CNN Pushes Palinization Of Tea Party Nation

To put it bluntly, the Tea Party kicked ass and took names in the 2010 elections.

As reward for their crimes against Socialism, Marxism and Obamaism the leftwing of American politics painted a bulls-eye on the back of these patriotic citizens.

Between now and the elections of 2012, the network division of the Obama administration’s public relations department, otherwise known as ABC, NBC, CBS, MSNBC, and CNN, will take aim at that bulls-eye, resorting to every dirty trick in the propaganda playbook to try and land an arrow into the heart of the Tea Party. And their latest meme, since Nazi and racist didn’t stick, is to frame them for the economic plague caused by the Obama, Pelosi and Reid hydra.

During the past week, CNN hosts and guests poured a torrential rain of blame on the Tea Party for the nation’s credit downgrade, labeling them anti-American and hostage takers. So is it any wonder the latest CNN/ORC poll shows the Tea Party’s unfavorable number is up a few points?

On the CNN Newsroom Saturday, August 9, the unbiased network’s bias was on display for all to see. They took delight in pointing out the poll’s unfavorable number for House Majority leader John Boehner at 40%. They made sure to highlight Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell at 39%.

Read More at American Thinker By Sonny Palermo, American Thinker

“Extraordinary Reversal”: Moody’s nearly halves GDP forecast, QE3 on horizon

By Peter Schroeder (Hill.com):

Citing an “extraordinary reversal of fortune,” Moody’s Analytics on Monday significantly lowered its hopes for the nation’s economy through 2011, nearly halving its expectations for growth over the next six months.

Recent drama on the economic front, headlined by the debt-limit drama that led to an unprecedented downgrade of the nation’s credit rating, have “eviscerated” investor and business confidence, Moody’s said.

The company, which is related to credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Service, lowered its expected growth of the nation’s gross domestic product to roughly 2 percent for the remainder of the year, down from its 3.5 percent growth expectation of just a month ago.

And while the research shop once expected unemployment to dip below 8 percent by the end of 2012, it now expects it to linger around 8.5 percent in the months following the presidential campaign.

The new report suggests the 2012 campaign for the White House will take place against the backdrop of a continuing-to-struggle economy, which could hurt President Obama’s chances for reelection.

Obama is on the road this week in the Midwest, where he lambasted Congress on Monday for the debt ceiling talks.

The nation’s economic psyche was already iffy following the deep recession. And the debt theatrics, continued European instability, and repeated violent swings in the stock market have sent people and businesses running for cover, Moody’s said.

“Falling stock prices weigh heavily on those animal spirits so vital to a well-functioning economy,” Moody’s stated. “Markets and the economy seem one shock away from dangerously unraveling.”

Standard & Poor’s became the first rater in history to downgrade the United State’s debt earlier in July, but Moody’s has maintained the nation’s AAA rating while placing it on watch for a downgrade.

The Federal Reserve attempted to assuage markets on July 9 by saying it would be keeping interest rates near zero for at least two more years. The “unprecedented” move also increases the odds that the central bank will embark on a third round of asset purchases known as “quantitative easing,” according to Moody’s. It now expects “QE3” to begin sometime in the next few months.

Read more at the Hill.com HERE.

UK’s Cameron decries moral collapse, need to address marriage, other social issues

By David Stringer and Shawn Pogatchnik (OneNewsNow):

Britain must confront a culture of laziness, irresponsibility and selfishness that fueled four days of riots which left five people dead, thousands facing criminal charges and hundreds of millions in damages, Prime Minister David Cameron acknowledged Monday.

As rival political leaders staked out their response to England’s unrest, Cameron pledged to deliver a raft of new policies by October aimed at reversing the “slow-motion moral collapse” which he blames for fostering the disorder.

“This has been a wake-up call for our country. Social problems that have been festering for decades have exploded in our face,” Cameron told an audience at a youth center in Witney, his Parliamentary district in southern England. “Just as people last week wanted criminals robustly confronted on our street, so they want to see these social problems taken on and defeated.”

Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said Monday he was checking whether those involved in the riots should have their welfare payments cut, while London mayor Boris Johnson said young people convicted in the disorder would lose their right to use public transportation for free.

Cameron pledged to end a culture of timidity in discussing family breakdown or poor parenting, or in criticizing those who fail to set a good example to their children or community.

“We have been too unwilling for too long to talk about what is right and what is wrong,” Cameron said. “We have too often avoided saying what needs to be said, about everything from marriage to welfare to common courtesy.”

In a rival speech, main opposition Labour Party leader Ed Miliband criticized Cameron’s response as overly simplistic, and demanded that lawmakers focus on delivering better opportunities for disaffected young people.

“The usual politicians’ instinct _ announce a raft of new legislation, appoint a new adviser, wheel out your old prejudices and shallow answers _ will not meet the public’s demand,” said Miliband.

He spoke at his former high school in Camden, north London, half a block from the scene of rioting Aug. 8, when shops were trashed and police came under attack.

“Are issues like education and skills, youth services, youth unemployment important for diverting people away from gangs, criminality, the wrong path? Yes, they matter,” Miliband said.

The differing approaches to Britain’s most serious riots in a generation are likely to dominate the country’s annual political conventions, which begin next month. Miliband has called for a full public inquiry into the roots of the riots, while Cameron insists his government is able to adequately examine the issue.

Cameron insists that racial tensions, poverty and the government’s austerity program – much of which is yet to bite – were not the primary motivations for the riots across London and other major cities.

Instead, Cameron pointed to gang-related crime, and a widespread failure from Britain’s leaders to address deep rooted social issues, including the country’s generous welfare system.

“Children without fathers. Schools without discipline. Reward without effort. Crime without punishment. Rights without responsibilities. Communities without control. Some of the worst aspects of human nature tolerated, indulged – sometimes even incentivized – by a state and its agencies that in parts have become literally demoralized,” Cameron said.

He pledged that the government would intervene to help 120,000 of the country’s most troubled families before the 2015 national election.

Standing before a backdrop of graffiti, Cameron said Britain’s damaged society had for too long been one which “incites laziness, that excuses bad behavior, that erodes self-discipline, that discourages hard work.”

Read more at ONENEWSNOW HERE.

Obama the Job Terminator

Through taxation and regulation, the Democrat candidate for President is killing American jobs. The effort is so pronounced, so pervasive and so relentless, that it is time to call it deliberate.

Obama has consistently demanded higher individual income taxes on “millionaires and billionaires,” which he consistently defines as anyone making more than $200,000 a year. Calling for “fairness,” he has repeated this mantra thousands of times. Apparently he believes it would be fairer if the top 1% of American income tax payers already paying 38% of all federal income tax revenues pay even more, while half of all American adults continue to pay no income tax at all.

Obama has blocked all attempts to lower the American corporate tax rate—now the highest of all industrialized countries. Worse still, Obama has blocked all efforts to stop the double taxation of U.S. companies’ foreign sales. American companies pay taxes to countries where sales are made, then face American corporate income taxes if the net profits are brought back home. Trillions of dollars are kept by American companies overseas instead of being invested here because of this stubborn job-killing double taxation.

Consequently, while the TOTUS (Teleprompter of the United States) speaks eloquently about the need for jobs, Obama tax policy punishes job creators. While the TOTUS speaks up forcefully for increased American exports to create jobs, the reality of Obama tax policy is having the opposite effect—jobs are fleeing the U.S. While the TOTUS castigates American companies for hoarding cash and not hiring, it is Obama’s double taxation policies that are causing the problem.

As with other bad trends (deficit spending, declining student test scores, endless wars) that predated Obama but have accelerated under his regime, things have gotten so much worse for job creators in the U.S. in the last 2.5 years.

Read More at Human Events  By Roger Hedgecock, Human Events

LAMBRO: Obama numbers that add up to one term

 

The Obama economy is looking bleaker than ever. All recessions end, but this one’s going to last a lot longer than most because America remains overtaxed, overregulated and drowning in unfathomable debt.

We had the capacity to grow our way out of the 2008 recession within two years with the right growth policies, but President Obama and the Democrat-run Congress pursued impotent, anti-growth fiscal policies that drove spending to unprecedented levels at a time when the recession had sandbagged tax revenues. That forced the feds to sharply increase borrowing, which is devouring the lion’s share of our economy’s income.

When cooler heads, some within his own administration, were urging him to concentrate on the economy, he focused on a massive new government health care entitlement program. That’s in the process of running up a mountain of future bills – plus crushing anti-job-creating regulations – on an economy struggling to climb out of one of the severest recessions since the Great Depression.

When a recession hits and incomes fall, Americans instinctively tighten their belts, reduce spending, pay off credit cards and sock money away in savings in case things get worse. But Mr. Obama and his party did just the opposite. They expanded government, raised spending and burdened the economy with $3 trillion in higher debt.

The Obama crew lived in a separate reality of its own making, believing its exaggerated rhetoric that the economy was moving “in the right direction.” But as the economy grew weaker, revenues fell, budget deficits rose, and the unemployment rate climbed into the 9 percent range.

Read More at the Washington Times By Donald Lambro, The Washington Times

Perry to Pose Major Threat to Romney

The biggest development of the Republican presidential campaign on Thursday happened in Austin, Texas – 1,000 miles from the leadoff caucus state where GOP front-runner Mitt Romney and seven of his opponents squared off ahead of an important test vote this weekend.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry sent word that he was running for the GOP nomination, casting a shadow over the debate and threatening to upend the race.

Back in Iowa, Romney emerged unscathed with his leader-of-the-pack status intact after two feisty hours; his two Minnesota rivals – Rep. Michele Bachmann and former Gov. Tim Pawlenty – sparred repeatedly as each sought advantage ahead of Saturday’s Iowa straw poll.

Overall, the dynamics of the campaign did not change with a single debate. And they may not change when Saturday’s straw poll results are announced.

But the race could well change in the coming days as Perry dives into it.

Read More at Real Clear Politics By Thomas  Beaumont, Real Clear Politics

One last chance for Republicans

The GOP has to get it right in 2012.  It will either return to its platform of small government, traditional values, and national sovereignty, or its conservative base will abandon it.

The stakes are far too high for conservatives to support the candidacy of another business-as-usual, ruling class member. Not only are we faced with unprecedented economic challenges, we are also suffering under a dramatic expansion of government, shepherded by both parties.

Typically, economic crisis brings opportunity to the party out of power. Elections are often won by pointing out the failed policies of the incumbent.  If the past is any guide, the upside possibilities for the GOP in 2012 far surpass any downside risks.

But what makes the present crisis particularly dangerous to the GOP is the growing awareness of grass roots activists that they’ve been hoodwinked almost continuously for the past two decades.  Although their party has controlled the White House or at least one house of Congress for all but four of the past twenty-four years, the central government has grown into a gargantuan, freedom-smothering entity over this same time frame.

We’ve been told endlessly by GOP politicians that we must return to a limited government, grounded in the Constitution, and how they will uphold the sanctity of life and the traditional family.  They start their campaigns with prayer meetings, issue proclamations in honor of God and country, and talk about revitalizing the American economy, but everything gets worse under their leadership: more regulations, more activist judges, and more big government programs.

How about illegal aliens? There’s hardly a Republican in Congress who hasn’t had strong words about illegal immigration.  But when push comes to shove, nothing happens.  Proposals for amnesty, code-named “immigration reform,” are championed by many in the GOP.  No reasonable effort is made to fund a fence.  Obama is not held accountable for failure to enforce immigration laws.

The Republicans’ fight against Obama in other areas also lacks vigor.  As we stand on the verge of the greatest federal takeover of our economy with Obamacare, no serious GOP effort has been undertaken to defund this program.  Obama has not been brought to accountability for his Project Gunrunner/Fast and Furious abominations or his failure to defend DOMA (Defense of Marriage Act), which the Constitution obligates him to do as the head of the Executive Branch.

No GOP leader speaks about Obama’s lack of transparency in his administration or anywhere else.  Obama’s czars also get a pass, despite their circumvention of the confirmation requirements of the US Constitution.  No attempt is made to defund such offices. And the list of unchallenged Obama outrages goes on and on.

Then we have the budget process and the debt ceiling.  Conservatives were promised at least $100 billion in cuts this year.  Turns out that was lie:  the actual number may not even be $300 million.  The debt ceiling deal was even more of a betrayal.  No cuts at all right now, just continued exorbitant spending.  There’s a promise of future cuts in 2014 but we (and Standard and Poor’s) all know that’s just a pipe dream.

So when conservatives enter their voting booths convinced of both a collapsing Republic and a complicit party, there’s zero chance of compromise no matter who’s on the ballot.  The lesser of the two evils is no option in 2012.

That spells opportunity for any constitutional conservative running for the Republican nomination.  The GOP base is desperate for a candidate who truly loves this nation and will do whatever it takes to put us back on course.

But be forewarned:  the grassroots is also quite skeptical of all candidates, given the track record of the last two decades.  A candidate who starts a campaign in Bush-like fashion by appealing to the base with a prayer meeting or a vicious verbal attack on the establishment can’t expect an immediate outpouring of conservative support.  Quite simply, the base is sick and tired of being lied to.

Given this growing discernment, a candidate from outside the beltway who has a proven track record of holding the establishment to account for corruption and/or the growth of government can count on significant support.  The perfect storm of crisis and establishment disgust will spawn a candidate who, in 2012, either will resurrect the GOP and its platform or will walk away with its base in an independent bid.

Saving our great Republic requires courageous and selfless leaders.  There are very few in office today. God willing, at least one will rise to the occasion in the Presidential race, rescuing our country from the edge of the abyss, and back to its foundations.

Read original article at WND HERE.

How Reagan Would Campaign Against Obama

By Randy DeSoto (Red County):

Two speeches that Ronald Reagan gave, one when announcing his Presidential candidacy in November of 1979 and another during his re-election campaign in 1984, seem particularly poignant for the times of economic turbulence that we’re passing through right now.

In the late 70’s President Jimmy Carter stated in the obvious from the Oval Office in July of 1979, when he gave his famous “Crisis of Confidence,” aka “Malaise Speech.”

If you’ve never seen it, watch even just the first couple of minutes of this dreary mess:

Carter posited, “For the first time in the history of our country, a majority of our people believe that the next five years will be worse than the past five years.”

At that time, the county was going through a period of stagflation: high unemployment, no growth, yet rising interest rates. Unemployment reached 10% and interest rates stood at twice that.  There was a pervading sense that poverty would continue to surge and wealth would continue to be destroyed. It was feared that we were going to keep doing what we did in the past: grow the government, increase entitlements, create even more red tape for businesses trying to compete in a global economy.

Enter Ronald Reagan, stage right.  The one-time actor, and former two-term governor of California announced his intentions to seek the Presidency. The words he spoke to the nation about President Carter and the Democrats policies then, could just as easily be spoken today. Taking on Carter’s predictions of gloom and doom and a diminishing country, Reagan said,

“They tell us…that the America of the coming years will be a place where — because of our past excesses — it will be impossible to dream and make those dreams come true.  I don’t believe that. And I don’t believe you do either. That is why I am seeking the presidency. I cannot and will not stand by and see this great country destroy itself. Our leaders attempt to blame their failures on circumstances beyond their control, on false estimates by unknown, unidentifiable experts who rewrite modern history in an attempt to convince us our high standard of living, the result of thrift and hard work, is somehow selfish extravagance which we must renounce as we join in sharing scarcity. I don’t agree that our nation must resign itself to inevitable decline, yielding its proud position to other hands. I am totally unwilling to see this country fail in its obligation to itself and to the other free peoples of the world.”

Click HERE for the entire speech.

Reagan won the election of 1979 in a landslide, 44 states to 6, and for the first time since the 1950’s the Republicans controlled the Senate. They were able to build a coalition in the Democratically controlled House to pass measures that lowered tax rates drastically from a top marginal rate of 70% down to 28%. They also cut regulations, and privatized vast swaths of jobs once performed by the federal government. The result was that the economy boomed, and experienced the largest peacetime economic growth in American history. The funny thing was that despite the lower tax rates, revenues to the federal treasury doubled, because so many people were working and getting paid more. Unemployment fell in half from 10% to 5%, and as one would expect, the poverty rate shrank too.

Read more at Red County HERE.

Video: Tired of watching Washington? Take a break and laugh

Sometimes listening to and watching all of the stuff that comes out of Washington becomes a little too much. Take a break and watch this funny video.