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Tea Party Response: Rand Paul
points blame at both parties in critique

Louisville Courier-Journal, by James R. Carroll

Original Article

Posted By:tisHimself, 2/13/2013 5:47:49 AM

Saying “the state of the economy is tenuous,” U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., on Tuesday night issued a tea party critique of President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address and his policies that called for smaller government, deep federal spending cuts and congressional term limits. “The path we are on is not sustainable, but few in Congress or in this administration seem to recognize that their actions are endangering the prosperity of this great nation,” Paul warned in remarks delivered minutes after the president spoke and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio offered the official Republican response.

  

Post Reply  

Reply 1 - Posted by: zoidberg, 2/13/2013 7:05:40 AM     (No. 9173595)

Rand Paul did a great job.


Reply 2 - Posted by: doodah, 2/13/2013 7:23:01 AM     (No. 9173610)

I kinda like Rand Paul, but hope he doesn´t challenge Marco Rubio, maybe a Rubio/Paul ticket in 2016, but honestly, Rubio´s speech was the best ever. We certainly have a star in Rubio, of course, the MSM and Dems will continue to trash him and who knows if it will work like it did with Sarah Palin. We have got to take back the PR war and show the truth about our side and the Dems side.


   

 

  


 
Reply 3 - Posted by: StormCnter, 2/13/2013 7:52:36 AM     (No. 9173637)

I like Rubio and I want to like Rand Paul, but a few of his statements concern me. There´s time to sort it out.


Reply 4 - Posted by: mikkins2, 2/13/2013 8:10:17 AM     (No. 9173666)

Well done Mr. Paul. More voices are needed to point out the fact that both parties are responsible for the economic mess this country is in and the lack of desire to do any meaningful changes to fix it. Its all about the spending and the current Republican Establishment is addicted to it as their partners in crime, the democrats.

Any issue that does not involve spending cuts or national security is a mere distraction at this point.

Got Tea?


Reply 5 - Posted by: 4freedom, 2/13/2013 8:40:51 AM     (No. 9173735)

Rand Paul was one of the few Senator´s that had the guts to vote against the NDAA, that carries allot of weight with me.


Reply 6 - Posted by: WAN2, 2/13/2013 9:52:21 AM     (No. 9173917)

Addicts don´t give a flying f--- about cutting off their supply of drugs.



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Below, you will find ...

Most Recent Articles posted by "tisHimself"

and

Most Active Articles (last 48 hours)




Most Recent Articles posted by "tisHimself"



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Threaten McConnell?
Real Clear Politics, by Scott Conroy and Caitlin Huey Burns    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/29/2013 11:51:18 AM     Post Reply
When Ashley Judd announced on Wednesday that she had decided not to run for Mitch McConnell’s Senate seat in Kentucky, national Democrats quickly made clear that they remain serious about taking on the five-term lawmaker. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee launched a small anti-McConnell radio ad buy the next morning. But before the Senate minority leader can devote all of his attention to fending off whoever emerges from the Democratic primary in 2014, he may first have to contend with a GOP challenge from the right.

Obama Speaks Under
Arafat Banner
Weekly Standard, by Daniel Halper    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 11:18:26 PM     Post Reply
At a press conference today in Ramallah, President Barack Obama addressed the assembled journalists while standing under a Yasser Arafat banner: "Hope everyone saw presser. If not there, it was notable that Obama and Abbas spoke from under a banner bearing pictures of Arafat and Abbas. Also another big banner was hanging on wall nearby with Abbas kind of superimposed on Arafat," the White House pool reporter notes.

Digital Footprints Reveal
Continued RNC Cronyism,
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Red State, by Ron Robinson    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 11:09:45 PM     Post Reply
It’s bad enough that RNC Chairman Reince Priebus has decided to continue the relationship with failed Romney consultants Targeted Victory to send the RNC’s mass emails. What’s so harrowing is the cynicism and sloppiness Targeted Victory brings to the table to fulfill that contract. One would think that Targeted Victory, in fulfilling the RNC email contract, would take extreme care and would want to remove any taint of the Romney campaign from the RNC emails. (Targeted Victory invoiced the failed Romney campaign for over $17 million.) But one would be wrong in making that assumption.

The New Mossbacks
American Spectator, by Jeffrey Lord    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 8:15:05 PM     Post Reply
It’s uncanny. Unless, of course, it isn’t. The sons of two famous politicians made their potential presidential stand at CPAC — each son having achieved elective office on his own. Yet somehow… in some strange, perhaps not so mysterious fashion… each son sounds… like… yes indeed: Dad 2.0. Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush sounds like ex-President Dad George H.W. Bush, not to mention ex-President Brother George W. Kentucky Senator Rand Paul takes the Senate floor for a champion filibuster, followed by a CPAC speech, sounding ever so more than slightly like former presidential candidate and now ex-Congressman Dad Ron Paul.

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Supporting Same-Sex Marriage
National Review Online, by Andrew Johnson    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 3:05:56 PM     Post Reply
With the Supreme Court set to hear two cases on the issue of same-sex marriage this week, Republican strategist Karl Rove told This Week’s George Stephanopoulos that “I could” see the Republican party’s next presidential candidate supporting same-sex marriage. This comes on the heels of Ohio’s Republican senator Rob Portman’s recent support of the issue.

   

 



 
Libertariansm for Social Conservatives
American Conservative, by Jack Hunter    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 2:12:08 PM     Post Reply
At the Conservative Political Action Conference last weekend, the nation’s largest annual gathering of conservatives, many speculated that the GOP might be veering in a more libertarian direction—or at least influential leaders within the party might be prodding it or might be anxious for it to go in that direction. The Daily Beast ran the headline “Libertarians run the show at CPAC.” In his CPAC speech, former presidential candidate Rick Santorum warned that conservatives should not surrender their principles, referring specifically to social issues. Some on both the left and right perceive libertarianism as inherently hostile to social conservatism.

The GOP´s Vietnam
American Conservative, by Daniel McCarthy    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/24/2013 2:07:54 PM     Post Reply
America doesn’t really have a two-party system. It has a one-and-a-half-party system, where one party at a time tends to dominate the national agenda while the other becomes a half-party—one that might hold onto the House of Representatives and some state governments, but that isn’t trusted by voters to run the country. The Republicans are America’s half-party today. This is a reversal from a generation ago,

Can the Republican Party
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Wall Street Journal, by Peggy Noonan    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/23/2013 10:10:30 PM     Post Reply
The air has been full of 10th-anniversary Iraq war retrospectives. One that caught my eye was a smart piece by Tom Curry, national affairs writer for NBC News, who wrote of one element of the story, the war´s impact on the Republican Party: "The conflict not only transformed" the GOP, "but all of American politics." It has, but it´s an unfinished transformation. Did the Iraq war hurt the GOP? Yes. The war, and the crash of ´08, half killed it. It´s still digging out, and whether it can succeed is an open question.

Lead Us Not Into Temptation
American Spectator, by William Murchison    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/23/2013 8:55:12 PM     Post Reply
THE HEAT’S ON, my friends. Gotta change that GOP. Change it how? You know by now, surely, with all the talk afloat in the land since the last time America voted. Gotta gag, not to mention tie up (and maybe strangle, if no one’s watching too closely) those “social issue” people, the ones who cost Republicans probably the White House and almost certainly the Senate. They just wouldn’t shut up, would they? Had to keep jamming their sermons down our throats: abortion, gay rights, marriage, religion. Religion? Oh, my God! All that stuff that divides instead of uniting people?

Where Is Today’s Jack Kemp?
National Review, by Rich Lowry    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/23/2013 12:24:36 AM     Post Reply
The harsh assessment of the RNC “autopsy” committee would be that it talked to 2,600 people, yet one of its top proposals is reviving a minority inclusion council from the 1990s. It takes months of research to come up with this stuff? But that would be too harsh. The autopsy is a good-faith effort to stare the Republican predicament straight in the face. It’s just that there are inherent limits to any such exercise. The party is not going to be saved by committee.

   

 

  


 
The Price of Gay Marriage:
The Galvanic Corrosion of
the Language
The American Thinker, by Geoffrey P. Hunt    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/22/2013 7:14:19 AM     Post Reply
When was that watershed moment where advocacy of gay marriage crossed into the mainstream from the radical chic of the intellectual elite ? Gay marriage, quite apart from homosexuality per se, has only in recent years been embraced by more than just a few libertarian sophisticates. Ironically it wasn´t too long ago when the progressive darlings and the beautiful people believed, to the contrary, that marriage of any kind was oppressive, a form of institutional bondage.

The First American Pope
National Review Online, by George Weigel    Original Article
Posted By: tisHimself- 3/14/2013 12:43:12 PM     Post Reply
The swift election of Jorge Mario Cardinal Bergoglio, S.J., as bishop of Rome is replete with good news — and not a little irony. To reverse the postmodern batting order, let’s begin with the good news. A true man of God. The wheelchair-bound beggar at the corner of Via della Conciliazione and Via dell’Erba this morning had a keen insight into his new bishop: “Sono molto contento; e una profeta” (“I’m very happy; he’s a prophet”).



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