...sigh...
To: US Navy Vet
2 posted on
11/08/2012 11:27:39 AM PST by
boomop1
(term limits will only save this country.)
To: US Navy Vet
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5b/John_McCain_official_photo_portrait-cropped-background_edit.JPG/150px-John_McCain_official_photo_portrait-cropped-background_edit.JPG)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/ca/Mitt_Romney_by_Gage_Skidmore_6.jpg/220px-Mitt_Romney_by_Gage_Skidmore_6.jpg)
I've had it with our stinking
"Establishment Republicans" who keep blaming conservatives for
THEIR LOSES.
And yes, I DID cast a vote for LOSER and
"Establishment Republican" Romney, and AGAINST the
Arab-
Kenyan Barack Hussein Obama II,
(a.k.a. Barry Soetoro),
the one
guilty of TREASON !
That last caller should have told Rush that Conservatives have little in common with
"Establishment Republicans".
Every time
"Establishment Republicans" tell us what to do, WE LOSE !
Every time
"Establishment Republicans" sell us a COMPROMISING LIBERAL, we lose !
Don't you get it ?
No more MONEY or VOTES for
"Establishment Republicans" !
Jack Kerwick's article May 24, 2011 titled
The Tea Partier versus The Republican was right.
Thus far, the field of GOP presidential contenders, actual and potential, isnt looking too terribly promising.
This, though, isnt meant to suggest that any of the candidates, all things being equal, lack what it takes to insure
that Barack Obama never sees the light of a second term; nor is it the case that I find none of the candidates appealing.
Rather, I simply mean that at this juncture, the party faithful is far from unanimously energized over any of them.
It is true that it was the rapidity and aggressiveness with which President Obama proceeded to impose his perilous designs upon the country
that proved to be the final spark to ignite the Tea Party movement.
But the chain of events that lead to its emergence began long before Obama was elected.
That is, it was actually the disenchantment with the Republican Party under our compassionate conservative president, George W. Bush,
which overcame legions of conservatives that was the initial inspiration that gave rise to the Tea Party.
It is this frustration with the GOPs betrayal of the values that it affirms that accounts for why the overwhelming majority
of those who associate with or otherwise sympathize with the Tea Party movement
refuse to explicitly or formally identify with the Republican Party.
And it is this frustration that informs the Tea Partiers threat to create a third party
in the event that the GOP continues business as usual.
If and when those conservatives and libertarians who compose the bulk of the Tea Party, decided that the Republican establishment
has yet to learn the lessons of 06 and 08, choose to follow through with their promise,
they will invariably be met by Republicans with two distinct but interrelated objections.
First, they will be told that they are utopian, purists foolishly holding out for an ideal candidate.
Second, because virtually all members of the Tea Party would have otherwise voted Republican if not for this new third party, they will be castigated for essentially giving elections away to Democrats.
Both of these criticisms are, at best, misplaced; at worst, they are just disingenuous.
At any rate, they are easily answerable.
Lets begin with the argument against purism. To this line, two replies are in the coming.
No one, as far as I have ever been able to determine, refuses to vote for anyone who isnt an ideal candidate.
Ideal candidates, by definition, dont exist.
This, after all, is what makes them ideal.
This counter-objection alone suffices to expose the argument of the Anti-Purist as so much counterfeit.
But there is another consideration that militates decisively against it.
A Tea Partier who refrains from voting for a Republican candidate who shares few if any of his beliefs
can no more be accused of holding out for an ideal candidate
than can someone who refuses to marry a person with whom he has little to anything in common
be accused of holding out for an ideal spouse.
In other words, the object of the argument against purism is the most glaring of straw men:I will not vote for a thoroughly flawed candidate is one thing;
I will only vote for a perfect candidate is something else entirely.
As for the second objection against the Tea Partiers rejection of those Republican candidates who eschew his values and convictions,
it can be dispensed with just as effortlessly as the first.
Every election seasonand at no time more so than this past seasonRepublicans pledge to reform Washington, trim down the federal government, and so forth.
Once, however, they get elected and they conduct themselves with none of the confidence and enthusiasm with which they expressed themselves on the campaign trail,
those who placed them in office are treated to one lecture after the other on the need for compromise and patience.
Well, when the Tea Partiers impatience with establishment Republican candidates intimates a Democratic victory,
he can use this same line of reasoning against his Republican critics.
My dislike for the Democratic Party is second to none, he can insist.
But in order to advance in the long run my conservative or Constitutionalist values, it may be necessary to compromise some in the short term.
For example,
as Glenn Beck once correctly noted in an interview with Katie Couric,
had John McCain been elected in 2008, it is not at all improbable that, in the final analysis,
the country would have been worse off than it is under a President Obama.
McCain would have furthered the countrys leftward drift,
but because this movement would have been slower,
and because McCain is a Republican, it is not likely that the apparent awakening that occurred under Obama would have occurred under McCain.
It may be worth it, the Tea Partier can tell Republicans, for the GOP to lose some elections if it means that conservativesand the countrywill ultimately win.
If he didnt know it before, the Tea Partier now knows that accepting short-term loss in exchange for long-term gain is the essence of compromise, the essence of politics.
Ironically, he can thank the Republican for impressing this so indelibly upon him.
I'm fresh out of
"patience", and I'm not in the mood for
"compromise".
"COMPROMISE" to me IS a dirty word.
Let the RINO's compromise their values, with the conservatives, for a change.
Mitt Romney and the "Establishment Republicans" can go to hell!
3 posted on
11/08/2012 11:28:30 AM PST by
Yosemitest
(It's simple. Fight ... or Die !)
To: US Navy Vet
Who is this Ben Ghazi guy the Republicans are NOW talking about? Geez, what a bunch of morons.
4 posted on
11/08/2012 11:29:23 AM PST by
Cowboy Bob
(Greed + Envy = Liberalism)
To: US Navy Vet
I don’t understand why they keep saying Romney didn’t get the voters McCain got. . . I have seen several articles/references to the fact that tens of thousands of votes have not been counted yet (absentee, military, provisional) and that it is expected that Romney will actually exceed McCain’s vote totals by some.
5 posted on
11/08/2012 11:29:28 AM PST by
Persevero
(Homeschooling for Excellence since 1992)
To: US Navy Vet
Missed big openings and playing nice guy doesn’t win.
6 posted on
11/08/2012 11:30:23 AM PST by
Red Steel
To: US Navy Vet
Democrats committed voter fraud
This freeper txrefugee had a post that I think we all should read and spread around:
On CNN today, they revealed that Axelrod & Co. had the 2010 Census sheets from the heavy-minority counties in the swing states. They supposedly knew every house where their voters lived and followed up with absentee ballots etc.(No one has moved in the last two years? Hard to believe.)
Now, if this isnt a recipe for stealing an election, I dont know what is. They could request the ballots, have someone collect them at drop boxes, fill them out and submit them. No wonder the turnout of Blacks, Mexicans, and students actually went up over 08, though the enthusiasm was obviously missing. That doesnt make sense unless someone was doing something shady.
3 posted on Wednesday, November 07, 2012 7:53:38 PM by txrefugee
7 posted on
11/08/2012 11:31:55 AM PST by
Democrat_media
(limit government to 5000 words of laws. how to limit gov Quantify limited government ...)
To: US Navy Vet
I’m having a hard time with this turnout thing. I don’t even live in a swing state, but the turnout was crazy here. People were in line forever. The lines were full of short-haired men and with women dressed in red; the parking lots were full of pickup trucks. Conservatives turned out in droves, in herds, in masses. You may have heard that in heavily conservative areas of Virginia like Norfolk, there were people (service members and their families) standing in line for THREE HOURS in the dark and cold after the polls closed, stubbornly insisting on their right to vote. We didn’t see this for McCain and Palin, sorry. So I’m mystified: where did all their votes go? Where?
8 posted on
11/08/2012 11:34:35 AM PST by
ottbmare
(The OTTB Mare)
To: US Navy Vet
Yawn.
Romney should have promised a free rifle to every GOP voter and that probably would have worked better.
People now want free stuff - give it to them.
Democrats offer free condoms - we offer free rifles.
Lets see who turns out more peopler.
9 posted on
11/08/2012 11:35:09 AM PST by
GlockThe Vote
(The Obama Adminstration: 2nd wave of attacks on America after 9/11)
To: US Navy Vet
Bet source was Stephen Schmitt.
Sounds dumb enough to be him
10 posted on
11/08/2012 11:35:14 AM PST by
Zathras
To: US Navy Vet
I don’t understand why Romney chose not to clobber Obama over Benghazi. Perhaps it had to do with some notion of being a “gentleman”, or “running a clean campaign.” Maybe he thought that if he aggressively criticized Obama on this issue, new facts might suddenly come to light that would make such a tactic appear foolish. Who knows.
But it’s no mystery why he was hamstrung with the issue of Obamacare: as governor of Massachusetts, he imposed the same program. It’s difficult to get around that fact.
11 posted on
11/08/2012 11:41:07 AM PST by
GoodDay
To: US Navy Vet
Well, it certainly true that Romney just wimped out and let Obama get away with murder without more than a brief complaint.
But the problem isn’t just that he didn’t speak out. The problem is, even if he had spoken out, who would believe him? His record is pro gay, pro abortion, and pro socialized medicine. He is a serial liar and flipper flopper, and the media would have torn anything he said to shreds.
So, his only recourse was to stand there with perfect hair and smile and pose with his wife. Sure, but that isn’t enough to cut it.
18 posted on
11/08/2012 12:17:57 PM PST by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
There’s an old saying about political campaign postmortems:
If you won, everything you did was right.
If you lost, everything you did was wrong.
19 posted on
11/08/2012 12:32:44 PM PST by
D-fendr
(Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
To: US Navy Vet
we really should have been talking more about Benghazi and Obamacare Romney couldn't talk about Obamacare without having to justify Romneycare, and he weak "MA is one thing, USA is another" doesn't work, because a government mandate is at the heart of each, and that's the fundamental problem.
Fully agree that they (or surrogates, more to the point) should have brutalized Obama with the Benghazi fiasco. At the ver least, we might some justice if it it didn't move the election needle.
22 posted on
11/08/2012 12:55:20 PM PST by
kevkrom
(If a wise man has an argument with a foolish man, the fool only rages or laughs...)
To: US Navy Vet
Counting down the number of days remaining when we have to hear anything from “Romney advisors”
Just go away
Go
Now
23 posted on
11/08/2012 12:56:33 PM PST by
silverleaf
(Age Takes a Toll: Please Have Exact Change)
To: US Navy Vet
Sounds like the ground-game guys are trying to blame the ones responsible for the air attack.
I expect the messaging guys to whisper about that the GOTV efforts were the problem.
To: US Navy Vet
TOLD YOU SO.. Romney was going to take a dive..
I suspect he knew about the massive voter fraud that was going to take place..
He didnt look very upset that he lost... kind of like he knew it all along..
I believe he did.. and was complicit in it...
AND STILL IS.. Bengazi will die a quick death..
And most of AMerica could give a “floater” about it..
What amazes me is the obvious GLEE that Megyn Kelly and Bair showed when Obama WON on FOX...
FOX News is starting to STINK... O’Realy seems to “care less” who won..
Its becoming harder and harder to watch FOX News for me..
36 posted on
11/08/2012 1:44:44 PM PST by
hosepipe
(This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole..)
To: US Navy Vet
38 posted on
11/08/2012 2:26:21 PM PST by
newzjunkey
(Obama thanks Pontius Pilate Freepers for giving him four more years!)
To: US Navy Vet
Easier than taking responsibility for rooting out voter disenfranchisement of the members of their Republican Party.
Of course Romney’s worth a cool coupla hundred million or so...
but how about all the Republican Party grass roots..who need jobs and their vote.. who humped it...where’d their vote go?
40 posted on
11/08/2012 2:30:12 PM PST by
mo
(If you understand, no explanation is needed. If you don't understand, no explanation is possible.)
To: US Navy Vet
41 posted on
11/08/2012 2:33:06 PM PST by
Graewoulf
((Traitor John Roberts' Obama"care" violates Sherman Anti-Trust Law, AND the U.S. Constitution.))
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