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To: Charles Bronson Forever

“I blame McCain for Palin’s loss”

That is absolutely the right way to view this.

Many of us have said that the ticket was inverted. That’s another lesson learned: an inverted ticket is a risky ticket. People may be charmed or fascinated with the bottom of the ticket but they ultimately have to vote for the top.

As Mark Steyn wrote “McCain had a biography but no platform.” True. He really didn’t stand for anything. Sarah was the one who provided the new-found focus on energy independence, children with special needs, and low taxes. She was also excellent at tying some of these together: we need to drill-baby-drill and mine-baby-mine because our dependence on foreign tyrannical regimes is a national security risk. Two campaign themes tied up in one package!

To call McCain an “untraditional conservative” is like calling Obama an “untraditional Christian.” The latter’s not a Christian and the former’s not a conservative. McCain is a moderate DemRat, a counterpart to his good friend Joe Lieberman. According to an article on Drudge this morning breaking down the voting by demographics, few independents voted McCain-Palin. On being asked in an exit poll why he voted for Obama given his lack of experience, one indie said “Well, no one has experience in that job until one has actually done it” (a trite answer but worth repeating, I think, to the MSM in a future debate). When asked why he would vote Hussein when he knew his taxes would go up the indie replied “So? My taxes would probably go up under McCain.”

And he’s right. McCain’s no conservative, traditional or otherwise.

There were also some asinine rumors from the McCain camp that Sarahcuda “didn’t know that Africa was a continent, and not a country” and that she once answered her hotel room door during the campaign wearing only a towel.

I don’t know about the first — and after all, Obama claimed on video that he had visited “all 57 states” — but the second would have been a real story had he claimed that Palin answered the door completely naked. THEN I would have been interested, as well as extremely jealous...

If the Africa bit is true, my answer is this: big deal. Hussein, Biden, and the press were unable to identify the statement “we think spreading the wealth around is good for everybody” as Marxian socialism. And when Hussein claimed that his statement reflected merely his desire to give a “tax cut to the middle class”, the morons in the press believed him. That’s far worse than any mistake or gaffe or slip-up on geography.

Schmidt and Davis sound like a$$hats. It sounds as if they were afraid of Sarah too. Sarah is the OUTSIDER; one of US. She threatens the existence of INSIDERS like THEM.

This campaign seems as if it’s been going on forever, but consider that Sarah has only been part of it for about 8 weeks. Amazing.

Palin is a strong, determined person and a natural politican to the core. But I plan on showing my support by sending an e-mail to her affirming the idea that right now SHE is the frontrunner of a new conservative movement. There are a few other good people, but right now she’s out in front.

It wouldn’t hurt if other FReepers did the same. She’s returning to being a full time governor, mom, and wife, and I doubt she has time to surf alternative media like the Internet to see what her conservative supporters are saying. The base needs to get both information and encouragement to her.

After all, by helping her we ultimately help ourselves.


505 posted on 11/06/2008 9:07:42 PM PST by GoodDay (McCain-Palin '08)
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To: GoodDay

And one of the first things we can do is to start spreading the news from an ABC article posted here earlier today:

All the states in the U.S. are in recession or nearing recession EXCEPT ONE...ALASKA. And that’s ENTIRELY because of Sarah Palin’s pro-growth, pro-economic freedom policies. It’s not because “there’s oil in Alaska.” The mere presence of oil doesn’t mean a thing if you can’t drill for it economically and if you can’t re-invest profts after having sold it.

Japan, for example, has almost no natural resources worth speaking of, yet when it followed pro-growth, pro-economic freedom policies, it prospered.

Now that we are entering a recession, expect the worst: expect the demRat government to meddle, and as a result, expect the real possibility of a full-fledged depression. Big Government advocates like depressions because it provides excuses for keeping themselves in power for as long as possible. Our coming depression will provide the needed excuse for creating the institutions of a European-style welfare state.

That Sarah’s state is the ONLY state not undergoing economic decay is not just a talking point; it’s a SHOUTING POINT.

It’s an excellent start for positioning her as a frontrunner in the New Conservative Movement.

Finally, as a bit of reverse psychology: Steyn always points out how important language is, and who controls it. Who gets to define things. We should utilize linguistic “cross-dressing” as much as possible; i.e., putting conservative concepts into lefty-sounding rhetoric. The right will smile in amusement and the left will simply go nuts since they will have to argue against their own vocabulary. For example, in an issue such as gun control, the right could point out that such laws make it difficult or impossible for minority small-business owners in high-risk neighborhoods to defend themselves. “How could you possibly support such a racist policy?”

For this reason, I suggest that we brand this New Conservative Movement with a name that smacks of liberalism but which is really conservatism. Perhaps “The New Freedom Movement”: It’s all about conservation and being unselfish: rather than selfishly claiming all that redistributed wealth for yourself, we encourage all able-bodied members of the middle class to sacrifice their welfare checks by accepting a large cut in their taxes and getting to keep all their income. This gets them OFF the welfare rolls and frees up more welfare for those who really need it (such as the very wealthy and the very poor).

FReepers, this is no different from what Hussein did with his redistributionist/socialist schemes. He cross-dressed it into calling it a “tax cut for the middle class.” You recognized it only upon laborious intellectual analysis (taking about 20 seconds, but still laborious). It’s an effective technique in selling a platform and there’s no reason we shouldn’t be doing the same thing.


516 posted on 11/06/2008 9:53:36 PM PST by GoodDay (McCain-Palin '08)
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To: GoodDay

Good post!
And I might add - Biden having FDR going on TV in 1929 and all the rest of the illiterate stuff...


538 posted on 11/06/2008 11:10:01 PM PST by GretchenB
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To: GoodDay

the indie replied “So? My taxes would probably go up under McCain.”

think mccain would’ve fought to keep the bush tax cuts from automatically expiring when he voted against them in the first place? He probably would have been another “read my lips” republican.
Put cap and trade and loads of other regulations on top of that and conservatives will be equated with “bad economy.”


554 posted on 11/06/2008 11:48:28 PM PST by ari-freedom (So this is how Liberty dies... with thunderous applause)
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