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Rudy must be stopped
World Net Daily ^ | 4/16/07 | Joseph Farah

Posted on 04/16/2007 9:09:11 AM PDT by Ol' Sparky

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To: Teacher317
he surely hasn't been very strong on much domestically for the last few years. I was hoping for better.

He's given us two conservative Supreme Court Justices, including the Chief Justice. That really will be Bush's legacy.

Try getting that out of a Madame President. Or an Obama president.

61 posted on 04/16/2007 10:20:04 AM PDT by Ole Okie
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To: zarf
No, the loons and morons are the "conservatives" that refuse to oppose a liberal Republican like Giuliani and back a conservative in the GOP primary.

It's no wonder liberalism keeps advancing when so many "conservatives" are so dumb and deluded as to think electing a liberal Republican will be beneficial in any way to conservatism.

62 posted on 04/16/2007 10:21:04 AM PDT by Ol' Sparky
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To: Ol' Sparky

I am R E A L L Y getting sick and tired of this fricken abortion issue. You keep posting this crap and people who were tolerant (me) are going to rebell!


63 posted on 04/16/2007 10:22:23 AM PDT by Fawn (http://www.hartzvictims.org/)
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To: Ol' Sparky
No, Joe, I most certainly will not take that pledge. Because "under no circumstances", by definition, includes "even if Hillary Clinton wins as a result". For reasons which should be as clear to you and to Freepers who remember the Clinton administration, of all people, as they are to me, that is completely unacceptable to me, and ought to be to you. Eight years of that delightful couple and their merry marauders was about nine years too many for myself and the country. Another term or two? Not on my conscience, thank you. No. No. Hell, no. Never. Absolutely not.
64 posted on 04/16/2007 10:23:18 AM PDT by RichInOC (I remember the Clinton years. Have you forgotten?)
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To: airborne
He may be many things, but conservative ain’t one of them.

If you're one of the folks who believes you have the power to decide who is 'in' and who is 'out' of the C club, then maybe you can't understand the real situation as it's happening here.

But Rudy is still a political conservative, even tho he disagrees with you about some issues.

65 posted on 04/16/2007 10:24:20 AM PDT by Dominic Harr (Conservative: The "ant", to a liberal's "grasshopper".)
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To: Dominic Harr
"Rudy is a 'conservative'. He's socially liberal, politically conservative."

Wrong. He claimed to be fiscally conservative , but is a fraudulent LIBERAL, since he advocates taxpayer funding of abortions.

66 posted on 04/16/2007 10:24:33 AM PDT by TommyDale ("Rudy can win the War on Terror!" Perhaps, but for whose side?)
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To: tumblindice
Cite?

The two big landslides in modern politics were Reagans -- done in large part with the help of 'Reagan Democrats' -- and the 96 'Contract with America' sweep.

Both were coalitions of politically C folks who agreed to avoid social issues.

The 'peasants with pitchforks' approach of "anyone who doesn't agree with me is a blankety-blank-blank liberal" has been tried, many times, here. It fails, every time.

You don't get to define who and what a 'conservative' is, I'm sorry. I didn't get any memo giving you that power.

67 posted on 04/16/2007 10:28:10 AM PDT by Dominic Harr (Conservative: The "ant", to a liberal's "grasshopper".)
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To: onyx
“Think Commander in Chief”

Of course you can vote for anyone you want as can I. If Rudy is the nominee, I’ll vote third party.

Regarding the CIC thing though, consider this:

1. Hilary, as the first female president is going to want to prove she has more balls than any male president... If she were soft in time of war, she would be the last woman president for the next 100 years. She’s got to know that.

2. If, as a female democrat president she decided that she wanted to bomb Syria, or Iran or even Saudi Arabia, who would oppose her? I would suggest that she would have more freedom to do this than a republican.

I, for one, am not concerned about her as a CIC. It’s the liberal social issues that mean more to me.

68 posted on 04/16/2007 10:29:44 AM PDT by babygene (Never look into the laser with your last good eye...)
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To: Ol' Sparky

The same king-makers who pushed Bush down our throats are the same who are pushing what’s-his-name upon us. What Bush will not be able to accomplish (in giving our country away) in the few months (but long months) he has left, they have lined up Rudy to finish the job. That is why we are reading that he is winning in every pole to make us believe he will be the next moron…I mean president.

For those who are of a Spanish cultural background, there is a saying here in Panama: We are going from Guatemala to Guatepeor. The play on words is in the last four letters of each word.

Regards.


69 posted on 04/16/2007 10:30:14 AM PDT by Gatún(CraigIsaMangoTreeLawyer)
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To: Dominic Harr

Name 10 Republicans to the left of Giuliani.

You can’t. He’s a liberal.


70 posted on 04/16/2007 10:31:27 AM PDT by Politicalmom (Better a democrat with an energized opposition than a leftist “Republican” with no opposition.)
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To: Dominic Harr

I understand perfectly.

I’m the type of guy who makes a decision and then says what he thinks.

I gave you my opinion, which is no more right or wrong than yours. You have your opinion and I have mine.

And you saying he’s a conservative,or Rudy saying it, does not change the fact that I, and many others, strongly disagree.

Perhaps it it you who can’t understand the real situation.


71 posted on 04/16/2007 10:31:56 AM PDT by airborne (Freedom is worth fighting for !! And I'm in a fighting mood !! HUNTER 2008 !)
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To: Dominic Harr

Are you saying Reagan Democrats were not socially conservative?


72 posted on 04/16/2007 10:32:28 AM PDT by Politicalmom (Better a democrat with an energized opposition than a leftist “Republican” with no opposition.)
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To: TommyDale
He claimed to be fiscally conservative , but is a fraudulent LIBERAL, since he advocates taxpayer funding of abortions.

Bolding letters may indeed give you more authority in some circles -- but again, I never got a memo declaring you as the sole decider of who and what a 'Conservative' is.

Rudy's stance makes perfect sense, from a politically C standpoint.

73 posted on 04/16/2007 10:35:44 AM PDT by Dominic Harr (Conservative: The "ant", to a liberal's "grasshopper".)
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To: zarf; Jim Robinson

I guess I’m a “loon”, too.

What do you think, Jim?


74 posted on 04/16/2007 10:37:26 AM PDT by Politicalmom (Better a democrat with an energized opposition than a leftist “Republican” with no opposition.)
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To: Politicalmom
Name 10 Republicans to the left of Giuliani.

On political issues like taxation, regulation, budgets???

I can name dozens.

Now if you mean 'social' issues, if you're unable to recognize the difference, then perhaps I see your error.

75 posted on 04/16/2007 10:38:17 AM PDT by Dominic Harr (Conservative: The "ant", to a liberal's "grasshopper".)
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To: Ol' Sparky

“Purity over Victory!”


76 posted on 04/16/2007 10:38:47 AM PDT by Tarnsman
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To: Dominic Harr
Rudy is a 'conservative'. He's socially liberal, politically conservative.

What an idiotic statement. Giuliani isn't conservative by ANY definition.

Illegal immigration/Immigration Immigration politics have similarly harmed New York. Former mayor Rudolph Giuliani sued all the way up to the Supreme Court to defend the city’s sanctuary policy against a 1996 federal law decreeing that cities could not prohibit their employees from cooperating with the INS. Oh yeah? said Giuliani; just watch me. The INS, he claimed, with what turned out to be grotesque irony, only aims to “terrorize people.” Though he lost in court, he remained defiant to the end. On September 5, 2001, his handpicked charter-revision committee ruled that New York could still require that its employees keep immigration information confidential to preserve trust between immigrants and government. Six days later, several visa-overstayers participated in the most devastating attack on the city and the country in history.

New York conveniently forgot the 1996 federal ban on sanctuary laws until a gang of five Mexicans—four of them illegal—abducted and brutally raped a 42-year-old mother of two near some railroad tracks in Queens. The NYPD had already arrested three of the illegal aliens numerous times for such crimes as assault, attempted robbery, criminal trespass, illegal gun possession, and drug offenses. The department had never notified the INS.

Source: Heather Mac Donald

CNN clip:

Announcer: "Back in 1996, mayor Giuliani went to federal court to challenge new federal laws requiring the city to inform the federal government about illegal immigrants."

Rudy Giuliani: "There isn't a mayor or a public official in this country that's more strongly pro immigrant than I am. Including disagreeing with President Clinton when he signed an anti-immigration legislation about two or three years ago."

The New York Immigrant Coalition Press Release, August, 1989:

Rudy would continue to make city services available to all immigrants, regardless of immigration status.

Prohibit city workers from reporting undocumented immigrants to the INS, unless criminal activity is involved….

Make sure that city workers understand what benefits immigrants are entitled to….

Encourage outreach to immigrant communities to encourage their utilization of city services….

Support the use of interpreters and translators in city government

Support bilingual and bicultural education with goals of learning fluent English and maintaining native language skills….

Oppose making English the “official language” of the U.S.

Support adding alienage to protected class under City’s Human rights Law.

Additionally, he has supported Bush's guest worker program.

Guns

CNN clip

Rudy Giuliani: "I'm in favor of gun control"

Meet The Press:

Tim Russert: "How about registration of all handguns?"

Rudy Giuliani: "You know I'm in favor of that. I've been on your show many times."

As mayor of New York City, Rudolph W. Giuliani became the favorite Republican of gun control advocates. He spoke in favor of a licensing system for gun owners that would require trigger locks and firearms training, and he lobbied Congress to outlaw most military-style assault weapons. He was the only Republican mayor to join a lawsuit by dozens of cities against the gun industry, and he complained that Southern states had lax gun laws that fed the illegal weapons trade in the Northeast.

Abortion

As mayor, Rudy Giuliani will uphold a woman's right of choice to have an abortion. Giuliani will fund all city programs which provide abortions to insure that no woman is deprived of her right due to an inability to pay. He will oppose reductions in state funding. He will oppose making abortion illegal. New York Times, August 4, 1989

Giuliani said in a speech back in 1989: “There must be public funding for abortions for poor women,” Giuliani says in the speech that is posted on the video sharing site YouTube. “We cannot deny any woman the right to make her own decisions about abortion.”

Leaflets distributed by the Giuliani campaign .... said that he opposes restrictions to Federal Medicaid financing for abortions and opposes the Hyde Amendment, which is intended to deny support for that financing. New York Times, June 18, 1993.

On Partial Birth Abortion: Mr. Giuliani has said that New York State law should not be changed to outlaw the procedure. New York Times, January 7, 1998

"I'm pro-choice. I'm pro-gay rights,Giuliani said. He was then asked whether he supports a ban on what critics call partial-birth abortions. "No, I have not supported that, and I don't see my position on that changing," he responded." -- CNN.com, "Inside Politics" Dec 2, 1999

"I never called for the overturning of Roe vs. Wade." Rudy Giuliani, New York Newsday, September 1, 1989

On Parental notification, Giuliani says he's for it now. But read this excerpt from a New York Times article written last month:

"On a 1997 candidate questionnaire from the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League of New York, which Mr. Giuliani completed and signed, he marked ‘yes’ to the question: Would you oppose legislation ‘requiring a minor to obtain permission from a parent or from a court before obtaining an abortion.’”

As these comments from a 1989 conversation with Phil Donahue show, Rudy Giuliani is staunchly in favor of abortion:

"I've said that I'll uphold a woman's right of choice, that I will fund abortion so that a poor woman is not deprived of a right that others can exercise, and that I would oppose going back to a day in which abortions were illegal.

I do that in spite of my own personal reservations. I have a daughter now; if a close relative or a daughter were pregnant, I would give my personal advice, my religious and moral views ...

Donahue: Which would be to continue the pregnancy.

Giuliani: Which would be that I would help her with taking care of the baby. But if the ultimate choice of the woman - my daughter or any other woman - would be that in this particular circumstance [if she had] to have an abortion, I'd support that. I'd give my daughter the money for it."

From the FEC database: 04/24/1999 Donations

NEW YORK STATE NARAL INC WOMEN'S HEALTH PAC

NARAL donated exclusively to Democrat candidates with one exception----Rudy Giuliani.

Giuliani accepted $1,000 from NARAL in 1999.

NARAL gave $250 to Hillary Rodham Clinton.

NARAL gave $1000---4 times as much-----to pro-abortion Giuliani.

The homosexual agenda

Giuliani said homosexuality is "good and normal." quoting Ray Kerrison New York Post, July 7, 1989

According to the New York Times, Giuliani has attended every “gay pride” parade in New York during his eight years as mayor. In 1992, during his first run for mayor, Giuliani took part in a homosexual “pride” parade that included a contingent of pedophile activists marching behind a banner for NAMBLA (North American Man/Boy Love.

On Gay Domestic Partnership: "I have no objection to the concept of domestic partnership," said Rudy Giuliani on Informed Sources New York T.V. Show (PBS), May, 1992

On Gay-Rights/Gay Rights Bill: Giuliani favors extended civil-rights protection for gays and lesbians. Giuliani urged, by letter, to the New York Senate Majority Leader to pass the state's first ever gay rights bill, but did it privately. "I am writing to convey my support for the current legislation to prohibit discrimination against gays and lesbians, and to urge you to allow the bill onto the floor of the Senate for prompt action." ".......It is my belief that we can penalize discrimination [against gays] without creating any potentially objectionable special privileges or preferential treatment." New York Post, June 5, 1993

Judical appointments

A Politico review of the 75 judges Giuliani appointed to three of New York state's lower courts found that Democrats outnumbered Republicans by more than 8 to 1. One of his appointments was an officer of the International Association of Lesbian and Gay Judges. Another ruled that the state law banning liquor sales on Sundays was unconstitutional because it was insufficiently secular.

A third, an abortion-rights supporter, later made it to the federal bench in part because New York Sen. Charles E. Schumer, a liberal Democrat, said he liked her ideology.

Cumulatively, Giuilani's record was enough to win applause from people like Kelli Conlin, the head of NARAL Pro-Choice New York, the state's leading abortion-rights group. "They were decent, moderate people," she said.

Source: Ben Smith, The Politico, 3/1/07

One judge approved by Giuliani, Rosalyn Richter, had been executive director of a gay rights organization, Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, before being named to the bench. After her initial appointment by former Mayor David N. Dinkins, Richter changed the questions asked of potential jurors to be more welcoming to gay and lesbian couples. She was later reappointed by Giuliani.

Another judge, appointed by Giuliani to the criminal bench in 1996, Dora Irizarry, has called herself pro-choice and was later elevated to the federal bench with strong support from Democratic Sens. Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York.

A family court judge reappointed by Giuliani, Sheldon Rand, was excoriated on the conservative-leaning New York Post editorial page last week for ruling that city funds be used to pay for a sex-change operation for an indigent New York resident.

And a fourth judge, Paula J. Hepner, appointed initially by Dinkins in 1995, issued a ruling that allowed a lesbian to adopt her partner's child. Four years later, Giuliani reappointed Hepner to New York's family court bench. Hepner was subsequently married to another woman in a ceremony in Canada.

Source: om Hamburger and Adam Schreck, Los Angeles Times, 3/12/07

Global Warming

"I do believe there's global warming, yes. The big question has always been how much of it is happening because of natural climate changes and how much of it is happening because of human intervention. The overwhelming number of scientists now believe that there is significant human cause." -- Rudolph Giuliani, Feb. 12, 2007.

Taxes

---"Over the objections of a furious Mayor Giuliani and city legislators from both parties, the New York state legislature has abolished the New York City commuter tax. The action, done to apparently affect a local legislative race in suburban Rockland County, could cost New York City $360 million. NPR's Margot Adler reports."--- NPR Report

---"Let's face it: Rudy Giuliani argued for the reinstatement of the tax,..."--- NY Sun report

[Giuliani] says ruling out a tax increase is "political pandering." Newsday, August 31, 1989

"When I ran for Mayor both times, I was asked very, very often to do the following:

Pledge that you will never raise taxes. I refused to do that. Pledge that you will lower taxes. I refused to do that." -- Rudy Giuliani, New York Times, October 25, 1994

Mr. Giuliani criticized Mr. Pataki’s proposal to cut taxes as “a shell game” that would hurt everyone in the state… -- New York Times, October 30, 1994

Government spending

Mr. Giuliani said the surplus from the current fiscal year, which ends on June 30, is projected to be $856 million, a record amount caused largely by higher-than-expected tax revenues from robust profits on Wall Street. He said for the first time that he wanted to use $99 million of that money to help the city adapt to the new strict Federal welfare rules by paying for child care, job training and other programs.

Source: New York Times, Clifford Levy, 5/9/97

Giuliani allowed spending to increase significantly faster than inflation during four of his last five years in office - and another big increase was in store for fiscal 2002 before the World Trade Center attack forced the city into an austerity mode.

Source: FISCALWATCH MEMO July 20, 2004

Not all that well. According to New York's Independent Budget Office, total budgeted expenditures grew from $31.8 billion in 1995 (Rudy's first budget year) to $44.6 billion in 2003, an increase of 40.3%. By comparison, the inflation rate from January 1995 to January 2003 was 20.89% according to this inflation rate calculator. Thus, New York City's spending under Rudy grew at a rate twice that of inflation.

Perhaps the biggest difference is on fiscal issues. Giuliani, who lost interest in curtailing the growth of city government in his latter years, left behind a fiscal catastrophe—a $6.4 billion deficit proportionately bigger than the hole that caused the 1975 fiscal shortfall. --- Jacob Weisberg, Slate magazine 2/21/07

Mr. Clinton is enthusiastic, and in August 1997 uses his tool for the first time to strike down a special-interest provision tucked in a bill. That provision gives New York hospitals a unique right to bilk extra Medicaid money, and the veto is expected to save federal taxpayers at least $200 million. Quicker than a Big Apple pol can say "pork," New York officials sue, challenging the line item veto's constitutionality. That suit, Clinton v. City of New York, goes all the way to the Supremes, which in 1998 put the kibosh on veto authority. The kicker? The guy who brought the suit and won--or, rather, the guy who helped stall one of the more powerful tools for reining in government spending--was none other than former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Source: Kimberly Strassel, Wall Street Journal, 4/14/07

School Choice

We’re going to see increased calls for privatization and for vouchers for private and parochial school education. Alternatives which in my view will weaken if not create the collapse of the New York City public school system…. I believe the voucher system in New York City would be very, very troublesome. Our system is so large that making that kind of transition would pose tremendous difficulties. Not to mention the constitutional and legal difficulties that would be entailed in providing tax relief and tax dollars for religious education.

Rudy Giuliani

Speech to Wharton Club,

New York Times, August 15, 1995

Giuliani himself was on record as repeatedly opposing a voucher system. As a candidate in 1993, he had told United Federation of Teachers’ President Sandra Feldman that he believed vouchers were “unconstitutional.”

In May 1995, he told a UFT conference that “vouchers would bleed the public schools of needed funds.”

In a speech to the Wharton Club in August 1995, the mayor declared, “Vouchers would weaken, if not create the collapse of the New York City public-school system.”

But by January 1999, Giuliani, facing term limits, was seriously thinking about running for the Senate in 2000. His advisers and pollsters were telling him that if he switched his position on vouchers, it would help him with Catholic voters upstate, and the national Republican Party.

So he slipped a favorable reference to a voucher plan into his state of the city address that month.

According to Wayne Barrett’s definitive Giuliani biography, Rudy!, following this voucher’s reference, the mayor told an alarmed Crew, “Don’t worry about it. It’s just a political thing, a campaign thing. I’m not going to do anything. Don’t take it seriously.”

The Full Rudy, pp. 52-53

"He doesn't support tuition tax credits and vouchers." Sandra Feldman, President of N.Y.C. Teacher's Union, 1993

Minimum Wage

"I favor increasing the minimum wage." -- Rudolph Giuliani, 2/6/00, CNN Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer.

Price Controls

Giuliani to Lobby to Save Rent Control (May 24, 1997)

The Tenant/AP ^ | May 24, 1997 | staff

NEW YORK -- Mayor Rudolph Giuliani says he will go back to Albany next week to push to keep rent controls on more than 1 million apartments, and to urge Republican leaders to come around to his position.

``I believe that we should continue rent stabilization and rent control,'' the mayor said. ``I will continue to oppose'' their elimination.

On McCain-Feingold

"For example, on campaign finance reform, I'm a very, very strong supporter of Campaign Finance Reform. A very strong supporter of McCain-Feingold for a long, long time now." -- 2/6/00, CNN Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer.

Disregard for Constitutional Rights

Mayor Giuliani routinely disregarded the First Amendment as he rejected requests for information from news organizations and civic groups and opposed public access to city hall steps and parks for demonstrations. "Freedom is about authority," Giuliani said, responding to critics in 1998. "Freedom is about the willingness of every single human being to cede to lawful authority a great deal of discretion about what you do and how you do it."

War on Terror

Giuliani Defends Clinton on 9/11 Efforts

FOX News ^ | 09/27/2006 | Matt Sedensky

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani defended Bill Clinton on Wednesday over the former president's counterterrorism efforts, saying recent criticism on preventing the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks is wrong.

Political bickering over which president _ Clinton or George W. Bush _ missed more opportunities to prevent the attacks has been escalating since Clinton gave a combative interview on"Fox News Sunday"in which he defended his efforts to kill Osama bin Laden.

"The idea of trying to cast blame on President Clinton is just wrong for many, many reasons, not the least of which is I don't think he deserves it,"Giuliani said in response to a question after an appearance with fellow Republican Charlie Crist, who is running for governor."I don't think President Bush deserves it. The people who deserve blame for Sept. 11, I think we should remind ourselves, are the terrorists _ the Islamic fanatics _ who came here and killed us and want to come here again and do it."

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice challenged Clinton's claim that he did more than many of his conservative critics to pursue bin Laden, and she accused the Democrat of leaving no comprehensive plan to fight al-Qaida.

Giuliani said he believed Clinton, like his successor, did everything he could with the information he was provided.

"Every American president I've known would have given his life to prevent an attack like that. That includes President Clinton, President Bush,"the former mayor said."They did the best they could with the information they had at the time."

77 posted on 04/16/2007 10:40:12 AM PDT by Ol' Sparky
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To: Politicalmom
>>>>>Name 10 Republicans to the left of Giuliani.
You can’t. He’s a liberal.

Excellent point.

If anyone wants to have a better understand of who Rudy Giuliani really is, I suggest they think of Joe Lieberman. Both men are on equal liberal footing.

78 posted on 04/16/2007 10:41:14 AM PDT by Reagan Man (FUHGETTABOUTIT Rudy....... Conservatives don't vote for liberals!)
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To: babygene
Thanks for being honest. We’re a two major party system. It’s an either/or decision, which means it’s sometimes more about voting against the democrat than it is about voting for the Republican, but like you said, you’re entitled to cast your “feel good vote” just as I am entitled to cast my pragmatic vote.

I’m grateful the other side also has their “feel good” voters -— Naderites handed 2000 in Florida to GWB.

79 posted on 04/16/2007 10:41:30 AM PDT by onyx (DEFEAT Hillary Clinton, Marxist, student of Saul Alinsky & ally and beneficiary of Soros.)
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To: airborne
And you saying he’s a conservative,or Rudy saying it, does not change the fact that I, and many others, strongly disagree.

It's just that out here, in the real world, words are useful cuz they mean things to the people we're talking to.

And many, many folks feel that 'politically conservative' means 'a conservative use of govt power'.

Careful. As in 'I spend my money conservatively'. Rudy is a C by that definition.

So when you are talking to one of us, and you say, "Rudy is a liberal", we think, "gosh, you have no idea what you're talking about".

What you *mean* to say is "Rudy is a social liberal!".

Many (most?) political conservatives say, "well, govt shouldn't be interfering in social things".

So the peasants with pitchforks idea of "anyone who doesn't agree with me is a blankety-blank-liberal" is a 100% failure every time it's tried.

80 posted on 04/16/2007 10:44:53 AM PDT by Dominic Harr (Conservative: The "ant", to a liberal's "grasshopper".)
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