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To: Jameison

It's too late. Six members of my family who vote straight Rep. ticket have vowed to never vote again. Don't care who they elect. Think we all forgot: government is not your friend. Always follow the money. Only curious now how much money is in ALL those congressional freezers.


8 posted on 05/28/2006 10:37:06 AM PDT by texaslil (and)
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To: texaslil
"Six members of my family who vote straight Rep. ticket have vowed to never vote again. "

Appears you come from a family of quitters. I'm not sure those are the people I want choosing this nation's leaders anyway.

10 posted on 05/28/2006 10:41:56 AM PDT by Rokke
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To: texaslil
"It's too late"

Naaah.
This is democracy at work right here.
We let our congressmen know what we think about a bad bill, and our congressmen are now even more determined to vote against said evil Senate Bill.
At this rate we are not only going to retain the House in November, we might even gain some seats, as the American public find out how really evil the Senate Bill is and turn on the RATS, and they will.
11 posted on 05/28/2006 10:42:08 AM PDT by Jameison
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To: texaslil; Jameison

"It's too late. Six members of my family who vote straight Rep. ticket have vowed to never vote again. Don't care who they elect." ~ texaslil

They need to become a little more emotionally mature (ie: grow up).

REALITY 101:

Excerpt from item below:

"If you want to express yourself, and you want to protest, you have to show up -- and, folks, as I said yesterday, the one thing -- and Tony Blankley echoes this in a column that he wrote today. [The price of secure borders] The one place now that conservatism is being defended and advanced, or being attempted to be advanced, is the House of Representatives. That is imperative.

It is an imperative to hold the House of Representatives, and we can do this. We can conduct our little rebellion here if you want to call it that, one election at a time, one politician at a time."

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_051706/content/america_s_anchorman.member.html

Conservative GOP Rebels in Primaries
Wednesday May 17, 2006

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: I want to touch on some of the rebellion. There is a rebellion among Republicans taking place, ladies and gentlemen. The Republican Party itself is missing it. Of course, the Drive-By Media is missing it. It all started in the little town called Herndon, Virginia, where incumbent Republicans who had thought that they were being magnanimous and big-hearted, opened a day labor center for illegal immigrants, and the people that started it and operated it, held elective office were thrown out of office in a primary.

[]The same thing happened in North Carolina. People who were all in favor of in-state tuition for illegal immigrant children and so forth, in Republican primaries were thrown out. These country club, blue-blood, Rockefeller-type Republicans were dispatched, and conservative Republicans won. "Angry taxpayers on Tuesday tossed out the two Republican Senate leaders who helped engineer last year's legislative pay raise, an issue that apparently cost 15 House members their jobs, too. Senate President Pro Tempore Robert Jubelirer of Altoona, and Senate Majority Leader David Brightbill of Lebanon County conceded to their challengers, becoming the first lawmakers in major leadership posts to lose a primary election in 42 years.

(story) "The House defeats would be the most since 1980. 'We have had a dramatic earthquake in Pennsylvania,' said Jubelirer, a 32-year legislator. The defeats of Jubelirer and Brightbill 'will send shock waves throughout he political establishment for years to come,' said Mike Young, a retired Penn State University political science professor... 'The people have spoken,' Jubelirer, 69, said shortly after congratulating his challenger, Blair County Commissioner John Eichelberger. 'They have said this is a time for change. It is a historic year.' Eichelberger, 47, said the race was about redefining the Republican Party."
Another quote: "The pay raise got people out but at the end of the day it was our message that sold. I think the Republican Party said enough is enough for politics as usual," meaning enough of this RINO Republican stuff, enough of this moderate liberal country club Rockefeller blue-blood stuff, we've had it -- and there's a whole number of issues that are causing this to happen. It's not just immigration. It was a pay raise in this case, but it's unresponsive, status quo. It's, "We know more than you do. You don't know what you're talking about. We're elected officials. We're better than you are," and people said, "I'm tired of being dealt with this way."

John Fund writes today in the Wall Street Journal: "A clear pattern is developing in primary contests for state legislature this year. In North Carolina, GOP voters turfed out a series of incumbents who had not opposed taxes enough. In Indiana, the state Senate president was tossed out of office earlier this month by a political newcomer. Now in Pennsylvania, we see another voter revolt. Republicans are clearly upset at their party, and if GOP members of Congress don't heed that message, they may come to regret that in November." Now, this all boils down to this: We are as conservatives and the dominant factor in the Republican Party. We are a national security, law and order, free market party, and yet we're fighting in a minimalist way in Iraq.

Shelby Steele is right about that. "We're not using the full force of our power. We are not enforcing the law on the border, and we are spending like idiots. The only thing holding us together is the detestable, contemptible left. We know the country simply cannot be turned over to them." But these stories are not all. In Utah, Chris Cannon, long time Republican congressman, now in a primary runoff because he's a big open-borders guy. He denies it now, and he would object to this characterization, but he is. In Nebraska, the Republican governor who was thought vulnerable to coach Osborne, the great former coach of the University of Nebraska, the Republican governor won because he vetoed legislation giving in-state tuition to illegals.

Coach Osborne was more supportive of that, and this is happening all across the country. It started in this little town, Herndon, Virginia, and these 18 senators who voted yesterday with the open-borders crowd, 18 Republicans, there was a simple, clear amendment. We'll deal with this amnesty program and the day worker program, guest worker program after we secure the border, which is what most common-sensible things people believe should be done first anyway. Secure the border. Eighteen Republican senators voted against that amendment, and these 18 senators down the road could use some primary challenges. See, folks? This is how we protest.
These ragamuffin, long-haired, maggot-infested, dope-smoking worthless losers, they go out [] and they protest on communist holidays. They protest on May Day or they'll pick a day they don't want to go to school, but we, ladies and gentlemen, protest on Election Day, when it counts. We'll let the Third World take to the streets; let 'em demand rights. We will go to the polls and civilly speak through our votes. There is a rebellion underway here. The media, the GOP establishment do not see it. There is something that could be done about this, but you're not going to do it by staying at home on Election Day.

If you want to express yourself, and you want to protest, you have to show up -- and, folks, as I said yesterday, the one thing -- and Tony Blankley echoes this in a column that he wrote today. The one place now that conservatism is being defended and advanced, or being attempted to be advanced, is the House of Representatives. That is imperative. It is an imperative to hold the House of Representatives, and we can do this. We can conduct our little rebellion here if you want to call it that, one election at a time, one politician at a time. McCain, he's going to have to ask Republican voters for their support one day. Lindsey Graham, he was one of these 18 senators.

He comes from one of the most conservative states in the country, and he, one day, is going to have to go back there and ask for their votes again when he wants to be reelected. This is the kind of thing that people will remember, will help them remember votes like this. McCain's getting his own wake-up call, by the way. The media is now continually full of stories about how he's no longer a maverick. There actually was a side-by-side debate on one Internet website. Two journalists were debating whether or not it's still accurate to call McCain a "maverick" or not, and one journalist said, "He's not a maverick anymore. Why look, he's sidling up to Falwell, sidling up to Robertson."

"No, he's still a maverick. He's just doing this because he knows what he has to do to win."

The bottom line is McCain's usefulness to the Drive-By Media is finished. His usefulness was when he was the bad boy of Washington ripping his own party, ripping his president, doing the left's bidding for it within the Republican Party and the Drive-By Media. But now that he apparently has decided his strategery is going to be to mend fences with conservatives, now they're debating is he worthy of maverick status or not. He's going to have to ask for people's votes one day, too. This happens one politician, one election at a time. Make no mistake: there's a rebellion going on out there, and you people know it, and as usual you're the first on the case. The GOP establishment hasn't figured it out and they won't -- and of course the Drive-By Media hasn't the slightest clue. I mean, they look at these election results and they haven't the slightest ability because they don't understand conservatives. They don't want to understand conservatives. Even if they note the change, they'll come up with some asinine reason to explain it that will be so far off the mark, so they're not up to speed on it either. But it is happening out there.

END TRANSCRIPT
Read the Background Material...
(PTR: 'Earthquake in Pennsylvania')
(WSJ: Incumbents Under Fire - John Fund)
(Washington Times: The price of secure borders - Tony Blankley)http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20060516-085749-7755r.htm


26 posted on 05/28/2006 11:13:43 AM PDT by Matchett-PI ( "History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid." -- Dwight Eisenhower)
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