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The return of Sarah Palin (she's the new Reagan)

Starting with an appearance on Oprah November 16th begins the return of Sarah Palin to the national spotlight. In reality she never really left and she made her presence felt via facebook articles, but the is no doubt she has been in seculsion since July. However, all of this is about to change, and here comes the new Reagan. I found the following excellent article, that states my point quite well, here it is:
 

The Sarah Palin Binge

By Patrick S. Adams 11/07/09

 

   When Sarah Palin left the governorship of Alaska at the end of July, her supporters stood strong and tall. Websites devoted to the former governor continued springing up across the web with the same vigor as they had before her resignation and since her selection as vice presidential candidate. Membership in pro-Sarah websites grew instead of contracting as most typical thinkers would have thought. But the termination of her Twitter account timed simultaneously with a self-imposed exile so she could write her book and “bone up” on the issues left her fans somewhat hungry. Like addicts “jonesing” for a fix, Sarah supporters were doing radio broadcasts and writing blogs just so they could talk about her and keep the positive flame alive in an environment where left wing bloggers and the mainstream media were doing everything they could to finally put her to rest. Now, Sarah Palin is coming back to bookstores and TV screens across the nation and her fans are about to binge.

    It was about a week after the election and I’m having a conversation with a friend of mine who, although far from being a liberal, was raising concerns about Sarah Palin’s viability as a potential 2012 candidate. Of course, the usual things came up like how she didn’t seem to be ready for primetime and that he didn’t think she was as smart as a Newt Gingrich or a Mitt Romney. That’s when I asked my talking point question. Upon what information are you drawing these conclusions? Are you drawing these conclusions based on what is being said about her in the mainstream media, or have you actually researched her and found areas of legitimate weakness that need to be brought to light?

    His response was “that’s a good question.” My friend then went on to say that he thought the Katie Couric interview killed her and that seeing Alaska from her house was just a childish answer to a serious foreign policy question. That’s when I pounced. I was like, “see! See I told you the mainstream media lies were why you think the way you do.” I told him that, of course as we all know, Sarah Palin never said she could see Russia from her house. I made him Youtube the video where she talks about being able to see Russia from an island off the coast of Alaska and how she as governor is responsible to activate the National Guard if Putin rears his head in Alaskan airspace. He agreed with me that I was right about the Russia from her house comment and ended the discussion by saying “right now, I wouldn’t vote for her. But she still has four years to get up to speed and who knows.”

    I’m an intellectually honest guy. A lot of people respect my political knowledge. I consider my credibility to be a very important and valuable thing. I’m not about being all high and mighty about having a B.A. in political science, but I am proud of my interest in the subject because I love America to the bone and my degree is a personal symbol to me of my love for my country as well as the love for Ronald Reagan that interested me enough to pursue that degree. So, I would never do my credibility or degree a disservice by lying about a candidate or spinning a candidate just to fit the square peg of a misguided ideology into the round hole of reality. Nor would I ever back a candidate that I did not think was qualified, honest or representative of my views.

    For example, I had a deep affection for Mark Sanford. I would yell at the screen every time he came on Fox News. All of the information I had to that point told me that this was a quality guy. Would I chose him over Palin if he ever ran against her in the primaries? No. Palin, as far as I still know today has the most integrity I have ever seen in a political candidate since Ronald Reagan. She is ideologically my soul mate. And I do admit the bias. But the bias comes after the fact, not before. I am a political scientist, albeit by hobby since I don’t get paid for it, but it helps me in my business and it helps me learn the human stuff that you need to know in order to work at being successful. As a political scientist, I consider it my job to research and learn about issues and candidates. I have my beliefs and I have my reasons through my understanding of natural order as to why I think our country’s leaders have to do things a certain way and have to believe in certain philosophies and principals.

    It was with great sadness and heaviness of heart (okay I admit I even shed a couple of tears) that I had to step away from Mark Sanford. I could not in good conscience spin what he had done and continue to push him as the conservative voice I once thought he was. The first time I ever jumped off a political bandwagon because of moral turpitude was when I was 11. Nixon was about to be impeached for Watergate. I admit in 1976, I didn’t know who Ronald Reagan was. I rooted on Ford because that’s all I knew. But as I grew into a more aware high school student and the events of the Iranian hostage crisis were unfolding, I got more involved. I knew there was a tough guy named Reagan out there. And I knew Jimmy Carter had to go. Ronald Reagan won in 1980, I bounded up the stairs toward the projectionist booth of the movie theater where I worked fist pumping. When inside I high fived my co-worker, Kenny, who was also my age 17 (and thus neither of us could vote) and Don, the projectionist who was a middle aged guy.

    The statute of limitations has probably long since expired, so I will admit this. Don gave Kenny and me a beer and we drank in celebration of Ronald Reagan’s victory. That’s when I began binging. No, not on alcohol, but on Reagan. When the hostages were released a half hour after Reagan’s inauguration, I knew I had found my man. The more I learned about him, the more I loved him. I even went to the library after getting frustrated over the New York Times’ reporting on supply side economics. I studied it and read magazine articles about it. And in doing so, I gained a deep interest in political science itself. I learned about different ideologies. They taught Marx in college of course, but they also taught Nietzsche and Nazism. I sought out knowledge about the entire length of the political spectrum. I soul searched and questioned myself, just like any good existentialist should do. I realized two things after examining ALL the facts. I am a Catholic and I am a conservative. So it wouldn’t surprise anyone to know that I “binged” during the Ronald Reagan / John Paul II era. I mean I really binged. Because I was drinking beer with some friends on the Fourth of July one year, I had to go in the house to use the bathroom. But I never came back out for  over an hour.

    It was during that “beerless” hour that I binged the most. It just so happened I walked into the house just as Ronald Reagan began delivering the Statue of Liberty speech. I immediately hit the couch and glued my eyes to the set. My friends asked me what happened and I told them that I was watching Ronald Reagan. The economy was booming and good times were being had by all. I advanced my career quickly during the Reagan years and made a decent buck, which allowed me to drive a nice car and do things like go to the Hamptons or go on canoe trips with my friends. Then it was over. Until now.

    There are many I see online who are younger than me and do not have the warm and fond memories I have of living during the Ronald Reagan years. They don’t yet know what it’s like to binge, but they do know what it’s like to be out. These are the Sarah Palin fans who are in their 20’s. When she ran for vice president, we binged. But it was a short binge of only a couple of months. Yet we wanted more. We spent our waking hours wondering where our next dose of Sarah was going to come from. I mean come on, I even read the Anchorage Daily News every day hungering for anything Sarah, even if it was negative (I knew negative press would reinforce the fact they were scared of her and that meant she was still viable).

    The fear of the unknown only hit me twice since I’ve been a Sarah fan. First, when Troopergate broke and then when she resigned. It was because of Troopergate, though, that I was able to get through her resignation without having to be talked off the ledge. In fact, Sarah Palin herself made sure I didn’t even go on the ledge when she tweeted to her supporters that it was all good. But the real reason I didn’t go to the ledge is that when I researched Troopergate I realized it was bullcrap. The next day Sarah Palin was explaining it to reporters and I looked into her eyes through the TV screen and I had this feeling of calmness overwhelm me. I realized at that very moment that I trusted Sarah Palin to the core. The real reason I didn’t go to the ledge when she resigned is that I remembered the look in her eyes as she explained Troopergate. And I knew that she would not lie to us when she explained why she resigned. I told everyone that day not to worry. People asked me for answers. I told them only Sarah Palin herself can give you the answer.

    That discussion with my friend about a week after the election led me to sit down and be realistic with myself. I had to face the fact that Sarah Palin had a credibility problem with a lot of people (through no fault of her own). When I looked at her, who she really was, rather than be disappointed, I was amazed. The Sarah Palin who ran for vice president with whatever faults she may have had was still more amazing and more appealing than any candidate I’d ever seen since Reagan.

    Then I said to myself in a hypothetical dialogue with liberals: if you think she’s big now, wait until 2012. She’s going to be a behemoth! The political scientist in me realized that the left and the media elite were treating Sarah Palin as if she was a snapshot in time. I realized that was wrong. I rebutted that position by saying she is an evolving candidate. I was too young to watch what Ronald Reagan did before he became president. So I hit the computer and researched the hell out of the pre-presidential days of Reagan. I also bought “Rendezvous With Destiny.” I realized that what I was seeing with Sarah was the “political childhood” I had missed with Reagan. Reagan became the man for me a half hour after he was inaugurated, not in 1964 or 1976. Sarah Palin became “the woman” for me the night she gave her acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention.

    I got to see Sarah Palin’s governorship. I got to see her exile. I got to see the part that I missed with Reagan. If Sarah Palin could draw 60,000 people to a rally, electrify the Republican base the way she did and develop such a strong devout following all in the matter of a few months, can you imagine what she could do in the matter of a few years? It’s mind boggling. Katie Couric? That’s nothing. There was no 24 hour media or internet around when Ronald Reagan dropped his note cards, scrambling them, before screwing up a major speech big time prior to the 1980 primaries. His handlers thought he wasn’t up to the job, never mind the press. He’s just lucky Shannyn Moore wasn’t there when he dropped the cards, otherwise it would have been all over the Huffington Post and then later that night on Countdown!

    Sarah Palin was an accomplished governor and mayor when she was selected as the VP candidate in 2008. She had focused all of her efforts on governing Alaska. She knew every nook and cranny of energy policy and how the oil and gas business worked. Did she know who the president of Khazakstan was? Probably not. When asked about the bailouts, she told a reporter she would have to get more specific information on how the Fed wanted to do them but knew to say that in general she doesn’t favor bailouts. Sarah Palin did not spend the years leading up to her nomination as vice presidential candidate studying Federal Reserve banking policy. She was too busy putting together ACES and AGIA. The Bush Doctrine meant nothing to her, not because she wasn’t intellectually curious, but because she was a citizen politician learning the nuts and bolts of how to be a great leader. Learning the Bush Doctrine was not going to put any money into her pocket; being a strong leader for Alaska was, and as such, that got the priority.

    Handlers say that Sarah Palin was such a fast learner that they soon got over the fear they had about her going up against a political veteran like Joe Biden. There was the impression that Sarah Palin could cram more information in an hour than most could cram in a week. Now consider this. Since July it’s been what 3 months? Sarah Palin has done more preparation for being president than she’s ever done in her life. Sarah basically did the work equivalent of earning a PHD in political science during the last three months. And she wrote a book doing it. There are going to be a lot of people who are going to be not only surprised, but shocked at the politically mature and ridiculously charismatic Sarah Palin we are going to see in just a few short days. Buckle up and strap yourself in folks. The Sarah Palin we are going to see is going to blow our minds. Tina Fey is going to have to totally re-do her act if she wants to satirize the new Sarah Palin.

    Already, word on the street is that she looks great, is no longer looking too thin and has that twinkle in her eye again. They even (Beehive is going to love this) say her hair has gotten longer and fuller! Sarah Palin supporters are about to get more Sarah than they can possibly handle. It’s going to make liberals sicker than dogs, but it’s going to be binge time for Sarah Palin fans. Ladies and gentleman, you are about to see what happens to a snapshot in time when she becomes an evolving candidate. You are about to see what happens to a electrifier when she becomes a behemoth.

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Rasmussen Poll, Huckabee & Sarah Palin

Recently Rasmussen released an early GOP field poll for 2012 contenders and it found the following:

Twenty-nine percent (29%) of Republican voters nationwide say former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee is their pick to represent the GOP in the 2012 Presidential campaign. The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds that 24% prefer former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney while 18% would cast their vote for former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich gets 14% of the vote while Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty gets 4%. Six percent (6%) of GOP voters prefer some other candidate while 7% remain undecided.

Okay, first things first; Huckabee’s surge has come right out of Palin’s decline since the last field poll conducted by Rasmussen back in July. Mitt Romney has remained unchanged. So what is my take on this?

        First, Sarah Palin’s early resignation obviously has had an impact on her poll numbers. Second; and I believe this is what has hurt her most, has been her retreat from the public eye since her resignation. Third, while she has retreated from the public eye the left and the GOP elites have hammered her relentlessly almost every single day since July, without her fighting back.

        Now consider what Huckabee has done. He has been campaigning for President since he lost to McCain. First, he is always in the spotlight, in particular would be his show on FOX News. So while Sarah Palin has retreated, Huckabee has fiercely thrusted himself in the limelight. Second, he has had a bestselling book for weeks. So what this poll shows us is how Palin matches up against Huckabee after she has been out of spotlight for months and viciously attacked on a daily basis, against Huckabee who has been in the spotlight and has not been attacked by the leftist media.

        However folks, the situation is about to change dramatically because Sarah Palin is returning to the spotlight as of mid to late November. Her book sales have already crushed Huckabee’s book sales. Palin will obviously being doing a national book tour and interviews in the rightwing media where she will put forth what her vision is for America. Second, many rightwing media figures are already Sarah Palin supporters, such as: Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, and Tammy Bruce. These personalities will be very influential among the GOP base in the 2012 GOP primaries. Third, Sarah Palin is now sifting through over 1000 requests for speaking and campaigning events and you can be sure that the media will be all over every word that Palin utters as she speaks across the nation once again.

        Fourth, while Palin has been out of the spotlight, she has been far from idle. Obviously, she finished her book early so that it will be ready for holiday sales. However, what you may not know is that she has been setting up what appears to be a new national 537-C “PAC”. This is to distinguish it from her “SarahPac”, because there are differences in what each PAC can and can do under federal law. Sarah Palin’s new 537-C PAC will allow her to have far more freedom in how she uses her money and enable her to go after her political enemies, namely Obama. She is the only potential 2012 candidate who has gone as far as to set up 537-C national PAC. Thus, Sarah Palin is building a well oiled national political machine for 2012. To use a military analogy, Sarah Palin is building up her war machine and training her troops for the war that she knows is a mere 3 ½ years away and in doing this she is outsmarting the rest of the 2012 GOP contenders, and Obama. Thus, my opinion is that Huckabee should enjoy his time in the limelight, he will not be at the top for long.
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Sarah Palin is down but will make a comeback!

 

      Sarah Palin is down but she is definitely not out. Today a Rasmussen poll showed that the GOP at this time they choose the following: Huckabee 29%, Romney 24%, Palin 18%, Gingrich 14%, and Pawlenty 4%. Ah…so Sarah Palin’s 15 minutes of fame is up some of you may be saying. However, let point out the following. First, Sarah Palin has deliberately been staying out of the spotlight, while Huckabee & Romney have been getting as much media coverage as they can. Second, while she has chosen to stay out of the limelight she has been viciously attacked by the Democratic Media, the Democrats, and the establishment GOP elites on an almost daily basis. Thus, she has suffered a dip in the polls and I am not surprised by this, but I expect a quick rebound. Since her resignation in July Sarah Palin has been working on two massive projects; the first is her bestselling book and the second is a national conservative political action group (the name of which is still not known) that will be revealed after her book is released on November 17th.

        So what is your point Allen? My point is that Sarah Palin is going to be stepping back into the limelight starting in late November and when she does her poll numbers are going to surge. Sarah Palin’s rock solid Reagan Conservatism combined with her extreme charisma is going to take Huckabee down; he simply cannot compete with her in this arena. Also, when Sarah Palin does step in back into the limelight she will do so with a bestselling book, new public appearances, and a newly formed national conservative PAC for the American people. Thus, she will be in a far stronger position than either Huckabee or Romney, both of whom have temporarily benefited from Sarah Palin’s voluntary retreat from the public spotlight and this folks is about to change.  

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Townhall.com's GOP "name game"

Ah the Townhall.com "name game", I wrote about it before but I thought I would write about it again. The Townhall.com "name game" centers around the GOP elites mental disorder known as A.B.P which stands for "anybody but Palin!" Thus they search for a GOP "name" they can try and sell to us the grassroot conservative base. Their first choice was the dweeb Bobby Jindal, but after two disasterous television appearences they realized that he could never cut it. Then they went back to Mitt Romney and the arguement was that he who comes in second in a primary will get the nomination the next time around. So Romney came in second last year, thus he'll get the nomination in 2012. They beat this drum until something happened that caused Mitt Romney to drift into the shadows and it was the national health care debate. You see the problem is that Mitt Romney is a believer in socialized medicine, so committed is he that he instituted it in his own state as governor and it is now bankrupting the state but hey should that matter? Well after seeing the tremendous hostility of the American people to socialized medicine, well then having a GOP candidate who believes in it most likely is not going to work out. Now we come to the moderate (and yes I said "moderate") Tim Pawlenty, and I suppose I should give Townhall.com some points for moving up from the liberal Romney to the moderate Pawlenty. Maybe in time they will actually support a conservative. Ah yes Tim Pawlenty, did you know that he has long been a supporter of Obama's "Cap & Trade" tax, you know the kinda taxes that drive up the cost of literally everything and in a time when we are in a deep recession. Sound like the next GOP standard bearer to you? Hey Matt Lewis, Michael Medved, and Hugh Hewitt keep playing the "name game" maybe one day you find a conservative name to hand to us!
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Sarah Palin is building up her staff.

According to Investors Business Daily Sarah Palin is building some pretty heavyweights as her advisors, and we are slowing learning who these people are. Thus far we have two more names according to IBD:

Randy Scheunemann, for instance, has been a foreign policy and national security adviser to prominent Republicans ranging from McCain to Sen. Bob Dole and former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. He has also represented and advised the pro-free market government of the Republic of Georgia, which is struggling against Russian aggression.

Another sometime adviser to Palin is Ford Motor Co. executive Stephen Biegun, a member of President George W. Bush's National Security Council. Biegun advised former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and was chief of staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee under the late Sen. Jesse Helms.

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Investors Business Daily on Palin vs. McCain

Funny you would think that IBD has been reading my blog recently since I have been writing on this topic for three days now. Anyway here is what IBD has written on the matter:
 

McCain Vs. Palin For The GOP's Soul

Politics: The top and bottom of last year's Republican ticket represent the recent failed past and future potential of the party. Both are vying for party leadership, but the past should get out of the future's way.

Sen. John McCain is, as Politico noted last week, "working behind-the-scenes to reshape the Republican Party in his own center-right image." The loser of last year's run for the White House is recruiting candidates, raising money and campaigning for them, and even taking sides in GOP Senate, House and gubernatorial primaries.

Some people apparently need a hook to exit the stage. McCain's personal story is one of the most compelling in America, but as a politician, he leaves much to be desired.

The Arizonan won last year's Republican nomination largely on the strength of his valorous military biography; a candidate with a focus on Reaganite principle would have had a chance of actually winning the election.

The former POW has consistently taken positions that more closely resemble those of liberal Democrats. Employing the worst kind of class warfare rhetoric, he opposed President George W. Bush's tax cuts.

He pushed for amnesty for millions of illegal aliens and, most infamously, joined with liberal Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., to restrict the political speech guaranteed by the First Amendment through his campaign finance law — which the Supreme Court may soon gut in its Citizens United v. FEC case.

In his concession speech McCain said, "I don't know what more we could have done to try to win this election." Well, the fact he doesn't know why he lost is the problem — especially as he spreads the losing ways of his own so-called "maverick" Republicanism.

The McCain campaign does have one positive legacy, however: It made Sarah Palin a national figure.

The former Alaska governor, already popular among grass-roots Republicans, is growing in credibility. Her much-criticized decision to resign the governorship is beginning to look like a move that made perfect sense — not just for herself but for Alaskans — in the face of the long knives the Democrats had ready for her as a sitting chief executive.

Palin is becoming a bold, principled voice on issues ranging from the global war on terror to financial markets. "Now is not the time for cold feet, second thoughts, or indecision," she said regarding White House skittishness on Afghanistan.

She has warned that "we're ignoring the looming crisis caused by our dependence on foreign oil," arguing that America will be at foreign powers' "mercy if they decide to dump the dollar as their trade currency."

Democrats are apoplectic about her charge that their health care revolution will mean "death panels" — but she touched the nerve of instinctive American distrust of government, which is why Democrats find they can't stop talking about it.

The supposedly unsophisticated Palin is being advised by some impressive heavyweights.

Randy Scheunemann, for instance, has been a foreign policy and national security adviser to prominent Republicans ranging from McCain to Sen. Bob Dole and former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. He has also represented and advised the pro-free market government of the Republic of Georgia, which is struggling against Russian aggression.

Another sometime adviser to Palin is Ford Motor Co. executive Stephen Biegun, a member of President George W. Bush's National Security Council. Biegun advised former Senate Majority Leader Bill First and was chief of staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee under the late Sen. Jesse Helms.

Biegun, who helped with Palin's Hong Kong speech last month and was her chief foreign policy aide during last year's campaign, told Investor's Business Daily that the former governor showed "great passion for foreign policy and national security" during the campaign, calling it "an area on which she has great instincts."

She's "free-trade oriented," he says, with "a strong sense of the importance of American leadership in the world."

That sounds like the kind of candidate McCain is now doing his best to defeat around the country. As Palin grows in stature , it would be a good idea for McCain to let some air out of that ego — and accept the defeat he was handed at the ballot box last year.

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Levi Johnston to pose for Playgirl.

Levi Johnston one of the worst scum bags in America is supposedly going to pose for nude for Playgirl magazine. I didn't even know that Playgirl was even being published anymore it has been that long since I have even heard its name being mentioned. Is this guy a world class fool? Look when you do something like this it ruins your life, just look at most of the lives of women who do soft porn like Playboy. An untold secret is the reality that almost all of the Playmates cannot find husbands and good careers after they bare it all. It appears that guys don't want to have to explain to their daughters why they should not pose nude while mommey did, and professional employers do not take seriously women who bare all. So what does Levi think he is going to get out of this? Folks the left is behind this and urging this utter moron to do the most stupid things; this is about embarassing Sarah Palin and nothing more. Funny thing is this; if Palin does become President she can easily cut off Levi from ever seeing Bristol's baby by simply denying him security clearence for the next eight years. Levi payback can be a real pain when you mess with Sarah Palin. If only this moron truly knew who he was messing with and the consequences could be for his foolish actions. Unfortunately, Bristol was determined to date Levi even though Sarah & Todd did everything in their power to keep the two apart, including sending Bristol off to boarding school to keep her away from Levi but she would have none of it. My heart goes out to both Bristol, who I am sure deeply regrets her decision to even date Levi, but also to her son who has such a total loser for a father.
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Sarah Palin is the leader of the GOP.

I find it funny that once again Sarah Palin is the one leading the GOP. Before she led the charge against Obamacare with her facebook article on "death panels" and then most Republicans in congress followed her on this. Now Sarah Palin has a new article on her facebook page where she wrote how Obama is destroying the value of the U.S. Dollar, see here http://www.facebook.com/notes.php?id=24718773587. Now today we find some of the Republicans in congress arguing Sarah's same points, save that she made them two days ago. Folks, the definition of a leader, is the one who leads the way and is then followed by others. Sarah Palin has time again said things first only to be "followed" by much of the rest of the GOP. The GOP is following her lead, and she is not following them and this in my opinion makes her the unofficial leader of the GOP.
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Look out for A.B.P. in the GOP. What is it?

     So what does A.B.P stand for? It is short for "anybody but Palin" and we are seeing this from many quarters. First, we have the neo-conservatives, those ever loving "conservatives" who love to grow government and deficits and ignore the Constitution and are adverse to balanced budgets. They are easy to find because they currently control the GOP and live inside the Beltway. One can also appreciate their handiwork because they destroyed the GOP and gave us Obama as President. Oh these morons have their voices; their Colin Powells, their Charles Krauthammers, their David Brooks, and David Frums. Ah, too bad none of these fools understand that it is true Traditional Conservatism that wins elections, and not RINO sellouts. However, don’t worry because they all agree that Traditional Conservatism should be avoided at all costs and since Sarah Palin is a Traditional Conservative she should thus be avoided at all costs as well. Oh, and just a little history lesson, these guys supported Gerald Ford over Reagan in 1976 and George "Daddy" Bush in 1980 over Reagan, who of course was "unelectable" but who nonetheless managed to win two electoral landslides in 1980 and 1984. Anybody remember how the rockefeller and neo-conservative presidents did? Gerald Ford lost to the loser Jimmy Carter and "Daddy" Bush, while managing to kill the Reagan coalition, lost to Bill Clinton. So obviously we should listen to these knuckleheads because they have such a great track record. 
        Now we have a new movement in the GOP led by John "I got Obama elected" McCain and Lindsey "Backstabber" Graham. The goal is to remake the GOP into "McCain's image". So these guys feel it is best to move the GOP further to the left of even the neo-conservatives and while their political ideology does not have an official name let's just call it "nuts" for the moment. The former campaigner for John McCain, Steve Schmidt and some others in the McCain camp have called a future Sarah Palin GOP candidacy in 2012 as potentially "catastrophic" and they would know a lot about catastrophes because they witnessed one first hand, it was their own GOP presidential campaign last year which was orchestrated by none other than themselves. Folk's trust me on this; Steve Schmidt's very vocal attack on Sarah Palin was done at McCain's bidding. Why do I believe this? First, it is obvious that Palin and McCain are on the outs, because Sarah Palin has been viciously attacked in every possible way and this guy has barely said a damm word about it. Does this sound like a friend and backer to you? Second, since McCain wants to move the GOP to the political left and since Palin has made it no secret that she wants to help the GOP get back to Traditional Conservatism in the Reagan mold; guess what a conflict between these two is inevitable and while I do not know what this confrontation is going to look like I know beyond the shadow of a doubt that it is coming down the pike. McCain's attacks on Palin via his subordinates is basically right out of Saul Alinsky's Rules For Radicals in that you attack your opponent publically and relentless in order to destroy that person and make them irrelevant. However, I have a news flash for McCain and his ilk: Sarah Palin has been viciously attacked almost every day for about a year now and she is still the most popular Republican on the planet and is powerful enough to derail Obamacare using facebook alone and has broken records by having the fastest selling non-fiction book in history. So obviously the attacks have not worked but McCain is too dumb to understand this reality. 
        The third group is the Townhall.com types and by this I mean people like Hugh Hewitt, Michael Medeved, and bloggers like Matt Lewis and his pals. While they are genuinely conservative they are good Republicans first and conservatives second. Basically they will set aside their conservative principles just to get a Republican elected, even when the Republican is not a conservative. For example, take Hugh Hewitt's man crush on Mitt Romney. Folk's, Mitt Romney is not a conservative and he never has been and has prided himself in not being a Reaganite in the past. Romney is a leftist plain and simple. However, Hewitt thought he was the best bet against Obama, so he cast aside his conservative principles to support a non-conservative for president because Romney had the best chance (in his opinion) of winning. Now these people consider themselves to be “politically pragmatic” and they strongly believe in the voting for the lesser of two evils approach. They are completely and utterly disconnected from the GOP base, because the GOP base is sick of voting for the lesser of two evils. The GOP base is sick of bigger and bigger government, larger and larger deficits, and being screwed over time and again when the non-conservative Republicans are in office. The reason the Democrats retook Congress in 2006 is because a large part of the GOP base stayed home on election day in disgust at both Bush and the Republicans in Congress, they were disgusted by the lack of true traditional conservatism in setting national public policy. The GOP base wants traditional conservatism back in the GOP and they see it in Sarah Palin and not in any other potential GOP candidates for 2012.

        So the Townhall.com types are playing what I call they "name game". Like the neo-conservatives they are governed by A.B.P (anybody but Palin) and so they are constantly looking for a Republican “name” they can support who will appeal to the GOP base and will have a pragmatic chance of winning in 2012, because in their infinite wisdom they know that Sarah Palin has no chance of winning in 2012. So the first name they have backed was Bobby Jindal, but he completely flopped on his face as I predicted he would. Then they went back to Mitt Romney, but they do not seem so sure that they can sell Romney to the GOP grassroots and they are wavering in supporting him. Now it is Tim Pawlenty’s turn; he is now the big name to support. Folk's do you know anything about Tim Pawlenty? No? Well you are in good company because neither do most people including the folks on Townhall.com, but don't worry he fits their chief agenda he's somewhat “conservative” and he's not Sarah Palin. These knuckleheads are conservatives who just fail to learn from history; they praise Reagan and I believe they truly want a Reaganite in the White House but they simply will not support a Reaganesque candidate because from a pragmatic point of view a traditional conservative candidate like Reagan is unelectable today. Didn't we hear this same crap back in 1976 and in 1980? Yeah I think we did and who was wrong back then and are wrong today? I’ll give you one guess. Folk's keep an eye on Sarah Palin she is the Reagan conservative for 2012 and in this regard she is alone, plain and simple.

 

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Reagn's 1977 speech- We need a "New" Republican Party

Reagan- We need a new Republican Party

Despite what some in the press may say, we who are proud to call ourselves “conservative” are not a minority of a minority party; we are part of the great majority of Americans of both major parties and of most of the independents as well.

A Harris poll released September 7, 1975 showed 18 percent identifying themselves as liberal and 31 percent as conservative, with 41 percent as middle of the road; a few months later, on January 5, 1976, by a 43-19 plurality, those polled by Harris said they would “prefer to see the country move in a more conservative direction than a liberal one.”

Last October 24th, the Gallup organization released the result of a poll taken right in the midst of the presidential campaign.

Respondents were asked to state where they would place themselves on a scale ranging from “right-of-center” (which was defined as “conservative”) to left-of-center (which was defined as “liberal”).

o  Thirty-seven percent viewed themselves as left-of-center or liberal

o  Twelve percent placed themselves in the middle

o  Fifty-one percent said they were right-of-center, that is, conservative.

What I find interesting about this particular poll is that it offered those polled a range of choices on a left-right continuum. This seems to me to be a more realistic approach than dividing the world into strict left and rights. Most of us, I guess, like to think of ourselves as avoiding both extremes, and the fact that a majority of Americans chose one or the other position on the right end of the spectrum is really impressive.

Those polls confirm that most Americans are basically conservative in their outlook. But once we have said this, we conservatives have not solved our problems, we have merely stated them clearly. Yes, conservatism can and does mean different things to those who call themselves conservatives.

You know, as I do, that most commentators make a distinction between [what] they call “social” conservatism and “economic” conservatism. The so-called social issues—law and order, abortion, busing, quota systems—are usually associated with blue-collar, ethnic and religious groups themselves traditionally associated with the Democratic Party. The economic issues—inflation, deficit spending and big government—are usually associated with Republican Party members and independents who concentrate their attention on economic matters.

Now I am willing to accept this view of two major kinds of conservatism—or, better still, two different conservative constituencies. But at the same time let me say that the old lines that once clearly divided these two kinds of conservatism are disappearing.

In fact, the time has come to see if it is possible to present a program of action based on political principle that can attract those interested in the so-called “social” issues and those interested in “economic” issues. In short, isn’t it possible to combine the two major segments of contemporary American conservatism into one politically effective whole?

I believe the answer is: Yes, it is possible to create a political entity that will reflect the views of the great, hitherto [unacknowledged], conservative majority. We went a long way toward doing it in California. We can do it in America. This is not a dream, a wistful hope. It is and has been a reality. I have seen the conservative future and it works.

Let me say again what I said to our conservative friends from the academic world: What I envision is not simply a melding together of the two branches of American conservatism into a temporary uneasy alliance, but the creation of a new, lasting majority.

This will mean compromise. But not a compromise of basic principle. What will emerge will be something new: something open and vital and dynamic, something the great conservative majority will recognize as its own, because at the heart of this undertaking is principled politics.

I have always been puzzled by the inability of some political and media types to understand exactly what is meant by adherence to political principle. All too often in the press and the television evening news it is treated as a call for “ideological purity.” Whatever ideology may mean—and it seems to mean a variety of things, depending upon who is using it—it always conjures up in my mind a picture of a rigid, irrational clinging to abstract theory in the face of reality. We have to recognize that in this country “ideology” is a scare word. And for good reason. Marxist-Leninism is, to give but one example, an ideology. All the facts of the real world have to be fitted to the Procrustean bed of Marx and Lenin. If the facts don’t happen to fit the ideology, the facts are chopped off and discarded.

I consider this to be the complete opposite to principled conservatism. If there is any political viewpoint in this world which is free from slavish adherence to abstraction, it is American conservatism.

When a conservative states that the free market is the best mechanism ever devised by the mind of man to meet material needs, he is merely stating what a careful examination of the real world has told him is the truth.

When a conservative says that totalitarian Communism is an absolute enemy of human freedom he is not theorizing—he is reporting the ugly reality captured so unforgettably in the writings of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

When a conservative says it is bad for the government to spend more than it takes in, he is simply showing the same common sense that tells him to come in out of the rain.

When a conservative says that busing does not work, he is not appealing to some theory of education—he is merely reporting what he has seen down at the local school.

When a conservative quotes Jefferson that government that is closest to the people is best, it is because he knows that Jefferson risked his life, his fortune and his sacred honor to make certain that what he and his fellow patriots learned from experience was not crushed by an ideology of empire.

Conservatism is the antithesis of the kind of ideological fanaticism that has brought so much horror and destruction to the world. The common sense and common decency of ordinary men and women, working out their own lives in their own way—this is the heart of American conservatism today. Conservative wisdom and principles are derived from willingness to learn, not just from what is going on now, but from what has happened before.

The principles of conservatism are sound because they are based on what men and women have discovered through experience in not just one generation or a dozen, but in all the combined experience of mankind. When we conservatives say that we know something about political affairs, and that we know can be stated as principles, we are saying that the principles we hold dear are those that have been found, through experience, to be ultimately beneficial for individuals, for families, for communities and for nations—found through the often bitter testing of pain, or sacrifice and sorrow.

One thing that must be made clear in post-Watergate is this: The American new conservative majority we represent is not based on abstract theorizing of the kind that turns off the American people, but on common sense, intelligence, reason, hard work, faith in God, and the guts to say: “Yes, there are things we do strongly believe in, that we are willing to live for, and yes, if necessary, to die for.” That is not “ideological purity.” It is simply what built this country and kept it great.

Let us lay to rest, once and for all, the myth of a small group of ideological purists trying to capture a majority. Replace it with the reality of a majority trying to assert its rights against the tyranny of powerful academics, fashionable left-revolutionaries, some economic illiterates who happen to hold elective office and the social engineers who dominate the dialogue and set the format in political and social affairs. If there is any ideological fanaticism in American political life, it is to be found among the enemies of freedom on the left or right—those who would sacrifice principle to theory, those who worship only the god of political, social and economic abstractions, ignoring the realities of everyday life. They are not conservatives.

Our first job is to get this message across to those who share most of our principles. If we allow ourselves to be portrayed as ideological shock troops without correcting this error we are doing ourselves and our cause a disservice. Wherever and whenever we can, we should gently but firmly correct our political and media friends who have been perpetuating the myth of conservatism as a narrow ideology. Whatever the word may have meant in the past, today conservatism means principles evolving from experience and a belief in change when necessary, but not just for the sake of change.

Once we have established this, the next question is: What will be the political vehicle by which the majority can assert its rights?

I have to say I cannot agree with some of my friends—perhaps including some of you here tonight—who have answered that question by saying this nation needs a new political party.

I respect that view and I know that those who have reached it have done so after long hours of study. But I believe that political success of the principles we believe in can best be achieved in the Republican Party. I believe the Republican Party can hold and should provide the political mechanism through which the goals of the majority of Americans can be achieved. For one thing, the biggest single grouping of conservatives is to be found in that party. It makes more sense to build on that grouping than to break it up and start over.

Rather than a third party, we can have a new first party made up of people who share our principles. I have said before that if a formal change in name proves desirable, then so be it. But tonight, for purpose of discussion, I’m going to refer to it simply as the New Republican Party.

And let me say so there can be no mistakes as to what I mean: The New Republican Party I envision will not be, and cannot, be one limited to the country club-big business image that, for reasons both fair and unfair, it is burdened with today. The New Republican Party I am speaking about is going to have room for the man and the woman in the factories, for the farmer, for the cop on the beat and the millions of Americans who may never have thought of joining our party before, but whose interests coincide with those represented by principled Republicanism. If we are to attract more working men and women of this country, we will do so not by simply “making room” for them, but by making certain they have a say in what goes on in the party. The Democratic Party turned its back on the majority of social conservatives during the 1960s. The New Republican Party of the late ’70s and ’80s must welcome them, seek them out, enlist them, not only as rank-and-file members but as leaders and as candidates.

The time has come for Republicans to say to black voters: “Look, we offer principles that black Americans can, and do, support.” We believe in jobs, real jobs; we believe in education that is really education; we believe in treating all Americans as individuals and not as stereotypes or voting blocs—and we believe that the long-range interest of black Americans lies in looking at what each major party has to offer, and then deciding on the merits. The Democratic Party takes the black vote for granted. Well, it’s time black America and the New Republican Party move toward each other and create a situation in which no black vote can be taken for granted.

The New Republican Party I envision is one that will energetically seek out the best candidates for every elective office, candidates who not only agree with, but understand, and are willing to fight for a sound, honest economy, for the interests of American families and neighborhoods and communities and a strong national defense. And these candidates must be able to communicate those principles to the American people in language they understand. Inflation isn’t a textbook problem. Unemployment isn’t a textbook problem.

They should be discussed in human terms.

Our candidates must be willing to communicate with every level of society, because the principles we espouse are universal and cut across traditional lines. In every Congressional district there should be a search made for young men and women who share these principles and they should be brought into positions of leadership in the local Republican Party groups. We can find attractive, articulate candidates if we look, and when we find them, we will begin to change the sorry state of affairs that has led to a Democratic-controlled Congress for more than 40 years. I need not remind you that you can have the soundest principles in the world, but if you don’t have candidates who can communicate those principles, candidates who are articulate as well as principled, you are going to lose election after election. I refuse to believe that the good Lord divided this world into Republicans who defend basic values and Democrats who win elections. We have to find tough, bright young men and women who are sick and tired of cliches and the pomposity and the mind-numbing economic idiocy of the liberals in Washington.

It is at this point, however, that we come across a question that is really the essential one: What will be the basis of this New Republican Party? To what set of values and principles can our candidates appeal? Where can Americans who want to know where we stand look for guidance?

Fortunately, we have an answer to that question. That answer was provided last summer by the men and women of the Republican Party—not just the leadership, but the ones who have built the party on local levels all across the country.

The answer was provided in the 1976 platform of the Republican Party.

This was not a document handed down from on high. It was hammered out in free and open debate among all those who care about our party and the principles it stands for.

The Republican platform is unique. Unlike any other party platform I have ever seen, it answers not only programmatic questions for the immediate future of the party but also provides a clear outline of the underlying principles upon which those programs are based.

The New Republican Party can and should use the Republican platform of 1976 as the major source from which a Declaration of Principles can be created and offered to the American people.

Tonight I want to offer to you my own version of what such a declaration might look like. I make no claim to originality. This declaration I propose is relatively short, taken, for most part, word for word from the Republican platform. It concerns itself with basic principles, not with specific solutions.

We, the members of the New Republican Party, believe that the preservation and enhancement of the values that strengthen and protect individual freedom, family life, communities and neighborhoods and the liberty of our beloved nation should be at the heart of any legislative or political program presented to the American people. Toward that end, we, therefore, commit ourselves to the following propositions and offer them to each American believing that the New Republican Party, based on such principles, will serve the interest of all the American people.

We believe that liberty can be measured by how much freedom Americans have to make their own decisions, even their own mistakes. Government must step in when one’s liberties impinge on one’s neighbor’s. Government must protect constitutional rights, deal with other governments, protect citizens from aggressors, assure equal opportunity, and be compassionate in caring for those citizens who are unable to care for themselves.

Our federal system of local-state-national government is designed to sort out on what level these actions should be taken. Those concerns of a national character—such as air and water pollution that do not respect state boundaries, or the national transportation system, or efforts to safeguard your civil liberties—must, of course, be handled on the national level.

As a general rule, however, we believe that government action should be taken first by the government that resides as close to you as possible.

We also believe that Americans, often acting through voluntary organizations, should have the opportunity to solve many of the social problems of their communities. This spirit of freely helping others is uniquely American and should be encouraged in every way by government.

Families must continue to be the foundation of our nation.

Families—not government programs—are the best way to make sure our children are properly nurtured, our elderly are cared for, our cultural and spiritual heritages are perpetuated, our laws are observed and our values are preserved.

Thus it is imperative that our government’s programs, actions, officials and social welfare institutions never be allowed to jeopardize the family. We fear the government may be powerful enough to destroy our families; we know that it is not powerful enough to replace them. The New Republican Party must be committed to working always in the interest of the American family.

Every dollar spent by government is a dollar earned by individuals. Government must always ask: Are your dollars being wisely spent? Can we afford it? Is it not better for the country to leave your dollars in your pocket?

Elected officials, their appointees, and government workers are expected to perform their public acts with honesty, openness, diligence, and special integrity.

Government must work for the goal of justice and the elimination of unfair practices, but no government has yet designed a more productive economic system or one which benefits as many people as the American market system.

The beauty of our land is our legacy to our children. It must be protected by us so that they can pass it on intact to their children.

The United States must always stand for peace and liberty in the world and the rights of the individual. We must form sturdy partnerships with our allies for the preservation of freedom.

We must be ever willing to negotiate differences, but equally mindful that there are

American ideals that cannot be compromised. Given that there are other nations with potentially hostile design, we recognize that we can reach our goals only while maintaining a superior national defense, second to none.

In his inaugural speech President Carter said that he saw the world “dominated by a new spirit.” He said, and I quote: “The passion for freedom is on the rise.”

Well, I don’t know how he knows this, but if it is true, then it is the most unrequited passion in human history. The world is being dominated by a new spirit, all right, but it isn’t the spirit of freedom.

It isn’t very often you see a familiar object that shocks and frightens you. But the other day I came across a map of the world created by Freedom House, an organization monitoring the state of freedom in the world for the past 25 years. It is an ordinary map, with one exception: it shows the world’s nations in white for free, shaded for partly free and black for not free.

Almost all of the great Eurasian land mass is completely colored black, from the western border of East Germany, through middle and eastern Europe, through the awesome spaces of the Soviet Union, on to the Bering Strait in the north, down past the immensity of China, still further down to Vietnam and the South China Sea—in all that huge, sprawling, inconceivably immense area not a single political or personal or religious freedom exists. The entire continent of Africa, from the Mediterranean to the Cape of Good Hope, from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, all that vastness is almost totally unfree. In the tiny nation of Tanzania alone, according to a report in the New York Times, there are 3,000 people in detention for political crimes—that is more than the total being held in South Africa! The Mideast has only one free state: Israel. If a visitor from another planet were to approach earth, and if this planet showed free nations in light and unfree nations in darkness, the pitifully small beacons of light would make him wonder what was hidden in that terrifying, enormous blackness.

We know what is hidden: Gulag. Torture. Families—and human beings—broken apart. No free press, no freedom of religion. The ancient forms of tyranny revived and made even more hideous and strong through what Winston Churchill once called “a perverted science.”

Men rotting for years in solitary confinement because they have different political and economic beliefs, solitary confinement that drives the fortunate ones insane and makes the survivors wish for death.

Only now and then do we in the West hear a voice from out of that darkness. Then there is silence—the silence of human slavery. There is no more terrifying sound in human experience, with one possible exception. Look at that map again. The very heart of the darkness is the Soviet Union and from that heart comes a different sound. It is the whirring sound of machinery and the whisper of the computer technology we ourselves have sold them. It is the sound of building, building of the strongest military machine ever devised by man. Our military strategy is designed to hopefully prevent a war. Theirs is designed to win one. A group of eminent scientists, scholars and intelligence experts offer a survey showing that the Soviet Union is driving for military superiority and are derided as hysterically

making, quote, “a worst case,” unquote, concerning Soviet intentions and capabilities.

But is it not precisely the duty of the national government to be prepared for the worst case? Two Senators, after studying the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, have reported to the Armed Forces Committee that Soviet forces in Eastern Europe have the capability to launch, with little warning, a “potentially devastating” attack in Central Europe from what is termed a “standing alert.”

Reading their report, one can almost see the enormous weight of the parts of the earth that are under tyranny shifting in an irresistible tilt toward that tiny portion of land in freedom’s light. Even now in Western Europe we have Communists in the government of Italy, France appeasing terrorists, and England—for centuries the model or the sword of freedom in Western Europe—weak, dispirited, turning inward.

A “worst case”? How could you make a good case out of the facts as they are known? The Soviet Union, poised on the edge of free Europe, capable of striking from a standing start, has modern tanks in far greater numbers than the outmoded vehicles of NATO. We have taken comfort from NATO’s superiority in the air, but now the Soviet Union has made a dramatic swing away from its historic defensive air posture to one capable of supporting offensive action. NATO’s southern flank is described in the Senate report with a single word: shambles.

The report is simply reality as it was, with different names and faces, in Europe in the late 1930s when so many refused to believe and thought if we don’t look the threat will go away.

We don’t want hysteria. We don’t want distortion of Soviet power. We want truth. And above all we want peace. And to have [recognition] that the United States has to immediately re-examine its entire view of the world and develop a strategy of freedom. We cannot be the second-best super-power for the simple reason that he who is second is last.

In this deadly game, there are no silver medals for second.

President Carter, as a candidate, said he would cut five to seven billion dollars from the defense budget. We must let him know that while we agree, there must be no fat in our armed forces. Those armed forces must be capable of coping with the new reality presented to us by the Russians, and cutting seven billion dollars out of our defense budget is not the way to accomplish this. Some years ago, a young President said, we will make any sacrifice, bear any burden, and we will, to preserve our freedom.

Our relationship with mainland China is clouded. The so-called “Gang of Four” are up one day and down the next and we are seeing the pitfalls of making deals with charismatic personalities and living legends. The charisma fades as the living legends die, and those who take their place are interested not in our best wishes but in power. The keyword for China today is turmoil. We should watch and observe and analyze as closely and rationally as we can.

But in our relationships with the mainland of China we should always remember that the conditions and possibilities for and the realities of freedom exist to an infinitely greater degree with our Chinese friends in Taiwan. We can never go wrong if we do what is morally right, and the moral way—the honorable way—is to keep our commitment, our solemn promise to the people of Taiwan. Our liberal friends have made much of the lack of freedom in some Latin American countries. Senator Edward Kennedy and his colleagues here in Washington let no opportunity pass to let us know about horrors in Chile.

Well, I think when the United States of America is considering a deal with a country that hasn’t had an election in almost eight years, where the press is under the thumb of a dictatorship, where ordinary citizens are abducted in the night by secret police, where military domination of the country is known to be harsh on dissenters and when these things are documented, we should reject overtures from those who rule such a country.

But the country I’m describing is not Chile—it is Panama.

We are negotiating with a dictatorship that comes within the portion of that map colored black for no freedom. No civil rights. One-man rule. No free press.

Candidate Carter said he would never relinquish “actual control” of the Panama Canal.

President Carter is negotiating with a dictatorship whose record on civil and human rights is as I have just described and the negotiations concern the rights guaranteed to us by treaty which we will give up under a threat of violence. In only a few weeks we will mark the second anniversary of the death of freedom for the Vietnamese. An estimated 300,000 of them are being “re-educated” in concentration camps to forget about freedom.

There is only one major question on the agenda of national priorities and that is the state of our national security. I refer, of course, to the state of our armed forces—but also to our state of mind, to the way we perceive the world. We cannot maintain the strength we need to survive, no matter how many missiles we have, no matter how many tanks we build, unless we are willing to reverse:

The trend of deteriorating faith in and continuing abuse of our national intelligence agencies. Let’s stop the sniping and the propaganda and the historical revisionism and let

the CIA and the other intelligence agencies do their job!

Let us reverse the trend of public indifference to problems of national security. In every congressional district citizens should join together, enlist and educate neighbors and make certain that congressmen know we care. The front pages of major newspapers on the East Coast recently headlined and told in great detail of a takeover, the takeover of a magazine published in New York—not a nation losing its freedom. You would think, from the attention it received in the media, that it was a matter of blazing national interest whether the magazine lived or died. The tendency of much of the media to ignore the state of our

national security is too well documented for me to go on.

My friends, the time has come to start acting to bring about the great conservative majority party we know is waiting to be created.

And just to set the record straight, let me say this about our friends who are now Republicans but who do not identify themselves as conservatives: I want the record to show that I do not view the new revitalized Republican Party as one based on a principle of exclusion. After all, you do not get to be a majority party by searching for groups you won’t associate or work with. If we truly believe in our principles, we should sit down and talk.

Talk with anyone, anywhere, at any time if it means talking about the principles for the Republican Party. Conservatism is not a narrow ideology, nor is it the exclusive property of conservative activists.

We’ve succeeded better than we know. Little more than a decade ago more than two-thirds of Americans believed the federal government could solve all our problems, and do so

without restricting our freedom or bankrupting the nation.

We warned of things to come, of the danger inherent in unwarranted government involvement in things not its proper province. What we warned against has come to pass.

And today more than two-thirds of our citizens are telling us, and each other, that social engineering by the federal government has failed. The Great Society is great only in power, in size and in cost. And so are the problems it set out to solve. Freedom has been diminished and we stand on the brink of economic ruin.

Our task now is not to sell a philosophy, but to make the majority of Americans, who already share that philosophy, see that modern conservatism offers them a political home.

We are not a cult, we are members of a majority. Let’s act and talk like it.

The job is ours and the job must be done. If not by us, who? If not now, when?

Our party must be the party of the individual. It must not sell out the individual to cater to the group. No greater challenge faces our society today than ensuring that each one of us can maintain his dignity and his identity in an increasingly complex, centralized society.

Extreme taxation, excessive controls, oppressive government competition with business, galloping inflation, frustrated minorities and forgotten Americans are not the products of free enterprise. They are the residue of centralized bureaucracy, of government by a self-anointed elite.

Our party must be based on the kind of leadership that grows and takes its strength from the people. Any organization is in actuality only the lengthened shadow of its members. A political party is a mechanical structure created to further a cause. The cause, not the mechanism, brings and holds the members together. And our cause must be to rediscover, reassert and reapply America’s spiritual heritage to our national affairs.

Then with God’s help we shall indeed be as a city upon a hill with the eyes of all people upon us.

Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA)

Conservative Political Action Conference

Washington, DC

February 6, 1977
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McCain vs. Palin The coming battle!

A recent Politico article found here: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1009/27832.html

has pointed out that Senator John “I got Obama elected” McCain (in cohorts with Senator Lindsey “Back Stabber” Graham) is working behind the scenes to reshape the Republican Party in his image, which is to say that he wants the GOP to move to the political left of George Bush and even to the left of all the neo-conservatives. McCain is in the process of endorsing people like Mark Kirk for Senator in Illinois. Now who is Kirk? Representative Kick is one of only eight Republicans who voted for Obama’s Cap & Trade industrial tax & kill bill. Oh who else? How about the other RINO Charlie Crist in Florida, the man who stands shoulder with Obama more often than not. In short what is McCain doing? McCain is trying to root Traditional Reagan Conservatism and Libertarian Conservatism right out of the GOP.

        Let me just say it, Senator McCain is a political menace and he needs to be defeated in either the next GOP primary or the general election, and yes I am advocating voting for a Democrat if this is what it takes to get rid of McCain. Fortunately, there is a rock solid conservative running against McCain in Arizona for the GOP nomination and we conservatives need to support him with everything we got. His name is Chris Simcox the founder of the Minutemen who patrols Arizona’s border with Mexico, cracking down on illegal immigration on their own time and expense. His website is: http://www.simcoxforsenate.com/ and he needs our support.

        Fortunately, there is hope coming from another direction as well; one that McCain is unwise to go against. It is the “Northern Storm” Sarah Palin. Sarah Palin is utterly determined to bring Traditional Reagan Conservatism back to the GOP. She is so determined to do this that she resigned her governorship when she realized that she could not be both the Governor of Alaska and be an activist in bringing conservatism back to the GOP. I will be one the first to write it: a showdown is coming between Sarah Palin and John McCain because they are both determined to shape the GOP in what are two completely different views: McCain’s “we need to be more liberal & advocate government control” and Palin’s “we need to get back to Reagan & recover personal liberty”. A conflict is thus inevitable and I do not know what it will look like but Palin will have to take on McCain if she is to succeed in bringing Traditional Conservatism back to the GOP.

        What will be the consequences for Sarah Palin if she takes on the man who placed her as his running mate on the GOP ticket last year? My prediction is that there will be no consequences for her; in fact it will benefit her politically. For Sarah Palin a clean break with McCain or even a confrontation with him will only show her commitment to Traditional Conservative principles, and her commitment to stand by her principles no matter the cost. The GOP base already hates McCain and for the life of me I cannot figure why the Republicans of Arizona keep sending this loser back to the Senate, but God willing they will have realized what a menace he is and nominate Chris Simcox in 2010. Simcox should keep his slogan simple like, “McCain gave us Obama!” That should wake the Arizona GOP base up.

        However, getting back to the point, Sarah Palin does not need McCain and to be associated with him is a hindrance and not a benefit for her. Sarah Palin’s political star power can be seen from her continuous drawing of wildly enthusiastic crowds of 30,000-50,000 people to her recent recording breaking bestselling book, all this shows that she has by far and away the power to take on McCain and it is McCain who should be afraid of Sarah Palin. Sarah Palin has the base, she is getting the money, and she has the backbone to break McCain and she doesn’t owe him a damm thing at this point. I state this because when the McCain staffers were lying about Palin and her wardrobe he was nowhere to be found, when Letterman attacked her daughter there was not a peep from the “honorable” McCain, and now Steve Schmidt (the utterly disastrous former McCain campaign manager) is calling Sarah Palin a potential “catastrophe” for the GOP if she wins the GOP nomination in 2012. So where is the “honorable” McCain? NOWHERE! This guy is not honorable; he has not had an honorable moment in his life since Vietnam!  Just ask his fellow Republican Senators what an A-Hole he is when off camera.

        My advice to John McCain is this: if you get in Sarah Palin’s way you do so at your own peril, because she has political star power that you do not even remotely have and this is a fight you cannot win among the GOP base. Even if you were to come out and publically say “don’t vote for Sarah Palin in 2012”, it would not mean much because the GOP base utterly detests you. In Palin vs. McCain my money is on Sarah Palin plain and simple.  
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Townhall.com vs. Sarah Palin?

     One of the things I have noticed on Townhall.com is that it sufferers from A.B.P which stands “anybody but Palin”, a phrase used by inside the Beltway Republicans and especially used by neo-conservatives. Folks let me explain something to you, the GOP is in the midst of a civil war and if you listen to much talk radio you will pick up on this. In conservative talk radio you have two types of hosts: first, are those who are Traditional Conservatives first and Republicans second. These would be Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, and Tammy Bruce. The second type of hosts are Republicans first and Conservatives second, and these would be Hugh Hewitt and Michael Medved  and I will refrain about making comments about Gallagher and Prager because I am uncertain as to where they stand.

        The first group of hosts are solidly behind Sarah Palin because they know that she is a rock solid Traditional Reagan Conservative and makes no apologies for it. In fact Sarah Palin deliberately took numerous swipes at neo-conservatism in her Hong Kong speech. She gave the finger to George Bush’s “compassionate conservatism” by using the term “common-sense conservative” to describe herself and she flat out rejected the golden egg of neo-conservatism which is to spread democracy around the world; she stated unequivocally that this is not the job of the United States. The U.S. should fight for human natural law rights, but fighting to establish democracy across the global is not our job. This was two fingers held up at once; one to George Bush and the other to the neo-conservatives in the Beltway. They also know (as I do as well) that she can beat Barak “Hussian” Obama in 2012. Lastly, they know that she will redefine the GOP back into the Reagan mold, thus leaving the neo-conservative GOP elites with pink slips and a kick in the as*.

        The second group of hosts and Townhall.com in general is more neo-conservative than traditional conservative. They take their orders from the GOP elites and not the conservative grassroots. They utterly fail to understand that the GOP base is sick of neo-conservatives and are no longer turning out to vote for them, and this is what happened to the GOP in both 2006 & 2008. The first group (like Reagan) wants to transform the GOP into a “New Conservative Republican Party” as Reagan stated in a 1977 speech. Reagan did not view being Republican as being enough, he valued “Conservative Republicans”, and not RINO’s who are simply “Democrat Lite”.

        This would explain why Townhall.com ignores good news about Sarah Palin, while reporting bad news about her. For example yesterday, Sarah Palin made history by having the fastest selling non-fiction book in history. Within 8 hours of her book being posted on Barnes & Noble’s website it rose to #1 in sales and within 24 hours it rose to #1 on Amazon.com. Yet Townhall.com thought that Tim Pawlenty’s creating a PAC was bigger news! Today they were (in my opinion) forced to report what everyone was already writing and talking about yesterday, I guess they didn’t want their A.B.P to be too obvious. Folks there is a deliberate choice in what Townhall.com is doing, they are looking to prop up either Pawlenty or Romney, but still it is A.B.P (anybody but Palin) in the end because they are Republicans first and conservatives second.

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So who is the leader of the conservative movement?

   Having thought about this for a while I do not see a single leader for a revival of Traditional Reagan Conservatism, and not the moderate neo-conservatives who utterly destroyed the GOP. Like 1977 when the GOP was smashed and Reagan with much grassroots support rebuilt the GOP into a Traditional Conservative Party, and in this he succeded magnificently. Today the grassroots of the GOP and even independent conservatives have utterly had it with the current GOP leadership. So what are we seeing? First, there are the national tea parties, and the massive turnout in townhall meetings, but this movement does not have a standeredbearer at the moment, although Palin 2012 T-shirts and signs dominated the crowds. 

   The other leaders who are pushing for a conservative takeover of the GOP are Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, Tammy Bruce, and Glenn Beck. These people are highly influencial among the grassroots of conservatives and libertarians. But they also seem to be placing hope in a future political figure and that is Sarah Palin. Recently in Hong Kong Palin took a swipe at the "compassionate conservitism" (a.k.a neo-conservative crap) by defining herself as a "common sense conservative" and that what Traditional Conservatism is, it is applied "common sense" to politics and economics. If Sarah Palin does run for president she has many things going for her. First, the tea party movement that is just waiting for her to take the lead. Second, a conservative base who deeply loves her. Third, she has very powerful supporters in the media, such as: Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Greta Van Sustrin, Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, and Tammy Bruce just to name a few. I also think that Neil Cavuto is strongly leaning towards her as well. There are also conservative websites who support her as well such as Newsmax, Drudge, Redstate.com, and Human Events. Not to leave out her almost 1 million followers on her facebook page. I just want to give you a glimpse of what is both going on and will most likely happen in the next few years.
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Palin, McCain, and the GOP Elites

This was a great piece by a college student that is worth a quick read. Here it is:
 

Moderates Murdered McCain, Now Punish Palin

By Patrick Ross

It’s not Sarah Palin’s fault. No matter how much the media and the squishy moderates who propped up John McCain try to blame it on her, this loss falls squarely at the feet of the nominee and every other “compassionate conservative” complicit in muddying the definition of a Republican.
Every real conservative saw this coming a long time ago — as far back as eight years, the first time this loser went down to, of all people, George W. Bush. The only reason McCain didn’t suffer the biggest wipeout in American political history was because of Palin.
My original plan was to vote for Calvin Coolidge. I figured I’d much rather endorse Silent Cal than loud-mouthed, high-pitched Yosemite Sam. I ended up voting for McCain, but my vote was really cast for Palin. Say what you will about her intelligence, but all I care about is a politician committed to reigning in government. I don’t care if she hasn’t read a page of Shakespeare as long as she isn’t calculating how next to involve government in matters where it doesn’t belong. The presidency should be a rather simple job. The less the president “does,” the better.
While the so-called “moderates” didn’t take well to Palin, the base was immediately galvanized, as is evident by the stratospheric spike in contributions following the pick. McCain spent the last weeks of his campaign trying to save formerly solid GOP states, which speaks volumes because, by that time, he had muzzled Palin.
Republican turnout dropped and 20 percent of conservatives jumped ship for the messiah. I’d venture that the turnout would have been even lower and the defections higher if she hadn’t been on the ticket. Without Palin, McCain would have been worse off than Walter Mondale in 1984.
It says a lot that the media and the hacks inside the McCain camp have circled the wagons against Palin. The insiders, being their usual traitorous selves, are trying to slough off the blame for their miserable performance so that they can continue working campaigns and attending state dinners. It’s also telling that the worst they can come up with are petty personal smears: she answered a door in her towel (the horror!) and she bought some nice clothing (oh no!). Of course, it doesn’t matter that Obama blew $2 million on his victory party, not to mention orchestrating the most expensive campaign in history. Palin’s the villain, right?
I’m glad McCain was defeated because he would have been as much an activist as Obama. He claimed to be the spiritual successor to Teddy Roosevelt, which is better than aligning with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson and John F. Kennedy I suppose, but it’s time Republicans stopped nominating anybody whose activism is going to go beyond sweeping cuts across the board.
The moderate and liberal Republicans got everything they wanted this election: an equivocating campaign about global warming and Joe the Plumber, no personal attacks – including the total exclusion of Jeremiah Wright from official discourse – and a nominee whose claim to fame is voting with the Democrats. Look where this behavior has gotten Republicans over the last 12 years: Bob Dole went down to insurgent, anti-moderate conservatives voting for Ross Perot, Bush narrowly won against candidates as weak as Al Gore and John Kerry and it all culminated with a candidate so “mavericky” that he defeated himself.
Even before Palin’s nomination, polls indicated that moderates were breaking for Obama in excess of 60 percent. Ronald Reagan won landslides with conservatism, not by courting back-stabbing independents like Colin Powel.
McCain’s loss will be harmful in the short term, but it has thoroughly discredited the moderate heads of the party and is going to force a groundswell of reform for the GOP. People on the inside are obviously scared, as is evident by the panicked rush to blame Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and anybody else who didn’t genuflect to the messiah. Conservatives have been Balkanized. It’s time to flush the moderates before they crush the GOP.

Patrick Ross is a fifth-year English and history double-major. He can be reached at pross@uci.edu.

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George Bush's claim to redefine the GOP.

Matt Latimer, retells a story in his new book Speechless: Tales of a White House Survivor, and Byron York relates it in the Washington Examiner. The story is about how George Bush has boasted about how he redifined the Republican Party from being a cnservative party to a big government party. Here is what Byron York wrote: 
“What is this movement you keep talking about in the speech?” the president asked Latimer.

Latimer explained that he meant the conservative movement — the movement that gave rise to groups like CPAC.

Bush seemed perplexed. Latimer elaborated a bit more. Then Bush leaned forward, with a point to make.

“Let me tell you something,” the president said. “I whupped Gary Bauer’s as-s in 2000. So take out all this movement stuff. There is no movement.”

Bush seemed to equate the conservative movement — the astonishing growth of conservative political strength that took place in the decades after Barry Goldwater’s disastrous defeat in 1964 — with the fortunes of Bauer, the evangelical Christian activist and former head of the Family Research Council whose 2000 presidential campaign went nowhere.

Now it was Latimer who looked perplexed. Bush tried to explain.

“Look, I know this probably sounds arrogant to say,” the president said, “but I redefined the Republican Party.”

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