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Last night's big winnner? Easy -- Rick Perry
Renew America ^ | 8-12-2011 | Bryan Fischer - Commentary

Posted on 08/12/2011 1:07:19 PM PDT by smoothsailing

Last night's big winnner? Easy -- Rick Perry

Bryan Fischer

August 12, 2011

The big winner in last night's GOP debate was Rick Perry. This is for the simple reason that no one else won. The race from this point forward is Rick Perry and the Eight Dwarves.

The exchange between Pawlenty and Bachmann was spirited, and there was nothing inappropriate about it. Politics ain't beanbag, as Lincoln famously observed. It's a contact sport, and part of what you must do in the primary season is distinguish yourself from your competitors. You have to throw some elbows to do that.

Pawlenty was hurt by the exchange, because he took a swing at a girl. No matter how much progress we think we've made on gender equality, there is still something deep inside us that says men should use their strength to protect women, not attack them, and Pawlenty put on the full-court press last night.

But Ms. Bachmann chose to get into the ring, and can't complain if punches are thrown, nor should anyone complain on her behalf. That's one of the reasons to question whether it's a good idea for women to get involved in the rough and tumble of politics. I hate to see a woman attacked like Bachmann was last night, but she made herself vulnerable to it by throwing her hat into the ring.

What has been done to Sarah Palin and what is being done to Michele Bachmann — the grotesque beating they have taken from the hostiles on the left (I'm not talking about Pawlenty here) — is a travesty and a shameful embarrassment to any culture which claims to have an enlightened view of the treatment of women.

But this is what conservative women who enter politics are choosing to accept. It is not right, but it is inevitable, since too many on the left are consumed with bitterness and hatred toward conservatives in general and conservative women in particular. They are enslaved to a driving, brooding passion to destroy, and the more attractive the conservative woman is, the more it feeds their blood lust. As captives to this dark, driving vitriol, they can't help themselves. It will take the power of God to set them free from their own bondage to this mindless anger and rage. This means that a woman must count the cost, as Jesus taught, before jumping into the fray.

Part of the problem here is that when a women mixes it up in the political arena, and gets punched, she must punch back. The danger to the woman here is that every time she punches back, which she must do, she hardens a little bit of her soul and sacrifices a little bit of her femininity. I'm not sure that's a good trade. But each woman needs to make that choice for herself. No one else can or should make that decision for her.

Quick hits on the rest of the debate:

Romney came across as plastic. He completed his abject flip-flop on marriage, going from being the man who imposed same-sex marriage on America by executive fiat in 2004 to a man who now supports a federal marriage amendment to undo what he himself did in Massachusetts. He has a real credibility problem on social issues.

He defended RomneyCare despite the fact that it served as the blueprint for ObamaCare. He said the first thing he would do as president would be to give a waiver from ObamaCare to all 50 states, which obviously then includes Massachusetts. So once again, he'd use the power of his office as president to undo what he did as a governor. All in all, not a sterling record of consistency and believability.

Ron Paul's policies would be a positive menace to our national security. He is clueless about the danger Islam poses to the West, and doesn't even mind if Iran nukes up. And he is one with Obama in blaming us for Iran's hatred.

In Paul's confused thinking, whatever the CIA did to Iran in 1953–1953! — explains and justifies their lasting and eternal hatred of our country. That's no different than urging us to maintain an abiding hatred of Japan because of what they did to us in 1941. It's ridiculous.This is absurd and dangerous to an alarming degree. It's hard to see how a man this out of touch with reality regarding Islam can be trusted with the power of the Oval Office.

Plus he wants to Mirandize foreign Muslims who kill us, even though they have no constitutional or Geneva Convention rights whatsoever.

Newt and Herman both gave disappointing responses when pressed on their views on Islam. Both had taken strong and correct positions in the past, and both got squishy and squirrelly last night. Grassroots Americans are aware of the threat Islam poses to the West (when Herman said sharia law does not belong in American courts, he got spontaneous applause), and are looking for a leader who understands that. It increasingly looks like neither Newt nor Herman will fill the bill.

Newt got testy when Chris Wallace exposed his flip-flop on Libya, and tried to justify his contradictory positions with an answer nobody could follow. Romney was exposed as a flip-flopper on Afghanistan. Romney continues to appear to be disconcertingly inconsistent and unpredictable, not good qualities in a chief executive.

Paul did remind us that liberty comes from the Creator. But his understanding of liberty includes the liberty to snort cocaine, shoot up heroin, and indulge in prostitution and sodomy. That's not liberty, that's bondage. His views promote license, not liberty.

Santorum was the strongest on the platform on the pro-life issue. He rightly would make no exceptions even for rape, since in America we don't punish a child for the sins of his father. He's absolutely correct.

Huntsman made himself a non-factor by admitting he has no economic plan on his website, which should have been his first order of business. He also indicated he'd be for amnesty once the border is secure, a position anathema to most conservatives. Romney repeated the canard that we are a "nation of immigrants." We're not. Eighty-five percent us were born here.

Huntsman also argued that he as governor has the best record in the field on jobs. He loses that argument once Perry gets in the race tomorrow.

Bottom line: the race is Rick Perry's to lose.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2012debates; democrat; exdemocrat; formerdemocrat; ia2012; perry2012; spoiler
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To: Signalman

What a an insult to Mr Reagan.


21 posted on 08/12/2011 1:37:27 PM PDT by org.whodat (What does the Republican party stand for////??? absolutely nothing.)
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To: ImJustAnotherOkie
My two cents on the debate...Ron Paul looked like the kook he is; spouted nonsense. He’s toast.

Any respect I had for Ron Paul's expertise on finance vanished with his idiotic rants on foreign policy.

22 posted on 08/12/2011 1:38:35 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: cripplecreek; ImJustAnotherOkie; MNJohnnie; smoothsailing; TexasFreeper2009

Who wrote this article? Dana Carvey’s church lady from SNL? He’s going to have to get over his queasiness about women mixing it up in the arena. I just wish all the candidates could fight like a girl.

I thought the debate was terrible...except for all the others. Could it have been better, yes. Worse? Wait for the general, then it will be back to brainless soundbites.

Finally, we had halfway intelligent questions being asked rather than the moronic CNN/PBS-type “moderators” going on and on with gays and abortion.

I’d say Rick Perry did best, but so did Michelle Bachman and so did Herman Cain. Let’s try to keep in mind how much better this was than what usually passes for a campaign debate.

As for Ron Paul, boy! He really let his freak flag fly! I agree with whoever said he is Dennis Kucinich’s crazy uncle. I like what he has to say about the Fed but his sanity ends at the water’s edge, and let’s not even get into drugs and marriage.


23 posted on 08/12/2011 1:38:35 PM PDT by sinanju
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To: Signalman
Rick Perry is the Ronald Reagan of 2012.

When asked at the state fair who she would support if Perry and Romney were the last two standing, she replied, "I don't see that happening."

Check out her writing on her t-shirt.

24 posted on 08/12/2011 1:38:48 PM PDT by houeto
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To: Vigilanteman
Perry is Romney without the enthusiasm for socialized medicine. Romney is Perry without the enthusiasm for open borders.

And they're both Peter-principle ruling-class swells striving to rise above their level of incompetence.

25 posted on 08/12/2011 1:39:06 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Regulation is government control of capital, and government control of capital is socialism.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
I've come to the conclusion that Rick Perry's supporters think he should be able to just waltz in and claim the nomination without getting any manure on his feet.

I've posted some mild but factual criticisms of his Bush like stance on open borders and ties to the Chamber of Commerce/Cheap Labor lobby and been accused of being an Obama plant.

For the record, I do not hate Rick Perry and I do not hate Mitt Romney. I see either as a vast improvement over what we have in the white house now, but another Bush-like mediocre president who would merely slow our march toward socialism, rather than reverse it.

Perry is Romney without the enthusiasm for socialized medicine. Romney is Perry without the enthusiasm for open borders.

26 posted on 08/12/2011 1:42:21 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: MNJohnnie
It would help his case if HE bothered to get his facts correct. Lincoln would have NO idea what a beanbag was. He never said any such thing.

There were beanbags in Lincoln's time and long before, it's in all the history books!

"Politics ain't beanbag, as Lincoln famously observed."

I don't know if Lincoln said that, but he could have. I think the writer was just making an attempt at humor.

However, we do know that Lincoln said; "Ballots are the rightful and peaceful successors to beanbags" and "A beanbag divided against itself can not stand".

:o)

27 posted on 08/12/2011 1:44:33 PM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: Vigilanteman

And it’s certainly good that not the many share that wrong opinion.


28 posted on 08/12/2011 1:47:58 PM PDT by RowdyFFC
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To: houeto

So you read the article from the Dallas Morning News, a totally commie rag that more than likely took some of her statements and put them together to say what they wanted her to say?

Sarah Palin holds her cards very close to her chest. And I know for a fact that she and Perry are talking.


29 posted on 08/12/2011 1:52:15 PM PDT by RowdyFFC
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We wish it grew there
Please Donate

30 posted on 08/12/2011 1:52:34 PM PDT by TheOldLady (FReepmail me to get ON or OFF the ZOT LIGHTNING ping list.)
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To: Winstons Julia

Another Romney

They all have flaws, it is still going to be voting for the lesser of 2 evils. We can choose the least socialistic of the batch, but we will be the ones who have to be united on a candidate. The demwits don’t have to.

The person who goes up against 0 will have to have charisma, tv appeal, which means a decent set of choppers to smile not grimace at you, not sound dull as a droning professor, and has some fire in their belly, and a touch of the old time preacher man. Along with their facts straight.

And they better have a clean childhood, because the FBI has been busy digging dirt on all of them at 0’s command, which he will drop on the right Friday nights.

Until you start hearing the Reform word, and placing congress people under Medicare, instead of their life time platinum health care, and make them live under the same exact laws they foist on you, they will remain your Lord and Masters, and you the SERF with an open wallet to rape.

Force them to replace the SS funds they stole too. And fix it so they can’t raid it again.


31 posted on 08/12/2011 1:52:40 PM PDT by GailA (Any congress critter who fails to keep faith with the Military, will NOT keep faith with YOU!)
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To: Vigilanteman

I agree, he has to earn it, but the potential is pretty good that he is going to out perform the rest of the current field. He’s got the best narrative by far of the group. Only Pawlenty has more than one term of executive expeirence, but he’s the longest serving and his state is doing the best in the country. He still has the show us he has the political accum to take on Obama and a platform we are willing to fight for.

I disagree that he is anything like Romney. Perry isn’t the perfect conservative, but he’s long been a champion of building a strong business environment, low taxes, and less government. Romney has not demonstrated much of that at all. Perry is much closer in philosophy to Bachmann and the tea party than he is to Romney, although he has weaknesses. Perry’s downsides are the traditional ties to big business and immigration. He has to convince me as a voter that he has a practical but strong policy on illegals beyond a strong border, and also show a bigger allegiance to shrinking government spending and intrusion than he does to the big business lobbyist.


32 posted on 08/12/2011 1:56:10 PM PDT by ilgipper (political rhetoric is no substitute for competence (Thomas Sowell))
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To: sinanju
I’d say Rick Perry did best, but so did Michelle Bachman and so did Herman Cain. Let’s try to keep in mind how much better this was than what usually passes for a campaign debate.

Do you mean Rick Perry did best by not being there?

33 posted on 08/12/2011 1:58:16 PM PDT by smoothsailing
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To: Winstons Julia

1) He had bad grades.
2) His job creation is all low-wage jobs.
3) Conservatives in Texas have bad things to say about him.

Maybe that’s why he won last nights debate. He escaped the platform where he’d have been asked those questions. ;)

It’s deceptive to consider those who did not attend the debate the winners. It’s not winning to avoid debates so that you can avoid questions. Deceptive yes, but not winning. Unless of course you’re Charlie Sheen.


34 posted on 08/12/2011 1:59:42 PM PDT by tsowellfan
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To: TexasFreeper2009

I am totally committed to Sarah Palin, if she runs. If she doesn’t run, here are my priorities.
2. Rick Perry
3. Michelle Bachman
4. Rick Santorum
5. Ron Paul
6. Huntsman
7. Pawlenty
8. Romney
9. Gingrich


35 posted on 08/12/2011 2:00:09 PM PDT by 2nd Amendment
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To: 2nd Amendment

If Palin doesn’t run, then Cain would head the list for me.

As an aside, I talked to a lot of people today who say they’re taking another look at Gingrich, based on last night’s showing.


36 posted on 08/12/2011 2:05:33 PM PDT by lawley
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To: smoothsailing
Agreed, I'll withold judgement and see how well Little Ricky holds up under fire.
37 posted on 08/12/2011 2:06:54 PM PDT by ImJustAnotherOkie (zerogottago)
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To: smoothsailing
Thank you for that quote of Palin’s at the fair today. Another thread on FR had a tweet from someone there trying to act as if Palin was disparaging Perry. The full quote does nothing of the sort.
38 posted on 08/12/2011 2:09:40 PM PDT by normy (Don't take it personally, just take it seriously.)
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To: lawley

Yes, I forgot Cain. He would be ahead of Ron Paul. I just don’t know about Gingrich. He is brilliant He is the author of the contract with America. But he inserts foot in mouth and has some personal baggage.


39 posted on 08/12/2011 2:10:17 PM PDT by 2nd Amendment
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To: smoothsailing
Having read the first 28 posts, I am convinced that most have misconceived the debates last night and have misunderstood how they should be judged.

The challengers have a substantial advantage in debates especially when the incumbent is generally out of favor as is Obama. In these circumstances the challenger in the general election must merely show that he/she is "presidential" to "win" the debate. That's because the debate is really a contest over undecideds. Those who have already decided their vote are not going to be swayed to the other side unless there is a really profound gaffe.

The undecideds are undecided because they are unhappy about the incumbent but not yet convinced about the challenger. The challenger's job is to show that he will not embarrass the country by looking presidential and avoiding gaffes.

So we looked through the debate last night and we ask first, whether any individual who did not look "presidential?" The answer is no but Pawlenty, Huntsman and Cain only barely qualified. Ron Paul is sui generis and does not really factor in. Bachmann, Gingrich, Romney and Santorum all looked completely presidential and would therefore be acceptable as alternatives to an unpopular incumbent. Second, we ask did anyone make a disqualifying gaffe? The answer is no but Pawlenty came close. Therefore, the debate last night was a great success because it demonstrates that all of the candidates are presidential timber.

Now the question arises from a conservative's point of view, whom should we pick? That is always a subjective weighing of true conservative commitment vs. electability. That is a tension which need not exist but does because the media makes it so. All true conservatives are painted by the media as being crazies and therefore their electability suffers. That is what is going on now with Michele Bachmann and we saw it in the 2010 elections.

Right now Gov. Perry seems to have the best balance of conservative values and electability. That does not mean that he triumphed his absence last night as the author asserts. It means that he has a good record subject to complaints especially about immigration and he combines that record with an extremely good telegenic appearance. In that respect he ranks right up there with Romney. The problem for Perry is that he comes off too Texas and too much of a folksy shit kicker which people will describe as a resemblance to George Bush but which can turn off a lot of Easter and Northern voters as well who might as a result regard him as a masculine version of Sarah Palin.

So Gov. Perry must submit himself to the process like every other candidate and he must show that he can look presidential and avoid gaffes. He must to some degree mitigate his good old boy image If he does so we can expect him to emerge at the head of the pack and, most important, he can beat Obama.


40 posted on 08/12/2011 2:12:32 PM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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