But he publicly slammed Obama's policies! And he's a minority!Then there is no way in hell he'd ever win a national election. Or any election.
That Rand Paul won the straw poll should be telling of how these guys still haven't seen the light.
I've mentioned the Congressional Progressive Caucus's budget before, but I think people need to have a glance at what it contains.
http://grijalva.house.gov/uploads/The_CPC_FY2012_Budget.pdf
Stimulus, infrastructure bank, public option, negotiation for bulk prices on pharmaceuticals, taxing capital gains as ordinary income, reduced defence operations and spending. Sign me up. Pity that this get to attention in the media because it doesn't compare to the seriousness of the Ryan budget.
There's an unfortunate tendency in the media to define the poles of the debate as being between the median member of the high-discipline Republican caucus and the right-most members of the low-discipline Democratic caucus. But that's an observation about the structure of internal caucus dynamics, not the real ideological landscape. So if you want a taste of what a liberal alternative to conservative budgeting really looks like, I'd skip past the Senate Budget Committee Democrats' plan and take a gander at the "Back to Work" (PDF) budget from the progressive caucus in the House.
This one really takes a hammer to the budget deficit.
It restores Clinton-era marginal income tax rates starting at the $250,000 threshold. It establishes new income tax brackets—45 percent at $1 million, 46 percent at $10 million, 47 percent at $20 million, 48 percent at $100 million, and 49 percent at $1 billion. Capital gains and dividends will be taxed as ordinary income. The deductibility of all itemized deductions will be capped at the 28 percent rate. The estate tax will have a $2.5 million exemption and then a series of progressive marginal rates from 55 to 65 percent. The mortgage-interest tax deduction for second homes is eliminated. There's a financial transactions tax. A couple of corporate income tax deductions are eliminated. There's a kind of too-big-too-fail tax on banks more than $50 billion in assets. There's a $25 per-ton carbon tax.
2010 CPAC Straw Poll Winner: Ron PaulThe Paul family legacy. Win the regular season but choke in crunch time
2012 CPAC Straw Poll Winner: Mitt Romney
That quote sums up the single biggest problem with any of the negotiations between Democrats and Republicans.That budget is kind of old news. They recently released a new budget called the "Back to Work" budget (which I've posted about twice before). Yglesias wrote a summary about it.
There's an unfortunate tendency in the media to define the poles of the debate as being between the median member of the high-discipline Republican caucus and the right-most members of the low-discipline Democratic caucus.
More at both links.
Looks like it, if this is the same thing:Eh? You sure Mittens won the straw poll?
Front-runner Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, was the choice of 38 percent of the conservative activists surveyed. Rick Santorum, fresh off victories in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri, came in second with 31 percent. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich came in third with 15 percent of the vote. U.S. Representative Ron Paul of Texas, who won the group’s 2010 and 2011 straw polls, received 12 percent of the vote.
Eh? You sure Mittens won the straw poll?
WASHINGTON -- Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney won the Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll on Saturday, a major symbolic victory as he tries to convince Republicans that he is sufficiently conservative to win the GOP nomination.
Romney won 38 percent of the CPAC straw poll votes, with former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum coming in second at 31 percent. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) picked up 15 percent of the votes and Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), who won the straw polls in 2010 and 2011, received only 12 percent of the vote.
The result came despite what has been a weaker conservative response to Romney than Santorum, who has little to prove as a conservative and Catholic who has strong evangelical support. Romney needed to fight against accusations that he is a "Massachusetts moderate" -- hardly a winning concept among staunch conservatives here -- and weak on pro-life issues.
Eh? You sure Mittens won the straw poll?
Looks like it, if this is the same thing:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-02-11/romney-wins-cpac-presidential-straw-poll.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/11/cpac-straw-poll-results-2012_n_1270466.html
I assume it was rigged for the election.
Especially considering apparently 44% of the polled that year were students. I'd say probably 90% of conservative students are Paulies.
PD is talking about The Hitch, and I agree with him (PD) that its is the most frustrating thing about Hitchens and his legacy.
Reading / watching Hitchens helped me greatly in helping me shed by Catholic upbringing. Getting to hear him speak for a good two hours at the Sydney Opera House a few years back was something special.
However, having to hear him defend his advocacy for the Iraq War was always frustrating. Yes, Saddam was a monster and his people now have the opportunity to build a more cohesive country. But that doesn't make the cost of admission worth it, in terms of the lives lost (both American/Coalition and Iraqi) and the treasury drained. And the process in which the war was sold should never be repeated again. The lies, the cheerleading, the "us vs. them" mentality, the morphing of Bid Laden to Saddam as the culprit of 9/11, the false definition of what patriotism meant ... all of these should never be repeated again in American history.
Are you thinking of the Iowa caucus?
It's amazing how one picture can say so much.
The 60 Plus Association, a conservative advocacy group for senior citizens, hosted a zombie-themed party that brought in professional makeup artists who created a horde of CPAC's very own "Obama zombies" (aka college students in search of free booze).
Zombies holding glasses full of scotch and bourbon traipsed the darkened ballroom. A woman with a fake human brain in her hand posed for pictures with newcomers, which were immediately posted on Facebook.
While a deejay blasted tunes near a dance floor, makeup artists perfected new zombies in the corner. Near the bar, zombie CPAC'ers grooved in front of a television screen to a Dance Dance Revolution-style game in exchange for free drink tickets.
IE 60+ conservatives have money to waste on dead end "advocacy" groups and college students don't.I don't quite get the message they were trying to push with the "college students in search of free drinks", especially when they were giving people free drinks.....
Also, seems rather young for a 60+ advocacy group.
It's amazing how one picture can say so much.
Well, there's the fact that it was decided at the city level.
Or as I've pointed out, "We're all about States and local rights.. until they do something we don't like. Then yay federalism!"
"We've had the establishment pick another loser for us," she said of Romney, the 2012 Republican nominee, at CPAC. "The fight we have, and the fight I want you to engage in, is the establishment against the grassroots. The establishment has given us a whole series of losers. Bob Dole and John McCain. Mitt Romney."
So CPAC's Saturday afternoon speaker called CPAC's Friday afternoon speaker a loser:
Phyllis Schlafly CPAC: Mitt Romney, John McCain A 'Bunch Of Losers'
You are completely missing the point.
So CPAC's Saturday afternoon speaker called CPAC's Friday afternoon speaker a loser:
Phyllis Schlafly CPAC: Mitt Romney, John McCain A 'Bunch Of Losers'
And if Santorum, Bachman, Paul, Palin lost the excuse would be "the media destroyed him/her, they never had a chance!" Such a lack of personal responsibility from the personal responsibility crowd.So CPAC's Saturday afternoon speaker called CPAC's Friday afternoon speaker a loser:
Phyllis Schlafly CPAC: Mitt Romney, John McCain A 'Bunch Of Losers'
It may be contradictory, it may or may not be on the correct side of the policy, but it's really good politics.
No its not. The people you are talking about are a dying breed.
On "Fox News Sunday," Karl Rove responded to Sarah Palin's declaration at CPAC that Republican consultants who "keep losing elections" need to either "buck up" and run for office or "stay in the truck."
Rove said that as a "balding white guy" he wouldn't be a particularly good candidate for office. But "if I did run for office and win, I'd serve out my term," he said. "I wouldn't leave office mid-term."
Am I the only one who thinks Portman is kind of a dirtbag in all of this? It's like he finally realized "wow, gay people are someone's family members. Shit they have like feelings and stuff too. Who knew?" What else is he ignorant about? Does he realize that poor people actually exist and are someone's child? What about black people? Does he realize they are more than just a statistical presence in the country? God forbid he considers if people we bomb in *other* countries have families or feelings...
Maybe I'm overreacting but that's how it made me feel when I heard him.
The soda ban is bizarre to me. I think it opened my eyes to how many people (including myself to some extent) externalize the government but internalize large private interests.
I think that Palin with a Big Gulp is actually a message that sells.
There's a large contingent of voters out there that view the soda ban as overreach (whether a good idea or not, justifiable or not) and it becomes a symbol of overwhelming government in general.
For all the Clown Shoes going on with race, gender, and policy which are going to lose the GOP votes, this pic will gain them votes.
Also, making fun of her looks seems pretty juvenile.
Obligatory disclosure: Hate Palin, hate what she represents, understand (if disagree) with the Soda ban, think we should attack the subsidy side of things.
On one hand, the soda ban is so completely ridiculous. On top of the image issue it creates, it doesn't even really get at "big soda" where it is most effective (more people probably buy big sodas at supermarkets than at restaurants, but that's just a guess). But, on the other hand, it doesn't actually ban people drinking large quantities of soda. It just makes it more inconvenient to do so. I'm all for making unhealthy behaviors more inconvenient. People have shown they are either unwilling or unable to make the right choice (poverty, etc.), so the government having to play nanny in this case doesn't strike me as over the line.
The popular alternative ("sin tax") just seems so regressive to me.
I've mentioned the Congressional Progressive Caucus's budget before, but I think people need to have a glance at what it contains.
http://grijalva.house.gov/uploads/The_CPC_FY2012_Budget.pdf
Stimulus, infrastructure bank, public option, negotiation for bulk prices on pharmaceuticals, taxing capital gains as ordinary income, reduced defence operations and spending. Sign me up. Pity that this get to attention in the media because it doesn't compare to the seriousness of the Ryan budget.
I think that Palin with a Big Gulp is actually a message that sells.
There's a large contingent of voters out there that view the soda ban as overreach (whether a good idea or not, justifiable or not) and it becomes a symbol of overwhelming government in general.
For all the Clown Shoes going on with race, gender, and policy which are going to lose the GOP votes, this pic will gain them votes.
Why is this women still relevant? Didn't see fight against the ERA?
It's not conversions, it's motivations. People who are lukewarm on politics "because they're all stupid" get riled up over this kind of thing and vote.
It's not for Palin (she's not running for anything ever again) it's for the party.