Archive for June, 2009

Understanding The Obama Agenda

It has been a couple days since my last post as I have been driving from North Carolina to California. Aside from the time I have to spend with my wife while traveling, driving all day for 3 days straight is not my favorite thing to do! I was able to find some time to post this article on Obama’s African Colonialism and will try to expound more later, but for now, this should suffice.

Had Americans been able to stop obsessing over the color of Barack Obama’s skin and instead paid more attention to his cultural identity, maybe he would not be in the White House today. The key to understanding him lies with his identification with his father, and his adoption of a cultural and political mindset rooted in postcolonial Africa. Like many educated intellectuals in postcolonial Africa, Barack Hussein Obama, Sr. was enraged at the transformation of his native land by its colonial conqueror.

But instead of embracing the traditional values of his own tribal cultural past, he embraced an imported Western ideology, Marxism. I call such frustrated and angry modern Africans who embrace various foreign “isms”, instead of looking homeward for repair of societies that are broken, African Colonials. They are Africans who serve foreign ideas. The tropes of America’s racial history as a way of understanding all things black are useless in understanding the man who got his dreams from his father, a Kenyan exemplar of the African Colonial.

Before I continue, I need to say this: I am a first generation born West African-American woman……

Obama is fine with being called a “Socialist” because what he has planned for this country is far more extreme.  Click here to read the full article.

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Looking Forward, Not Backward.

Well, it is a sad day for Americans as Democrats, led by the inexperience and naivete of President Obama, have taken another wack at “The People’s” constitutional rights.  Having said that, we fought hard as Republicans to defend the constitution, and I suggest that we look forward and not backward.  What is done, is done, and there is nothing we can do about it now, accept speak out in the same ways we have.

The best thing that we can do is look forward to what MUST be accomplished in order to reverse the destructive policies of the President and Democrats in Congress.  If we can restore enough balance of power in our Congress, we have much more of a fighting chance to NOT allow the Democrats to continue to heap burdens on the American people which are “grevious to be borne.”

This clip of Governor Mitt Romney’s CPAC speech seems appropriate:

This is the man I will be promoting for 2012, which, by the way, can’t come any slower!

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Governor Mitt Romney is Doing Everything Right

I have to apologize for not being able to post today -one of the most important days in history regarding the taxation of the American people.  I have been traveling from North Carolina to California.  Right now I am in a motel using their free wifi while my wife watches “Any Given Sunday.”  For the past 2 days I we have listened to 6 hours of non stop conservative talk radio as a means of keeping pace with what we have been missing on the internet(we don’t have a television).

If there is anything of importance for me to write about it would simply be this -CALL YOUR CONGRESSMAN AND HOUND HIM/HER OVER THIS NEW TAX BILL!

I am too tired(drove 16 hours today) to post anything substanital, but  this article expressed my feelings regarding Mitt’s efforts exactly:

(The Atlantic).The prevailing narrative today is that Romney has risen to the top of the 2012 Invisible Primary because he’s the last man standing.

True, Romney hasn’t made any obvious mistakes. But his rising standing is a consequence of decisions he’s made, and not just a result of the luck.

Romney is picking and choosing his battles. He shares an Obama-esque disdain for the superficial daily scrum that cable channels whip up. It’s a credit to his communications team that he can appear on television once every two or three weeks and seem to be part of the dialog. When Romney has something to say, he’ll find a venue to say it. On auto restructuring, on the Republican stimulus plan, on a free market approach to health care, on the Employee Free Choice Act, and on missile defense, Romney matches his opinions to key constituencies, and he always draws respectful news coverage.

He’s not consumed by anger or sarcasm. Romney can get angry, and he can be sarcastic. But his public appearances today are calm, measured; his interviews are given in dignified settings. Romney’s political team believes that the public has no appetite for presidential adversaries who are driven by personal dislike. To Romney, this dignifies the office of the presidency.

He’s not frantic about the invisible primary. Obviously, Romney has a base of staff, donors and supporters, and he doesn’t need to panic about grabbing strategists and consultants who might defect from other potential candidates. He keeps in touch with key supporters in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and the other early states, but his travel schedule is not burdened by a need to concentrate his time and resources on rebuilding lists, raising money and rebuilding his reputation.

Pew finds that Romney’s fav/unfav ratio is pretty darned good. The same guy who was pegged as a flip-flopper, as a fake (or too real) social conservative, as a guy who said what people wanted to hear… is relatively popular. Plenty of time has passed, and a very distracting election probably helped. But Romney did himself many favors as the 2008 presidential campaign wound down. He got out of the race at the right moment, letting arch-enemy Mike Huckabee try and rally the right against John McCain. He became the establishment frontrunner to be McCain’s vice presidential selection, and when McCain didn’t pick him, he became the ’08 ticket’s chief economics spokesman He turned over his scheduling to McCain’s team, winning goodwill. He’s rehabbed his image fairly successfully.

He’s kept in touch with the right people, including McCain. While it’s known that the two former rivals have had dinner since the election, it’s not well known that McCain occasionally calls upon Romney for policy advice. As Romney slowly expands his circle, his inner ring advisers remain intact, including every significant member of his Massachusetts gubernatorial staff, his communications team, and many of his consultants. Romney inspires loyalty like no other potential 2012 presidential candidate.

He’s helping the party. His donor base and personal wealth allow him to be a generous fundraiser for other candidates, campaigning for Republican gubernatorial candidate Chris Christie in New Jersey, Bob McDonnell in Virginia, Meg Whitman in California and his friend Bob Bennet in Utah.

There’s a sense among Romney regulars that the stuff that tripped him up in 2008 will not be relevant if he decides to run in 2012. The number of people who will oppose him because of his faith probably won’t grow. He made his rookie mistakes in 2008.

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Romney’s Public Image Has Improved

(Pew research).Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney has seen his favorability ratings improve and now enjoys a positive balance of opinion among the general public: 40% rate him favorably, 28% unfavorably. This marks a reversal of opinion from February 2008, during the latter stages of the GOP primary campaign, when just 30% viewed him favorably and 44% expressed an unfavorable opinion.

mitt-romney's-public-imageThe latest national survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, conducted June 10-14 among 1,502 adults reached on landlines and cell phones, finds that impressions of Sarah Palin have not changed much since the presidential campaign. Palin continues to be divisive figure among the general public, with about as many saying they have an unfavorable impression (44%) as a favorable view (45%) of the Alaska governor.

Among Republicans, however, the balance of opinion about Palin is more positive than it is regarding Romney or other leading GOP figures, Newt Gingrich and Michael Steele. More than seven-in-ten Republicans (73%) express a favorable opinion of Palin while just 17% have an unfavorable opinion. Romney, Gingrich and especially Steele are less familiar figures – among the public overall and Republicans – than is Palin. While comparable percentages of Republicans rate Palin and the other Republicans unfavorably, far more view Palin favorably. And Palin continues to be overwhelmingly popular with key parts of the GOP base – white evangelical Republicans (84% favorable) and conservative Republicans (80% favorable).

Since February 2008, shortly before he abandoned his race for the GOP presidential nomination, opinion of Romney has improved across most political and demographic groups, but the shift has been particularly pronounced among independents. In February 2008, just 29% of independents had a positive impression of Romney while 46% had a negative view. Today, that balance is reversed: 44% view Romney favorably and 25% unfavorably.

Positive opinions among both Democrats and Republicans have increased by eight points since early 2008. Among Republicans, Romney has made identical nine-point gains in favorability among conservative Republicans and moderate and liberal Republicans; currently, 61% of conservative Republicans and 52% of moderate and liberal members of the GOP express positive opinions of Romney.

Romney’s favorable ratings have not changed significantly among white non-Hispanic evangelical Republicans; 54% have a favorable opinion now, compared with 52% in February 2008. Among all other Republicans, by contrast, positive opinions of Romney have increased by 11 points, while negative opinions have fallen considerably (from 31% to 16%).

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Governor Romney Will Appear on CBS “Early Show” Wednesday

Mitt-Romney-on-cbs-early-show

This just out from Eric Ferhnstrom via Twitter:

Romney on CBS Early Show tomorrow. Response to Obama on health care, economy and Iran.

Note: Notice the almost hidden promoting of Governor Romney going on?

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