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Democrats Reveal Strategy -- Lie, Cheat, and Steal (Revised)

I advise all Republicans against premature triumphalism.  I've watched Democrats stealing elections since at least the mid 1990s, when they stole Philadelphia elections so unashamedly that a judge actually threw out the results in several races.  I've seen the probably stolen (Mary Landrieu's Senate seat in Lousiana, Christine Gregoire's (sp?) governorship in Washington), and the definitely stolen (Tim Johnson's Senate election in South Dakota, and most notoriously Al Franken's Senate seat in Minnesota).  The successful defense of a Republican-won election in Florida 2000 against an attempted Democratic theft was an exception to the rule.  These people are ruthless law-breakers, and I fear that I'll end up watching the Democrats stealing election after election while Republicans are left fighting by the Marquis of Queensbury rules against an opponent using brass knuckles and poison.
 
For the moment the second item in the Democrats plan has hit a snag, as the Schumer/Van Hollon (I don't care how you spell his name) absurdly-named DISCLOSE Act failed a key test vote.  Don't get cocky, pachyderm party -- the Obamacare Health Care Deform monstrosity (which in itself was essentially Hillarycare grotesquely raised from the dead) hit a few snags to, and yet it eventually passed.  Don't think that the Democrats have given up on Sandinista-style elections in America, though.  (If you don't understand this reference, read Give War a Chance, by P.J. O'Rourke.  You should have by now, anyway.)  In America, bad Democratic ideas live forever, much like Count Dracula.  Watch your state legislatures -- they'll try to catch you unawares while quietly loading the dice in their favor.
 
Here in Monroe County, NY, the Democrats have started preparing the "steal" part of the strategy for this November.  For years, we had basic mechanical voting machines.  They were low-tech, and that was the beauty of them.  They were simple to use, and never broke down.  They were also largely tamper-proof, so this was why the Democrats decided they had to go, and gone they are.  I just got my instructions for using the new machines, and even a quick skim shows many many different ways of tampering with ballots and thus with elections.  (For example, imagine someone setting all of the machines so that the Democrat vote count starts at 10, and the Republican starts at -10.  The vote total will still be correct, so how will anyone know?)  The old machines required about 5 minutes training (usually in 6th grade) to master, but online I found a 41 page manual for the ImageCast Voting System (with Ballot Marking Device).  Check it out yourself.  More complicated and thus bound to be much slower, these "high-tech" devices violate the KISS standard -- Keep It Simple, Stupid.
 
But they're not stupid.
 
They want it complicated.  They want lots of "questionable" ballots, for them to mark (for their candidate) or spoil (if it's marked for the other candidate).  The more complex they make the once simple act of voting, the more opportunity they will have to tamper with election results.  These people are ruthless and conscienceless.  They are about power.  Don't think they're going to give it up, especially as the census figures and redistricting will give them the chance to cement themselves in power permanently. 
 
I hope the Republicans have hired lots of poll-watchers, electronics experts, and legions of lawyers.  They're probably going to need them.
 
(I really didn't have to explain the "lie" part, did I?)
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Lessons of Year One of the Obama Error, v1

Lessons of Year One of the Obama Error

In many ways, the Scott Brown election victory in Massachusetts was the perfect last day for the first year of the BO administration.  Many writers will be writing their evaluations of year 1 of the new error, in which we tried turning over the White House to a “narcissistic neophyte Marxist” (thank you Thomas Sowell).  Much of it will be bosh, much will be slanted and distorted, and a fair amount will be both.  Some of the following may be, too, but at least I admit the possibility.  The following is entirely personal, but I’ll make it as honest and as accurate as I can.  

(Keep in mind that this is a scrapbook.  These items will of necessity be short.  I may write a book someday, but this isn’t it.)



Affirmative Action is a Lousy Way to Choose a President

Over a year ago I wrote a post declaring why I would not be celebrating the ascension of  “America’s first black president”.  Re-reading it now, it still holds up pretty well.  I remain convinced that many of the voters who voted for BO in 2008 did not actually vote for Barack Obama, they voted for “a black man for President”.  I have always found the assertion that America had to elect a first-term Senator of no particular distinction President to do penance for “White Guilt” ridiculous.  I have no white guilt, historical or otherwise.  I’m not even white, anyway.  My grandfather, Young Han Choo, was the South Korean Consul General to the United States.  I live in the historic “Burned-Over District” in western New York, which was a hotbed of abolition fervor in the years before and during the Civil War.  The famous Jerry Rescue happened not far from where I’m typing this, in Syracuse, NY.  None of this is truly relevant, anyway.  I was not alive during slavery, and I was a child when the Jim Crow Laws finally met their deserved demise.  To say that someone like me bears guilt for the misdeeds by those who have gone before is getting frighteningly close to the reasoning that Adolf Hitler used to justify his shocking crimes against the Jewish people.

Too few people bothered looking behind the symbolic nature of the campaign and looked at the man behind it.  If they had, they would have seen the radical nature of the man running for the highest office in the land.  Of course, we couldn’t have predicted everything.  The hoards of czars would have been a surprise, although perhaps not so stunning as they were.  However, there were warning signs abounding, if the voters had looked for them, and if they had demanded thorough reporting from the traditional (in the worst meaning of the word) media.  “Radical” scarcely describes the man who spoke and voted against a ban on Live-Birth Abortion, a hideous practice brought to the attention of the public by a courageous nurse in Illinois named Jill Stanek, in which infants who survived a botched abortion would simply be set aside to die, with no life-saving aid offered despite the fact that they had in fact been born.  In fact, the only state senator who spoke against the ban on the practice in 2001 was Illinois State Senator Barack Obama.  Can anyone possibly argue that this information is insignificant, and that the public didn’t need to know this before Election Day?  In fact, it is a window into what increasingly seems to be the icy emptiness of the Obama soul.



Purity of Principle is a Luxury a Patriot can Seldom Afford

Approaching Election Day in 2008, it was very clear that some conservative Republicans were going to refuse to vote for John McCain because he was insufficiently conservative.  These proud righties chose to “punish” the Republican Party by withholding their support, even if it meant that the Democratic Party candidates would “sweep the board” -- taking the Presidency and both houses of Congress.  One of my best friends numbered himself among them, to my distress.  I tried with increasing desperation to talk him out of his determination, and won the concession that he would not let his opposition to Senator McCain keep him home on Election Day, if he could find other candidates running for other offices that were worth voting for.  (I believe he did.)

Of course, when you stay home on Election Day, you can’t vote for any of the candidates, not just the one you’re avoiding voting for.  As a result, you do more damage than you intend, and you punish the innocent, a number that eventually includes yourself and your country.  One of those who may have been defeated by recalcitrant conservatives’ anger at John McCain was Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman, who was a reliably conservative vote.  Not 100%, but as we all learned, but some of us forgot, “nobody’s perfect”.  I mentioned this in a post in December.  Republicans (and many others) are rightly celebrating the victory of Scott Brown on Tuesday, giving the Republicans the vital 41st vote they need to derail the health care hostile takeover (barring procedural tricks by the Dems, so don’t stop watching).  If more conservatives had gone to the polls in November 2008, perhaps Norm Coleman could have held onto the seat which was stolen from him by the Democrats’ election-stealing machine.  If Norm had reached the closing of the polls with a larger lead than he had, it would have been much harder for the election thieves to steal enough votes to turn the result, perhaps impossibly so.  I wonder how many of the recalcitrant conservatives in Minnesota realize to this day that they helped inflict Senator Al Franken on the whole country.  Thanks, you sanctimonious stiff-necks.

The Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary defines Patriot as "one who loves his or her country and supports its authority and interests."  Is it really in your beloved country’s best interest to have socialist majorities in both houses of Congress, with a Marxist egomaniac in the White House?  Is it in your country’s interest to have reduced the Republican representation to such a splinter that they cannot help the country or please you, even if they absorb the “lesson” you tried to “teach” them?  All virtues become either vices or weaknesses when exaggerated.  Are you sure that you have not sinned against your country, in your zeal to punish a political party?  If the economy dies, are you sure that some of its blood will not be on your hands?



The Imposture of the Democrats as the “Party of the People” took a Beating This Year

I wish I could remember which conservative pundit said that the greatest advantage the Republicans have when fighting to regain power is the way Democrats conduct themselves when they’re in power.  We often speak of the arrogance of power, but seldom in American history has it been so flamboyant as it has been in the last year.  To my memory, every major initiative passed by the Democrat majorities in Congress this year was passed against the will of the majority of the American people.  From the “Stimulus”, to Cap-and-Trade, to the deficit-drenched budget, to the pork-stuffed appropriation bills, to the socialistic health-care takeover bills, the Democrats have shown contempt for the desires of the people that has been a marvel to behold.  

Think back to the town hall meetings of August.  Thousands of plain American citizens turned out for meetings held by senators and representatives (those who had the courage to actually face their constituents), and let them know in no uncertain terms that they were fiercely opposed to the agenda being pushed in Washington.  How did the Democrats respond (with some honorable exceptions)?  With insults, with pomposity, and with transparently false accusations.  On a few occasions, they even tried to say that the thousands opposing them publicly (like an iceberg, the majority of the millions of Americans opposing the socialistic and tyrannical agenda being pushed in Washington lies under the surface) were being paid to protest by such special interests as the insurance companies.  They called them "teabaggers" (Don’t follow this link if you’re easily offended).  The Tea Party Movement is a genuine movement of angry American citizens who are fed up with the high-handed dictatorial actions of the professional politicos in Washington, and in their state governments as well.  They do not deserve to be slandered, but the Democrats see the voters as subjects, not employers.

The Democrat line recently is that the public has been deceived by “misinformation” distributed by the Tea Partiers, the Republicans, and the “special interest groups”.  Presumably, they mean the “misinformation” we’re getting from the precisely quoted text of the bills.  Anyway, there’s something incredibly rich about being accused of misleading people by serial liars like Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, … and Barack Obama.



I have more, much more, but thinking back over the past year has given me a headache.  I’ll be back when the Excedrin start working.

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Anybody Else Miss Norm Coleman?

As I watch the struggles over Cap-and_Trade, the Health Care Hostile Takeover bills, etc., I think "It sure would be nice if Norm Coleman were still a Senator from Minnesota."  As I recall, the election went down to the wire on election night, with Coleman holding a narrow lead against Democratic candidate and former comedian Al Franken.  The Democrats spent the next 72 hours creating votes for Franken, while the Republicans, with naive trust in the electoral system (and apparently forgetting Florida 2000), sat on their hands instead of demanding that all ballot boxes (or their Minnesota equivalent) be impounded immediately after the polls closed.  Syndicated columnist Ann Coulter tried desperately to get the Republicans to act, but their hesitation proved fatal. 
 
The Coleman campaign and the Republicans in Minnesota and on their Senatorial Campaign Committee share the blame for this loss, of course, but they're not alone.  I remember many sanctimonious conservatives declaring that they would stay home rather than vote for John McCain for President.  A friend of mine was among them, but my friend is a reasonable man, and he agreed to vote for good Republicans on his local ballot even if he didn't vote for Johnny Mac.  I wonder how many of his fellows stayed home altogether, rather than vote for a less-than-perfect candidate?  I wonder how many in Minnesota?  Enough to swing the election?
 
Norm Coleman was not perfect, to be sure.  No man or woman is.  We can be sure, though, that he would have stood with his party to fight these horrific proposals.  Every "Simon-pure" conservative who stayed home rather than vote for John McCain helped elect Franken, and shares the responsibility for our current problems.
 
Thanks a lot, you pompous twits.
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Grateful for Blagojevitch

Quick question:  Who is the one person who is happiest about the Blagojevitch scandal?
 
Answer:  Al Franken, because now he can go back to stealing the Minnesota Senate seat secretly, since the press and the people are distracted by another crooked pol.
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A Disgusting Development for Conservatives

I'm at work today.  They allow us to read at our stations between calls, so I'm reading articles I've downloaded from the Internet.  Suddenly, I was hit (with an effect rather like bird droppings from the sky) by an appalling thought.  With the Republicans in the Senate down to 41 or 42 seats (I think Saxby Chambliss will be returned, but Minnesota AG Mark Ritchie may succeed in helping Al Franken steal Norm Coleman's seat), RINOs like Olympia Snowe, Susan Collins, and Arlen Specter suddenly become vitally important to any attempts to maintain filibusters against dreadful Democratic ideas.  Will they stand with their party?  Will they demand unacceptable recompense for their support.
 
I fear the worst.  These may be dark days descending...
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Support Norm Coleman, Oppose Election Fraud! (Amended)

Even though I couldn't afford to, I just donated to Norm Coleman's campaign, and I urge anyone reading this to do so, too.  It's time for all of us who support honest elections to stand up and shout "No!  We will not tolerate flamboyant seat-stealing before our very eyes!  We will not let crooked politics hand a seat to an unfunny man (thank you, James Taranto) who is in no way qualified to be in the Senate, and who LOST the election.  The leftmedia may allow it, but we will NOT!"
 
Benito O'Carter surfed to victory on a tidal wave of money (legal and illegal).  Even if Senator Coleman is not a 100% conservative, he's infinitely better than Al Franken, and we must not let dollars and fraud defraud a decent man who played by the rules and won fair and square. 
 
(To donate to Norm Coleman's stop-Frankenfraud efforts, go here.  To see why I consider this effort so important, go here.)
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