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Ohio SoS Brunner and ACORN

If it wasn't apparent already that corrupt Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner is, essentially throwing out all pretense to fairness in an effort to get Obama elected, her ties to ACORN cast away all doubt.
 
One of Brunner's consultants on her 2006 camapign, Karyn Gillette, one of the national directors of ACORN's voter registration arm, Project Vote, who has also been in contact with the Obama campaign, obtaining their donor lists.
 
Project Vote also advises Brunner on election strategy, which to the observer, appears to mean how to steal an election for your favorite candidate.
 
Is there an Recall Brunner campaign going on anywhere in this state? If so, where do I sign up? If not, how do we go about starting one? Can we get our state representatives involved in impeaching her?  The woman is a danger to democracy in the State of Ohio, and to the American way of life.
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Night of the Long Knives

A paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, the Sturmabteilung, better known as the Brownshirts, was created by Hitler in 1920. Their purpose was to stifle dissent, and create fear among  the German people. You know, to "get in the faces" of those who disagreed.  They were instrumental in the rise of to power of Hitler and the Nazi party.
 
Eventually, SA itself became problematic, attempting to usurp the role of the German Army, and threatening the ambitions of the leaders of both the Army and the Nazi Party. 
 
Hitler, seizing an opportunity to consolidate his power, order the leaders of an offshoot of the SA, the Schutzstaffel, better know as the SS, to arrest and execute the leaders of the SA.  In a three day period, known as the Night of the Long Knives, at least 85 people, and possibly hundreds, were executed.
 
So, what does this have to do with us, here, today?  Well, when Obama takes power, and all those Obamatrons who were taking to the street, "getting in our faces," leading their Dear Leader (Yes I know I'm mixing dictators, but it sounds better) to victory start looking  for him to back up his lofty rhetoric and high promises, why do they think he will treat them any better than Hitler did his thugs?  The Obamorons are going to end up (metaphorically, at least I hope) stabbed in the back and discarded as inconvenient.  Giving government more power NEVER ends up making the people better off. It leads to poverty and repression and the denial of the Rights we hold to be Self-evident.
 
With the Unholy Triumvirate of Obama, Reid and Pelosi running this country, things are going to get real scary, real quick.
 
 
 
 
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Obama Inauguration to be Pay-Per-View

A.P. Y.L. - October 29, 2008
 
WASHINGTON - Sources close to the Obama campaign revealed today that plans for the Obama Inauguration will include premium seats, on and near the podium,  premium press boxes, with and without electricity and internet access, and exclusive rights for Time Warner to broadcast the event on Pay-Per-View.
 
A spokesman for Time Warner states, "We will be offering three packages for our viewers to choose the amount of History they wish to experience.  Our White Package will sell for $19.95, and will include coverage of the Inauguration itself.  The Red Package will include the Inauguration, as well as the festivities prior to the event, costing $29.95. The total package, in Democratic Blue, will cost $59.95 and will feature not only these events, but coverage of the official Inaugural Ball, afterward. All purchasers of the Blue Package will receive a complimentary American Flag lapel pin, with the date January 20, 2009 engraved on the front."
 
Judy France, of the National Educators' Association, says the organization is strongly suggesting that all active members buy one of the packages for their classes.  " This is an amazing opportunity for teachers to give our children a chance to witness history," said France, adding, "Not only is the cost fully tax-deductible as a business expense, but it also helps a variety of worthy causes," referring to the Obama Campaign's pledge to donate a portion of the proceeds to the NEA, as well as the Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now (ACORN) and the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League (NARAL).
 
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Support the Fairness Doctrine

As evidenced by this study from the Project for Excellence in Journalism, and this study from the Center for Media and Public Affairs, the media is so in the tank for Obama, that if the "Fairness Doctrine" were to be invoked, it would most likely result in an increase in the number of positive stories on Conservative topics.
 
What with MSNBC being All Obama, All the Time, and CNN morphing into the Obama news network, we'd have to have an INCREASE in Conservative media, not less. 
 
ABC's Charles Gibson asked a very probing question of Obama tonight. He wanted to know what Obama would miss from the campaign trail, after the election.  Way to go, Charlie!  Next up, Obama: Boxers or Briefs.
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Riot: The Unbeatable High

Tomorrow, you're homeless, Tonight it's a blast
 
From what I hear, the authorities are expecting riots and unrest should The Obamessiah not fulfill his destiny, and be elected to sit at the Left hand of the Lord.  I'll go one further, and suggest that there will be rioting and unrest regardless of whether he wins or loses.  Some of the places that are expecting trouble have riots when their SPORTS TEAMS win a championship.  Why shouldn't the Coronation of The One result in anything less than full fledged anarchy?  After all, they will now have someone in the White House who won't expect them to clean up their own mess, but will find, most likely, some way to blame it on George W. Bush, and then have the Feds come in and rebuild. 
 
There's an old saying, "You don't (defecate) where you eat."  Let's tell those who would tear down their cities, and then expect us to pick up the rebuilding tab: "You Break It, You Bought It." No federal aid for cleanup. No Federal aid to the cities UNTIL they are cleaned up.  You want to burn down your house, and destroy the local businesses? Fine. Now you don't have a place to live, or  to buy food? Should have thought of that BEFORE YOU BURNT THEM DOWN.
 
If people want to be idiots, that's their business.  But I'll be damned if they are going to get be to pick up the tab.
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Judge to Berg: Constitution is Irrelevant

I have not read the full text of the decision, but I pulled this off of the Townhall news blurb.

"Surrick ruled that Berg lacked standing to bring the case, saying any harm from an allegedly ineligible candidate was "too vague and its effects too attenuated to confer standing on any and all voters.""

Now, I'm not arguing the merits of the case, not arguing the wisdom of bringing it in the first place, nor am I criticizing the result of the decision.

I do, however, have some issue to take with the wording presented here.

It seems to me that the judge is saying, in essence, that the Constitution, and the law are irrelevant in determining whether a candidate is ineligible for office.  I keep reading this over and over, and I can't seem to interpret it any way other than "The Constitution is irrelevant. Now sit down and shut up."

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Ohio SoS Brunner: Incompetent or Corrupt?

Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner is doing her utmost to ensure that all Ohioans, living, dead and imaginary have a chance to vote in this election.  She has fought attempts to verify voter registration, and allow for independent observers at polling places to help eliminate voter fraud. 
 
"Participation is the fullest measure of democracy,"  says her website. Well, then I suppose the guy from Cleveland who registered seventy-two (yes, seventy-two) times is really participating.
 
It appears to me that SoS Brunner's actions will result in the sort of chaos we last saw in Florida in 2000. This election may not be decided until the courts have once again had their say.  Maybe she should just skip all pretense, and declare Obama the winner right now.
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Troopergate: Biggest Piece of Caribou Crap Ever?

Well, the report on "Troopergate" is out.  No, not the Troopergate that had Bill Clinton's pants around his ankles, the one where Sarah Palin is accused of pressuring the head of the Public Safety Commission, Walt Monegan, to fire a scumbag State Trooper, who happened to be her ex-brother-in-law.
 
On the Huffington Post, (not the most impartial source of news in the nation), they've excerpted bits of the report, which basically say that Palin abused her power by doing what, legally, she was entirely correct and justified in doing.
 
It seems to me that the entire "scandal" is predicated on the fact that the Trooper in question was, at one point, a member of her family.  Did her family benefit from the firing?  I think the WHOLE State of Alaska benefitted.  The man was a disgrace to the uniform, and a danger to public safety. 
 
This whole situation smells like a stinking pile of Caribou crap.
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Racism, the Election and Crying Wolf

Every day, now, it seems that someone is crying racism, every time someone has the audacity to criticize Obama.
When Sarah Palin claims Obama is "Palling around with terrorists," referring to Bill Ayers, who is by the way, white, and an unrepentant terrorist, Palin is called racist for supposedly invoking the fear of Islamic terrorists.
 
 
Mccain is called racist for calling Obama "That one" during the debate.  I, personally, thought it was a little awkward, maybe "This guy" would have sounded a little better, but I certainly didn't think the words were synonymous with "Black guy."
 
And then, best of all, the Obamorons at that most moderate of sites, Democratic Underground, (Try to spend five minutes at that intellectual wasteland wothout having your head explode)  see Palin as a racist for wearing a white outfit, saying she "ought to put on a white hood and light up a cross."  They then go on to call her a despicable human being.
 
I don't like Obama's policies, I don't like the direction he thinks this country should go, and I think his associations, which, taken separately, might not be so troubling, give a picture, when taken as a whole, give a picture of a man with not much respect for the Constitution, the rights of the individual, nor the intelligence of the American People as a whole. 
 
In other words, as Joe Biden once said, I judge him, not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character. 
 
There is a story I heard as a child called "The Little Boy Who Cried Wolf."  I think this story would be helpful to the Liberals out there, if there are any out there capable of learning the lesson. 
 
It involves a little boy watching sheep in a pasture.  He gets bored with his job, and calls out "Wolf, Wolf!"  to watch the villagers come running out to save the sheep.  Of course, they get pretty angry when there is no wolf there, and go grumbling home.  Later, the boy does it again, and again, and fewer and fewer villagers come, as they stop believing the boy.  Finally, a wolf actually does come, and when he calls out, no one believes him, and all the sheep get eaten.
 
The moral of the story, obviously, is never buy a sheep farm.  But, beyond that, there is a lesson, that if you keep crying out imaginary threats, sooner or later, no one will be listening when there is a real threat.
 
Does anybody actually listen when Jesse Jackson cries "racism" anymore? Does anyone hear anything but a dull hum when Al Sharpton starts blathering on and on?  Has anyone actually heard a word Louis Farrakhan has said in the past twenty years?
 
By crying racism at every turn, these people numb us to the real thing when it actually happens.  Most of us live and work with people of different colors and ethnicities every day, and don't think anything about it.  We are trying to live in a color-blind world, but those who see racists behind every tree won't let us.
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Obama's Math Problem

I'm not sure how this adds up, but I took this chart directly off the Obama web page.
 
 
Impact of the Obama Tax Plan
WHO  
TAX CUT 
Married Couple Making $75,000 with two children, one of whom is in college 
$3,700
 [includes $1,000 Making Work Pay; $500 universal mortgage credit; and $4,000 college credit net of current college credits]  
Married Couple making $90,000
$1,000 
Single Parent making $40,000 with two young children and childcare expenses.
$2,100
[includes $500 making work pay; $500 universal mortgage credit, and $1,100 from Obama expansion of the child care tax credit] 
70-Year Old Widow Making $35,000
$1,900 

 
Now, I see how the single parent numbers add up to $2,100, and the other two have no breakdown at all, but for a married couple with two kids, one in college, how do they come up with that figure?  I'm no math major, but I am a math minor, and I can't see how it adds up.  How does what looks like $5,500 in tax cuts end up netting the taxpayer a credit for $3,700?  Does this work?  Can this be used for, say government contracts, say we contract for $90 million, but only pay $60 million? I guess now we know how Obama managed to pay $300,000 less than the asking price for his house.
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Obama Agrees: Biden Lied - Proof

The following is taken directly from Obama's Website. It is in the section on Iran, third bullet point.

Diplomacy:
Obama supports tough, direct presidential diplomacy with Iran without preconditions. Now is the time to pressure Iran directly to change their troubling behavior. Obama and Biden would offer the Iranian regime a choice. If Iran abandons its nuclear program and support for terrorism, we will offer incentives like membership in the World Trade Organization, economic investments, and a move toward normal diplomatic relations. If Iran continues its troubling behavior, we will step up our economic pressure and political isolation. Seeking this kind of comprehensive settlement with Iran is our best way to make progress.
 
No preconditions, Joe?
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Fannie and Freddie: What They Said - Check it out

Check out this Article for the October 2nd  Wall Street Journal:

House Financial Services Committee hearing, Sept. 10, 2003:

Rep. Barney Frank (D., Mass.): I worry, frankly, that there's a tension here. The more people, in my judgment, exaggerate a threat of safety and soundness, the more people conjure up the possibility of serious financial losses to the Treasury, which I do not see. I think we see entities that are fundamentally sound financially and withstand some of the disaster scenarios. . . .

[What They Said] AP

Clockwise from top left: Sen. Thomas Carper, Rep. Barney Frank, Sen. Robert Bennett, Rep. Maxine Waters, Sen. Chris Dodd and Sen. Charles Schumer.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D., Calif.), speaking to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Mel Martinez:

Secretary Martinez, if it ain't broke, why do you want to fix it? Have the GSEs [government-sponsored enterprises] ever missed their housing goals?

* * *

House Financial Services Committee hearing, Sept. 25, 2003:

Rep. Frank: I do think I do not want the same kind of focus on safety and soundness that we have in OCC [Office of the Comptroller of the Currency] and OTS [Office of Thrift Supervision]. I want to roll the dice a little bit more in this situation towards subsidized housing. . . .

* * *

House Financial Services Committee hearing, Sept. 25, 2003:

Rep. Gregory Meeks, (D., N.Y.): . . . I am just pissed off at Ofheo [Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight] because if it wasn't for you I don't think that we would be here in the first place.

[nowides]

Fannie Mayhem: A History

A compendium of The Wall Street Journal's recent editorial coverage of Fannie and Freddie.

And Freddie Mac, who on its own, you know, came out front and indicated it is wrong, and now the problem that we have and that we are faced with is maybe some individuals who wanted to do away with GSEs in the first place, you have given them an excuse to try to have this forum so that we can talk about it and maybe change the direction and the mission of what the GSEs had, which they have done a tremendous job. . .

Ofheo Director Armando Falcon Jr.: Congressman, Ofheo did not improperly apply accounting rules; Freddie Mac did. Ofheo did not try to manage earnings improperly; Freddie Mac did. So this isn't about the agency's engagement in improper conduct, it is about Freddie Mac. Let me just correct the record on that. . . . I have been asking for these additional authorities for four years now. I have been asking for additional resources, the independent appropriations assessment powers.

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Brian Carney of the Editorial Board on the hearings Congresspeople don't want to remember. (Oct. 2)

This is not a matter of the agency engaging in any misconduct. . . .

Rep. Waters: However, I have sat through nearly a dozen hearings where, frankly, we were trying to fix something that wasn't broke. Housing is the economic engine of our economy, and in no community does this engine need to work more than in mine. With last week's hurricane and the drain on the economy from the war in Iraq, we should do no harm to these GSEs. We should be enhancing regulation, not making fundamental change.

Mr. Chairman, we do not have a crisis at Freddie Mac, and in particular at Fannie Mae, under the outstanding leadership of Mr. Frank Raines. Everything in the 1992 act has worked just fine. In fact, the GSEs have exceeded their housing goals. . . .

Rep. Frank: Let me ask [George] Gould and [Franklin] Raines on behalf of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, do you feel that over the past years you have been substantially under-regulated?

Mr. Raines?

Mr. Raines: No, sir.

Mr. Frank: Mr. Gould?

Mr. Gould: No, sir. . . .

Mr. Frank: OK. Then I am not entirely sure why we are here. . . .

Rep. Frank: I believe there has been more alarm raised about potential unsafety and unsoundness than, in fact, exists.

* * *

Senate Banking Committee, Oct. 16, 2003:

Sen. Charles Schumer (D., N.Y.): And my worry is that we're using the recent safety and soundness concerns, particularly with Freddie, and with a poor regulator, as a straw man to curtail Fannie and Freddie's mission. And I don't think there is any doubt that there are some in the administration who don't believe in Fannie and Freddie altogether, say let the private sector do it. That would be sort of an ideological position.

Mr. Raines: But more importantly, banks are in a far more risky business than we are.

* * *

Senate Banking Committee, Feb. 24-25, 2004:

Sen. Thomas Carper (D., Del.): What is the wrong that we're trying to right here? What is the potential harm that we're trying to avert?

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: Well, I think that that is a very good question, senator.

What we're trying to avert is we have in our financial system right now two very large and growing financial institutions which are very effective and are essentially capable of gaining market shares in a very major market to a large extent as a consequence of what is perceived to be a subsidy that prevents the markets from adjusting appropriately, prevents competition and the normal adjustment processes that we see on a day-by-day basis from functioning in a way that creates stability. . . . And so what we have is a structure here in which a very rapidly growing organization, holding assets and financing them by subsidized debt, is growing in a manner which really does not in and of itself contribute to either home ownership or necessarily liquidity or other aspects of the financial markets. . . .

Sen. Richard Shelby (R., Ala.): [T]he federal government has [an] ambiguous relationship with the GSEs. And how do we actually get rid of that ambiguity is a complicated, tricky thing. I don't know how we do it.

I mean, you've alluded to it a little bit, but how do we define the relationship? It's important, is it not?

Mr. Greenspan: Yes. Of all the issues that have been discussed today, I think that is the most difficult one. Because you cannot have, in a rational government or a rational society, two fundamentally different views as to what will happen under a certain event. Because it invites crisis, and it invites instability. . .

Sen. Christopher Dodd (D., Conn.): I, just briefly will say, Mr. Chairman, obviously, like most of us here, this is one of the great success stories of all time. And we don't want to lose sight of that and [what] has been pointed out by all of our witnesses here, obviously, the 70% of Americans who own their own homes today, in no small measure, due because of the work that's been done here. And that shouldn't be lost in this debate and discussion. . . .

* * *

Senate Banking Committee, April 6, 2005:

Sen. Schumer: I'll lay my marker down right now, Mr. Chairman. I think Fannie and Freddie need some changes, but I don't think they need dramatic restructuring in terms of their mission, in terms of their role in the secondary mortgage market, et cetera. Change some of the accounting and regulatory issues, yes, but don't undo Fannie and Freddie.

* * *

Senate Banking Committee, June 15, 2006:

Sen. Robert Bennett (R., Utah): I think we do need a strong regulator. I think we do need a piece of legislation. But I think we do need also to be careful that we don't overreact.

I know the press, particularly, keeps saying this is another Enron, which it clearly is not. Fannie Mae has taken its lumps. Fannie Mae is paying a very large fine. Fannie Mae is under a very, very strong microscope, which it needs to be. . . . So let's not do nothing, and at the same time, let's not overreact. . .

Sen. Jack Reed (D., R.I.): I think a lot of people are being opportunistic, . . . throwing out the baby with the bathwater, saying, "Let's dramatically restructure Fannie and Freddie," when that is not what's called for as a result of what's happened here. . . .

Sen. Chuck Hagel (R., Neb.): Mr. Chairman, what we're dealing with is an astounding failure of management and board responsibility, driven clearly by self interest and greed. And when we reference this issue in the context of -- the best we can say is, "It's no Enron." Now, that's a hell of a high standard.

 
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A Question for Senator Obama

I  have a question for Senator Obama:
 
Mr. Senator,
 
You have said that you do not want your daughters "punished with a baby."  I'm curious.  Suppose, hypothetically, one of your daughters and my son had a liaison, which resulted in a "mistake," i.e. a baby.  Now, suppose your daughter decided she wanted to keep the baby, but my son wanted nothing to do with the child, again, hypothetically.  Would you expect child support from him?  If so, why should he be punished for a choice your daughter made?  Does he not have the right to use his own body as he see fit?  Why should he be forced to use his body to work to support a child that he doesn't want? 
 
Again, these questions are hypothetical, but I think it points out a dichotomy in the argument for abortion.  The mother has "choice," the father has none.
 
It is my belief, and I hope to instill it in my children, that every decision we make, good or bad, has consequences, and that we should take responsibilty for those actions.  As one who was adopted as a baby, I believe that adoption is a far better choice than abortion.  Abortion may be a choice, but it is rarely, if ever, a good choice.
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Must Read From Senator Tom Coburn, M.D. (R-OK)

I heard this today on Rush Limbaugh's show, and excerpted it directly from there.  I am looking for a copy of the full speech.  This should be a must read for every citizen of this country.  Every high school student. every college student, every member of Congress should be required to read and understand this. 
 
RUSH: You have to hear Senator Tom Coburn on the Senate floor late yesterday -- we have some sound bites here -- speaking about the $700 billion bailout.

COBURN:  We have a patient with cancer, and they have secondary pneumonia because of the cancer and we're going to treat the pneumonia.  But we're not going to fix the cancer.  We're gonna ignore the cancer.  Let me tell you what the cancer is.  The cancer is Congresses for years upon years have totally ignored the Constitution of the United States and taken to us areas where we have no business being.  There is no way you can justify in the US Constitution that the country ought to be the source of mortgages for homeowners in this country, and yet Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac control 70% of the mortgages in this country.

RUSH:  He then continued.

COBURN:  If anybody in America is mad about this situation, there's only one place they need to direct their anger, and it's right in the Congress of the United States.  What we're going to do is we're going to continue to treat the symptoms rather than directly go after the cause that has created the greatest financial risk and peril this country has ever seen.  We're not going after the cause.  The cause is get back within the bounds of the Constitution that very specifically says where we have business working and where we don't.  We decided that we would ignore the wisdom of our founders and create systems that are outside the enumerated powers that were given to us because we know better, we know better.  We don't know better, it is obvious.

RUSH:  This is Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn.  He finally said this.

COBURN:  This body continues to spend more, authorize more, and create bigger and more intrusive government, limiting the power of the great American experiment to in fact supply an increased standard of living.  We're in tough times, but they're going to get tougher until the American people hold this body accountable to live within the rules set out in a very wise, a very providential way that served this country well.  We ignore this book, this Constitution at our peril, we are reaping exactly what we have sown.

RUSH:  He's dead on about this and I would add to it here that what he recites is exactly what the American left wants.  They want the Constitution shredded.  They want government in charge of as much as possible.  This is not an accident that this willful disregard for the Constitution by people sworn to uphold it, it is not a coincidence this is happening.  

If I can find the whole speech, I will post it.
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