Originally posted by: yuppiejr
Originally posted by: Pabster
PokerGuy, Rush is right about the global warming snake-oil, and McCain buying in to it.
He's already said he wants to impose numerous restrictions on Detroit to improve fuel efficiency and stop global warming.
Rush was also right that the nomination of McCain will be the end of the Republican Party as we know it.
I'm a conservative and I'm completely disappointed with the inability of the Republican party to produce a single decent POTUS candidate this year.
Me too. I'm glad in the sense that it helps 'my side' have a better chance, but I'm worried that one of the two major parties has had really pathetic candidates.
At least they settled on the merely 'really bad' candidate, the best of the bunch compared to the simple disasters.
I'm also pretty unimpressed with what the Democrats have offered up, two inexperienced senators who's primary appeal to the voters is their race or gender tied to a vague "you can't do much worse" message to voters. At this point I plan to write-in my own candidate and for president and focus on donating and volunteering to help Michell Bachman retain her seat locally.
They offered up plenty of experienced white guys - Edwards, Kucinich, Biden, and others, but the voters didn't pick them. You might to to reconsider their only appeal is gender/race.
This Republican movement to the left ever since the Clinton administration to try and capture conservative democrats and/or undecided voters rather than sticking with the principals on which the party is founded has been a total flop (2006 should have been a wake up call). Reagan got it right when he dug in his heels and stuck to the core conservative Republican message, even when the press hammered him for it. His message resonated with the reclusive but numerous base in addition to a lot of conservative Democrats or undecided voters and re-energized the party in the 80's.
I see you're one of the Reagan revisionists, even if I do agree with you that he galvanized the right wing and moved the country to the right (that's a bad thing, IMO).
Were those core Republican policies of his when he greatly expanded government and set the nation on the road to the huge debt he started? Were they when he had a foreign policy that largely abandoned the nation's principles for liberty and human rights and illegally sold missile to Iran for hostages to fund a terrorist army in Central America and supported the death squads of right-wing Central American thugs? Were they when he was reckless with the marines invading Lebanon, then pulling out when they were bombed - one of the key events that persuaded Osama bin Laden, reportedly, along with Somalia that the US could easily be driven out of places with an attack? Was it his allowing people to increase government secrecy and reducing the oversight of the public? Was it his having a huge tax increase because the tax cut went too far (which I'd defend him on, but doesn't make him the poster child for digging in his heels as a conservative)? Was it his signing of the amensty for illegal immigrants?
Reagan was a disastrous president and very different than the revisionists paint him as.
He wasn't even all that popular in office; the impeached Clinton beats him there. But he is a fictionalized figure for Republican propaganda, much like the movies' fictional "Wild West".
I don't know why the modern Republican party leadership doesn't get it, but I expect the message will be pretty clear if November's election is the next Republican blood bath most of us are expecting. Just because the core Democrat platform seem to be pushing farther to the left doesn't mean the Republican base wants to move the same direction.
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The democrats are disappointingly moving to the RIGHT, from Bill Clinton forward - we lost a good chance with Kucinich and Edwards to put in place good policies.
Now the leading 'democrat' has a long record of being a *Wal-Mart* director and a pro-corporate attorney.
Perhaps the only thing clear now is that the righties and lefties will each be disappointed in whoever the next president is, if Obama doesn't win.