Democrats secret and not secret agents...
I've been depicting Fiorini as the perfect Democrat secret sleeper agent. That Is still more true than not. But it's only my opinion - well - not only. Now we find the second agent depicted by Mona Charon's column on Dec 9th. That's today!!!
She lays out her case in no nonsense straight forward terms. Question inow is how many of his approval number came from the left to begin with. Who? Trump the life long Democrat turned RINO. Who else as an opponent would bandaid the left back together?
http://townhall.com Mona Charon
The dictionary defines "bogeyman" as "an imaginary evil spirit, referred to typically to frighten children." Hello, Donald Trump. It's not clear whether he set out intentionally to elect Hillary Clinton, but there is little question that he could not be fulfilling the role of Republican bogeyman to greater effect.
As Commentary's Jonathan Tobin noted, during a week in which the disastrous fecklessness of President Obama and his party in the face of terrorism ought to have been Topic A, we are all talking about Trump instead. Brilliant. Tobin's point actually applies to the entire presidential contest. By rights, it should be about the Democrats' unraveling. From Obamacare to terrorism, from the economy to climate change, and from guns to free speech, progressive policies have proven deeply disappointing when not downright obtuse and dangerous. Clinton promises more of the same while trailing an oil slick of corruption in her wake. And yet swinging into the frame, week in and week out, the orange-maned billionaire bogeyman dominates the discussion.
Hell yes, Republicans are anti-Hispanic bigots, Trump (a lifelong Democrat) is supposed to confirm. Just look at the way he talked about Mexican "rapists" and vowed to build a wall that Mexico will fund.
Hell yes, Republicans want to fight a war on women. Did you hear what Trump said about Megyn Kelly and Carly Fiorina?
Hell yes, Republicans are anti-immigrant, anti-handicapped, anti-Jewish and anti-Muslim. Line 'em up and Trump will offend. Not cleverly, mind you, but crudely. Donald Trump is fond of saying that our political leaders are stupid, constantly outmaneuvered at the bargaining table by shrewder Chinese, Mexicans, and Japanese. No one can accuse him of stupidity: provided his goal is to elect Hillary Clinton.
This week, while we were still burying our dead from San Bernardino, every Republican -- rather than explaining why President Obama's refusal to fight the war on terror has led to this moment -- instead had to condemn Donald Trump's mindless proposal to keep every single Muslim out of the United States until further notice. Again, he's the perfect bogeyman.
It's not just that what he says demands condemnation. It's that it seems to give credence to the Democrats' narrative.
Personally when I listen to or read about Trump I'm reminded of the climb to power int he 20's and 30's of the last century by an ex German Army Corporal who also had a hair problem..on his lip.
She lays out her case in no nonsense straight forward terms. Question inow is how many of his approval number came from the left to begin with. Who? Trump the life long Democrat turned RINO. Who else as an opponent would bandaid the left back together?
http://townhall.com Mona Charon
The dictionary defines "bogeyman" as "an imaginary evil spirit, referred to typically to frighten children." Hello, Donald Trump. It's not clear whether he set out intentionally to elect Hillary Clinton, but there is little question that he could not be fulfilling the role of Republican bogeyman to greater effect.
As Commentary's Jonathan Tobin noted, during a week in which the disastrous fecklessness of President Obama and his party in the face of terrorism ought to have been Topic A, we are all talking about Trump instead. Brilliant. Tobin's point actually applies to the entire presidential contest. By rights, it should be about the Democrats' unraveling. From Obamacare to terrorism, from the economy to climate change, and from guns to free speech, progressive policies have proven deeply disappointing when not downright obtuse and dangerous. Clinton promises more of the same while trailing an oil slick of corruption in her wake. And yet swinging into the frame, week in and week out, the orange-maned billionaire bogeyman dominates the discussion.
Hell yes, Republicans are anti-Hispanic bigots, Trump (a lifelong Democrat) is supposed to confirm. Just look at the way he talked about Mexican "rapists" and vowed to build a wall that Mexico will fund.
Hell yes, Republicans want to fight a war on women. Did you hear what Trump said about Megyn Kelly and Carly Fiorina?
Hell yes, Republicans are anti-immigrant, anti-handicapped, anti-Jewish and anti-Muslim. Line 'em up and Trump will offend. Not cleverly, mind you, but crudely. Donald Trump is fond of saying that our political leaders are stupid, constantly outmaneuvered at the bargaining table by shrewder Chinese, Mexicans, and Japanese. No one can accuse him of stupidity: provided his goal is to elect Hillary Clinton.
This week, while we were still burying our dead from San Bernardino, every Republican -- rather than explaining why President Obama's refusal to fight the war on terror has led to this moment -- instead had to condemn Donald Trump's mindless proposal to keep every single Muslim out of the United States until further notice. Again, he's the perfect bogeyman.
It's not just that what he says demands condemnation. It's that it seems to give credence to the Democrats' narrative.
Personally when I listen to or read about Trump I'm reminded of the climb to power int he 20's and 30's of the last century by an ex German Army Corporal who also had a hair problem..on his lip.
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That assumes there is a vendor with an acceptable level of quality. In absence of which do without. I do not like Pepsi.. I like CocaCola. But when they dumped the original formula I dumped them. That left Royal Crown Cola or WalMart store brand. RC wasn't distributed where i lived so that left Walmart. Until I moved where WM wasn't sold that was my choice. Had none of it been available then Bubble Up or Upper 10 would have been next on my list.
That's the free market world.
As for political parties one does not improve them by voting for Pepsi. Actually Slice was the best ever made.....Pepsi killed them two strikes your out.
The logical course of action if the established brand becomes lame garbage and the possible replacements are lame garbage is don't vote for lame garbage.
If you insist on measuring with the yardsticks and definitions of the left your premises and therefore your conclusions will always be contradictions. If you don't like mine do as I did and come up with your own and apply it...see if it works...
If you wish to vote for dirt you will soon lose the chance to ever vote again. I'm not so sure that point hasn't been reached but I am sure you are for sure going to deserve what you asked for.
In the light of day words have meanings and words without action are meaningless.
Never vote again? I vote every day through the ballot box provided by this forum. And my None of the above will carry more weight no matter who sits in that oval office.
Cruz, Rubio and Paul have all cited Ayn Rand as an important influence on their economic thinking. I think she would likely support any one of them over Hillary or Bernie.
Republicans have controlled the House of Representatives and thus the purse strings since early 2011. Why is Obamacare still around and well-funded?
In Nevada, where I live, two of the last three Republican governors (to the delight of Democrats) have created the largest tax increases in the state’s history. Most of the money thus raised is destined to disappear into the sewer pits of “public education”.
I have voted Libertarian in every presidential election since 1972, and I see no reason to do otherwise in 2016 whether Trump is the Republican nominee or not.
There is only one logical consequence to that policy: support for some minor party (like the Libertarians,) which uniformly garners election returns in the single digit percentile, but frequently siphons enough votes away from (sometimes) worthy Republicans to hand elections goose-stepping Democrats. I will not go down that road, and submit that to do so is to actively abet the destruction of liberty.
If a large, established brand starts producing items of diminishing quality, the logical course of action is to improve the quality of those items, not throw one's support behind a lame garage start-up with a proven track record of failure and its own rash of quality problems. The analogy is not perfect - it is far easier to improve a product in the marketplace than it is to alter the intellectual composition of a political party - but I trust it's clear enough.
I do not and will not support Libertarianism, or any other minor party.
What part of that loaf is not rotten?
However since no other candidates are going to be allowed on the ballot it leaves you with choices. Vote left or vote left or a write in which under the winner take all rules accrues to the left or join the 35 to 50% who refuse to play the game. In effect not voting IS a vote of no confidence or a None of the Above vote.
Absent using some to destroy the others and I used the Carly/Bobby ticket as an example I have no choice but to not play the game.
Chane the thinking of an elected official when they are all rock solid Government Control People fanatics? Sure just like we've been doing for over half a century. Seen any change in thinking? Do they think? You know of course that socialism doesn't allow that. ...
So why are you supporting the left? Other than following the leftist mantra.
Trump isn't going to "make America great" with his Pragmatist rationales and juvenile persona. It is clear that individual rights are "negotiable" in his mind. His supporters are blind to this and do not tolerate these ideas in other candidates.
Until such a time, however, I'm going to see the political arena for what it is and vote accordingly. I'm not going to vote for spoilers because as I demonstrated with Huckabee, that's what allows the extremist Progressives to win. I don't buy the line that there can be paradigm shifts in politics where the populace suddenly all realize they've been duped and will see the error of their ways in one turning point in history. I believe that people must be educated bit-by-bit. They must be persuaded to act in their own logical interest rather than getting distracted by hucksters shilling free toys in exchange for control over their lives (SQUIRREL).
The Constitution is the standard, but getting back to it isn't going to happen in a day.
By their actions, the intent of both is to gain power for themselves by lying and stealing from the people. Evil, without doubt.
My use of Monroe was not to equate her with a politician, but to illustrate that Rand could be surprising and one shouldn't be too sure about what she might say or do.
I can't be more definitive than:
Don't Vote For Evil.
The major parties are really just the Devil and Lucifer. Two names for the same thing. They have both been consistent at lying and looting.
I didn't say abstain. I said don't vote for evil.
We give them the power. They can't get it without our consent (yet.) Don't consent. Don't agree to play the rigged game. If that means abstain, then abstain. If that means vote for a non-statist candidate, then do that. Either of those decisions retain your integrity and maintain your principles of rational philosophy and ethics. Voting for evil, either evil, does not.
Principles matter. Ethics matter. Don't consent to evil.
Siding with the Left? You cannot be serious. My point was that if you are so Objectivistly orthodox that you dislike all the candidates, you'll have to abstain from voting and leave the decision to primarily low information voters. I'm of the 1/2 a loaf is better than none. If half the loaf is rotten and you have no other choice, then cut away the rotten part. You can work to change the thinking of elected officials, but you cannot change the thinking of a non existent person.
I didn't say Fiorini was - I said could be....if she's not a socialist statist corporatist she's a socialist corporatist statist and besides she is a self confessed Democrat. Hardly puts her in any other category than an acceptable RINO and as such like the others she is part of the Government party....controlled by whom? Not the the lapdogs approved for 'also ran' status. her only value to the left is a counter to Hillary which helps Wasserman retain control of the DNC. Her only value to the Republicans is to be the token woman on the approved list of candidate wannabes.
they all by being Republicans or Democrats are in the 'government over people' side. nice for the socialists they have their own private slate and get to choose to acceptable candidates.
What's that got to do with the Constitution or the Citizens?
Nothing.
Trump, however, is a far more likely sleeper-Dem candidate. He waves off his donations to Democrats in the past as "business necessity" and he talks a provocative game, but I won't vote for him. He may rail on about border security and immigration (both of which his base stance - minus the bluster - I can get behind to a degree) and he talks tough about the Second Amendment, but I don't trust him to deal with the rampant cronyism in Government. His stance on Eminent Domain is enough to cause me to back away.
Jeb Bush and Chris Christie are just RINO's after the mold of most recent Republicans: Boehner, McConnell, Bush I and Bush II, and more. I can't wait til they drop out. I'd lump in Kasich here too.
I like Bobby Jindal. He led his state (Louisiana) through the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. He's been working to make his state more business-friendly while holding down government expenditures. I just think that he's going to have to wait a few more years to get name recognition.
I think the voters were initially enamored with Ben Carson because he was a non-Establishment player and he was black, but I think several of his recent media gaffes have hurt his stock and the polls are showing it. I think he'd make a great Surgeon General or Secretary of Health and Human Services (because I think he'd put himself out of a job), but I'm not convinced of his Executive credentials.
I'd vote for Rand Paul, but I don't think his campaign has the legs. I'd LOVE to see him as Secretary of the Treasury though!
I'd vote for Ted Cruz. I think he's the only one who has the political savvy to go head-to-head with Trump. I think he'd make a great Attorney General, too. Or Supreme Court Justice.
I just can't decide what to think about Rubio. His earlier stance on immigration and support for the Democrat's immigration bill pretty much poisoned the well for me, I think.
I'll never vote for Mike Huckabee. He's the reason we have Obama in the first place. In 2008, it was a four-way contest between McCain and Guiliani (RINO side of party) and Huckabee and Romney (evangelical side). When Guiliani bowed out, it only helped McCain. Huckabee only had support in two states, but insisted on staying in because of his hate of Romney as a Mormon, when all the polls showed that Romney would win head-to-head against Obama while McCain would lose. When Huckabee finally bowed out, it was only after several more states had been decided by the slimmest of margins in favor of McCain. The damage was done and McCain would go on to lose to Obama in the General Election as everyone knew he would.
As far as Rand Paul, I think he's very adept and that is why I no longer support him. Had he simply stuck to his beliefs I would have still been a supporter. But he started playing politics and he lost me. I so wish he had stuck to his values but then again, maybe he did and that is why he is not going anywhere in this election.
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