Posted on 12/09/2011 3:33:49 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
.....Im not ashamed to talk about my faith, he says in the first spot. Some liberals say that faith is a sign of weakness. Well, theyre wrong. In the second ad, titled Strong, Perry bravely comes out as a follower of Christ. Im not ashamed to admit that Im a Christian, he says, before vowing that as President, Ill end Obamas war on religion.
......But most flagrant is Perrys reference to Obamas war on religion without evidence or explanation. He leaves the strong impression that it is Obamas administrationinstead of Supreme Court decisions from the 1960sthat took school-sanctioned prayer and Bible-reading out of public schools. It is telling that Perry can assume his intended audience in Iowa living rooms will need no elaboration or convincing that there is indeed a war on religion.
Social conservatives have had a hard time providing substance for that charge, however, because many of their most dire predictions about a Democratic presidency simply havent come true. Obama hasnt taken away their guns, he hasnt started a race war, anddespite mailings distributed by the RNC in the 2004 campaigngodless liberals have not banned the Bible....
..It would easy to dismiss Perrys message as just a typical appeal to social conservatives or the desperate strategy of a candidate who may have slipped out of contention. But this is new. The casualness with which Perry tosses off the charge about Obamas war on religion is at odds with how corrosive the accusation really is. It encourages citizens to turn against one another in a way that conservatives would denounce as class warfare if the subject were economics. That leaves conservatives with a choice: they can denounce Perrys ads, or explain why they tolerate such divisiveness when the subject is peoples faith.
(Excerpt) Read more at swampland.time.com ...
I heard Rick Perry on Fox yesterday defending his new ads. I missed lot of it, but if I caught the drift correctly, (and maybe someone on this thread can expound on it,) he was talking about Evangelicals who seem to be willing to forget their values to support either gingrich or romney. He said, “Which Commandment DON’T you believe in?”
And I thought hear, hear.
How much of your soul are you willing to forfeit to indulge and overlook adultery, sexual perversion, abortion, lying, et al? Not me, man. I WILL NOT GO THERE!
Did you see Rick Perry’s interview on Fox yesterday with Martha McCallum?
Somebody criticized Time’s buttboy. That someone must pay!
Gov. Rick Perry - FED UP!
Now my friend Sarah Palin took a lot of heat for calling this as she saw itthe empowerment of death panels. But is she wrong? Sure, there isnt a section titled death panels in the law, but thats not how the statist works. The scheme is built around the central premise that federal bureaucrats get to decide a lot of things for you, and they are motivated by controlling costs, redistribution and fairness. As one expert, Dr. Alan Garber of Stanford University said, Being able to say no is the heart of the issue. We give those bureaucrats the power, and they want to say no in order to make the system work.
Matters of life and death, indeed. I honestly have no words to describe how frightening this whole scheme is and how badly it undermines freedom. Indeed, as Daniel Hannan, a British member of Parliament who knows socialized medicine firsthand, said, The idea that this, of all countries, could put into the power of a state bureaucracy decisions over what kind of medical treatment you get, literally whether you can live or die, is deeply un-American.
Most concerning is Obamas appointment of Dr. Donald Berwick to head up the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). The President was savvy enough to appoint this Massachusetts doctor in a recess appointment rather than the typical Senate confirmation process, knowing that a Senate hearing would likely spark public outrage and possibly derail Berwicks confirmation. Berwick is an outspoken fan both of health care rationing and the British health care system, which is a model of socialized medicine. Berwick once said, The decision is not weather or not we will ration carethe decidison is whether we will ration with our eyes open. He has also opined that the government can make a sensible social decision and deny access to certain medical care because it is so expensive that our taxpayers have better use for those funds. Shouldnt your doctor make that decision? Remember those death panels?
. Source
I guess Perry assumes that people are not so stupid that they do not realize that Obama is continuing the war on faith.
Preach it, sister. Amen to that.
No I missed it.
I just heard Gov. Perry is going to be on Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace....
Perry knows the American people want control over their lives returned to them and their states.
Perry is doing great with this issue.
Gov. Perry sued for Texas' money (without Washington telling us how to spend it) -- And won! Promise Kept.
And then the author goes on to denounce Perry and people who believe as being devise and playing the class warfare card.
Such tactics are used hourly by Obama and the MSM stays silent (or encourages it).
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I’m not sure I would have caught that ... thanx C’sW
The Shadow Party Strikes Again: Texans For Public Justice is Really Part of the Texas Democrats Smear - Bryan Preston - September 21, 2011 —
Texans for Public Justices true nature is relevant because theyve launched an ethics broadside against Texas Gov. Rick Perry on the eve of the next presidential debate, and that attack is getting picked up as if its not coming from a partisan hothouse. Despite their attempts to masquerade as non-partisan watchdogs, Texans for Public Justice are Democrat partisans funded by a variety of far left outfits. PJ alum Jennifer Rubin cites TPJ uncritically in a post at her Washington Post blog today, but doesnt go into who or what is behind the group. So, allow me.
I touched on Texans for Public Justice last year in my expose of how the Texas Democrats hope to use false front groups like TPJ to tear down the states Republican leadership, and regain the power that the voters have repeatedly chosen not to give them over the last two decades.
Because of his position as the Texas Democratic Partys shadow chairman, [Lone Star Project head Matt] Angle exerts a great deal of influence over several left-wing groups across Texas, some of which pass themselves off as non-partisan. Among those is Texans for Public Justice, a group that claims to be interested in tracking the influence of money and corporate power in Texas politics. That interest is decidedly one-way: TPJ never takes on Democrat operatives like Angle, and in media hit after media hit, is always on his side. This makes sense when you take a look at who funds TPJ: Open Society Institute (George Soros, whose fortune also directly funds candidates even at the local level in Texas) and the Tides Foundation (Teresa Heinz-Kerry, among many others). Scratch the surface of most nonpartisan watchdogs in your state and youll probably find the same money sources, and perhaps a similar network of activists and groups. They are Soros Shadow Party. TPJ is a left-wing front masquerading as a nonpartisan watchdog.Somehow the mainstream media in Texas consistently misses the fact that TPJ never takes on Democrats, about anything, ever. Ditto for non-partisan groups like the Texas Freedom Network (founded and run by Cecilia Richards, daughter of the late acerbic Democratic Gov. Ann Richards) and the Texas Values in Action Coalition (TEXVAC), both of which have been very active in the 2009-2010 election cycle dredging up and amplifying attacks on Republicans, which then get major interest from the mainstream media.
The Angle operation hunts as a pack. It starts when Angle and his operatives manufacture an ethical charge against a vulnerable Republican. The allied groups, Texans for Public Justice, TEXVAC, and Back to Basics PAC, generate a flurry of press releases decrying the evil Republican. Mainstream media dutifully reports and amplifies the charge, quoting the spokesmen with the furrowed brows at the Angle-allied groups. A Democratic candidate, funded and controlled by an Angle ally, Houston multimillionaire trial lawyer Steve Mostyn, waits in the wings while the Republican crashes and burns.
Two seconds at their site gives away the fact that TPJ are sharply partisan, and mostly an anti-Perry hate group. Texas is thick with these groups, which well hear more and more from as long as Perry is in the campaign. Theyre funded by everyone from George Soros (TPJ gets money from his Open Society group) to trial lawyers who oppose tort reform, like Houston trial lawyer Steve Mostyn. Theyll use their Texas location to attack Perry and the Texas record, and most journalists and bloggers from outside the state will probably assume that, since theyre based in Texas, they must know what theyre talking about. The question that needs to be asked, though, is what are these groups really up to.
Theyre not about good governance. Theyre not non-partisan. They exist to bring about liberal electoral success. Nothing more, and nothing less. Everything they say and do should be seen as partisan, because thats what it is.
Perry knows the American people want control over their lives returned to them and their states.
Perry knows the American people want control over their lives returned to them and their states.
Go, Perry.
Actually, if he wanted to be more precise and hit the nail squarely on the head,
0bama isn’t conducting a war on “religion” or on “faith”.
He is simply carrying out the leftists’ war on _Biblical_ Christianity.
It’s always been about “has God really said”. (Gen 3)
Rick has definitely hit a nerve in liberal land.
This Amy Sullivan reminds of the aliens in “Mars Attacks” whose heads explode when they hear Slim Whitman sing Indian Lovesong! HA!
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