Posted on 08/24/2011 2:35:46 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Honestly, some weeks I don't even have to write this column. It just falls from the heavens like manna. I pick it up and post it. This was one of those weeks.
Rick Perry. The name alone is enough to elicit chuckles. Big hat. Silly boots. Cowboy swagger.
The Texas governor likes to hold stadium-sized prayer rallies in which he fills a fraction of the stadium and talks to God. Two years ago he held a rally to ask God for rain. Today, Texas still bakes in a historic drought, suggesting that if there is a God, he's got better things to do than listen to Perry. Three weeks ago Gov. Perry did it again, holding a prayer rally to save the nation's economy. Two days later, Dow Jones tanked more than 600 points, inspiring late-night comedians and TV pundits to suggest that Perry's prayers felt more like a curse.
When he is not talking to God, Perry is running his mouth to the craziest people in America, the tea baggers, and in 2009 he seemed to be flirting with secession though the word never passed his lips. Two weeks ago he was in Charleston, the site of the original secession and the beginning of the Civil War, to declare his presidential intentions. Was this coincidence?
Coincidence or not, it has been like catnip to pundits and columnists. Writing in U.S. News & World Report Robert Schlesinger said, "And while talking about secession undoubtedly plays well among the three in 10 Texas voters ill-informed enough to think it's a serious political statement, it also makes the rest of the country (and likely the rest of the state) roll our eyes in bewilderment at the Lone Star Clown."
True enough, but Perry knows where his natural base is, and the Lone Star Clown is already planning a bus tour of the Palmetto State. I am confident he will get the welcome he came for. But what does that say about the people of South Carolina?
As I write this column, Gov. Perry has been a presidential candidate for less than a week, and he has already been caught in at least one screaming lie and one statement so outrageous that only a certified tea bagger or South Carolina GOPer could not be offended.
In one campaign stop he said he does not believe in manmade global climate change (as if his belief had anything to do with it) and went on to say that "hardly a day goes by" that some scientist is not caught faking data to support the global warming argument.
In fact, no scientist has been caught faking climate data and only the fools who live in the Fox News bubble could believe such a lie. But there are thousands of such people in this state, and they will be laying palmetto branches in front of Rick Perry's bus.
This is also be a good place for Perry to repeat Mitt Romney's statement that "corporations are people" with all the rights of humans. In this right-to-work state with the lowest level of union membership in the nation, this will be music to the corporate culture. What it means for people is unclear.
It will be interesting to see if Perry challenges the patriotism of native son and Fed chief Ben Bernanke while he's here. Last week he said Bernanke would be "treacherous" if he tried "printing money" to deal with the current economic crisis. He seemed to be threatening Bernanke when he said "we would treat him pretty ugly down in Texas."
I'm sure this schoolyard tough talk will play well in South Carolina, but I am also confident that most Americans would like a little more subtlety, a little more dignity from a man who aspires to be our president.
Leno, Letterman, Maher, Fallon and the folks at Saturday Night Live would love to see Rick Perry in the White House. It would mean for them the same thing it means for me: years of free material. But leading the United States of America leading it morally and politically is serious business. I see no evidence that Gov. Perry is up to the task. And it is easy to understand why. There is little in the backward and parochial political culture of Texas that would prepare a person for running a huge and complex nation such as the United States.
Like his predecessor, George W. Bush, Perry already seems to be in over his head. He does not understand that more people are laughing at him than with him.
Perry's candidacy guarantees that we will have an exciting campaign at least through the Republican National Convention. Let's hope it ends there.
I'm not saying he is. I'm just saying he looks creepy.
I bet he has clammy hands....
:^p Yuck!
The story obviously feel in his lap from the WH, the lazy slug.
The author appears to be all wee-wee’ed up.
I’m sure this schoolyard tough talk will play well in South Carolina, but I am also confident that most Americans would like a little more subtlety, a little more dignity from a man who aspires to be our president.
We are not selecting a ceremonial figurehead. We want someone that can take the fight to our nation’s greatest enemy, liberals.
Looks like he’s trying to become the Molly Ivins of the Rick Perry administration.
A liberal columnist ridicules a conservative.
I'm shocked... shocked, I tell you.
Maxine Waters ‘The TEA party can go straight to hell!”
Someone is feeling threatened by this group that hold no seats in congress. Maybe the author is feeling the same way when the light shines on the results of progressive policies enacted over the last 3 years?
If the columns fall like manna, who needs the author as a middleman?
Yeah, some columns just write themselves...and some columnists need that. Mockery is helpful too, it doesn’t take a lot of research, any snot on the playground can make fun of someone.
It’s a ‘Free’ little local paper full of street level leftist, garbage ads, and crappy music reviews. Moredoch is just one of lesser lights of lefty stoopid. Jack Hunter, until he left, was the only readable writer in this crapsheet.
So should we put Moredock in the ‘undecided’ column when it comes to Perry?
feel - fell
You are hereby certified “scientist enough” to criticize the loony Leftist AGW liars
Yes, and I’ve so noticed that what is written on the side of Palin’s bus is ‘illegals go home’.
“...most Americans would like a little more subtlety...”
NO, what we want is plain talk and ACTION. We have had quite ENOUGH subtlety....and nuance.
The Texas Revolution from Mexican tyranny and constitutional abandonment should be the model for today. The writer and his ilk are about to be sl;slaughtered like the Mexicans at San Jacinto.
Just don’t mess with Texas
We still don't know which "leading climate scientist" told David Deming that we have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period. http://epw.senate.gov/hearing_statements.cfm?id=266543 http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2489568/posts
I don’t think she’s ever publicly stated her position. That probably means that it would be one that most Freepers support, because she would be crucified in the media for stating it publicly.
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