If you listen to the MSM or the Left in this country, you always hear how mean and selfish Conservatives are.   We do not want to help the poor or various other inane reasons why we hate Black people and people less fortunate.   well, if you really want to know, Conservative is the best thing for all.   Free Markets and Liberty will always lead to a more prosperous country.   But if you look at what the MSM and Left, the only way you can get happiness is through the government.   This is the antithesis of what our country was founded on.  Individualism and Federalism were some of the main foundations of that Document that the Left think is a living document.

Each state would be its own entity and the Federal government would be there to protect the states.  Now the hand of the Federal Government is in our every day life and the Supreme Court has allowed the Commerce Clause to be used in ways the Founding Fathers never thought it should be used.  We have the Federal Government telling states that they will get money for projects if they jump through hoops to get them.

Somewhere along the way, the United States of America has lost its way and we need to get it back on track.  As in this video we see the Soft Tyranny poking its head into our country.

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Gov. Sanford has it totally right.   We do have the 10th Amendment and that is that all thing not specifically said in the Constitution goes back to the states or the people.  We have long ago totally lost what our country is all about.   We are a Republic, with each state is their own entity and the Federal Government is there to proect us from danger within and from outside the country.   But we now have the Federal Governmetn telling States what they can and cannot do.  This is not how the country was formed, States had more power and the Federal Government could not use money to force states to do its bidding.

Sanford is right to refuse to play in this game and should be commended.

America’s states are laboratories of democracy. They are both affected by, and relevant to, the larger national debate. What we’ve found in our own corner of the country is that carrying a substantial debt load limits our options when it comes to running government.

A recent report by the American Legislative Exchange Council ranked us 47th worst in the nation for annual debt service as a percentage of tax revenue. Our state dedicates nearly 11% of its annual tax revenue to paying debt. On top of that, South Carolina has another $20 billion in unfunded, long-term political promises for pensions and other liabilities. The state budget has already been cut four times in recent months as the national economic downturn has impacted South Carolina and driven down tax revenue.

President Barack Obama recently signed a “stimulus” bill that will spend about $2 billion through “programmatic means” in South Carolina. In other words, the federal government will put this money directly into existing funding formulas and programs such as Medicaid. But there is an additional $700 million that I as governor have influence over, and it is the disposition of this money that has drawn the national spotlight to South Carolina.

Here’s the background: Before the stimulus bill passed, I asked for states not to be bailed out. After it was signed into law, I said that a state bailout would create more problems than it solved, and that we shouldn’t spend money we don’t have. That debate was lost, so I looked for a reasonable middle ground. I asked the president for his support in using the $700 million to pay down state debt.

If we’re going to spend money we don’t have at the federal level, it becomes all the more important that our state balance sheet is in good order — particularly if this is a protracted downturn. But many people do not realize that the stimulus money runs out in 24 months — at which point South Carolina will be forced to find a new source of funding to sustain the new level of spending, or to make sharp cuts. Sure, I could kick the can down the road; in two years, I’ll be safely out of office. But it would be irresponsible.

If South Carolina could use stimulus money to pay down debt, in two years we will be able to spend, cut taxes or invest even if the federal government can no longer provide more money — not a remote possibility. In fact, paying debt related to education would free up over $162 million in debt service in the first two years and save roughly $125 million in interest payments over the next 13 years — just as paying off a family’s mortgage early frees up money for other uses.

When you’re in a hole, the first order of business is stop digging. South Carolina is in a hole, and it’s not a shallow one. Spending stimulus money on ongoing programs would mean 10% of our entire state budget would be paid for with one-time federal funds — the largest recorded level in state history.

Also, spending stimulus money will delay needed state restructuring. General Motors recently found itself in a similar spot. It needs to be restructured if it is to prosper, but a federal bailout enabled it to put off hard decisions. Likewise, taking federal stimulus money will only postpone changes essential to South Carolina’s prosperity. Though well-intended, it forestalls hard choices we must make.

One of Mr. Obama’s central campaign themes was his pledge to do away with politics of the past. In his inaugural address, he proclaimed “an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas, that for far too long have strangled our politics.”

This idea connected with millions of voters, myself included. I’ve always believed ideas should rise and fall on their merits. In fact, I saw such historical significance in his candidacy and the change he spoke of that I published an op-ed on it before South Carolina’s presidential primary last year. It was not an endorsement, but it did note the historic nature of his candidacy and the potential positive change in tone it represented. That potential may now be disappearing.

Last week I reached out to the president, asking for a federal waiver from restrictions on stimulus money. I got a most unusual response. Before I even received an acknowledgment of the request from the White House, I got word that the Democratic National Committee was launching campaign-style TV attack-ads against me for making it.

Is this the new brand of politics we were promised? Instead of engaging with me and other governors on the merits of our dissent, I am to be attacked in television ads? In the end, I just don’t believe a problem created by too much debt will be solved by piling on more debt. This doesn’t strike me as an unreasonable or extremist position.

Nevertheless, the White House declined my request for a waiver yesterday afternoon. That’s unfortunate. But in coming months we’ll continue advancing the debate at the state level about the merits of debt repayment. The fact remains that while we’d all like to spend unlimited dollars on the very real needs that exist in our state, we must spend in the context of what is sustainable.

Mr. Sanford, a Republican, is the governor of South Carolina.

Wall Street journal

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Voter Fraud alert

Well, this does not surprise me at all.   An ACORN member here in the St Louis area was indicted on voter fraud charges.   Umm, this happens every election, so what else is new.

ACORN voter registration recruiter charged with voter registration fraud
By Patrick M. O’Connell

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

01/05/2009

ST. LOUIS — A voter registration recruiter working for the group ACORN has been indicted on two felony counts of voter registration fraud.

Deidra Humphrey, 44, of East St. Louis, is expected to appear in U.S. District Court in St. Louis this week after a federal grand jury indicted her on the charges Dec. 31, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Humphrey is accused of submitting forged and false voter registration cards for the November general election, including forging cards for nursing home residents, U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway said Monday.

Humphrey worked for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) and the Missouri Progressive Vote Coalition, not-for-profit organizations that conducted voter registration drives…

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Illinois Politics

“The government of Illinois was once run by the mob, now the Government runs itself like the mob.”

Since now the whole world is looking into Illinois Politics, I have some things to say about it. Since I live here in the Great State of ChicagoIllinois, I can explain some things.    The arrest and the allegations against  Rod “the Bod” Blagojevich is not surprising.   Illinois has always been one of the  most corrupt states in the nation, and  most people remember the times of Al Capone, and think that that is in the past.   Well, Illinois is still run the same way with Kick Backs, Bribes and intimidation, the only thing is now theGovernment of Illinois has taken over the role the Mob played in Al Capone’s days.

varv12102008a20081210044003We have had 3 of the last 7 Governors behind bars, and Blago looks like he will be the fourth.   First we had Otto Kerner, who was convicted on 17 counts of bribery, conspiracy, and perjury.    Next we have Dan Walker who was convicted of banking scandals.   And who can forget George Ryan, who illegally sold licenses and contracts.   And what do all of these Governors have in common????    It is not political party, 3 were Democrats and one was a Republican.   I will give you a hint, they are not from down-state.    They are all from the Chicago area which is run by union bosses and the mob.   But in Illinois, the government runs itself just as the mob, without the murders, except if you are in East St Louis.

Illinois has had a long history of corruption, and hopefully this new scandal involving “Rod the Bod”  will shed light on the corruption of this great state.   But as with all the other governors we have had go to jail, we still elect these criminals into office.   I guess all the dead and dogs in Chicago have something to do with it.   But it is more than that.    We as citizens of Illinois have lost our voice and control over the elected officials.  We had a chance in this elections to have a new Constitutional Convention to change some of the rules that keepincumbents in office for life.   But we passed on that and will keep on having the same criminals run this state.

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In 1962 and 63, my awareness of politics went overnight from “yawn” to “what the hell does congress think they are doing.  The overnight cause was a single reading in one fell swoop of Barry Goldwater’s Conscience of a Conservative, a fairly short book given to me by a High School buddy along with a copy of Ian Fleming’s “Dr. No.”  Both books had an influence, one a 4 year old spy novel that titillated a young man’s imagination, the other, a political statement that more than 45 years later still reverberates in the political halls.  Well, it did until the Republican party lost it’s way!

 In mid-May of this year, my friend Doug Ross published GOP 2.0, Rebooting the Republican Party with a number of priorities that need to become our “ironclad” signature:

STRENGTHEN NATIONAL DEFENSE – increase the size, capability and efficiency of our Armed Forces, bringing back our defense spending to historical levels as percentage of GDP.

GAIN ENERGY INDEPENDENCE – open up ANWR and the OCS to exploration; aggressively pursue nuclear energy and green technologies; and incent private industry to aggressively pursue clean, renewable energy sources.

SECURE THE BORDERS – build physical barriers immediately as a precursor to an overarching, sensible immigration policy. If the boat’s sinking, you plug the holes first.

DEATH TO EARMARKS – zero tolerance for earmarks.

DEATH TO CORRUPTION – zero tolerance for corruption.

ENGLISH AS NATIONAL LANGUAGE – national unity requires a national language. That language is English.

IMPLEMENT FLAT TAX OR FAIR TAX – simplify the tax system by eradicating a tax code gone mad.

REDUCE SIZE OF GOVERNMENT – provide “whistle-blower-style” awards for reducing the size of government and task the IRS (which will no longer have to worry about enforcing the tax code) with achieving the reduction goals on an annual basis

SPUR HEALTHCARE COMPETITION – Address health-care deficiencies – with competitive, free-market solutions, not Government largesse.

ADDRESS ENTITLEMENTS – engage a bipartisan consortium to create a multi-million dollar competition to incent teams from private industry and academia to create solutions for our social security and Medicare liabilities.

This should not be a platform. It should be a promise — an ironclad commitment — to voters

If you ask most voters (well, except those smitten with The Obamamessiah and maybe a lot of them too) you will find that the majority of Americans are concerned with exactly those subjects (if asked in an honest straightforward manner.) 

Unfortunately, those are not questions that will be asked, in fact, most “news” sources are more than happy to trumpet the liberal/progressive line.  And therein lies the rub.  The MSM, being profoundly liberal for the most part has no truck with conservative positions and the Republican party as currently constituted has abandoned conservatism for Democrat Lite, hewing themselves to big programs, big spending, big pork-barral projects and a refusal to stand up for conservative principles.  In fact, with a very few exceptions, the majority of Republicans have thrown off their conservative cloaks, cloaks they were elected under, and donned the regalia of typical tax and spend Democrats.

If conservatism is to become resurgent, we must start from the ground up.  Look for and find local persons willing to run on a conservative platform and willing to tell the truth to the American people.  Look for and support those that are willing to sign on to Republican Party 2.0 and accept nothing less from your elected representatives.  Send them e-mails, letters, and postcards.  Tell them that you are fed up, and you aren’t going to take it anymore. 

You have nothing to lose but your country!

Cross posted at GM’s Corner

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Cross posted at Grizzly Groundswell and Stix Blog

This last Thursday I had the great privalege to meet a great candidate for Missouri’s 88th district.  It was a fun time and I met some pretty cool people at a Young Republicans Happy Hour.  And Shamed was there.  He is a good guy and I think would be a great addiction to the Missouri House.  It is too bad I live in Illinois and can not vote for him.  He is very smart, conservative and will be a great representative.   He has worked in Washington, D.C. , with Jim Talent, so he knows how the political game is played.  So I endorse him, and if any of you are in his district vote for him this fall.

 

Shamed Dogan

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State by State – The A’s

One of the goals I had in starting this site was to focus on the state congressional races. The snapshots here will not be in depth. I’m going to leave that to all of you, especially those who live in each state. The Rothenberg Political Report has analyzed the 2008 Congressional races and the rating information on the House and Senate is presented here. Going alphabetically, lets start with

Alabama

  • Senate
  • House
    • District 2 – Terry Everett is not running due to health issues. The Montgomery Advertiser says that six Republicans and 3 Democrats are running for the open seat. Rothenberg considers the seat to be Republican favored.
    • District 5 – Democrat Bud Cramer is also retiring at the end of his current term. Cramer is a popular nine term representative, but his seat is rated a toss up by Rothenberg.

Alaska

  • Senate
    • Rothenberg ranks Republican Ted Stevens seat as narrow advantage to the incumbent. His 2007 ACU rating is 64 (64.45 lifetime).
  • House
    • Don Young (2007-65, lifetime-76.61) is also a Republican and his seat is listed as a toss up tilting Republican

Arizona

  • House
    • District 1 – The seat formerly held by Rick Renzi is being called a toss up.
    • District 5 – Harry Mitchel holds on to this seat with his ACU rating of 8. Given that, it’s not surprising that Rothenberg lists it as leans Democrat.
    • District 8 – Mitchel’s isn’t the lowest rating in the state. The ACU gives incumbent Gabrielle Giffords a 4.

Arkansas

  • Senate
    • Democrat Senator Mark Pryor’s seat is listed as safe. That’s probably an understatement.

So, what do you know about these states and races. Discuss it in the comments here, or in the forum.

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