Posted on 01/11/2010 3:16:00 PM PST by pietraynor
LAST DEBATE TONIGHT AT 7 PM est.
The following are links to the Boston TV stations carrying the debate,
The following will stream live:
http://www1.whdh.com/
these MAY be streaming live, unconfirmed at this time.
http://www.myfoxboston.com/
http://wbztv.com/
http://www.thebostonchannel.com/index.html
Friend,
Our movement has done something amazing - we set a goal to raise $500,000 today with our moneybomb and we went by it. We set another goal of $750,000 and we have just surpassed it.
Right now, we are at $836,960.22 and the grassroots demands that we reach $1 Million by midnight tonight.
Tonight, our candidate, Scott Brown, just won the debate against Martha Coakley. We are about to win on January 19th but we need your help right now.
We only have 8 Days Left - will you help us reach the goal of $1 Million by midnight tonight?
Thank you so much for your support and our momentum is growing every day!
Pete Fullerton
Political Director
P.S. To reach the goal given to us by the grassroots, can you email and contact fellow supporters to get them involved? http://www.redinvadesblue.com
This message was sent from Brown For US Senate to xxxx.xxxxxx.COM. It was sent from: Brown For Senate, PO Box 395, Wrentham, MA 02093. You can modify/update your subscription via the link below.
Money Bomb...$1,117,747.46 raised...
I donated yesterday. The email was sent around 5 PM tonight. I’m glad to hear this.
I don’t think it’s over ... bet he raises a bit more!!!
I’m inclined to think with the way MA has been for the past generation or two there aren’t many ‘out’ R’s in the MA legal community .. perhaps a niche market for a few lawyers. There’s no question if there’s funny business, the national committees will lawyer up. Most important is having poll watchers.
I would NEVER discuss the 80’s with ANYONE!
$1,303,302.50 @ 12:22 est !!!!
Thanks for the ping!
lots of articles here....
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/01/11/Who_won_tonights_debate/
Who won tonight’s Senate debate?
Republican state Senator Scott Brown
70.5%
Democratic Attorney General Martha Coakley
20.2%
Independent Joseph Kennedy
9.3%
Total votes: 9255
See the lib’s view at www.boston.com
BTTT
10-4 Nutmeg!
Hopefully the idiots that have been conditioned into voting “Kennedy” for the last ~55 years siphon off Croakley votes.
I see Scott Brown either winning this in a sqeaker (1-2%) or a blowout (10%+ points). I don’t see much in between.
see the 2 crappy columns at the Glob?
jeff jacoby is of course, for Brown..
I really don't mean to criticize, but clearly the soldiers in the picture are communist/soviet troops and the US Capitol is (still) burning in the background.
I'm having a hard time understanding the statement made by this work... It seems to be depicting the heroism of communist troops in some sort of American context... as in our country in distress but being rescued by communists in some sort of way? While the US Capitol is burning?
Again I really don't mean to offend or to be critical but I just plain ol' don't understand.
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/opinion/editorials/view.bg?articleid=1224899
Herald endorses Brown.
Massachusetts voters have to ask themselves a serious question before they head to the polls next week: Are they content with the current state of affairs in Washington?
Are they content with a sweeping health care bill, now being negotiated behind closed doors by principals from only one political party? (So much for a new era of bipartisanship promised by our president.)
And are they prepared for the impact that bill will have on the health care industry in our own state, where we already insure 97 percent of our population?
Are they prepared for the devastating impact of $500 billion in Medicare cuts, both on our citizens and on our hospitals?
But there is far more that is going wrong these days in D.C. than just the health care fight. There has been a similar rush to fight global warming with policies that would tax us back to the Stone Age.
There was that $787 billion stimulus bill that didnt stimulate much of anything unless you count sending the unemployment rate to 10 percent. Oh, but it sure did stimulate the federal deficit, which hit a record $1.4 trillion.
Well, the voters of this state have the power to change that next week. Sometimes one vote can make a difference - especially if its one vote on the floor of the U.S. Senate.
If you love whats going on in Washington, well, then by all means vote for Martha Coakley. Shes a perfectly nice person, and she wont make a dimes worth of difference in the balance of power in Washington.
But if youre not happy with the status quo, if you think the way business is being conducted on Capitol Hill today is a disgrace and an affront to taxpayers, then you probably agree its time for a change.
Scott Brown can single-handedly deliver on that kind of change and the Herald is pleased to endorse his candidacy in the race for U.S. Senate.
Brown talks about being the 41st senator, adding to Republican ranks and depriving Democrats of the supermajority which has allowed them to ride roughshod over the nations agenda. But he would go to Washington as his own man - and as ours, beholden to no one, except Massachusetts voters.
Brown is a social moderate in the Weld/Cellucci tradition, who considers Roe vs. Wade settled law.
And as a lieutenant colonel in the National Guards Judge Advocate Generals Corps, Brown has a unique perspective on critical military issues and issues related to the war on terror.
As a state senator Brown has shown his ability to work across the aisle for things he believes in. He cites his efforts to help pass a crucial stem-cell research bill because I knew it meant jobs for Massachusetts.
And while Brown is a solid fiscal conservative, he is a compassionate conservative, voting to override gubernatorial vetoes and restore funding for breast cancer screening, suicide prevention programs and the METCO program.
My record speaks for itself, he added. If it helps people and creates jobs, Im for it.
The Democratic National Committee tried to goad former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin into endorsing state Sen. Scott Brown yesterday as it dispatched a top aide to Boston to help boost Attorney General Martha Coakleys stagnant campaign a week before the election.
After Brown got the nod from Palin for America - a conservative Web site run by a Palin supporter - DNC Press Secretary Hari Sevugan released a statement asking, Where on earth is Sarah Palin herself?
Seeking to alienate independents and moderate Republicans backing Brown, Sevugan added, Will Sarah Palin join Tim Pawlenty, Mitt Romney and other national Republicans in their support for Scott Brown? Or, has the pit bull lost her bark?
But the Wrentham state senators campaign sidestepped questions about whether he would seek or accept an endorsement from Palin, the darling of the partys conservative base.
This race will not be decided by outsiders, said Brown spokesman Felix Browne. Scott has been running this campaign on his own, and with the support of the grassroots, hell continue to stand on his own two feet.
Sevugans assault on Brown was the latest sign national Democrats are privately worried Coakleys campaign has stalled out a week before the Jan. 19 election.
They needed to run the general election different than the primary, and they didnt do that, griped one leading Democratic strategist. They ran a stealth campaign.
An Obama spokesman said the president has no plans to join Coakley on the campaign trail, but he did send an e-mail blast to Bay State supporters yesterday, calling the pivotal Senate race tight.
. . . Were so close to passing health reform - finally realizing Senator (Edward M.) Kennedys lifes work, Obama wrote. But we cannot get the job done without Martha Coakley.
Pawlenty, the Minnesota governor, used his Freedom First Political Action Committee to raise money for Brown yesterday.
But Browns fund raising took flight on its own, raking in a staggering $758,000 in one day as of 6:45 p.m. yesterday in an online money-bomb event. (over a million by night’s end)
check this out ..above
With all due respect, Roe is the antithesis of law. It consitutes the removal of the protection of the law to millions of human beings. It is absurd to suppose that an inalienable right such as the right to life can rightfully be abrogated. And further, States do not have "rights". They have powers.
No State has the just power to abrogate an inalienable right.
As much as I like Justice Scalia, he is dead wrong about this.
Any politician who will sell out the innocent for political advantage is liable to sell out anyone on anything. Down the road I trust Scott Brown as far as I can throw a grand piano.
Cordially,
Whether the individual states do or don’t have rights in a philosophical sense, the fact remains that the Tenth Amendment reserves to them all powers not expressly granted the central government.
Yes, I agree, but I would add that the Declaration makes it perfectly clear that the purpose of these government or state powers in the first place is to secure the aforementioned inalienable rights:
"...That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, "In other words it not just any old power, or all powers, but just powers, that is, power that serves justice that is legitimate. State Power that is used for ends destructive of these rights is by definition, injustice, or tyranny.
Cordially,
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