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Kennedy: Reagan Caused 9/11

I have heard a lot of outrageous things from the left but this takes the cake. I also have to point out yet again that I am a strong enviromental Republican, a founding member of my former school's chapter of the Sierra Club. Robert Kennedy, Jr. on Hardball last night said that if President Ronald Reagan did not roll back auto milage requirements "We'd most likely have the World Trade Center towers still standing". Quick note of support for Mealine Morgan for calling Kennedy on it. While I support the Energy Bill passed by the Senate thursday night, free-market thought on automobiles does not kill people. Radical Islam kills by distorting the Koran. I agree to a point, along with President Bush, that we need to invest in other energy sources (solar, ethanol, etc.) and quite frankly I do not want one penny of my money going to support the  Middle East if it doesn't have to. But Kennedy's arugement is in such bad taste, that it brings to a new level of unease we must feel of an uncoming Democratic Administration (hopefully not in 08). Will liberals focus on fighting and killing terror until every last terrorist is killed or proclaim that a Toyato Prius is the "new weapon of choice on the war on terror"?

                        
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Michigan's Nightmare

Michigan is a state full of contradictions that often leads to our further downfall. We are known for our pristine and challenging universities yet as soon as people graduate they leave Michigan. We are still a strong union state even though the negative effects of unions are killing the state. To make matters worse we have elected the worst governor in our history, Jennifer Granholm (Democrat), not once but twice.

                           (The Anti-Sarah Palin)

When I hear Republicans talk about their hatred of Hillary Clinton, I silently roll my eyes, but their disdian for the junior senator of New York is a fraction of the aboslute anomisty I feel for Governor Granholm. In her teens and twenties she tried to become an actress in Hollywood, with the highlight of her career a spot on The Dating Game, bringing new meaning to a date from hell. While I certainly hate her policies, it's her style that drives me crazy. She actually tries to convey false emotion with the words she is saying. She actually "acts" the entire time she is out in public. Then I hear how she is so charmistic and likable from the mainstream press. I as a liberal Republican absolutly disdian her. She is evil to her core. Besides that she is clueless when it comes to the business community. When Michigan lost Comerica Bank and Pfizer Pharm. by her own admission she found out with the press when the companies annouced the closures at their news conferances. Hopefully in Michigan, when we elect our next governor in 2010, the Republican Party will not have the burden of Iraq around it's neck and Mike Cox, our AG, will try to solve all that Granholm has ruined.

To my Republicans in the other 49 states, you should fear Granholm as well, she is on the shortlist for US Attonery General in a Democratic Administraion.
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Candidates Show Bigoted Side

Techinal Problems: I apoglize I am having problems with my computer and this blog reposted. Still stand behind it though.
 
My heart sank when I watched each and every candiate on the stage for the GOP nomaition for president say that putting harsh unfair bigoted limits on the men and women who serve in the military was a good idea. From John McCain to Rudy Guiliana each trying to keep the bigoted side of our party happy echoed empty rherotic by supporting Don't Ask Don't Tell. I'm not planning on becoming a Democrat in this life, but nastiness like this makes me ashamed to be a Republican. 

                                       

Hopefully the courts will be be able to change this policy soon, and real men like Virginia Senators John Warner and James Webb can push through congress getting rid of the this policy. One's sexual orentation does not dismiss one from the military but simply the act of saying it does. If a bigoted policy like this is supported across the board from the party of "limited goverment" we have lost are way. I once heard a bit of wisdom in the saying "if you dobut your party, listening to the other side makes you loyal all over again". That's getting less and less true of the Republican Party.
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Want to Win 08? Palin for VP.

I was recently told of the amazing promise of a candidate I had heard about briefly before. Her name is Sarah Palin, she is the current governor of Alaska, and there is a grassroots movement to get her on the short list of possible VP nominees for the GOP in 08. She is a conservative republican who also shows the moderate stride that won't turn off the general election, besides her charming personality, she shows smart ideas and wonderful leadership leading to 89% approval ratings, unheard of anywhere else. I am of the opinion that 2008 will elect the first woman and/or African American. There has been a long history of strong Republican women from Margaret Chase Smith to Condoleezza Rice and now I am proud to add Sarah Palin to that list.

                                  http://eyeball-series.org/hacker/hacker-eyeball.htm
While I certainly feel it is time for a woman to finally get on the ticket for our party, Gov. Palin is a wonderful politician first and a woman second. It's not enough to simply add a woman to the ticket, Mondale-Ferraro proved that, but to make sure they are true leaders and not a false facade of diversity. Like it or not, the GOP is going in disadvantaged with an unpopular incumbent of our own party and an unpopular war with our name on it (rightly or wrongly). We need a moderate like McCain or Rudy, (absolutely not Romney) and a good VP nominee, and in my personal opinion Sarah Palin will seal the deal in 08.
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The Most Powerful Kennedy Ever?

Sometimes it seems that the other Supreme Court Judges shouldn't even show up, when it comes to controversial decisions, the only person's opinion that counts is Anthony Kennedy. Of all the "big" cases this year he has been the deciding factor such as the late-term abortion ban and the EPA enforcement decision along with numerous other cases. To be sure Kennedy is more conservative than Sandra Day O'Connor (who I still love though) but he remains the magic eight ball of law interpretation.

                                      Anthony Kennedy
There is often a debate among Republicans about what the goal of the 2008 election is, but there are many including me, that say that Supreme Court nominations must take precedent. Yes we may not like McCain or Giuliani on every issue (I tend to) but the judges they will appoint, (and we have a slightly old court), are a lot different than what a Clinton, Edwards, or Obama administration will nominate. All those who yell RINO and boycott and/or withhold full support, endanger true republican victories in the legal system.
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You Go, Linda Chavez

I was so happy to see my opinions expressed so eloquently through one of my favorite republican columnist, Linda Chavez. I read her book An Unlikely Conservative, and was sad she was not our Secretary of Labor, even though I love Elanie Chao. Her article hit the nail on the head, there are some though not all, conservatives and liberals fighting this bill that are bigots. 
                                            

I've seen them first hand, and for all of you who continue to say "I am not a racist" followed by "deport em' all" I'm sorry but that is a contradiction. Border security is important but not the deciding factor, having 12 million immigrants here without properly knowing them is. I would have liked the bill to immedatly give them citizenship if they did not have a criminal background but one cannot have everything. I hope and pray the bill passes this second time, and eventually gets on President Bush's desk for his signature.
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Mitt Romney: The Most Shallow Man Alive

It's shocking to me that the only candiate that I have met personally running for President in 2008, is the one I like the least. I met Mitt Romney in2006 when he was doing a campaign stop for Michael Bouchard, the failed republican senate candiate in Michigan, he was very nice, kind, and I already liked that he was a moderate republican who seemed like a good guy. I will not vote for Mitt Romney. It's not because he's a morman, which is a great christian faith. He has changed his postion on everything and comes off as a completly calucated liar.
                                               
He was pro-choice, and more pro-gay rights (a good thing) than Ted Kennedy when running in 1994, he was still pro-choice from 1994 thru 2005 and suddenly became pro-life sometime after he started running for president. Even though I'm pro-life, I have much more repect for Rudy Guiliana than Frm. Gov. Romney. To all pro-life republicans, Mitt Romney will be a pro-life president, in fact he'll take any postion that polls well but none that are in fact his own, that should say something about his character, and that's truly something that matters to me. 
                                    
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I want your blood

Every American whose blood is good needs to give it. It is one of those silent things that make our country so great. Yet again and again I hear the excuses. "The time is never right","It's gross","It will hurt" "I get queasy". If you want to recieve blood if you are in surgery or an accident then you need to give it. While I would hope you would never need it, every 2 seconds someone does. 
                              
Giving blood is not exactly fun but it's not bad either. Also for all those who do give, me included, we need to make sure to do it 6 times a year. And for a fun political fact Republicans are alot more likely to give bood than Democrats although I'm pretty sure the Red Cross will take your blood, red or blue.
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Liberal Democrat Racists

I was never a fan of John Ashcroft, so when Alberto Gonzales became our Attonery General I was happy that a more moderate thought of law would represent our country. He has not let us down, pursuing conservative prinicpals of laws with the correct amount of restraint, yet the Democrats are tasting blood because the justice department choose to dismiss 8 US Attonerys because they were not in line with the Justice Department's current application of law. They serve at the pleasure of the President and it is his right to let them go. What the President's adminstration cannot not do, is try to move Attonerys actions in a specific case. That has not happened. Democrats though want to completly dismantle the Bush Adminstration, I knew the second Paul Wolfowitz resigned, they would simply check him off the list, and wait to do it to Gonzales. I have defended the hispanic culture is past blogs and supported the Immigration Bill, so it saddens me that the venom inspired by this no confidence vote may be racial motivated.                                                                                                

   Stephanie Miller
picture of Rachel Maddow Rachel Maddow


 Kathy Griffin w/ Larry King

On Saturday, Stephanie Miller, a liberal radio personality, said on C-SPAN, that we should deport him. Last week on The View, Kathy Griffin said that Condilezza Rice was a tool for the white man and that no women or minorities should ever be Republicans. Rachel Maddow, one of the Air America personalities, on Tucker Carlson show, said that an aide that worked for Frm. Senator Rick Santuraum deserved to be publicy outed because of their job. These are bigots who's faces belong behind a white pillow cases not on our television.
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"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" Kills

 I love reading The New York Times for their smart coverage of world events and domestic policy reporting. Recently the op-ed page (not a place I agree with often) published an article by a former solider who's story is one we all need to hear about the dangerous side of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell". A point I feel the need to highlight is the high number of young people (72%) who believe in dismantling the bigoted policy. This policy will change hopefully before Democrats ride it to power. A personal note that every young person I talk to in the Republican and Democratic Party, is agaisnt this policy. It needs to go. 





June 8, 2007
Op-Ed Contributor

Don’t Ask, Don’t Translate

Atlanta

IMAGINE for a moment an American soldier deep in the Iraqi desert. His unit is about to head out when he receives a cable detailing an insurgent ambush right in his convoy’s path. With this information, he and his soldiers are now prepared for the danger that lies ahead.

Reports like these are regularly sent from military translators’ desks, providing critical, often life-saving intelligence to troops fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the military has a desperate shortage of linguists trained to translate such invaluable information and convey it to the war zone.

The lack of qualified translators has been a pressing issue for some time — the Army had filled only half its authorized positions for Arabic translators in 2001. Cables went untranslated on Sept. 10 that might have prevented the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11. Today, the American Embassy in Baghdad has nearly 1,000 personnel, but only a handful of fluent Arabic speakers.

I was an Arabic translator. After joining the Navy in 2003, I attended the Defense Language Institute, graduated in the top 10 percent of my class and then spent two years giving our troops the critical translation services they desperately needed. I was ready to serve in Iraq.

But I never got to. In March, I was ousted from the Navy under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which mandates dismissal if a service member is found to be gay.

My story begins almost a year ago when my roommate, who is also gay, was deployed to Falluja. We communicated the only way we could: using the military’s instant-messaging system on monitored government computers. These electronic conversations are lifelines, keeping soldiers sane while mortars land meters away.

Then, last October the annual inspection of my base, Fort Gordon, Ga., included a perusal of the government computer chat system; inspectors identified 70 service members whose use violated policy. The range of violations was broad: people were flagged for everything from profanity to outright discussions of explicit sexual activity. Among those charged were my former roommate and me. Our messages had included references to our social lives — comments that were otherwise unremarkable, except that they indicated we were both gay.

I could have written a statement denying that I was homosexual, but lying did not seem like the right thing to do. My roommate made the same decision, though he was allowed to remain in Iraq until the scheduled end of his tour.

The result was the termination of our careers, and the loss to the military of two more Arabic translators. The 68 other — heterosexual — service members remained on active duty, despite many having committed violations far more egregious than ours; the Pentagon apparently doesn’t consider hate speech, derogatory comments about women or sexual misconduct grounds for dismissal.

My supervisors did not want to lose me. Most of my peers knew I was gay, and that didn’t bother them. I was always accepted as a member of the team. And my experience was not anomalous: polls of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan show an overwhelming majority are comfortable with gays. Many were aware of at least one gay person in their unit and had no problem with it.

“Don’t ask, don’t tell” does nothing but deprive the military of talent it needs and invade the privacy of gay service members just trying to do their jobs and live their lives. Political and military leaders who support the current law may believe that homosexual soldiers threaten unit cohesion and military readiness, but the real damage is caused by denying enlistment to patriotic Americans and wrenching qualified individuals out of effective military units. This does not serve the military or the nation well.

Consider: more than 58 Arabic linguists have been kicked out since “don’t ask, don’t tell” was instituted. How much valuable intelligence could those men and women be providing today to troops in harm’s way?

In addition to those translators, 11,000 other service members have been ousted since the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy was passed by Congress in 1993. Many held critical jobs in intelligence, medicine and counterterrorism. An untold number of closeted gay military members don’t re-enlist because of the pressure the law puts on them. This is the real cost of the ban — and, with our military so overcommitted and undermanned, it’s too high to pay.

In response to difficult recruiting prospects, the Army has already taken a number of steps, lengthening soldiers’ deployments to 15 months from 12, enlisting felons and extending the age limit to 42. Why then won’t Congress pass a bill like the Military Readiness Enhancement Act, which would repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell”? The bipartisan bill, by some analysts’ estimates, could add more than 41,000 soldiers — all gay, of course.

As the friends I once served with head off to 15-month deployments, I regret I’m not there to lessen their burden and to serve my country. I’m trained to fight, I speak Arabic and I’m willing to serve. No recruiter needs to make a persuasive argument to sign me up. I’m ready, and I’m waiting.

Stephen Benjamin is a former petty officer second class in the Navy.

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Let Gays Serve

At the democratic debate on Sunday, all eight candiates agreed that don't ask don't tell, the military's policy concerning homosexuals, should be scraped and gays should be able to serve out in the open. For once I was in complete agreement with all of them.

In 2005, member of Congress Marty Meehan (third from left) unsuccessfully attempted to repeal the policy
In 2005, member of Congress Marty Meehan (third from left) unsuccessfully attempted to repeal the policy

Military service is a great scarifice to one's nation and the service coming from a person who's gay is no less than one who is straight. The men and women who serve, as I know you believe as well, all deserve respect and the best we can give them in terms of medical care, wages and safety. For those that are gay they do not deserve the burden of hiding who they are just to sastify nasty bigots who distort God's word.
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Bill Richardson: A Lost Cause


                                    
I had a great hope in Bill Richardson, New Mexico's current governor and candiate for President. He seemed to be the only moderate voice in the Democratic Party who had the world experience with foreign leaders to really bridge the gap between us and the world. I read part of his book, and was told of great stories about him from a co-worker whose family member works with in the Richardson adminstration. I'm sure he's a great guy and I know he has a sense of humor from those old campaign ads but he looks like a lost sheep up on stage. I've seen him during most of the debates and he does the annoying 1,2,3 plan that comes of as condsending and set in concrete. He also really messed up last night during the question and answer session calling a woman's son serving in Iraq her husband. Proof he wasn't listening in the most basic of details. He's a big second amendment man and that should draw the eyes of some conservatives but with eight democrats currently running and Mike Gravel is coming off better than you, you need to complete change your campaign because pretty soon you won't have one.
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Hillary For President?

Senator Hillary Clinton of New York again stood out among the Democratic contenders to argue for a more moderate, sensible mindset with foreign affairs and domestic policy. While her weak points were her constant berating of the current president, she knows the responibility of America in Iraq and her health care plan seemed to focus on savings rather then spending, a good step. While it's dobutful I would support the junior senator from New York she surely seems to be the misplaced victim of the constant hatred of the right. Barrack Obama was again full of false superority for not supporting the war as a state senator, while it's quite evident that his postion as a junior senator in the US Senate in 03, most likely would have swayed. 
                                             

John Edwards was very good although not his best, again while these candiates are running for the left they lose moderates like me, but I did like his honesty about the cost of his health care plan. Bill Richardson lost yet another oppertunity to distingush himself in a good way and came off as blundering when it came to his answers and insenstive by calling a women's son in Iraq her husband. Christopher Dodd did not stand out. Joe Biden was good on Darfur.  Mike Gravel was fun. Dennis Kunichich proved there should be limits to who gets on the stage. Hillary Clinton won first, John Edwards second, and Joe Biden (as much as I hate him) third. Bill Richardson was the biggest loser (and I like him).
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I Love France

As most of you know by now last month France elected it first real conservative in some time Nicolas Sarkosky  over Segolne Royale, a socialist. Even though Chirac was in France's conservative party he was no friend to the United States, and with Sarkosky we have a real chance at a global relationship. 

                                               Nicolas Sarkozy  
This is taking place with the current conservative wave hitting Europe with Angela Merckel of Germany and even Tony Blair. Now of course Blair is stepping down making room for Gordon Brown until the British Elections in 09, where David Cameron has a real shot at establishing Tory rule. Of course with the terrorist victory in Spain and the close liberal election in Italy, Europe is still far more left than us. But what does it say about the American press that was rooting for Royale over Sarkosky, that Sarkosky domestic politics, conservative as there are are still so liberal that they are more in line with the Democratic Party than with us. Au Revoir.
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