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If Texas turns blue, can Republicans ever win the White House again?
Just the News ^ | December 25, 2020 | Joseph Curl

Posted on 12/26/2020 1:21:26 PM PST by Hojczyk

Let's start in 2000. That year, former Texas Gov. George W. Bush absolutely annihilated Democrat Al Gore in Texas, winning 59.3% of the vote to Gore's 37.9%. Bush won by 1.3 million votes of about 6 million cast.

Bush crushed Democrat John Kerry in 2004, 61.1% to 38.2%. That time he won by nearly 1.7 million votes of some 7 million ballots cast.

But things began to change when Barack Obama ran for president. While the late Sen. John McCain defeated the Democrat in 2008, he got just 55.4% of the vote to Obama's 43.6%. And McCain won by fewer than 1 million votes of about 8 million ballots cast.

Utah Sen. Mitt Romney took the margin back above that million-vote mark, defeating Obama in Texas by more than 1.2 million votes of about 8 million ballots cast as he took the state by 57.1% to 41.3%.

Yet President Trump couldn't match those numbers in 2016. He won 52.1% to Democrat Hillary Clinton's 43.1%. And he won by slightly more than 800,000 votes of some 8.5 million cast.

Things got worse in 2020, when Trump got 52.1% of the vote to Joe Biden's 46.5%. While a win, his margin was just more than 600,000 votes — of nearly 11 million cast.

You read that right: 11 million. That's double the number of votes cast in the state in 1996.

(Excerpt) Read more at justthenews.com ...


TOPICS: Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: fakeelection; fakenews; stopthesteal; tds; texas
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To: Olog-hai

LOL. You can look at 10 different exit polls. Hispanics break 2:1 Democrat over Republican. Deal with it.


141 posted on 12/26/2020 3:30:25 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Texas Eagle

Or if too many Californians fleeing the Cali Dictatorship move to Texas and vote to replicate the prison they fled.


142 posted on 12/26/2020 3:30:28 PM PST by arthurus (covfefe |-|)
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To: Celerity

How can you tell what’s happening when the elections are polluted with all this fraud?


143 posted on 12/26/2020 3:30:46 PM PST by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: Celerity

At least this ain’t Pennsylvania.


144 posted on 12/26/2020 3:31:35 PM PST by Al B. ("Evil is powerless if the good are unafraid." -- Ronald Reagan)
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To: Hojczyk

And exactly why would I want to support the GOP ever again? The GOP is not an alternative to the democrat party, it is the same as.
Where are all these armed to the teeth conservatives that are going to fight to save our country?
What do you need, a chicom APC rolling down your street?


145 posted on 12/26/2020 3:31:41 PM PST by .44 Special (Tiamid Buacach!)
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To: Texas Eagle

You will see many Republican Senators following Romney’s lead after a Biden inauguration.


146 posted on 12/26/2020 3:31:45 PM PST by arthurus (covfefe |-|-)
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To: central_va

I can look at 100 different exit polls and learn the same amount of nothing. And you still haven’t answered my question.


147 posted on 12/26/2020 3:32:20 PM PST by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: Texan5

Hear, hear!


148 posted on 12/26/2020 3:33:45 PM PST by crusty old prospector
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To: central_va

Glad to see I’m not the only one making too much sense when it comes to the imaginary lockbox-taxes paid getting invested -rather than put in the general fund to be plundered like an ATM-accumulate interest, determined by the investment/s. and are paid to the taxpayer in an amount determined by the interest rate on investment-etc, etc-you’re right-it is simple...


149 posted on 12/26/2020 3:34:35 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: BrexitBen

“’Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the defense of tyranny is no virtue.’ Barry Goldwater”

On the Saying that “Extremism in Defense of Liberty is No Vice”

By Will Wilkinson
Niskanen Center
January 5, 2016

“Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in pursuit of justice is no virtue.”

These deathless lines are generally credited to Barry Goldwater, but he didn’t write them. Karl Hess, Goldwater’s lovable anarchist speechwriter, put them in the Arizona senator’s Republican convention acceptance speech. “I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice!” Goldwater actually said, in a slightly less pithy formulation. “And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue!” It’s a rousing sentiment, however it’s phrased.

This uncompromising spirit of immoderation praised by Goldwater has consistently characterized the “freedom movement” that rose from the rubble of his ill-fated campaign, and his stirring quip has served as a sort of unofficial libertarian motto. But Goldwater’s apothegm is completely wrongheaded. It’s one mistake after another. Understanding why it’s wrong is useful and important. It’s a good first step toward an understanding of why, more than a half-century after Goldwater’s failed campaign, an attraction to extremes and a disdain for moderation has left libertarianism languishing at the margins of American political life.

Goldwater’s dictum consists of two propositions, both false. In this post, I’ll take on “extremism in defense of liberty…” In a second installment—soon to follow—I’ll tackle “moderation in pursuit of justice…” Together, these two posts will amount to the beginning of a defense of moderation in politics, an introduction to the themes of this blog, as well as an explanation of its ironic name.

So let’s get started.

The chief difficulty with “extremism in defense of liberty is no vice” is that it pretty straightforwardly violates history’s most popular and plausible theory of virtues and vices. According to Aristotle, virtue is a mean between excess and deficiency. I happen to think Aristotle is basically right. It follows, almost by definition, that extremism is going to err on the side of excess, except in extraordinary circumstances that legitimately call for extreme measures. That’s the simple philosophical objection: virtue is a form of well-calibrated moderation in temperament. The porridge of virtue is always just right. Vice is too hot or too cold, a disposition to extremes.

But let’s put Aristotle aside for a moment. The questionable character of extremism is anyway right there on the surface of our ordinary understanding of the term. There is a whiff of violence, or at least danger, about extremism. Extremists reject mainstream opinion, including mainstream opinion about acceptable political tactics. To embrace extremism in defense of something is to at least flirt with the idea that violence isn’t out of the question.

As Karl Hess noted in his memoirs, shortly after Goldwater delivered his famous speech, Malcolm X very logically connected “extremism in defense of liberty” to the idea of black Americans defending their rights by “any means necessary.” Here’s Malcolm X:

My reason for believing in extremism—intelligently directed extremism, extremism in defense of liberty, extremism in quest of justice—is because I firmly believe in my heart that the day the black man takes an uncompromising step and realizes he’s within his rights, when his own freedom is being jeopardized, to use any means necessary to bring about his own freedom or put a halt to that injustice, I don’t think he’ll be by himself. [Emphasis added.]

This makes a lot of sense. Throughout its history, America’s white supremacist institutions have been so violently opposed to the liberty of black people that it was not unreasonable to believe that something extreme might need to be done to finally win them a modicum of freedom. That said, if extremism in defense of liberty is warranted, it doesn’t quite follow that it’s okay to use any means necessary to that defense. (Malcolm X certainly would not have endorsed, say, the nuclear annihilation of Manhattan in exchange for the end of systemic racial oppression in America.) Nevertheless, it’s true that the embrace of extremism is the embrace of extreme measures, and violence—the “means” that is normally off the table—is the extreme measure par excellence. Malcolm X was right that it’s a very short step from extremism in defense of liberty to violence in defense of liberty. And if violent extremism is ever warranted—is ever morally permissible and, therefore, not a vice—then the violent racial oppression of the mid-century American South arguably did warrant it.

This dip into American racial politics with Malcolm X is not in the least tangential to the meaning of “liberty” and “extremism” in the context of American politics. It’s worth pausing here to reflect on the fact that for centuries white Southerners saw the sustenance of slavery and racial apartheid as very much a matter of their liberty. Over the course of American history, all the way up through Goldwater’s 1964 acceptance speech, “extremism in defense of liberty” was at least as likely to imply the willingness to deploy violence to maintain white supremacy as it was to mean anything else. Goldwater, you’ll recall, opposed the Civil Rights Act on “constitutional” grounds, and his nomination speech came just two weeks after Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act into law. It requires a special sort of obtuseness to insist that Goldwater was only making some sort of abstract, historically acontextual point about the politics of liberty. Indeed, it’s Malcolm X who takes “extremism in defense of liberty” literally, as a strategy for the liberation of oppressed people, exposing and inverting its racially-coded meaning. Moreover, given America’s long history of brutal racial oppression, Malcolm X’s interpretation of the maxim as an endorsement of violence was perfectly natural and logical.

If the formulation had never showed up in a famous line in a famous speech that means a lot to certain people, there wouldn’t be much of a question about the plain meaning of “extremism in defense of liberty.” Consider the case of Timothy McVeigh, who murdered 168 people in a federal building in Oklahoma City with a truck bomb. McVeigh saw his attack as a blow for liberty in a war against the tyrannical American state that had murdered its own citizens at Waco and Ruby Ridge. When he was picked up by police a few days after the massacre, McVeigh was wearing a t-shirt that said, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants,” quoting Thomas Jefferson. McVeigh was executed by the undiminished state believing he’d nobly refreshed the tree of liberty with blood. “Extremism in defense of liberty” seems like a natural way to describe what Thomas Jefferson prescribed and what Timothy McVeigh did, doesn’t it?

This isn’t to say that people who like to repeat Barry Goldwater’s famous quote think that they are sticking up for domestic terrorism. Of course they don’t. The point is that Malcolm X and Timothy McVeigh knew perfectly well what “extremism in defense of liberty” really means, and we ought to stop pretending that we don’t know it, too. Almost everyone who repeats Goldwater’s slogan is guilty of hyperbole and doesn’t really mean what he or she is saying. Barry Goldwater himself certainly didn’t think that it is “no vice” to murder scores of innocent people in defense of liberty. Of course he didn’t!

However, it is interesting and quite telling that when Goldwater attempted to explain his glorification of pro-liberty extremism, he cited (this is according to Hess) the Allied invasion on D-Day as an example of the principle in action. The awesome scope and stakes of D-Day suggest that Goldwater did understand that “extremism” has something to do with possibly killing people. So it would seem that the senator’s own example cuts against the sensible, charitable interpretation of the first half of his dictum, which is that all he was saying is that, when liberty is at stake, a certain principled inflexibility is called for. According to this line of thinking, all Goldwater had in mind were hardball political tactics, such as, for example, suspending some functions of government for a week or two rather than raising the debt ceiling again. Though it’s true that some Democrats think that’s pretty “extreme,” shutting down the government over the debt ceiling isn’t very much like D-Day, is it?

The backstory of Goldwater’s maxim is interesting and very confusing. It’s hard to sort out competing claims about its ultimate source. It is widely believed to have come from a memo written by Harry Jaffa, a disciple of the political philosopher Leo Strauss. Jaffa certainly took credit for it. According to Hess, who put the line in the speech, Jaffa said he had taken the idea from a Lincoln speech. According to William Safire, Goldwater—or one of his ghostwriters—said he got the quote from Taylor Caldwell, a writer of blockbuster historical novels. For her part, Caldwell said she passed Goldwater a Cicero quotation (which she probably made up) well before his nominating convention speech. She doesn’t mention Jaffa. Anyway, here’s Caldwell’s possibly spurious Cicero quote:

I must remind you, Lords, Senators, that extreme patriotism in the defense of freedom is no crime, and let me respectfully remind you that pusillanimity in the pursuit of justice is no virtue in a Roman.

It seems that “extreme patriotism” in this context had to do with the swift execution of followers of Catiline, Cicero’s conspiring political rival. “Defense of freedom” had to do with the protection of the Roman Republic, and “pusillanimity in pursuit of justice” would seem to mean not summarily killing alleged traitors. Goldwater’s “extremism” has something to do with killing people, all the way down to its fake classical source.

Anyway, how one gets from Caldwell’s Cicero to Goldwater’s slogan is mysterious. In Caldwell’s telling, she found these lines (which it seems no other classicist has ever found) in a letter Cicero wrote to his son, which also contained a summary of Aristotle’s ethical theory. According to Caldwell’s possibly confabulated “translation,” Cicero said,

Virtue Is rightly defined as a Mean. And insofar as it aims at the highest excellence it is an Extreme … Extremes of excellence in virtue and in patriotism, should be honored by all just men.

This equivocation on the meaning of “mean” and “extreme” seem to be the crucial move, and key to understanding what’s wrong with Goldwater’s slogan as a matter of virtue theory. If, as Aristotle says, virtue is a mean between a vice of excess and a vice of deficiency—a middle-ground between two extremes—then to be virtuous is to have a certain kind of moderate temper. Extremes are vices by definition. But it’s easy to see how virtue as moderation may not be a useful idea if you’re trying to convince your kid that it’s an admirable thing to murder political rivals in defense of the regime, because that’s pretty extreme. So a little sophistry is in order.

The trick here is reframing virtue—a mean between extremes—as an extreme of excellence. Virtue is an excellence, after all. Obviously, “extreme moderation“ won’t do. That’s too oxymoronic and keeps the essentially moderate nature of virtue too much in mind. So excellence it is. And then you place “patriotism” next to “virtue,” as if patriotism is obviously a form of virtue. However, an “extreme of excellence” in patriotism is surely very different from “extreme patriotism” on an Aristotelian account of the virtue of patriotism. The virtue of patriotism, if it is a virtue at all, would be a point somewhere between the vice of indifference to one’s country and the vice of raving jingoism, or “extreme patriotism.” Maybe extreme patriotism isn’t a crime, as pseudo-Cicero maintains, but it’s exactly the sort of judgment-overriding emotional impulse Aristotle invariably condemns as vice. This is very shady stuff, whether it’s attributed to Cicero or Caldwell.

So what’s the story? Caldwell sent all this fake Ciceroniana to Barry Goldwater? To Harry Jaffa? And Jaffa wrote up a version of the slogan, Goldwater liked it, and told Karl Hess to put it in his acceptance speech? I have no idea. One way or another, Goldwater ended up with “extremism in defense of liberty.” If he had said, “Extreme patriotism in defense of liberty is no vice,” he would have been wrong. Extreme patriotism is too much patriotism. It is a vice. If Goldwater had said, “Extreme virtue in defense of liberty is no vice,” it would be hard to disagree. It’s hard to disagree with tautologies. But “extremism” does not mean “extreme virtue.” It means a willingness to use extreme tactics—to water the tree of liberty with blood, if need be.

Sometimes there is a need. Sometimes circumstances legitimately call for extreme measures. A civil war to free enslaved human beings would be a good example. Goldwater’s example, D-Day, is another case in which extreme, extremely violent, measures were not unvirtuously excessive. That’s probably why Goldwater thought of it when pressed. But even he could see that D-Day is the exception that proves the rule. The rule—the general principle—is that extremism is a vice, whatever it is in defense of. If you’re engaged in a literal war between good and evil, then maybe you’ve got to do what it takes and kill people. But politics is not war. If you’re a senator from Arizona, or a think tank scholar engaged in normal domestic politics of a stable liberal democracy, extremism is no virtue.

In the circumstance of normal liberal-democratic politics, not only is extremism a vice, it’s also bad strategy. In next week’s post, I’ll argue that “moderation in pursuit of justice,” in addition to being virtuous after all, is more likely than the extremist rejection of moderation to move American policy in a pro-liberty direction. Stay tuned.

https://www.niskanencenter.org/on-the-saying-that-extremism-in-defense-of-liberty-is-no-vice/


150 posted on 12/26/2020 3:36:54 PM PST by Jyotishi (Seeking the truth, a fact at a time.)
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To: Olog-hai
What is your question? How f-ing stupid are you being? In a GOOD election year Republicans get 28% of the Hispanic vote. In a good year.

Here is another.

Hispanic 29% R

151 posted on 12/26/2020 3:37:29 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Hojczyk

What a pointless article.

Trump won; they stole it from him/us. The legislative and judicial branches of the government are terrified of the left, who can do whatever they want from now on.

I can’t imagine a Republican in the White House ever again, thanks to these cowards in our government


152 posted on 12/26/2020 3:38:03 PM PST by Joann37
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To: SkyPilot

Right.

On the poignant Rush Limbaugh show last week a woman called and said “It doesn’t matter if we educate or communicate or convince the voters and get them to get out and vote conservative in big numbers. This is a takeover. They have Dominion software that will simply adjust the percentges upward for the Dems as more GOP votes are registered. It is a takeover.” (paraphrased)


153 posted on 12/26/2020 3:39:21 PM PST by frank ballenger (End vote fraud harvesting,non-citizen voting & leftist media news censorship or we are finished.)
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To: central_va
NO.WE.ARE.NOT. Man this is really pathetic. Have you ever read a history book?“

Yes I have. There is no codified blueprint of how Texas secedes. Some will even argue Texas can’t do this at all but they will be proven wrong. So yes we are very much in uncharted territory in that we have never faced a totally corrupt central government.

154 posted on 12/26/2020 3:42:44 PM PST by precisionshootist (uic)
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To: Olog-hai

You can tell by how stable the 28-30% figure is with multi polling entities and multiple election cycles. IT IS VERY CONSISTENT. I am not a fan of polling but this one is very consistent.


155 posted on 12/26/2020 3:43:41 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: saintgermaine

Wayne Allyn Root quote from your post:
Those two moves will erase any need for cheating and stealing elections. Democrats will have 40 to 60 million new Democrat voters by 2024. Almost all of them will legally vote Democrat, in order to keep the bribes coming (citizenship, welfare, food stamps, free healthcare, free college).

No cheating will ever be necessary again. America will cease to exist. America will be a foreign nation. Certainly, foreign to Republicans and patriots.
//////////////////////////////

Either software and other vote fraud, or a tsunami of illegals on welfare voting Dem for the rest of their lives-——we freedom loving and God fearing patriots seem to have had it unless God intervenes. We were apparently told by God to stand up and fight in World War II (not pray quietly on our knees and wait for intervention to come). What does God want this time? I keep praying to find out His Will.


156 posted on 12/26/2020 3:44:46 PM PST by frank ballenger (End vote fraud harvesting,non-citizen voting & leftist media news censorship or we are finished.)
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To: Olog-hai

suspect? it’s true.


157 posted on 12/26/2020 3:45:30 PM PST by b4me (God Bless the USA)
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To: Hojczyk

Another horsecrap article.

Texas was a majority rat state for decades. It’s been trending conservative.


158 posted on 12/26/2020 3:45:48 PM PST by sergeantdave (Federal courts no longer have any standing in America. )
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To: precisionshootist
Try to educate yourself because you are embarrassing FR.

Secession of the Southern States: Causes & Timeline

The causes my vary a little but the timeline would be about the same.

159 posted on 12/26/2020 3:47:06 PM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: central_va

Now you’re throwing ad hominem at me on top of the ad verecundiam (a German statistics company no less). Trying to deny obvious fraud (ad lapidem)? Once you have fraud, all (alleged) statistical measurement is destroyed.

Only liberals use logical fallacies.


160 posted on 12/26/2020 3:47:32 PM PST by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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