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Duncan Hunter: Pro-Life, Pro-Border Security, Pro-Military, Pro-Second Amendment Conservative
E-mail from Duncan Hunter | Duncan Hunter

Posted on 02/10/2007 7:54:35 PM PST by seanmerc

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To: Blackirish
Ask W it's worth about 35% of the vote.

W's horribly low approval numbers are almost exclusively caused by his abysmal record on securing the borders. Indeed, as a result of this issue, I myself have been in the "disapproval" camp since before the election of '06. The Ramos and Compean fiasco is only making things worse.

If W. got himself right on illegals, his numbers would go up 5-10% overnight.

Duncan Hunter doesn't have that problem at all, so there's absolutely no comparison. Sorry.
281 posted on 02/12/2007 9:36:07 PM PST by Antoninus ( Who is Duncan Hunter? Find out....www.gohunter08.com)
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To: nctexan

That looks more like a party that Julieaani hosted.


282 posted on 02/12/2007 9:42:01 PM PST by streetpreacher (What if you're wrong?)
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To: Antoninus
I agee partially. Had W secured the border and done some day to day conservative governance...tax reform....tort reform...held the line on spending....vouchers...the things he actually campaigned on....at least made an attempt.

If W had kept his campaign promises we would have barely held on in 06 despite Iraq.
283 posted on 02/12/2007 9:43:50 PM PST by Blackirish
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To: upsdriver

Actually, it was revealed in 1999 that Newt had an affair with an intern when the House was impeaching Clinton. It would be hard for him to overcome that.

And yes, I do like Newt's politics.


284 posted on 02/12/2007 9:45:56 PM PST by streetpreacher (What if you're wrong?)
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To: Blackirish
I agee partially. Had W secured the border and done some day to day conservative governance...tax reform....tort reform...held the line on spending....vouchers...the things he actually campaigned on....at least made an attempt. If W had kept his campaign promises we would have barely held on in 06 despite Iraq.

I agree. His 2nd term has been a disaster on practically all fronts. The jury is still out on Roberts and Alito...
285 posted on 02/12/2007 9:47:55 PM PST by Antoninus ( Who is Duncan Hunter? Find out....www.gohunter08.com)
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To: Blackirish

Do you mind if I correct your post before I respond? It really doesn't make a lot of sense in some areas.

[Duncan Hunter] is a fiscal liberal/social conservative. That, besides being a radical leftist, [is] the most unpopular [way to] straddle with the electorate. Ask W: it's worth about 35% of the vote. He is a [back-bencher], wired in big-spending, 20 year congress-critter from a gerrymandered district who has as much chance of being the next POTUS as Custer's Bugler.

***Presuming that my corrected version of what you wrote is what you intended to say, I will respond.

[Duncan Hunter] is a fiscal liberal/social conservative.
***Yes, there's that, at least at first glance. I would take that over a social liberal/fiscal[doesn't matter] because it is these principles that are so important in qualifying a candidate. If a man won't stick to his principles, how can you trust him for fiscal sanity? For instance, on the right to life, there's been ~25-30 million legal baby killings since Roe v Wade legalized this ghastly practice. How much is that worth in fiscal terms? Care to put a price on it? But at 2nd glance you can see that DH had some severe choices that needed to be made during his voting record and he made those choices. They seem very consistent, unlike the other candidates who are all over the map. Hunter undoubtedly would prefer to have fiscally conservative choices and he would drive for that as President.

That, besides being a radical leftist, [is] the most unpopular [way to] straddle with the electorate.
***Well, there was that Reagan character who spent (by borrowing) more than any previous president. He seemed pretty popular. I think this particular point is just plain bogus.


Ask W: it's worth about 35% of the vote.
***No thanks, don't have time to ask him. Besides, I think W would have found better numbers if he had stayed true to conservative principles. And anyways, what difference does it make to W what 35% of the vote is? He isn't running.

He is a [back-bencher], wired in big-spending, 20 year congress-critter from a gerrymandered district who has as much chance of being the next POTUS as Custer's Bugler.
***Steve Young was a great back bencher to Joe Montana and then when his time came, he did pretty good. I can see that in California politics, congress-critter is about as high as you could go during this period if you were a social conservative. And I think he has about as much chance of becoming POTUS as Jimmuh Carter or Bill Clintoon, who were both relatively dark horse candidates. A RINO would split the party for a decisive loss, so it behooves the middle-of-the-road repubs to take a look at someone who energizes the base. It would be foolishness not to.


286 posted on 02/12/2007 10:04:00 PM PST by Kevmo (The first labor of Huntercles: Defeating the 3-headed RINO)
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To: Blackirish

I agee partially. Had W secured the border and done some day to day conservative governance...tax reform....tort reform...held the line on spending....vouchers...the things he actually campaigned on....at least made an attempt.

If W had kept his campaign promises we would have barely held on in 06 despite Iraq.


Both the conservatives and the moderates abandoned the GOP in '06 because there was little to no difference between the parties in practice.


287 posted on 02/13/2007 4:40:58 AM PST by freedomfiter2 (Hunter '08)
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To: Peach

Yes! As I pointed out in one area...nothing is that cut n dry. That chart on Rudi is very unfair ...and as we both said, looks bad for FR. Nothing is that cut n dry. I think dirty tactics like that chart belong in places like DU.


288 posted on 02/13/2007 5:19:17 AM PST by Fawn
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To: seanmerc

A Brigadeer!! anti trade is anti America.

He can not be supported because of his failure to understand the world and the business conducted every day.


289 posted on 02/13/2007 5:21:38 AM PST by bert (Obama's people enslaved Black Americans.)
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To: bert

He can not be supported because of his failure to understand the world and the business conducted every day.

He's not anti trade. He's for trading on an equal footing.


290 posted on 02/13/2007 6:11:22 AM PST by freedomfiter2 (Hunter '08)
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To: freedomfiter2

Monday bump


291 posted on 02/13/2007 12:38:23 PM PST by william clark (DH4WH - Ecclesiastes 10:2)
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To: flaglady47

The greatest problem Republicans have is that we can't get information about our representatives and movers and shakers and ideas about our side of issues through the regular news outlets.

But someone on the right who wants to become President has to break through the media muzzle. Look at how they talk up a total unknown who has no real experience and accomplishments so that he is now a household word. And the first time I've seen Duncan Hunter so I knew what he looked like was on C-span today.

But I look at Mr. Hunter's list of accomplishments and I can't say that he deserves to be a household word.

I don't know when the American public's idea of qualification for being commander in chief and leader of the free world and President of the United States became so dumbed down that Barrack Obama is even considered to be more than a bad joke by the public. And when I think about the other Republicans who have been President, ... well, they had more accomplishments than having sponsored a border fence bill...

Eisenhower--5 star general who commanded the liberation of Europe

Nixon -- Senator, Vice President

Reagan-- Governor of California, in the trenches fighter against communists in the U.S. for decades(recommend the book Reagan's War)

George H.W. Bush -- Congressman, ambassador to the U.N., ambassador to China, head of C.I.A., Vice President

George W. Bush -- Governor of Texas with a list of accomplishments there, who had a lot of experience also being close to the center of power and learning how the world works as his father's confidante.

Actually our most qualified people for the top spot are Condi Rice and Jeb Bush and Rudy Giuliani.

That Condi and Jeb aren't running represents a victory of the MSM over us, and that should be our main topic of interest...how to stop the MSM from eliminating their opposition. We shouldn't have to be rummaging around in our third string to find a candidate.


292 posted on 02/13/2007 8:00:34 PM PST by patriciaruth (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1562436/posts)
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To: Hawthorn

I know Gov. Racicot - though not well - I have met him at several GOP events, and he is a native son of Montana.

I am glad to say you are incorrect! I do not know where you got the [erroneous] information, but...

MARC RACICOT served as Montana's governor from 1993-2001. He has roots that run very deep in Montana's colorful history. His ancestors came to the Montana Territory in the 1860's. Marc's grandfather arrived in Libby in 1917 to work as a logging camp cook in northwestern Montana for J. Neils Lumber Company. Marc Racicot was born to Bill and Pat Racicot on July 24, 1948, in Thompson Falls, Montana.

Marc grew up, first in Miles City and then in Libby. His parents opened their home to foster children, taking in nearly 50 youngsters over time and formally adopting two: Phillip and Aimee, to join Marc, Tim, Larry, Pat and Chris in their home on Larch Street.

Under the guidance of his father, a teacher and high school basketball and track coach, Marc was a starter on the Libby High School basketball team. During his senior year in 1966, Marc led the team to its first and only state basketball championship. Marc also played basketball in Helena for Carroll College. At Carroll, Marc was elected student body President and in 1970 set a record for most assists in a basketball game, 32. That record still stands.

While at Carroll, Marc worked summers for the Highway Department, mapping county roads and railroad crossings across the state. This gave Marc his first opportunity to see Montana corner to corner and to meet many individuals who remain good friends. During college, Marc also worked in the Capitol print shop and as a dishwasher, cook and line runner in the college cafeteria. He graduated in 1970 with a degree in English and later that year married Theresa Barber, a Carroll student from Big Timber, Montana. Soon after, Marc enrolled in the University of Montana Law School in Missoula, receiving his Juris Doctorate degree in 1973.

As an Army ROTC graduate, Marc was immediately assigned to the Judge Advocate General's Corps and stationed in West Germany where he served as chief prosecutor for the largest U.S. military jurisdiction in Europe. While there, he also managed to teach business and criminal law for the University of Maryland.

After three years, Marc was discharged from the Army as a captain, returning to Montana in 1976 where he became deputy county attorney for Missoula County. There, Marc established the Missoula Drug Treatment Program for people with substance abuse problems. In 1977, Marc became a state Assistant Attorney General, as well as Montana's first Special Prosecutor, handling major cases for county attorneys across the state. In 1980 he ran for chief justice of the Montana Supreme Court, but was unsuccessful. He also ran for district judge in Lewis & Clark and Broadwater counties in 1982 and 1984, respectively, but was also defeated.

From 1977 to 1988, Marc travelled across the state prosecuting scores of cases with a conviction rate of 95 percent. He lost only two cases in twelve years. One notorious case was State vs. Don and Dan Nichols, the "mountain men" convicted of abducting Kari Swenson, an Olympic athlete, and murdering a would-be rescuer.

Marc was elected Attorney General in 1988 and took office in January, 1989. He planned to run for re-election in 1992. However, Governor Stan Stephens (R) took ill and withdrew from the race. Marc sought the Republican nomination with Lieutenant Governor Dennis Rehberg, a Billings area rancher. After winning a hard-fought primary campaign, the men ran a successful general election race that led to a narrow 51 percent victory in November, 1992. Marc Racicot was sworn in as Montana's 20th Governor on Jan. 4, 1993.

In 1996, he sought re-election to a second and final term, with Judy Martz, a Butte businesswoman, as his running mate. On Nov. 5, 1996, they were overwhelmingly elected with 80 percent of the vote, the largest winning percentage for a Governor in Montana’s history and the largest winning percentage for any U.S. Governor in 1996.

As Governor, Marc sought to improve government efficiency and bring government services closer to its owners, the people. He favored reducing government wherever possible and eliminated two executive departments. The Governor's Office staff was reduced to about half of the staff it had in 1977.

After working with the Legislature to eliminate a $200 million deficit in 1993, the Racicot Administration helped produce a $22.4 million budget surplus in 1995. At the Governor's request, the Legislature approved refunding the money to state taxpayers as tangible proof the state kept its budgetary bargain with the people of Montana to live within its means.

Some of Marc's hobbies include running, carpentry and gardening. Marc has served on the Board of Directors of the Corporation for National Service and on the Board of Directors for United Way. He has been a member of the Board of Visitors of the University of Montana Law School and was a member of the Board of Trustees at Carroll College from 1989-1993. Marc and his wife Theresa have five children: Annie, Tim, Mary Catherine, Theresa Rose and Joe.

He is Constitutionally QUITE eligible, and eminently qualified as his bio suggests.

Not "end of story"...

RUN MARC RUN!!

AmericanArchConservative


293 posted on 02/14/2007 12:51:55 AM PST by AmericanArchConservative (Armour on, Lances high, Swords out, Bows drawn, Shields front ... Eagles UP!)
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To: AmericanArchConservative

> I know Gov. Racicot - though not well - I have met him at several GOP events, and he is a native son of Montana.

I am glad to say you are incorrect! I do not know where you got the [erroneous] information, but... <


If Gov. Racicot was born in the USA instead of Canada, then I was wrong. My sincere apology to the good gov and his fans.

[Probably I got him mixed up with another MT Governor. Was it Stephens?]


294 posted on 02/14/2007 7:34:14 AM PST by Hawthorn
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To: seanmerc
But, the second amendment is not about hunting. It is about the right of you and me to be secure in our homes. We must vigorously defend against all attempts to chip away at the Second Amendment. You know as well as I do that there is one thing criminals prefer over any other: unarmed victims.

Important as that is, the second amendment is not about protecting ourselves from criminals, except those criminals who are in government. Protecting our Liberty from government infringement is why the Constitution protects the right to keep and bear arms.

Of course the same arms can, and do, protect us from ordinary free lance type criminals as well.

295 posted on 02/24/2007 8:22:33 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: patriciaruth
Duncan Hunter is not exactly a household name.

Neither was William Jefferson Clinton at this time in 1991.

296 posted on 02/24/2007 8:46:43 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist
What did Hunter do about existing gun control laws when he was keeping a chair warm in Congress.

He voted for the repeal of the Assault weapons bill and against the Brady Bill. He had a 2006 A rating from the NRA and a 75% rating from GOA in 2005and 80 percent in 2003/2004. In 2000 and 2002 he had an A+ NRA rating. He got ratings of 0 from the Brady Bunch and the Coalition to Stop Gun violence.

Must have been doing something right to get those sorts of ratings.

297 posted on 02/24/2007 9:11:43 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: patriciaruth
Rudy has a record of accomplishment...cleaning up NYC and getting 600,000 off its welfare roles. He has also been tested under fire.

Hunter was an LT in the US Army, 69-71, and served in Vietnam, Airborne and Rangers. That was a job with plenty of tests, and a high mortality rate as well. Prior to the recent elections, he was Chair of the House Armed Services Committee, where hard decisions and lots of leadership is required.

I just went to his site, and discovered he's been endorsed by BG Chuck Yeager, USAF(ret), who is now a very vigorous 84 or so. That, along with what I already knew about him, is enough for me, he'd got my primary vote. (And unlike most politicos, he has an offspring currently serving in the military, a son in the Marines with two tours, so far, under his belt)

298 posted on 02/24/2007 9:38:57 PM PST by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: El Gato

Yes, I read about his record in Vietnam and his chairmanship.

I am very happy he is in Congress.

Be sure to donate a lot of money to his campaign and make up flyers to pass out, as I don't have the time or money this time around to support even someone I thought had a chance of winning.


299 posted on 02/28/2007 12:35:41 AM PST by patriciaruth (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1562436/posts)
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