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The Death of the GOP and the Birth of a New Political Party
RMS941 ^ | 1/29/08 | AJ Madison

Posted on 01/29/2008 9:52:21 PM PST by pissant

Alexander J. Madison – January 29, 2008

Fellow citizens,

I was holding out hope that we could save the Republican Party from it’s slow, deliberate and painful march towards irrelevance. But with the only Reaganite in the primary election, Duncan Hunter, dropping out this past weekend, and Tom Tancredo long gone after being pilloried by the GOP cheerleaders on ‘conservative’ talk radio, and Fred Thompson, the only other reasonably traditional conservative, unable to get the necessary traction for a competitive race against the moderates, it is time to cut our losses and let the collapse take its natural course.

The GOP, the RNC and their mouthpieces in the conservative media have alternately argued that Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, and John McCain are upstanding conservatives worthy of support. Despite each having undeniable careers as moderate to liberal politicians, a sampling of arguments have been made recently in said media that Mr. Giuliani would be good for the pro-life movement, that Mr. Romney’s record in Massachusetts was a model of conservative governance, and that Mr. McCain does not support amnesty. All demonstrably false. And each man a demonstrable prevaricator in his current claims.

There are plenty of other 3rd parties in existence, but none that adhere to the unparalleled wisdom of what our Founders laid out in the constitution, coupled with the policies that, in times past, made the GOP great: The party of life, liberty, limited government, sovereignty, low taxes, and military might. In forming a new party, I have no intention of creating a refuge for fringe thinkers, disgruntled defeatists, vengeful has-beens, or self pitying 'victims'. This will be the party of fearlessness and bold ideas for the future; but one consistently anchored in the wisdom of the ages, the understanding of man's nature, and the constraints of our founding documents. We will draw inspiration and ideas and self discipline from sources both ancient and new: from Plato, St. Augustine, Charlemagne and DaVinci to Edmund Burke, Adam Smith, and Ben Franklin to Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman, Winston Churchill and Ronald Reagan, and many others.

It is time to reject everything the Democratic Party has stood for the last 40 years, and not co-opt its ideas. It is time to reject the Libertarians and their blinders that obscure the dangers from terrorists, terror sponsoring nations, quislings, communist regimes, and moral decay. It is time to reject the useless 3rd parties that have interests far too narrow to ever compete for America’s affection. Whether it is the Green Party with its socialism and trumped up nonsense about global warming and the demise of the planet, or the Constitution/US Taxpayers Party with its paleocon notions of trade and fearful, ‘head in the sand’ foreign policy, or the Centrist Party with it’s “third way” Clintonian doublespeak, these parties have demonstrated not only an inability to make a difference, but the inability to offer a compelling reason why they are superior, or a coherent conservative vision....a vision that fits the reality of our heritage and the reality of 21st century geo-politics. It is time for a Conservative party.

The GOP had a golden opportunity with the ascension of Ronald Reagan to become the dominant, conservative force in American politics. In fact, in 1994, it looked as if they had succeeded, but it took a Clinton victory in 1992 and a big liberal push for socialized medicine to animate the GOP after 4 years of visionless leadership under GHW Bush. But the decay has been swift ever since.

Just what did Reagan do? Reagan rejected the fear inspired détente policy of Nixon, Kissinger and the RINOs. He rejected Jimmy Carter’s and the democrats’ limp-wristed foreign policy – everything from giving away the Panama Canal, to the embarrassing and foolhardy policy towards Iran, to their complete misunderstanding of the USSR’s intentions. Reagan rejected the 50 year nanny state drift that our country had embarked upon (and since resumed). As he famously declared, “government is not the answer to our problems, government IS the problem”. Reagan rejected the ideas from the feminist cabal, everything from the Equal Rights Amendment (pushed by RINOs such as Howard Baker and Gerald Ford), to abortion being a “right to choose”, to the attacks on the traditional family. Reagan also knew that our survival would only be assured if the USA was ready and willing to fight for it. Hence, he undertook the largest non-wartime buildup of our military in the nation’s history. He coupled that with the restoration of discipline that was lost during the post Vietnam era. It is the main reason why the USSR no longer exists today. Reagan also went about proving once and for all that lower tax rates and deregulation spur economic growth and greater income for the federal treasury and the individual citizen. Once chided by his GOP opponents for “voodoo economics”, Reagan changed the entire landscape of that debate. Reagan failed in some areas, no doubt about it, but working with democrat majorities in both houses during most of his term made it impossible for him to carry out a full agenda. But that agenda has been largely abandoned by the Republicans anyway.

‘A Thousand Points of Light’, a ‘Kinder, Gentler Nation’, the ‘Straight Talk Express’, and ‘Compassionate Conservatism’ all pointed to a direction away from conservative principles. Conservatism is not cruel, it needed no kinder-gentler admonition. Conservatism is straight talk, Mr. McCain, but you don’t know it because you were too busy siding with the liberals and fighting conservatives in far too many arenas. And conservatism is compassionate, Mr. Bush – compassionate to the taxpayers, to liberty, to the constitution, and to the rule of law. Qualifiers are not needed, and only lead to government sticking its nose in places where it scarcely belongs.

Far too much of what Reagan and his conservative allies fought for has been coming unglued, slowly but surely since he retired. Aside from the 1994 Contract with America, the resumption of the liberal nanny-state has been re-invigorated and the growth of the federal leviathan has marched on largely unopposed with novel, new ways to redistribute our wealth; created and fostered by Democrats and Republicans alike.

During the Bush I and Clinton years, the size of our Army was reduced down to 10 divisions, from 18. The spending on missile defenses atrophied. If not for patriots such as Duncan Hunter, Curt Weldon and others fighting for every defense dollar, the decay would have been even worse. A 1994 ‘crime bill’ included the feds paying for city cops, a ban on rifles that looked like assault weapons, and midnight basketball social programs. The conservatives fought this, but the RINOs prevailed and helped it pass into law. The Reaganites such as Hunter, Jessie Helms and Henry Hyde warned their party repeatedly and loudly not to cave in and award Permanent Normal Trade Relations to communist China. Despite overwhelming evidence of Chinese malfeasance, the GOP capitulated, and gave Clinton his legacy legislation, to the detriment of our national security and industrial base.

George W Bush gave his father short shrift during the 2000 campaign for the presidency, and instead claimed Ronald Reagan as his inspiration, despite the compassionate conservative mantra. With a decent record as a tax cutter in Texas, pro-life credentials and an admirable swagger, he won the primary over RINO McCain and then squeaked out the presidency over a sitting vice president. So far so good. Though conservatives knew full well that Bush intended to add a prescription drug plan to Medicare, little did we know that he would give the democrats mostly what they wanted in the plan at the expense of market-based ideas. And little did we know that his education bill would be co-written by Edward Kennedy, and that education spending would skyrocket. Little did we know that he would sign the McCain Feingold campaign finance reform disaster after being a vociferous opponent of such legislation. Little did we know that non-discretionary spending would balloon even with both chambers of Congress in Republican hands. Little did we know that the State Department under Bush’s closest ally, Condi Rice, would largely resemble the Clinton State Department. Little did we know that after years of defending gun owners, the Justice Department would side with the Washington DC gun confiscation lobby on the current case before the Supreme Court. And little did we know that Republican pledges to seal the border meant nothing of the sort, and would offer amnesty to 12 to 20 million illegal aliens instead.

This is not to say that President Bush is a bad man or not a ‘good republican’. He has several fine accomplishments under his belt, including being undaunted by extreme criticism over Iraq (which has shown great promise as of late) and giving us substantial tax cuts twice during his presidency. He has a good heart. But the problem is that being a good republican does not equate to being a good conservative. Defense spending is still not what it needs to be while all other spending is far, far higher than it ever should be. Our porous borders remain porous. Our debt continues to race upwards. Our government bows down at the altar of political correctness. And we have traded in our confident, self assured diplomacy that understood the paramount necessity of US sovereignty for a phony globalism; a hodgepodge of agreements and treaties that are more akin to leeches on our nation’s arteries, and an affront to our Constitution.

Instead of sending useless programs, subsidies, pork and bureaucrats to the ash heap of history, the Republicans instead chose to feather their own beds. They chose to continue ignoring the impending Social Security and Medicare meltdowns. They chose to increase spending on virtually every marginal or worthless federal department, including the Dept. of Education, the Department of Energy and the DOT. The Bush administration is even warming, quickly I might add, to the idea of ‘global warming’ being a legitimate problem. And the coddling of Abbas in the Palestinian territories is no better than Clinton’s coddling of Arafat – with similar results. In other words, it is a mess, with no overriding vision, much less a conservative one.

So today, I propose a new party, the party of Fealty to America, Liberty, Conservatism, Optimism and Nobility – FALCON. A party whose ‘Rendezvous with Destiny’ will result in the preservation of this greatest beacon of freedom in the history of nations. A party that will stay true to the intent of the founders and the magnificent and inspired documents they produced. A party that will incorporate the wisest, conservative, and timeless principles of governance and leadership; principles espoused by George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Churchill, and Ronald Reagan, while learning from their shortcomings. A party that will not be constrained or intimidated or fooled by the United Nations, ‘world opinion’, or the false seductions of collectivism- in any of its guises. A party that will deconstruct the regulatory labyrinth that has festered and grown over many decades. A party that understands our nation is a republic of independent states, whose affairs are not to be dictated by the federal government in matters outside the constraints of our Constitution. A party that will treat other nations with good will and friendship when good will and friendship is desired and reciprocated. A party that will work diligently for peace yet recognizes that evil passions and ill intent have been forever present in the history of man and in the history of nation-states. A party that maintains a military might capable of defeating all threats - swiftly, decisively and simultaneously. A party that understands American Exceptionalism and understands the roots of that exceptionalism. And a party that recognizes and reveres the Divine Father as the source of our existence, our rights, and our country’s successes, past, present and future.

I will follow this call to arms up with a 20 point platform. Eight of the 20 items will address the philosophical underpinnings of the FALCON party. And the balance will address current issues that need immediate attention, such as entitlements, terrorism, taxes, and the economy.

There are still many people in this great country with the raw courage and commitment to universal truths that possessed our Founding Fathers. We shall join together to see that courage and commitment manifested in the governance of our nation, for the good of our nation, and the good of the world.

May God Bless the United States of America, now and forever.

Note: The FALCON Party website will be up and running within 10 to 14 days. In the meantime, please contact the author at: ajmadison1787@yahoo.com


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS: conservativeparty; cutandrun; falcon; fl2008; goodgrief; handwringing; mccain; mcinsane; mcnuts; presidentrodham; splitters; surrender; thirdparty
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To: End Times Crusader; All
It means get rid of people like your buddy McCain and the rest of the Country club RINOs.

If he, or for that matter, any of the Dim candidate, are elected president and try to enact Amnesty, there WILL be HELL to pay.

181 posted on 01/30/2008 5:25:41 AM PST by wolfcreek (The Status Quo Sucks!)
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To: jmyrlefuller

Charlton Heston for President!!


182 posted on 01/30/2008 5:27:49 AM PST by westmichman ( God said: "They cry 'peace! peace!' but there is no peace. Jeremiah 6:14)
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To: littlehouse36
You know why a portion of them are laughed at. I give you Mike Huckabee.
183 posted on 01/30/2008 5:31:27 AM PST by mimaw
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To: wolfcreek

Are you one of those lunatics that wants a civil war in this country?


184 posted on 01/30/2008 5:33:20 AM PST by End Times Crusader (John McCain - Leadership for America ; Staying the course in the War on Terror)
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To: End Times Crusader

You’re delusional. You are just an open-borders quisling, shilling for McCain.


185 posted on 01/30/2008 5:36:19 AM PST by WildcatClan (The epitome of irony is that few entities exist, less common, than common-sense.)
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To: End Times Crusader

So does supporting McCain..wheather he wins or nor ,same outcome.
John McCain has sold me out as a coservative for the last time. I vote for him after they pull the ballot out of my cold dead hand. John McCain can go to hell.


186 posted on 01/30/2008 5:36:32 AM PST by nowings ( Reagan has passed on so stay in the Bush's)
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To: al baby

Pissant what scares me more than the demise of the Republican party is that I believe that The United States of America is just about a decade from complete collapse

_______________________________________________

The time for a breakaway party never came and has passed. : ) Basically, conservatives are a minority (by sizeable numbers). Their power is in aggregating with other groups in the Republican party. If we hit a major recession or major crises — everything will break lose and a third party might rise. More likely to be a Lou Dobbs, Reagan Democrat, common sense type party than an ideological conservative one though. That said, it has to rise very quickly like the Republican party did or it splits the vote and we end up with the worst of all worlds — no power and helping the libs. I think the solution is for conservatives of all stripes to become radically active on the net and more importantly in the party and running for office at all levels. Take back the party that we’ve taken before with Reagan.


187 posted on 01/30/2008 5:38:09 AM PST by Greg F (Romney appointed homosexual activists as judges in Massachusetts.)
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To: End Times Crusader

“Not voting Republican = Voting Democrat

Clear enough?”

Voting for John McInsane = voting for insane democrat-lite.
Clear enough?


188 posted on 01/30/2008 5:39:34 AM PST by antisocial (Texas SCV - Deo Vindice)
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To: littlehouse36

Open question: Why is it that liberals are so good at being subversives (and I mean everywhere: schools, churches, politics) and conservatives break off and begin anew? New media, charter schools, evangelical movement... and then the conservatives are labeled “fringe” and laughed at by the mother organization.
________________________

Because libs make it their job, their way of making a living to be political activists. It fits thier philosophy and since they have no religious faith and the like, they have no other interests to pursue, so socialism is their calling. It’s tough to fight the long wars in the trenches of organizations against libs once they have a foothold. The will keep burrowing. It’s their job — and their calling — and their core faith.

P.S. — Just a note for anyone reading. With McCain our likely nominee (which is ok, except on the amnesty issue!) — conservatives absolutely positively MUST get involved in the secure borders and anti-amnesty groups to give them the cash and the foot soldiers to fight in a few years if McCain is stupid enough to wreck his popularity and try again for amnesty. I think if we are getting a recession that low wage illegals will get even more unpopular so we may be o.k. — but have to get involved now. We face 4 more years of fighting this issue without anyone to veto the amnesty bill if McCain, Obama or Hillary win.


189 posted on 01/30/2008 5:45:27 AM PST by Greg F (Romney appointed homosexual activists as judges in Massachusetts.)
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To: All
I agree. I should start the ball rolling. Whoever is electing this Rinos/anti-social-values 'conservatives' does not represent "social-conservatives"

Let's not kid ourselves, we don't belong in this party.

"Social-Conservatives" are 'conservatives on fiscal issues for the most part' BUT also care about the culture/values of the country.

190 posted on 01/30/2008 6:10:06 AM PST by ElPatriota (Duncan Hunter 08 -- I am proud to support this man as my president)
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To: MitchellC; pissant

Unfortunately, rather than endorse NO one, he chose to endorse Huckabee. IMO, that decision was as tragic as his dropping out.

Pissant, I don’t understand enough about politics to opine on whether or not a third party is the way to go. But IMO we are fighting not just the Dems or Kennedy Wing of the Republican Party, but the very powerful bipartisan CFR/OBL and it is they who must be stopped.

My thoughts right now... do everything in our power to “Swiftboat” McCain.


191 posted on 01/30/2008 6:12:25 AM PST by Kimberly GG (God Bless our true conservative patriots..... Duncan Hunter & Family!!)
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To: pissant
But with the only Reaganite in the primary election, Duncan Hunter, dropping out this past weekend....



Hunter endorsed Huckabee. Huckabee and Hunter where on the same page in every debate they where in together. Huckabee and Hunter come from the same conservative philosophical mold with the same foundational beliefs.

Duncan Video: Hunter/Huckabee stand up to Clinton/Corrupt News Network plant/Romney flip-flops on gays in military

Video Huckabee: There is nothing funny about President Hillary Clinton/We cannot be soft we must be strong and defeat Islamic fascism

Huckabee: Congress spends like Edwards at a beauty shop

Duncan Hunter: “I got to know Governor Huckabee well on the campaign trail,” said Hunter. “Of the remaining candidates I feel that he is strongly committed to strengthening national defense, constructing the border fence and meeting the challenge of China’s emergence as a military superpower that is taking large portions of America‚s industrial base.”

“Along with these issues of national security, border enforcement and protecting the U.S. industrial base, I see another quality of Mike Huckabee’s candidacy that compels my endorsement. Mike Huckabee is a man of outstanding character and integrity. I saw that character over the last year of campaigning and was greatly impressed. The other Republican candidates have many strengths and I wish them all well. My personal choice is Mike Huckabee,” Hunter concluded.



HUCKABEE only mentioned one person for Secretary of Defense, DUNCAN HUNTER:
‘‘What you do,’’ he [Huckabee]explained, 'is surround yourself with the best possible advice.’ The only name he [Huckabee] mentioned was Representative Duncan Hunter of California. ‘Duncan is extraordinarily well qualified to be secretary of Defense,’ he [Huckabee] said.

Hunter undoubtedly had a closer look at Huckabee than conservative media commentators who have never met Huckabee or people commenting on a forum who have never bothered to research original sources or take a close look at what Huckabee actually says rather than what others are saying about him.

HUCKABEE/HUNTER '08



192 posted on 01/30/2008 6:14:24 AM PST by FreedomProtector
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To: pissant

.


193 posted on 01/30/2008 6:21:55 AM PST by dfwddr (Duncan Hunter '08 -- the real thing.)
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To: End Times Crusader
Don’t put words in my mouth!

I would not advocate violence unless it was the only alternative.

That said, I would not be surprised to see an armed insurrection if events continue to warrant a drastic change. Read into that what you will.

194 posted on 01/30/2008 6:21:58 AM PST by wolfcreek (The Status Quo Sucks!)
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To: pissant
"You would post this tripe, Pissant."

Well, maybe he just likes menudo. As for me, I am apprehensive about the future of the Republican party. I fearlessly predict dark days ahead for the party and for our country when any of the remaining candidates of either party take power.

195 posted on 01/30/2008 6:25:40 AM PST by Enterprise (Those who "betray us" also "Betray U.S." They're called DEMOCRATS!)
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To: Kimberly GG; All

“My thoughts right now... do everything in our power to “Swiftboat” McCain.”

DITTO!

BTW: Looks like Edwards is out.


196 posted on 01/30/2008 6:27:17 AM PST by wolfcreek (The Status Quo Sucks!)
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To: littlehouse36

Because a conservative is by nature a self-reliant individualist.


197 posted on 01/30/2008 6:40:06 AM PST by visualops (artlife.us nature wallpapers)
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To: pissant

The only chance we have is stopping John McCain. I’ll spend my time on that.


198 posted on 01/30/2008 6:42:25 AM PST by AuntB (" DON'T LET THE PRESS PICK YOUR CANDIDATE!" Mrs. Duncan Hunter 1/5/08)
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To: womanvet

“Can’t vote for him. Nope, wouldn’t be prudent. I’m writing in Fred Thompson. It will make me feel better than staying home.”

Voting for someone who isn’t running will insure a McCain win.


199 posted on 01/30/2008 6:47:29 AM PST by AuntB (" DON'T LET THE PRESS PICK YOUR CANDIDATE!" Mrs. Duncan Hunter 1/5/08)
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To: pissant
Hey, if Romney is the GOP horse, I'm in with the new party idea.

If McCain's the guy and picks Rudy or Romney as his running mate, then ditto.

If McCain wins and picks a reasonable conservative as his running mate, I'll stick with the GOP for the time being.
200 posted on 01/30/2008 6:47:58 AM PST by Antoninus (All you Mittens out there are going to feel like Flippers come November...)
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