Posted on 08/20/2012 10:10:15 AM PDT by Bratch
Ugh.
Over the weekend, GOP Rep. Todd Akin the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Missouri said some really, really stupid things. (Twitchy has comprehensive coverage. Click here and keep scrolling.)
Theres no sugar-coating or whitewashing this. It wasnt a gaffe. It was ignorant, garbled nonsense. Asked about his views on abortion in the case of rape, he claimed that If its a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.
Akins opponent, incumbent Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill (who is currently 11 points down in the polls), moved in quickly to capitalize on the comments by claiming that Akin was blaming the victims of rape. In the video clip above, however, youll note at the end that Akin makes clear that the rapists should be punished, not the victims.
Its about the only clear, sensible thing he said.
The legitimate rape phrase may have been a short-hand way, a la Whoopi Goldberg, of distinguishing between forcible rape and other types of rape or between real and phony claims of rape. Whatever he meant, he made a mess of it.
The cringe-worthiest part of his statement is this: the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.
I dont know what kind of biology classes Akin took, but rape-related pregnancies occur with significant frequency. No ifs, ands, or buts about it.
And here is something the feminists who are making great hay of Akins remarks wont tell you: There is most likely significant undercounting of those rape-related pregnancy figures, given what we know about Planned Parenthoods cover up of child rape and child sexual abuse and what we know from the invaluable investigative work of Lila Grace Rose and Live Action into Planned Parenthoods advice to young clients to hide statutory rape cases.
I understand the outrage many of my friends and fellow conservatives feel about the double standards the Right faces when it comes to media/political treatment of other politicians stupidity (looking at you, Bozo the VP). But the question Akin faced wasnt some obscure, gotcha question. It was basic abortion politics 101. His statement about the remarks issued yesterday doesnt even acknowledge the worst part of his botched answer.
GOP candidates in critical races that could swing the balance of the U.S. Senate ought to be ready for prime time. Period.
The Left, unsurprisingly, is now trying to hang Paul Ryan for Akins idiocy. Pro-abortion groups are already fund-raising off of it and every last celebrity on the planet is tweeting about it.
The Senate race in Missouri is still winnable. Big-spending, Obamacare cheerleader Sen. McCaskill has been in peril for months before the GOP nominee was decided.
Remember:
No matter who wins the Missouri Republican nomination to the U.S. Senate on Aug. 7, Democrat Claire McCaskill is running from behind.
McCaskill, the first-term incumbent Democratic senator, trails all three of her likely Republican challengers, according to a new Post-Dispatch/News 4 poll. She would lose to GOP frontrunner John Brunner by 11 percentage points if they were matched up today, the poll found. She would fall to Sarah Steelman or Todd Akin as well, though by smaller margins.
Further, her unfavorable rating is higher than her favorable, and some of her worst numbers are among all-important independent voters.
The poll of 625 registered Missouri voters suggests a key source of McCaskills problems is her support of President Barack Obama. The Democratic president who almost won Missouri in 2008, and once considered the state a 2012 tossup now has a 51 percent negative rating here and a 9-point deficit against Republican challenger Mitt Romney, according to the poll.
A lot of people are going to hold her accountable for her close ties to the president, said pollster J. Brad Coker of Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. of Washington, which conducted the poll.
On issues unpopular with Missourians, such as the Affordable Care Act and stimulus spending, shes sort of joined at the hip with him, said Coker.
That, paired with a Missouri electorate that is moving rightward, makes her path to re-election a narrow one, he said. Shes swimming upstream, and the currents getting stronger.
The question for Republicans in Missouri is whether sticking by self-inflicted-wounded Akin is more important than securing a U.S. Senate majority.
Steelman was/is plenty conservative. She angered establishment types. They turned on via various and nefarious ways.
Akin’s stupidity has made the news in Denmark.
41 should read:They turned on her via...
Akin should step aside for the sake of our country.
Country First - before party!
I'm afraid this could get very, very ugly.
Phillip Klein: Why Todd Akin should step aside; Updated: Akin vows to stay in race
Posted on August 20 2012 - 2:01 PM - Posted by: Doug Brady
Mary Beth and Steve have an excellent post on this and if you havent read it it yet, I urge you to do so. Phillip Klein makes some additional points today in a piece at the Washington Examiner. First Klein focuses on the sheer stupidity of Akins comments:
By now, anybody who follows politics enough to be reading this post has likely heard Missouri Republican U.S. Senate candidate Todd Akins idiotic and offensive statement when asked about whether abortion should be allowed in the case of rape. In case you need a refresher, Akin said, If its a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.
Michelle Malkin has a good post ripping into Akin, deservedly so. A lot of the focus has been on the phrase legitimate rape. Was he trying to differentiate between violent/forcible rape and statutory rape? Was he suggesting marital rape or date rape arent legitimately rape? Was he trying to suggest that a lot of rapes are faked? His attempt to make such distinctions, to this observer, is offensive, but at the very minimum its unclear.
The second part of the statement, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down is sheer idiocy with no basis in science.
Excellent points. Im still trying to wrap my arms around his use of the term legitimate rape. Whats that mean? When is rape legitimate? As Mary Beth and Steve noted, there are growing calls from Republicans for Akin to step aside. Most of these calls have centered on electability issues: if Akin stays in the race, Claire McCaskill will pound Akin over his comments for the next 10 weeks, turning what was once a winnable election for the GOP into a referendum on when rape is or is not legitimate. Fantastic. This is how a golden opportunity to flip a Democrat Senate seat is lost. And lets not forget that prior to the August 7 primary, polling data consistently indicated Akin was the weakest of the three potential candidates the Republicans could field against McCaskill. In addition to the electability issue, though, Klein also notes another big problem with Akin: what happens in the unlikely event he someone holds on to beat McCaskill:
Politically, a lot of the analysis as to whether Akin should drop out of the race has focused on whether he could still recover from this horrendous statement and win. A more important question is what kind of senator Republicans would be getting if he could hang on and they could gain a majority in the Senate. Anybody capable of making a statement as simultaneously offensive and moronic as Akins is likely to make more such statements. That means, even if Akin wins, hes likely to embarrass his party for six years and undermine the pro-life cause.
Exactly. Not only will the cause be undermined, but the Democrat Party will have been given more ammo in their ceaseless the GOP hates women campaign. Indeed Akins comments have the potential to negatively impact other GOP races in this crucial election year. The Democrat Party is desperate to change the subject from their disastrous stewardship of the economy, and Akins continued presence in the race will doubtless be viewed by them as the gift that keeps on giving. The only recourse for Republicans is for Akin to drop out, and do so immediately. Klein adds his name to that chorus:
Missouri Republicans have other choices. Both Sarah Steelman and John Brunner led troubled Democratic incumbent Sen. Claire McCaskill in polls taken during the GOP primary, and both were closer to the Tea Party than Akin (Steelman was endorsed by Sarah Palin). If Akin drops out of the race by tomorrow, the Missouri GOP could still pick another candidate. Akin has caused enough damage already. He should do the right thing and step aside and make room for somebody else while theres still time.
Obviously Sarah Steelman is my choice, but even Brunner is preferable to Akin. Will he drop out? I hope so, but I think thats a long shot at best. Most politicians are in the game for their own self-aggrandizement, and Ive seen no indication that Akin is an exception. Hell likely stay in till the bitter end, and help Democrats keep Dingy Harry in charge of the Senate calendar. I hope Im wrong.
Update: Big surprise. Akin just told the Huckster (who, naturally, endorsed Akin) that he will remain in the race till the aforementioned bitter end. And bitter it will be. For all of us. Via the Washington Post:
Rep. Todd Akin said Monday that he will not give in to calls for him to end his Missouri Senate campaign after his controversial comments about legitimate rape.
Im not a quitter. My belief is were going to move this thing forward, he said during an appearance Monday afternoon on Mike Huckabees radio show. To quote my friend John Paul Jones, Ive not yet begun to fight.
Akin also said he still sees himself as the right candidate to take on Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), even as many Republicans have begun to doubt it. He apologized for his remarks but said it doesnt mean he should end his campaign.
I hate when Im right. Sometimes.
So was Steelman? Endorsed by Palin?
“To quote my friend John Paul Jones, Ive not yet begun to fight.”
His friend. I know someone will defend him as they tried on another thread.
Jone Paul Jones passed in 1792.
And by me, for all the good it did her.
Wow, Viglanteman; my husband has taken our kids to see their grandmother for the next week in the Gaspe while I work. That is unfortunate for me right now, as you have made quite an interesting, informative post, even though I’m likely beyond childbearing years. Whew! :)
btw, Mrs. Vigilaneman is a lucky woman! LOL. :)
My cousin is an OBGYN and is now a leading expert in the field.
The Mrs. and I were a bit slow in getting our first child despite nearly two years of continuous effort. And I do mean continuous. We loved and wanted children in the worst way and were doing it two or even three times a day during the first couple of years of our marriage.
We couldn't figure out what was wrong, because I was getting plenty of semen discharge every time and my wife was getting an orgasm every 4th or 5th time. Everything we read indicated we were a perfectly normal young couple. But we weren't getting pregnant.
Finally, we went to see my cousin, he explained the mechanics, including what was covered in my previous post. Plus he pointed out that engines were always designed with upright or nearly upright (as in a V-8 or V-6 formation) for a reason-- to maximize lubrication, drive and thrust.
His talk made sense. We went home and tried it.
Honestly speaking, it was a little weird at first. But we kept at it and, one month later, we were pregnant.
Even when we weren't trying for pregnancy, we found nothing else nearly as satisfying. The kids are grown up and moved away now, but we still get a lot of electricity out of my cousin's advice of 26 years ago!
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