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Showing posts with label republican. Show all posts
Showing posts with label republican. Show all posts

Monday, January 30, 2012

How Much More Disrespect Does The President Have To Take...Enough is Enough.


One prominent conservative talker is admitting what conservatives are really thinking.

Llimited resources versus barack obama who i saw last night wow a huge crowd in washington at this big dinner. i mean, a bunch of us sitting next to each other, very prominent conservatives, former bush cabinet members , we're looking at each other going, i don't know if mitt romney can beat him.

So prominent conservatives are scared. now they are doing what they do best when they're scared. playing ugly politics. here's the head of the republican national committee , reince priebus.

In a few months, this is all going to be ancient history and we're going to talk about our own little captain scatino who is president obama abandoning the ship here and is more interested in campaigning than doing his job as president.

Comparing the president to a man charged with manslaughter? a man charged with this reckless cruise ship disaster where 17 people died and 16 are still missing. and here's tea party freshman alan west in florida over the weekend.

Take your message of equality of achievement, take your message of economic dependency, take your message of enslaving the entrepreneur will and spirit of the american people somewhere else. you can take it to europe. you can take it to the bottom of the sea. you can take it to the north poll, but get the hell out of the united states of america . yeah, i said hell.





Read More http://video.msnbc.msn.com/politicsnation/46196697#46196697

Friday, January 27, 2012

Ron Paul Words Come Back To Bite Him In The Butt.


Ron Paul, well known as a physician, congressman and libertarian , has also been a businessman who pursued a marketing strategy that included publishing provocative, racially charged newsletters to make money and spread his ideas, according to three people with direct knowledge of Paul’s businesses.

The Republican presidential candidate has denied writing inflammatory passages in the pamphlets from the 1990s and said recently that he did not read them at the time or for years afterward. Numerous colleagues said he does not hold racist views.

But people close to Paul’s operations said he was deeply involved in the company that produced the newsletters, Ron Paul & Associates, and closely monitored its operations, signing off on articles and speaking to staff members virtually every day.






Read More http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ron-paul-signed-off-on-racist-newsletters-sources-say/2012/01/20/gIQAvblFVQ_story.html?tid=sm_twitter_washingtonpost



Thursday, January 26, 2012

Rich Republican is Not Paying His Child Support.


Maybe Republicans aren’t immune to the baby-daddy/child support epidemic after all.   Rep. Joe Walsh, the congressman who has lectured the Obama Administration on financial irresponsibility is himself a bit sloppy when it comes to both money and his children.

Walsh owes over $100,000 in child support payments, according to his ex-wife.   Laura Walsh says that she had not received child support payments from the five year period from 2005 to 2010 for any of the three children they have together.  Walsh’s Congressional seat pays him a salary of $174,000 per year.




Read more http://yourblackworld.net/2012/01/black-news/family-values-republican-allegedly-owes-100000-child-support/

Monday, January 23, 2012

Congressman call President Obama " Tar Baby". Wtf.


For some members, yes. But others won’t be attending the president’s annual address to Congress at all.
Denver’s Fox 31 reported Monday that Rep. Doug Lamborn, a three-term Republican congressman from Colorado, will not attend the State of the Union.

The station reported that, according to Lamborn’s office, the congressman “does not support the policies of Barack Obama,” including the president’s recent recess appointments and his administration’s rejection of the Keystone XL oil sands pipeline.

Lamborn last made headlines in August, when he compared the idea of working together with Obama to “touching a tar baby.”


    Read More http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/2chambers/post/republican-lawmaker-doug-lamborn-of-colorado-to-skip-state-of-the-union/2012/01/23/gIQAanVrLQ_blog.html?wprss=rss_linkset&tid=sm_twitter_washingtonpost


Sunday, January 22, 2012

House Speaker cries foul before even hearing what he has to say.


House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Sunday panned as "pathetic" the 2012 agenda President Barack Obama plans to roll out Tuesday in his State of the Union address.

Boehner said he already "read a lot about what the president is going to talk about Tuesday night and it sounds to me like the same old policies we've been seeing: more spending, higher taxes, more regulations -- the same policies that haven't helped our economy. They've made it worse."

"If that's what the president is going to talk about Tuesday night, I think it's pathetic," the speaker said on "FOX News Sunday."




Read more http://www.myfoxmemphis.com/dpps/news/boehner-calls-obamas-agenda-pathetic-dpgonc-km-20120122_17291814?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Friday, January 20, 2012

Black House Niggaz pick their white savor


With four Republican candidates left in the presidential race, each giving his all in the countdown to the South Carolina primary on Saturday, the GOP electorate is still up for grabs. And despite the persistent "Mitt Romney is inevitable" narrative, for many Republican voters the nominee is anything but a foregone conclusion.

The Root spoke with five prominent black conservatives -- the former chair of the Republican National Committee, a civil rights activist, a former mayor of Cincinnati, a talk-radio host you may remember as the guy who begged John McCain to "take it to Obama" at a town hall in 2008, and a writer and actor best known for his role as Denise's husband on The Cosby Show -- to see which choices they're leaning toward. If their varying, but mostly undecided, outlooks on the race are any indication, this primary season could stretch out quite a bit longer.



Friday, January 13, 2012

Republicans want to go back to the days of slavery



Melissa Harris-Perry, an MSNBC contributor soon to host her own show, said that Republican presidential candidates in South Carolina are subtly appealing to a "segregationist past" that predates the Civil War. South Carolina's Democratic Party Chair took the more restrained position that Gov. Nikki Haley, R, and the Tea Party merely want to return to the "Jim Crow" policies from the period after slavery ended.

Harris-Perry accused Republican presidential candidates who campaign on the 10th Amendment of sly racism. "States' rights becomes a cover for talking about the ability to remove the rights of some American citizens," she said on MSNBC's Politics Nation. Al Sharpton had asked her why Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich have praised the 10th Amendment, and compared this presidential election to the 1860 campaign.
"But I think they also like 1860 because -- remember that back then it was the Republican Party who were the champions of the union," she added. "If they go back to the 1860s, they can lay claim to the segregationist past, but claim that they were above the fray." Harris-Perry distinguished the party of Lincoln from "the new-fangled Republican Party" of the 1960s and 1980s.

Dick Harpootlian, chairman of the South Carolina Democratic Party, agreed, saying that Tea Partiers in his state were pushing Jim Crow policies. "This is Jim Crow -- we're going backwards in this state, and not forward, and that's because of [South Carolina Governor] Nikki Haley and the Tea Party folks that don't want to try to convince folks of color to vote for their candidates," he said, in criticism of voter ID laws.

When the truth comes out, Rick show true colors.


Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum denied recently making comments about "black people's lives" after receiving criticism for the remarks.

Santorum took heat after saying, "I don't want to make black people's lives better by giving them somebody else's money." During an appearance on FOX News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor," he denied ever making the comments, saying the remark was the result of "a little bit of a blurred word."

"I looked at that, and I didn't say that," Santorum told O'Reilly. "If you look at it, what I started to say is a word and then sort of changed and it sort of -- blah -- came out. And people said I said 'black.' I didn't."
The GOP hopeful touted his past help of black colleges to further defend himself against criticism over the claims.

"And I can tell you, I don't use -- I don't -- first off, I don't use the term 'black' very often. I use the term 'African-American' more than I use 'black," Santorum said. "I can tell you as someone who did more work for historically black colleges, I used to have -- every year, I used to bring all the historically black colleges into Washington, DC to try to help them, because they get very little federal money through the bureaucracy, and so I help to try to introduce them to people in the Department of Education so they could have more resources."
Santorum also got defensive over his presidential run less than a day after he took a close second place at the 2012 Iowa Caucuses, saying this campaign "isn't my first rodeo."

"I've been in a lot of tough campaigns in Pennsylvania," Santorum said when asked if he is "ready to be demonized."

"We're going to have resources," Santorum said. "We're going to be a much bigger player than I think everybody anticipates right now."


see the statement for yourselfhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgLMghcPDVs&feature=player_embedded