Posted on 02/22/2016 3:34:56 PM PST by smoothsailing
February 22, 2016
by sundance
Ben Franklin told us long ago we have been given a constitutional republic “if you can keep it“. What Dr. Franklin failed to tell the anxious crowd was that inside the convention hall the attendees unanimously agreed, the enemy we needed to keep it from – was ourselves.
Last year after assembling volumes of research and data we shared a message that many found troubling; we outlined the GOPe road-map. Some people immediately thought it was ridiculous, however as time has gone along reality began to settle in – what we described in the GOPe “splitter strategy” was indeed factually taking place throughout 2015/2016.
Some people cannot accept the inherent discomfort; that’s completely understandable.
We are not generally experts in much more than gathering data and assembling the pieces to explain the most logical reasoning for them; a political ‘Occam’s Razor’, if you will.
However, for those who generally understand the principles behind the larger political machinations, an evolution is now evident. The GOPe have modified their plans, morphed and mutated the original scheme while maintaining the initial intent.
We, through the use of Candidate Donald Trump, have defeated the original GOPe scheme. But the powerful engineers behind the design will never stop trying to influence the outcome.
We are going to outline the most logical assembly of current political events and describe where the GOPe is trying to shape the state of the 2016 political race. However, in order to understand it moving forward, and more importantly, in order to defeat it, we must ‘begin with the end in mind’.
When Ben Franklin walked out onto the steps and said “YOU“, he meant all of us. So with that in mind please revisit this prior discussion which was sent specifically to the Ted Cruz coalition.
What we are going to describe later as the “mutated GOPe strategy” will take all of us to block it.
This was written in September 2015:
Long ago, during a dinner with Lou Holtz he told the story of his arrival at Notre Dame. Coach Holtz arrived to find his team filled with untapped talent, yet torn with internal conflict, turmoil, inter-player animosity and backbiting.
Holtz took measure of the team and called them to the locker room. He passed out paper and pencils and asked each player to write down their grievances and explain why their teammates were holding back the potential inherent in their own skill. A few hours later he returned to the locker room and led the team to the far side of the practice field.
There the players saw a shovel and hole he had been digging while they were writing. Coach held out a large empty coffee can; and before asking each player to place their scribe inside the container he asked them to commit to each-other and to God, that what they had written could be removed from their mind forever.
Holtz asked each player to make a promise; a pledge to themselves, to each other and most importantly to God, from that moment forward those grievances would be permanently gone.
Coach Holtz counseled everyone, without judgement, they were under no-compulsion to put their list into that can. No-one would think worse of them for retaining their grievance. He promised to fulfill the contract of those who were attending school on scholarship. Regardless of their decision, every man before him was guaranteed a college degree from Notre Dame University.
However, those who chose not to drop their grievances would not be on the team.
Even if it meant Holtz fielded a team of barely enough players, he was not going to lead a fractured army; his program could only succeed as a united effort.
Coach stood, and in order to give the young men time to think, he bowed his head in prayer. After several minutes Holtz then held out the can.
One-by-one the players folded their notes and placed them in the can; each fully understanding the severity of the counsel they had just witnessed. Each player in his own way defining himself in that moment of decision and choosing to give themselves to a greater possibility. The sum is greater than the collective assembly of the individual parts.
Holtz then took the can, sealed it, placed it in the ground and asked each of the players to use the shovel to bury their collective grievances. Linking hands they formed a circle around the now covered hole. They stood in the darkening twilight in that furthest corner of the field – and they prayed together.
The final words from Coach Holtz echoed with severity amid the stillness. He asked them to look at each other, and to look at the field behind them. He reminded them that in this moment, right then, they were looking at the birth place of champions. He looked toward the direction of the stadium where thousands gather to cheer the Fighting Irish, and he reminded them that is was not over there where champions were born – it was right here on the practice field, when no-one is cheering and no-one is watching.
Coach told them each how proud he was to be a part of “their team of champions” – and he pledged with full measure of intensity that he would never disregard them, nor would he ever fail them. He then sent them back to the dorms….. the rest, as they say, is history.
This story is shared because I am willing to put all my Ted Cruz objections into a similar coffee can and bury them forever:
I fully understand that a man of principle can make mistakes and accidentally place himself in a position of compromise.
Ted Cruz won victory in the 2012 Texas Senate race despite the establishment supporting his opponent Dewhurst. Cruz then went to DC to fulfill his campaign promise to repeal ObamaCare and fight against the DC constructs he later called the “cartel”.
Cruz is a very intelligent, intensely sharp and highly articulate representative Senator. All of these attributes are merited and evidenced by those who know and speak of him.
Ted Cruz walked into the belly of the beast and fought valiantly for 10 months in 2013 to bring about change. It stands as reasonable for a man who faced the severity of the professional DC Republican class, and the onslaught of a media machine seeking his destruction, that he would be exhausted in the winter of ’13/’14 and make a poor decision to trust Mitch McConnell purely based on finding himself in a position of isolation. I can reconcile the mistakes which stem as a result of psychological/emotional exhaustion.
During the period when McConnell was leading Cruz astray (December ’13 to June ’14) and while Cruz was vice-chair of the NRSC -which was maneuvering to support McConnell’s buddy Mississippi Senator Thad Cochran- unbeknownst to Cruz McConnell was actively engaged with the RNC in creating the GOPe roadmap.
Part of that 2014 activity, which Cruz was presumably unaware of, was the a collaboration between the GOPe and RNC to make changes to benefit the power interests who were planning the future nomination path for Jeb Bush.
Republican primary race rule changes, finance changes (hidden in the CRomnibus bill), delegate distribution changes, party primary date changes etc., were/are all part of the collaborative RNC/GOPe construct to deliver an establishment win for Jeb Bush (similar to 2012 with Mitt Romney).
While the NRSC simultaneously plotted to attack Chris McDaniels in Mississippi, Matt Bevin in Kentucky, and following the RNC success against Ken Cuccinelli in Virginia, and while Cruz and Rand Paul were leveraged to sit on the sidelines, these aforementioned plans were all taking place behind closed door.
It is accepted that by the time Ted Cruz caught on, and after he had given $240,000 to the NRSC, it was too late – the GOPe had already launched their attacks.
As a result, and after the mid-term elections, in January of 2015 Ted Cruz quit the NRSC.
Regardless of the discomfort inherent in these admissions, they are historical realities. None of these acceptances disqualify Cruz from presidential consideration today.
Fair enough?
However, the acceptance of what follows next is where find ourselves at loggerheads. The pathway the RNC/GOPe constructed to elect Jeb Bush specifically was designed to eliminate/defeat Ted Cruz.
Stop. And re-read this reality:
The GOPe road map was specifically and intentionally created by scheme and construct, to intentionally block any possibility for Ted Cruz to achieve 2016 presidential victory.
As a direct and factual outcome there is nothing Ted Cruz can do to overcome the structural dynamics currently in place which block any possibility of him achieving electoral victory. Period.
We have laid out the rules, laid out the road-map, and laid out the primary contests -REPEATEDLY- and we continued to asked anyone who finds themselves refusing this reality to outline a path for Cruz victory.
Unfortunately, it simply does not exist.
The RNC rules are now in place; the RNC primary dates are now all confirmed; the RNC delegate distributions all now set in stone; and there’s enough key state polling data for anyone to use who wants to prove this false.
We have studied this road-map intensely. We have explored the district-by-district level possibilities within each of the pre-March 16th 2016 states a hundred different ways, the numbers for anyone other than Trump just don’t add up.
The GOPe road-map was specifically created to block Ted Cruz, or anyone like Ted Cruz, from achieving victory.
Team Jeb is: Rubio, Fiorina, Christie, Huckabee, Kasich, Perry, Graham, Pataki and Gilmore. (10 establishment candidates all part of the RNC/GOPe machine) We have outlined it all HERE.
If, for the sake of intellectual exercise, you remove Donald Trump from the race and apportion his supporters in a reasonable manner, what you will find is that the GOPe road map kicks back into play – and no non-jeb is able to pull enough support to defeat Jeb.
Remove Trump and Ben Carson becomes Herman Cain 2012; Cruz becomes Gingrich, Jeb replaces Romney and the 2016 outcome becomes 2012 ground-hog day. Just as designed.
Here’s the kicker…. As previously mentioned, Ted Cruz is a smart guy, and therefore Ted Cruz also is aware of this.
Ted Cruz is fully aware of this – he picked up on it months ago. Hence:
We don’t like it either. It’s almost too bitter a pill to swallow – too big a bitter pill to accept. But that doesn’t change the result.
However, if you find yourself still seeking some proof therein, just ask the man himself. Ask Cruz, or a Cruz campaign insider to outline a pathway to victory.
The recent events in South Carolina prove our research as valid. Candidate Cruz did not win a single county, nor did he win a single congressional district in South Carolina, nor did he win a single delegate.
75% Evangelical Voter Turnout. A year of ground-team campaign assembly. 6,000 volunteers and boots on the ground…. and not a single county was won.
But then he crudely slandered a guy I like. And I became more aware of his past. If absolutely necessary I will still cast my vote for him based upon my single remaining and rapidly waning hope that he'll follow through on his promise to be tough on illegal immigration.
But it has become a slender reed indeed and it won't take much more for it to blow away, too.
Cruz really needs to win in Texas. It’s looking like it could be close.
I thought the article said that the deck was stacked against Cruz. I don’t understand your upset over that. It made wonder why Texas was not winner take all. If it were, Cruz would most likely take all 155 or so delegates.
You bet they are. They have 2 documentaries ready. On where Trump stalks a British reporter (the equivalent of our Barbra Walters) so much she has to get a restraining order. The other an attempted land grab for a golf course in Ireland (?) where he calls the really nice people living there "pigs" after they decide not to sell.
There's also Trump saying "Blacks are lazy."(I think I read that around 2012 or so?) They're definitely going to use that one! TSHTF after that.
And those are just the little things....There's still all the corrupt business deals.
Trump even tried to cash in on the government small business fund to help rebuild after 9/11! He wanted some of that loot!
Trump has shot his mouth off for years. All those words are going to come back and bite him right in the a$$, and if he's the candidate, he'll take the entire conservative base into the pits of hell with him - because he'll suposedly be representing us!
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#59 rational behavior?
That would be idiots supporting a lifelong liberal who brags about banging someone elses spouse just for starters.
If that is what you consider conservative candidate you are probably a democrat.
No doubt he has permanently changed the political landscape and I thank God for him for that.
I don’t care what Sundance says. He is a hack and not to be taken seriously. This sleaze outed a protected witness and posted pics of her husband and son. Bottom of the barrel.
Yeah. Cruz will probably do better in Texas than Trump did in SC.
If Cruz can get all of the delegates, which is unlikely but still possible, it puts him in the running for the nomination. It would be a grand slam.
If he finishes first but does not get all of the of the delegates, it is still a base hitter. Keeps him in the game.
I don’t consider Trump a conservative. He’s a nationalist and populist who promotes some conservative positions.
Calling me a democrat is a joke, and the joke is on you.
#64 You got that right and the other is the tRumo University class action lawsuit going thru the courts in multiple States.
Another Billy Jeff Buttufuco gets his ass nailed in a lawsuit that he lies about.
I told someone else that Trump is Clinton’s stalking horse as Perot was Bill’s. Anyone that actually looked hard at Trump saw what was going on and that he’s playing Conservatives. The problem is that they’re so angry, they aren’t thinking.
Don’t know anything about that. Just know that Texas is proportional.
Geeee .. I thought you were smart ..??
Apparently I was wrong.
Trump doesn’t have a record at all - when it comes to votes in the Congress. His views were his personal ones - and according to Cruzbots - no one is capable of learning and growing - unless your name is Ted Cruz. Cruz has voted for some bad things in the Senate which will harm “we the people,” and yet, youhang onto that mantra of conservative. I’m sorry, but selling out our country is anything BUT conservative. Wise up!
At least not until Hillary is sworn in.
As far as I know, this hasn’t been settled yet. However, allow me to point out that this did no harm to all of America, like Ted Cruz’s votes in the Senate have. ou people split hairs over every little thing. The people who took the courses are the ones who may or may not have been harmed. No one twisted their arms to take them, However, for some reason, you Cruzbots can’t see the difference. Sad, really sad.
You think Cruz will win Texas by more than 10 points? Recent polling indicates a 5 point gap within the MOE, and the gap is narrowing.
I would expect Ted to be doing better on his home turf.
...and a hater of puppies.
Listen, Trump changes positions more often than he does trophy wives. If you didn’t hear something you liked today there’s always tomorrow. He’s immoral and has no core principles. A lot of us will not vote for him. You’ll just have to accept it.
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