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Privatizing Social Security – Another Good Reason not to Vote Republican in 2012

According to the Associated Press (AP) most of the current crop of Republican Tea Party (GOTP) hopefuls running for president are embracing plans to partially privatize Social Security, reviving the very contentious issue that thankfully fizzled under former President George W. Bush. If there was no other reason to oppose the election of any of the crazy eights, this would be enough – however, there’s a lack of other reasons as well; but his will do for now.

President Obama’s would-be rivals are fanatical on letting younger workers divert part of their payroll taxes into some type of personal account to be invested separately from Social Security. Key phrase “being invested” which brings us the GOTP candidate’s true motivation; lining the pockets of Wall Street contributors – who always want more, and who are willing to pay for it.

Michele “Krazy” Bachmann and Ron Paul say younger workers should be allowed to invest in alternative plans, while the Reverend Ricky Perry says that whole groups, such as state and local government workers, should be allowed opt out of Social Security altogether.

The AP is reporting that Mittens Romney says the stock market collapse in 2008 shouldn’t scare workers away from investing in private accounts, but acknowledges it’s an issue.

“Given the volatility of investment values that we have just experienced, I would prefer that individual accounts were added to Social Security, not diverted from it, and that they were voluntary,” he wrote in his book, “No Apology.”

Thankfully Progressives and Moderates alike don’t share this “privatize everything” version of the Brave New World under GOTP leadership. They say it would drain resources from the more than 50 million people who now receive benefits, and of course raising the privatization issue could likely give Democrats a potent political weapon.

“We’ll fight that fight anytime,” said Congressman Sander Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees Social Security. “Bad policy is usually terrible politics, and that’s terrible politics.”

Levin is more than likely right, there is a large voting block of seniors in this country and their rolls fill with more and more voters with every presidential election; the GOTP likes to reason that business can handle everything this country needs, from its prison system to its retirement payouts; how long before some would be GOTP candidate suggests police forces and the military should be privately run as well? Wouldn’t that be great, officers and soldiers swearing an oath to some investment house instead of the Constitution?

 
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Posted by on September 17, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Cheering anyone’s death isn’t Chrisitan – or American

In a world where Republican Tea Party (GOTP) audiences cheer loudly for capital punishment and for hypothetical patients being allowed to die because they don’t have health insurance, one has to suppose this same generation would have cheered the deaths of three Roman criminals convicted and sentenced to die on Golgotha.

One can almost hear Governor Pontius Pilate giving his justification for so many executions – including that of a Rabbi from Galilee – during his tenure as Roman Governor of Judea.

“In the province of Judea, if you come into our province and you kill one of our children, you kill a Roman soldier, you’re involved in another crime and you kill one of our citizens, you will face the ultimate justice in the province of Judea, and that is, you will be executed.”

When asked about the cheering at the mere mention of the many executions he has overseen, Pilate probably would’ve replied.

“I think Romans understand justice.”

Well, 235 people have been executed in Texas under Rick Perry, and those were his words during the recent GOTP debate at the Reagan Library (of course province of Judea was used in place of Texas, Roman soldier for police officer and Pilate for Perry), the same debate where the crowd cheered its loudest of the night when the total number of executions was mentioned.

While I support capital punishment, especially for those convicted of murder, I don’t think it’s appropriate to cheer someone’s death/execution.

But such is life in the conservative America of today. These good old American Christians – if that’s what they are – shouldn’t be cheering anyone’s death. We may celebrate heroes who give their lives in the defense – or in the saving – of others; but we don’t cheer.

Those on the right who think it’s appropriate to cheer at the mention of 234 people executed; or who cheer at the imaginary or hypothetical death of someone with no health insurance, aren’t Christians; they’re barbaric animals. They’re not Americans; they’re some kind of historical throwback; a group belonging in the crowds of the gladiatorial games of Pilate’s time. They’re of course the natural evolution of people who’ve been daily fed on a non-stop diet of hate and fear by the uber-conservatives in this country (FOX PAC, Bush/Cheney, Limbaugh, Hannity et al).

What’s particularly revealing is not one of the fine and noble candidates on the debate stage said the cheering was wrong; not one of them exhibited the same courage John McCain showed during the 2008 campaign when he corrected people in a crowd shouting lies about his opponent; in not doing so, they proved – once again – that they’re not – in the least respect – presidential.

 
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Posted by on September 16, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Latest 2012 Presidential Polls (12 Sep 11 Edition)

The tenth anniversary of the 9-11 attacks has come and gone without another attack, and here are the most current 2012 presidential election poll numbers.

CNN/Opinion Research conducted a poll from 9 to 11 Sep 11 on who would be the Republican/Tea Party (GOTP) nominee if it all ended today:

Perry 30, Romney 18, Palin 15, Paul 12, Cain 5, Gingrich 5, Bachmann 4, Santorum 2 and Huntsman 2 …

Reverend Ricky Perry’s lead over Mittens is widening, with the Ice Queen polling in third – GOTPers must not care she isn’t running, or the FOX viewers don’t know any better? Paul is running in the fourth spot, with the Pizza Man and Newt polling fifth, while Krazy continues to plummet out of sight, barely leading Santorum and Huntsman; I think it’s safe to say Bachmann – who was never in it – is now going, going, going …

In Iowa – according to Rasmussen (always dubious poll results) – Perry holds first place with 29; Bachmann moves to 18, Mitt 17; Paul 14; Cain 4, Santorum 4, Huntsman 3 and Gingrich 2…

In New Hampshire – Magellan Strategies: Mitt 36; Rev Ricky 18; Paul 14; Krazy 10; Cain 3, Huntsman 3 and Gingrich 2…

According to NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl poll conducted 27 – 31 Aug 11, if the general election were held today:

President Obama 47/Perry 42

President Obama 46/Romney 45

According to this latest poll everyone else is passé:

President Obama /Bachmann

President Obama /Cain

President Obama /Paul

President Obama / Palin

President Obama /Gingrich

President Obama /Huntsman

President Obama /Santorum

So, if the GOTP nomination circus – and the general election – had both ended this week Reverend Ricky would be the GOTP candidate, and he would have lost by five (5) points to President Obama.

 
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Posted by on September 12, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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As Bachmann’s star begins to plummet?

Republican Tea Party (GOTP) wannabe Michele “Krazy” Bachmann’s presidential star is plummeting faster than it rose, so, what to do; what to do?

I know! Go back to Iowa! They love her there!

“We know that when Michele is in Iowa, she wins,” said Bachmann’s Iowa campaign chairman, Kent Sorenson. “If she’s here, she’ll win Iowa.”

Of course, but what about all the other primaries after that, all the ones you have to win to take the nomination? It’s time to realize that as presidential candidates, and as presidential campaigns go, you guys suck. It’s time to pack up your circus tent and go back to your shabby little congressional office.

Face it boys and girls, Krazy’s been eclipsed by someone even more crazy, and more right-wing and more appealing to the uber-conservative evangelical voters of the Tea Party; she’s been eclipsed by the Reverend Ricky Perry’s travelling prayer fest and secession tour.  She no longer holds the interest of her base. Uber-conservative evangelicals don’t want a woman for president if they can have a man any more than they want a black man in the White House. They want their women submissive and in the kitchen, not in the Oval Office. Krazy was an anomaly, and then Reverend Ricky came along; a person with the same crazy message but who was a man.

As Dandy Don used to sing at end of Monday Night Football games, “Turn out the lights, the party’s over …”

 
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Posted by on September 9, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Why I can’t vote Republican

I’ve been asked why I couldn’t vote Republican, well – if the election were held today – here are my reasons why I couldn’t vote for the current crop of Republican Tea Party (GOTP) presidential candidates:

Michele Bachmann – why would I vote for an uber-conservative evangelical candidate who is certifiable and who makes wild claims and then denies she made them? She hasn’t said one thing I agree with or could ever agree with.

Hermann Cain – won’t vote for a racist, and yes his views on Islam are racist.

Newt Gingrich – He’s a typical “family values” conservative;  had an affair while persecuting President Clinton for having an affair; told his wife he was divorcing her to marry his mistress while she was undergoing chemo therapy for cancer; claimed he had his affairs because he loved America too much.

Jon Huntsman – Wants to end Obamacare; wants to cuts taxes to corporations and the wealthiest 2%. Millions of Americans now have health care but Huntsman wants to eliminate that; can’t support that, much less supporting tax cuts to the wealthiest 2%; it’s time for the wealthy to pay their share, if not some back interest as well.

Ron Paul – He’s a kook; says he would do away with FEMA, enough said …

Rick Perry – no one who ever said secession was a viable answer for a state should be president. We don’t need a red neck deciding our country’s domestic and foreign policy. His desire to repeal the 16th and 17th Amendments are two more reasons not to mention his wild idea that Social Security is a Ponzi scheme …

Mitt Romney – Flip flops every other day; changes his mind depending who he’s talking too; he has a used car salesman feel; claims to be a job creator, but while governor of Massachusetts his state ranked 47th out of 50; he bought American businesses and chopped them up and sold them to the highest bidder – he took away people’s jobs while adding millions to his private fortune; runs from his faith … Corporations are not people Mitt …

Rick Santorum – Another uber-right wing candidate who makes wild statements and in particular his stern view on abortion, and homosexuality. Ricky claims, “Its murder, no matter what the circumstances. Doesn’t matter if it’s incest, or rape, doesn’t matter if the victim is eleven years-old.”

The Republican Tea Party, and its policies, has become something I can’t support, and quite frankly can’t conceive of any situation where I would ever do so.

These candidates don’t represent what’s best in America, they represent what’s worse.

They represent an America Ronald Reagan wouldn’t recognize, and a party where the Gipper wouldn’t be welcome; Reagan would be a Democrat today.

They represent racism, lying, hurtful aspects of America …

They represent an America where people applaud and cheer wildly when 234 people have been executed in Texas …

They don’t worry about facts they just make stuff up- they lie …

They represent a far-right form of Christianity that doesn’t recognize the Christ …

They represent the wealthiest among us while grinding down the poorest ..

They are not what’s good for America.

 
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Posted by on September 8, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Perry supported Clinton’s healthcare plan?

Republican Tea Party (GOTP) presidential wannabe Reverend Ricky Perry is calling ObamaCare “the closest this country has ever come to outright socialism” and in his political manifesto, Fed Up Ricky claimed the individual mandate was, “a total outrage;” he’s also declared if – God forbid – he was elected President he would use an executive order to repeal or block as much of ObamaCare as he possibly can.

This is all very interesting, but during the Clinton presidency Ricky wrote a letter to First Lady Hillary Clinton saying, “I think your efforts in trying to reform the nation’s health care system are most commendable.”

Ricky also asked Clinton to “give particular attention to the needs of the nation’s farmers, ranchers, agriculture workers, and other members of rural communities,” noting that many of them were uninsured and faced shortages of healthcare services. “Again,” Perry wrote in conclusion, “your efforts are worthy…. Please do not hesitate to contact me if I can be of any assistance.”

Perry spokesman Dave Carney defended the Reverend’s letter stating, “You need to read the letter. He praised her efforts in trying to tackle the issue and urged her not to overlook rural Americans. The letter was at the onset of her efforts before she proposed anything. No one could have imagined the horrible monstrosity she cooked up, in fact not to be outdone until ObamaCare years later.”

Carney needs to go back and read history about the 1992 campaign, if he did he would discover that then candidate Clinton was not shy on pushing for an individual mandate, a single payer program; so, either Carney is ignorant of the facts or he’s a liar. Perry knew full well what kind of healthcare program Hillary Clinton would be looking to implement.

Ricky however is also pleading the case of ignorance telling Sean Hannity he was clueless as to what the ultimate outcome of Clinton’s healthcare task force was, “I didn’t want them collectively to overlook a very important constituency. I had no idea that was going to be the end product. What I thought they were truly going to work towards was trying to reform healthcare, and we had no idea, and then now we’ve got ObamaCare.”

Reverend Perry – like his spokesman – is either ignorant to facts of history or he’s a bald faced liar; I think it’s the latter.

 
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Posted by on September 7, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Perry’s call for rain brings fire to Texas?

On 21 Apr 11, Republican Tea Party (GOTP) presidential aspirant, the Reverend Ricky Perry issued an official “Proclamation for Days of Prayer for Rain in Texas”; isn’t it interesting that since that gubernatorial edict was issued drought stricken Texas has received little to no appreciable rain, while Tropical Storm Lee dropped major rain in the neighboring state of Louisiana. Adding insult to injury, winds from Lee have fanned wildfires across Texas.

Clearly, the Lord doesn’t recognize Reverend Ricky’s authority to issue proclamations for days of prayer in His name.

Maybe He wasn’t happy with the company Ricky kept at his prayer fest?

Maybe Perry should have asked Romney or Huntsman to issue the proclamation?

Maybe God’s pointing out there’s a clearly defined separation between Church and State in America and politicians shouldn’t blur the lines to score political points prior to jumping into a presidential race?

 
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Posted by on September 7, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Is Bachmann anti-Catholic?

Texas Governor, and Republican Tea Party (GOTP) hopeful Reverend Ricky Perry is an uber-conservative evangelical Christian, as is Michelle “Krazy” Bachmann. What’s the big deal? Well, there’s a little tradition – as proscribed in the Bill of Rights and eloquently explained by Thomas Jefferson – we have here in the United States known as the separation of Church and State.

What’s alarming about the two “evangelical” candidates is that the evangelical faith believes Mormons – such as Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman – and Catholics; particularly Roman Catholics – like Marco Rubio – aren’t Christian. In fact some evangelicals call the Pope anti-Christ.

So far, Rev Ricky hasn’t had to face scrutiny over his “faith”, but Krazy hasn’t fared as well, of course when you wear your religion on your sleeve and make comments like hurricane Irene and a recent earthquake were God’s judgments on DC, well you’re going to get asked questions.

For instance, during a recent GOTP debate Bachmann was asked to explain a statement she made during her 2006 congressional campaign when she said she submits to the authority of her husband, and she was asked – quite correctly – to explain whether, as president, she would submit to her husband’s authority. Krazy replied that to her, submission means that she and her husband respect each other.

Of course, that’s not what “submission” means; in fact in no definition of the word does it come even remotely close to meaning equal, or “respect for each other”; it’s the oft repeated mistake of the far-right candidates thinking they can say whatever they want to whatever audience and that no one will ever remember or dare question them about it.

But wait, that’s not all, it seems various news agencies have recently reported Bachmann’s former church, which she left right before announcing her candidacy; the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod said on its website that the papacy is the anti-Christ. Now, while most Lutherans – such as the Lutheran World Federation – have dropped any hint of doctrinal condemnation, Krazy’s group – the Wisconsin Synod – has not.

Bachmann has insisted she was not anti-Catholic. But wait just a minute; President Obama was practically crucified for his association with the Rev Jeremiah Wright, with conservative talking heads – Limbaugh, Hannity et al – decrying how if Wright gave allegedly anti-American sermons in his meetings that had to have rubbed off on candidate Obama; and extending that same logic, if Krazy’s congregation was anti-Catholic was – and maybe is – she not anti-Catholic as well?

Or is this another case of uber-conservative Christian candidates thinking they can have their cake and eat it too? We’ll condemn President Obama by association, but not Bachmann? And when will anyone start questioning Perry’s ties to so-called “Christian” groups who are vehemently anti-Gay as well as anti-Mormon, anti-Islam, anti-Jew and anti-Catholic? Does America really need an uber-conservative evangelical Christian in the White House?

Joseph Smith Jr., founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) would no doubt be very uncomfortable with such an idea as he once proclaimed, “We do not believe it just to mingle religious influence with civil government, whereby one religious society is fostered (in the current 2012 case, evangelical Christians) and another proscribed in its spiritual privileges (everyone else), and the individual rights of its members, as citizens, denied.”

There’s little doubt that an evangelical dominated America would be an America where the rights of other faiths – particularly Islam – would be restricted, and certainly all other faiths would similarly find themselves on the outside looking in; more so, it will little serve America to have someone as President who is “submissive” to her husband, nor to have another far-right Texas Christian claiming to be doing God’s will as he bombs another Islamic nation. A candidate who subscribes to any faith that belittles or condemns other faiths does not belong in the Oval Office – period.

 
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Posted by on September 4, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Huntsman’s Crazy?

Republican Tea Party (GOTP) presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman is quoted by the Associated Press (AP) as saying his fellow GOTP presidential candidate’s criticism of climate change skepticism is “not a winning formula” for the GOTP in 2012, and that his opponents in the presidential primary are dead wrong in their willingness to let the US default on its debt.

ABC’s This Week on Sunday, Jake Tapper asked Huntsman about his shots at the Reverend Ricky Perry’s contention that evolution is “a theory that’s out there,” but not a sure thing, nor is the idea of climate change. After Perry had made his remarks, Huntsman reportedly tweeted, “To be clear. I believe in evolution and trust scientists on global warming. Call me crazy.”

Tapper asked, “Were you just being cheeky or do you think there’s a serious problem with what Governor Perry said?” Huntsman’s response: “I think there’s a serious problem. The minute that the Republican Party becomes the party – the anti-science party, we have a huge problem. We lose a whole lot of people who would otherwise allow us to win the election in 2012.”

But Huntsman is the lone voice of reason calling out against the far-right lunatic Christian fringe of the party which has taken control, and his comments are absolutely on target; the GOTP does have a huge problem, and becoming the party that dismisses science as wrong while embracing evangelical Christianity’s teachings as absolute simply makes a lot of Americans nervous, and seriously blurs the line between the separation of Church and State.

Huntsman further said, “When we take a position that isn’t willing to embrace evolution, when we take a position that basically runs counter to what 98 of 100 climate scientists have said, what the National Academy of Science – Sciences has said about what is causing climate change and man’s contribution to it, I think we find ourselves on the wrong side of science, and, therefore, in a losing position….I can’t remember a time in our history where we actually were willing to shun science and become a – a party that – that was antithetical to science. I’m not sure that’s good for our future and it’s not a winning formula.”

When describing the GOTP presidential field’s indifference toward the prospect of default and their ability to handle the economy he was less complimentary, “Well, I wouldn’t necessarily trust any of my opponents right now, who were on a recent debate stage with me, when every single one of them would have allowed this country to default. You can imagine, even given the uncertainty of the marketplace the last several days and even the last couple of weeks, if we had defaulted the first time in the history of the greatest country that ever was, being 25 percent of the world’s GDP and having the largest financial services sector in this world by a long shot, if we had defaulted, Jake, this marketplace would be in absolute turmoil. And people who are already losing enough as it is on their 401(k) s and retirement programs and home valuations, it would have been catastrophic.”

Huntsman is an old-time Republican, a Reagan style Republican running for the nomination of a party that wouldn’t nominate the Gipper if he were alive today. He isn’t the pandering fool his opponents are, and unfortunately, while it makes him an honest guy, it will undoubtedly cost him any hopes of winning the nomination.

 
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Posted by on August 21, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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Huntsman Attacks Other GOTP Candidates?

The Associated Press (AP) is reporting that Republican Tea Party (GOTP) presidential candidate Jon Huntsman is going on the attack against the other GOTP candidates saying the U.S. is a “center-right” country politically and the public is “crying out for a sensible middle ground”.

Huntsman – who has no chance of being the GOTP nominee – says his Republican rivals as well as President Barack Obama are on the political “fringes.” Huntsman says Obama is too liberal and there are Republican candidates who are too far to the right and have “zero substance.”

Huntsman let loose with his sharpest barbs at Reverend Ricky Perry and Michele “Krazy” Bachmann.

Huntsman said Ricky was wrong for expressing skepticism about manmade global warming and for criticizing the nation’s central banker. “I think when you find yourself at an extreme end of the Republican Party, you make yourself unelectable,” he said in interview, on ABC’s “This Week.”

Huntsman also attacked Krazy’s ridiculous claims she could bring gasoline prices below $2 if elected president. “I just don’t know what world that comment would come from. … That is completely unrealistic. And, again, it’s talking about things that, you know, may pander to a particular group or sound good at the time, but it just simply is not founded in reality.”

You go Jon! Wow, a GOTP candidate who has to tell the truth about his opponents in order to get press time, and isn’t afraid to say he’s a moderate – of course in the Tea Partista reality that is today’s GOTP that’s as good as the political kiss of death.

Huntsman continues to speak optimistically about his chances in 2012 in spite of lagging poll numbers, “I’m confident we’re getting there. But I’m even more confident that the message that we bring to this race, that of a center-right message for a center-right country that is looking for common-sense solutions and a leader who’s actually been there and done that in the marketplace and can apply those same principles now to a nation that so desperately needs it.”

Of course saying your optimistic about a campaign that so far is polling no better than 1 or 2 % may be equated to the Captain of the Titanic saying there was still a good chance of making into New York after hitting the ice berg; of course it’s possible – I suppose – for the front runners to all eventually appear too conservative – even to Republicans – and Huntsman could squeak it out – well not really, but we’ll give Huntsman the optimistic edge for now.

 
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Posted by on August 21, 2011 in 2012 Election

 

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