Posted on 01/12/2016 7:51:54 AM PST by EveningStar
... Traditionally, candidates who have attracted strong evangelical support have in part emphasized the need to lend a helping hand to the economically stressed and the least fortunate among us. Such candidates include George W. Bush, Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum.
But Cruz's speeches are marked by what you might call pagan brutalism. There is not a hint of compassion, gentleness and mercy. Instead, his speeches are marked by a long list of enemies, and vows to crush, shred, destroy, bomb them. When he is speaking in a church the contrast between the setting and the emotional tone he sets is jarring.
Cruz lays down an atmosphere of apocalyptic fear. America is heading off "the cliff to oblivion." ...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
The crease of his pants must not be as nice as Obama’s.
LOL!
Could it be that Cruz knows the difference between Christian charity and liberal Socialism? One is about people having compassion for other people, and following the teachings of Jesus Christ. The other is about stealing money from people in the form of taxes, and calling the politically oriented practice of wealth redistribution charity. Liberalism doesn’t create charitable individuals. It creates thieving demographics.
Exactly. David Brooks is a fraud, pretending to be a conservative so he can blast conservatives and conservative values. He is scum and beneath contempt.
Exactly. David Brooks is a fraud, pretending to be a conservative so he can blast conservatives and conservative values. He is scum and beneath contempt.
True; they screwed up, but didn't show active contempt for the rule of law. Cruz doesn't have that excuse -- when the matter reached his office, it was an unambiguous obvious ironclad case of "the state has no legal basis for keeping this guy in prison as long as it has, much less continuing to hold him". It's like the difference between a judge issuing a search warrant based on a distant sighting of what appear to be a marijuana patch and cops who arrive and tear up the place even after becoming perfectly well aware that the vegetation in question actually consists of tomato plants -- the former needs to be advised to be more careful next time; the latter needs to have the book thrown at them.
Brutalism....is a term...used to describe a certains style of Architecture!!
According to wikipedia:
Brutalism as an architectural philosophy was often also associated with a socialist utopian ideology, which tended to be supported by its designers, especially Alison and Peter Smithson, near the height of the style. socialist utopian ideology, ...hmmm something the “writer” at the NYT would likely be familiar with.
Mr. Brooks? thanks for uh Sharing!!
Keerap, just keerap.
No he didn't. Ted Cruz was the Solicitor General of Texas at the time. In Texas, the Solicitor General works for the Attorney General. Greg Abbott, the Attorney General of Texas, is the one who filed the appeal. Ted Cruz was merely the Texas official who argued the case before SCOTUS. David Brooks is trying to fool us with a little misdirection. He's trying to lay the blame on Cruz, but at the time, Cruz was merely a medium-sized cog in the machinery.
Another problem with the David Brooks article is that he's trying to make people believe that Ted Cruz is the heartless brute who tried to keep an innocent man in prison. In fact, Michael Wayne Haley was a scumbag felon who discovered a small mistake in the court proceedings and tried to get his sentence overturned on a technicality.
During the penalty phase of respondent's trial, the State introduced records showing that respondent had been convicted of delivery of amphetamine on October 18, 1991, and attempted robbery on September 9, 1992. The record of the second conviction, however, showed that respondent had committed the robbery on October 15, 1991 - three days before his first conviction became final. Neither the prosecutor, nor the defense attorney, nor the witness tendered by the State to authenticate the records, nor the trial judge, nor the jury, noticed the 3-day discrepancy. Indeed, the defense attorney chose not to cross-examine the State's witness or to put on any evidence.
So because of the bizarre way the Texas law was worded, even though he had been convicted of two felonies before and this was his third strike, the second felony technically did not count because he committed the crime 3 days before he was convicted of the first felony. The Brooks article makes it seem like an innocent man was sitting behind bars, and that was not the case.
It's hard to find bad things to say about Ted Cruz. In this article, David Brooks tried and failed.
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