Rick Perry vs. Barack Obama The campaign has begun
#321
Posted 2012-January-11, 17:22
The first campaign that I followed (1952) featured accusations that Stevenson was a Communist. Now it's that Obama was born in Kenya and is hatching a Muslim plot. These people are crazy, that's their excuse, but really how does Romney excuse going after someone for serving as an Ambassador?
#322
Posted 2012-January-11, 17:37
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#323
Posted 2012-January-11, 17:50
PS: I voted for Charlie Sheen.
#324
Posted 2012-January-12, 14:00
BunnyGo, on 2012-January-11, 04:56, said:
Huntsman Quietly Relieved To Be Polling Poorly Among GOP Voters
More seriously, Huntsman was very much unknown nationally before this campaign.
#325
Posted 2012-January-12, 15:56
cherdano, on 2012-January-12, 14:00, said:
More seriously, Huntsman was very much unknown nationally before this campaign.
That is funny. When I read the article, it wasn't immediately clear it was from "The Onion."
Wouldn't it be refreshing if a candidate actually thought along those lines.
#326
Posted 2012-January-12, 21:15
ArtK78, on 2012-January-12, 15:56, said:
Wouldn't it be refreshing if a candidate actually thought along those lines.
I play a game with my wife and brother where we will e-mail each other a couple sentences or paragraph from an article and ask "real" news or the onion?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#327
Posted 2012-January-13, 13:32
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It was a sequence of events that seemed to call into question certain commonplace Republican assumptions — that what’s good for Wall Street is good for America, that marginal tax cuts are a sufficient method of generating broadly shared prosperity, and that supply-side economics usually pays for itself. And many of the candidates for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination have made halting, tentative attempts to respond to these developments. Jon Huntsman has his plan to break up the big banks; Rick Santorum has his mix of family-friendly tax policy and industrial policy; Mitt Romney has his rhetorical emphasis on the middle class and his careful refusal to endorse the kind of upper-bracket income tax cuts that past Republican nominees have championed; and Ron Paul, of course, has his crankish master theory of the entire crisis.
Others, however, have campaigned as though nothing that’s happened in the last decade should alter Republican priorities in the slightest. In this view of things, there’s nothing wrong with the American economy that can’t be fixed by a budget-busting supply-side tax cut, a flat tax, or the combination thereof, and anyone who says differently is just stoking class warfare. This was Tim Pawlenty’s message during his short-lived presidential campaign; it was Herman Cain’s message during his brief 9-9-9-fueled rise to prominence; and it’s been the basic economic platform that both Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry have campaigned on for the last few months.
But even unacknowledged or denied, the reality of our economic situation — and the challenge it poses to certain conservative shibboleths — is too powerful to be buried completely. Which is why I’m not in the least surprised that it’s Gingrich and Perry who have led the charge against Romney’s record at Bain Capital, borrowing the laziest and most demagogic language of the left in a last-ditch attempt to derail the presumptive nominee. In the absence of a policy agenda that speaks to the interests of the beleaguered middle class and the insecurities of blue-collar America, they have fallen back on the rhetoric of, yes, class warfare, pillorying Romney as a wicked capitalist greedhead who enriched himself at the expense of the people Bain laid off. For men seeking the nominee of a party that champions free market capitalism, it’s an extraordinarily cynical gambit. But it’s also a deeply telling one: It suggests that the events of the past decade inevitably exert a profound pull even on politicians whose official platforms downplay their significance, and that conservatives who fail to respond intelligently to what should be a populist moment will inevitably end up responding mindlessly instead.
#328
Posted 2012-January-13, 14:49
y66, on 2012-January-13, 13:32, said:
Conservative Ross Douthat: Return of the Repressed
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#329
Posted 2012-January-13, 18:03
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And the hits just keep on coming...
#330
Posted 2012-January-13, 20:15
C'est dommage.
It's all a plot to get us to fondly recall Sarah Paling as the thoughtful candidate.
#331
Posted 2012-January-13, 22:48
His greatgrandfather had 5 wifes so I can understand the whole antigay marriage thingy. Gay marriage must lead to legal 5 wifes.
First a guy born in Kenya now a guy who is half French and half Mexican?
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btw I hear but did not confirm that Gingrich also speaks French and lived in France for two years.
Huntsman, chinese, and the list grows.
#332
Posted 2012-January-14, 01:33
George Carlin
#333
Posted 2012-January-14, 08:03
gwnn, on 2012-January-14, 01:33, said:
If Steve Colbert is to have any chance in this campaign he will have to Anglicize to Cole-Bert.
#334
Posted 2012-January-14, 09:59
kenberg, on 2012-January-13, 20:15, said:
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C'est la vie.
#335
Posted 2012-January-14, 11:48
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Gibney said he thought a provision requiring the candidates to use only state residents was unconstitutional, but none of the candidates had managed to collect the required 10,000 signatures. Only former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and Rep. Ron Paul (Tex.) qualified for the Virginia ballot.
Virginia, an increasingly important swing state, will hold its primary on Super Tuesday, March 6.
Virginia’s ballot-access rules, in place for four decades, are considered the toughest in the nation.
The rules might be too tough, but this failure doesn't speak well of the organizational skills of the candidates other than Romney and Paul.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#336
Posted 2012-January-14, 11:56
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Would a President Romney, along with a Republican Congress, cut taxes for the wealthy even more than he has pledged to do? Would he not try to balance the federal budget, even though he has said he would? Would he protect defense spending, as he has indicated he would?
I have no idea how Romney might behave in office. I do believe, however, that when he was running Bain Capital, his word was not his bond.
And I think that is his reputation as a presidential candidate as well.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#337
Posted 2012-January-14, 17:05
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In a related story, Gingrich warns of the dangers of check-writing.
#338
Posted 2012-January-15, 13:17
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#339
Posted 2012-January-17, 18:54
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#340
Posted 2012-January-19, 10:44
Winstonm, on 2012-January-17, 18:54, said:
And when that didn't work: Texas governor Rick Perry dropping presidential run
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And Newt can use a boost, as he keeps getting hit by the left-wing media: Marianne Gingrich talks to ABC's Brian Ross
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The sharing idea sounds zany to Mitt Romney, even though Mitt's grandfather had five wives.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell