They almost consider it a gentlemans agreement that the presidency be traded back and forth between parties every eight yearsI commend to you Terry Reed and John Cummings, Compromised: Clinton, Bush, and the CIA, Spi/Shapolsky, 1994.
Clinton and North argue before the vice-president's surrogate, revealing the agreement you suggest.
Indeed we need an outsider, be it Rick Perry, Herman Cain, or Sarah Palin--not the obsequious Mitt Romney.
Obama must be defeated--after Mitt Romney is defeated.
I posit it will be easily done, as Romney's support may be a mile wide but no deeper than the coating on an M & M.
Each of the three I've mentioned has strengths--strengths we ought to promote.
Rick Perry appeals to the primacy of the Second Amendment at a time the fascists in the capital arm the barbarians at the gate.
Herman Cain is a master of entrepreneurship as the bolsheviks party in the treasury.
Sarah Palin is an iconoclaust in the era of political correctness.
We'll elect one president, enlist the others' talents--
--and Michelle Bachmann can go take John Boehner's job so he can have more time for golf.
You’re right that Boehner needs to be replaced, but Bachmann hasn’t shown the legislative leadership skills to be the one to replace him.
And you miss Perry’s game if you call him an outsider. He’s for sale to anyone who’ll buy, and that’s the GOP Establishment (see: the TTC) often enough. Sure, he plays the rube cowboy conservative game (so well that W is said to have copied him in part), but he has been in the race to try to fool enough conservatives to climb onto his Trojan bandwagon. We’ve seen through it though, so Palin is still a threat to coalesce the conservative base and outnumber Romney’s voters.
Cain is another conservative that they’ve been glad to have in there (like Bachmann) to try to fragment the base. He’s doing that to some degree, but like Perry he’s not a strong enough candidate to maintain it against another, more viable conservative option.
The GOP RINO Establishment are deeper in this race, trying to throw in diversionary candidates against the force of Palin, than most people realize.
Precisely. Too many here are more willing to tear up other candidates instead of concentrating on the obvious.