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General Russell Honore To Run Vs David Vitter In Louisiana US Race?
Bayou Buzz ^ | August 28, 2009 | Christopher Tidmore

Posted on 08/29/2009 5:32:14 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued

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To: ClarenceThomasfan

“He would get the Republican vote and at least 40% of the black vote.”


I don’t think he’d get anywhere near 40% of the black vote; maybe he’d break 20% (it will take a few years before blacks stop voting 90% Democrat in most elections). But if he gets the conservative vote he’s a shoo-in.

I need to hear more about General Honoré’s views on the issues before I jump on his bandwagon, but I am certainly intrigued by his potential candidacy.


61 posted on 08/30/2009 10:22:48 PM PDT by AuH2ORepublican (Fred Thompson appears human-sized because he is actually standing a million miles away.)
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To: roses of sharon

Well, I don’t believe in totally giving up on the Black vote, and think we need aggressive and creative ways to reach out to them. I’ve written about this considerably, and half the problem is that we don’t even ask for their vote. If you don’t even do that, we shouldn’t be surprised when they vote 90% or higher for the Dems.


62 posted on 08/31/2009 4:55:01 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: roses of sharon

Oops, didn’t answer the second part of your question... Yes, he should run for Mayor, that would give us an idea of how he’d perform in a political capacity. We had a Black Republican businessman run for NOLA Mayor who switched to the Dems as a matter of convenience, he managed to get elected and did pretty well... until a natural disaster named Katrina hit and he turned into an incompetent basketcase. You probably know his name. Goes to show that not all Republicans are up for the job of leadership.


63 posted on 08/31/2009 5:01:46 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: fieldmarshaldj

We ask for their vote — just not in terms of racial heritage. We ask for traditionalist and many are. We ask for patriots and many are.


64 posted on 08/31/2009 5:08:12 AM PDT by KC Burke (...but He has made the trains run on time.)
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To: maine-iac7
If families are prepared, we lose fewer lives.

I'd vote for him just for saying 'fewer lives' rather than 'less lives'.

65 posted on 08/31/2009 5:17:09 AM PDT by TangoLimaSierra (To the left the truth looks Right-Wing.)
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To: KC Burke

We don’t do what is necessary to get their vote and the hard work to convert more and more for the long term. We don’t consistently go into their communities, we don’t walk the streets, go into the businesses and the churches, advertise on their radio stations, tv stations, and the like. We don’t aggressively run candidates, recruit candidates or fund candidates. We may make an attempt to be color-blind in making a pitch, but that won’t yield us much in the way of their vote because we fail to do what I cited above. In no means by doing so do I endorse moving leftwards, since too often that’s what it sounds like by making an appeal. We just need to shift our strategy without compromising our positions. We had Black Dems reaching out to us in the ‘90s and we did nothing to bring them over beyond the most superficial way, and again, we act surprised when they give that 90%+ to the Dems. It’s not surprising at all. We basically write them off, and they know we do.


66 posted on 08/31/2009 5:34:50 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
My impression of the General is that he tells you something - not whispers it.
67 posted on 08/31/2009 5:39:48 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Nemo me impune lacessit The law will be followed, dammit!)
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To: dancusa; Steamburg

My problem with Cajun country is that every politician that has come out of that region of LA since I have been living in LA has been a clone of every other one. Republican or Democrat they were the same.

I have quite a few Cajun friends and individually I love them, but as politicians they are great at running and talking but very lousy, like the French, at producing. I just want to know more about Honore than what he said during Katrina. Like one of my Cajun friends in Thibodaux said after Blanco, “I’ll never vote for another coon ass, just because they’re from around here.” I will not vote for him just because he was that “John Wayne dude.” I would remember who made that statement.

The Le American statement is quite interesting. Personally my heritage is Irish, German, English and I don’t wave any flags for anyone but the USA.


68 posted on 08/31/2009 5:45:04 AM PDT by A Strict Constructionist (We are an Oligarchy)
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To: cajungirl

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20090830/NEWS10/90829009

General noted for Katrina work to be speaker here
Appearance helps mark NAACP’s centennial observance


69 posted on 08/31/2009 5:49:48 AM PDT by abb ("What ISN'T in the news is often more important than what IS." Ed Biersmith, 1942 -)
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To: fieldmarshaldj
Ah yes, I remember.

Here in Detroit, my husband was actually in business some time ago with Dave Bing...Detroit's newly elected mayor. He is a great guy, wonderful family man, smart and decent. But with complete faith in government. He will never be a Republican.

I think we lost a window of opportunity with RR, I said then that we do not live in a vacuum, and should address the inner city public housing projects...imo, they were/are immoral. To force decent families to live with criminals like that is a sin. I think we could have “saved” some then, we could have smashed the whole idea of public housing.

Anyway, the Rev Wright's “church” and Katrina before that, showed me that it will be generations, if ever, before we can reach those blacks that have been marinating in hate for us, for so long. The MSM/DNC/Hollywood/Academia war room have done their job well.

70 posted on 08/31/2009 7:21:57 AM PDT by roses of sharon (Kennedy dared us to call his bluff, when we didn't, he made all of us complicit in what he had done.)
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To: Bogey78O
His race would appear to be soldier/warrior.
71 posted on 08/31/2009 7:26:13 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Nemo me impune lacessit The law will be followed, dammit!)
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To: roses of sharon

Well, we had several windows of opportunity. Almost all of the attempts were ill-advised or half-hearted. I believe it was my former Senator (and the then-RNC Chairman) Bill Brock who thought it was a good idea to hold the 1980 National Convention in Detroit. Unfortunately at the time, the emphasis was on pandering, especially to thugs like the then-Mayor, Coleman Young, who perfected the art of baiting Republican elected officials and then giving them nada in return (the buffoonish liberal RINO William Milliken, the Governor, used to jump every time Young got him on the horn - nothing but shakedowns, and if Milliken didn’t follow what he said, Young would pull out the race card).

Another instance of then-DE Gov Russell Peterson who was in office during the turbulent late ‘60s and he pandered and pandered to Blacks, and despite all that, they voted for his Dem opponent in ‘72 (which saw Peterson go down, and a young Joe Biden elevated to the Senate), and he couldn’t believe all his pandering didn’t get him squat (and he alienated White Conservatives, too).

Too many of these guys made the mistake of top-down approaches and basically pandering that lib Dems do, and there’s little way to compete on that front, because no matter what, the Dems can outflank us. What is needed is a bottom-up approach, seeding people in the worst, most hopeless areas, funding activism (use Dem approaches but with Conservative ideas). Blacks know most Republicans won’t come into their urban areas, even though so many can see the Dems take them for granted (but they see it as a choice between a party that’s already there, even if they don’t care for it, versus a party that’s not there at all and seems to care only about the White places - and it’s hard to argue with them that it’s not the case).

As I said, we had opportunities in the ‘90s once we got majority control, we could’ve aggressively gone out and used Dem-style hardball tactics to get more Blacks over to our side (vis a vis their elected officials, because it’s better to be in the majority side), essentially the methods they employed in the ‘30s. Some Black Dems, such as former Queens, NY Congressman Floyd Flake, was begging the GOP to give him a reason to switch parties, and start a movement to bring more Blacks over (it wasn’t like we were going to get 90% overnight, but 25% would be excellent for us, basically getting Blacks back to the voting mainstream of America, which they haven’t been for over 5 decades now), but we just shrugged our shoulders and he quit Congress in frustration.

The party’s approach has been naive and ignorant, they’ll sometimes recruit candidates, point to them and say, “See, we’re running a Black candidate !” But that’s it, rarely will they even give the candidate $$ or mobilize party volunteers on their behalf. I have seen umpteen examples of this in federal races, winnable districts. These candidates are incapable of competing in the general because they have NO $$ support. We had a candidate last November in WV for the Sec of State position being vacated by another Republican, the candidate was an African-born Conservative, he managed to win the primary, and the party thoroughly ignored him and gave him no money. This guy would’ve been an instant star and given Robert Byrd a heart attack, a Black African Republican in almost all-White West Virginia being a heartbeat away from becoming Governor (and the odds-on choice to succeed Gov. Manchin, especially if he appointed himself to Byrd’s seat when he dies), but he was beaten by a Dem who had a boatload of money and party support.

For a party that may claim that it isn’t racist, and I don’t think it is deliberately so, it does clearly give the appearance that getting Black support and supporting Blacks is very low-priority, even when (in the case of WV), it is rather imperative we support them. We’re literally slitting our own throats with this approach. It makes a pitch to Blacks just that much harder.


72 posted on 08/31/2009 8:28:04 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps !"~~)
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To: Clintonfatigued

I heard on the radio today that the General says he is not running, nor is he a Republican.


73 posted on 08/31/2009 4:53:50 PM PDT by roses of sharon (Kennedy dared us to call his bluff, when we didn't, he made all of us complicit in what he had done.)
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To: rawcatslyentist

Uh, just how conservative is it to cheat on your wife?

Your logic does not add up.

Casting judgment is not the same as using judgment.

Yours judgment says he’s a fine conservative so who cares if he cheated on his wife?

My judgment says he has shown he is unfit for being my representative.

Looking to the cross is exactly why he is unfit to be my representative. There are many fine people that can be conservative and keep their promises. I don’t and won’t settle for less when God wants me and you to have the best.


74 posted on 08/31/2009 6:34:24 PM PDT by panzerkampfwagen
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To: panzerkampfwagen
I'm more concerned with an unknown Honore.

We know what to expect from Vitter.

Yes he fell short. So have I. There is but one hope. How can you be forgiven when you cannot forgive?

75 posted on 08/31/2009 7:07:34 PM PDT by rawcatslyentist (Ifanationexpects tobe ignorantandfree,inastateofcivilization,itexpects whatneverwas andnever will be)
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To: roses of sharon

“I heard on the radio today that the General says he is not running, nor is he a Republican.”


Here’s an article from yesterday in which Gen. Honoré denies both that he’s thinking of running for the Senate and that he’s a registered Republican:

http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/08/honore-im-not-running-against-vitter——and-im-not-a-republican.php


76 posted on 09/01/2009 3:35:31 PM PDT by AuH2ORepublican (Fred Thompson appears human-sized because he is actually standing a million miles away.)
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