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		<title>Pandering is never the Answer &#8211; Engaging People Is</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/11/08/pandering-is-never-the-answer-engaging-people-is/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/11/08/pandering-is-never-the-answer-engaging-people-is/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2012 22:44:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=184</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Raised by Democrats, young, single, female, living in New York City, reading the NY Times, and making a living in the arts, after voting against Bush twice and railing against him for most of 7 years, I registered as a Republican, voted for McCain in the primary and took the unprecedented step of actively supporting him throughout the General Election. Was it because the GOP &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/11/08/pandering-is-never-the-answer-engaging-people-is/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Raised by Democrats, young, single, female, living in New York City, reading the NY Times, and making a living in the arts, after voting against Bush twice and railing against him for most of 7 years, I registered as a Republican, voted for McCain in the primary and took the unprecedented step of actively supporting him throughout the General Election.</p>
<p>Was it because the GOP pandered to me by watering down its positions or running female candidates? Emphatically, no.  Was it because I was initially more in sympathy with the Republican Party? NO. When I registered &#8220;Republican&#8221; I was vaguely disgusted with the Democrats but actively hated the GOP. The issue I&#8217;d tended to feel most strongly about was the PATRIOT ACT &#8211; I&#8217;d been against it for years &#8211; periodically engaging in some form of activism against it &#8211; Obama said he&#8217;d repeal it, McCain staunchly defended it. I wound up supporting McCain.</p>
<p>Why? The short answer is that, on closer inspection, I quickly saw that the candidate I&#8217;d planned to support (Ron Paul) was entirely unfit to be President, and McCain impressed me as a potential Commander in Chief &#8211; who would use the PATRIOT ACT responsibly while Obama struck me as somebody who would do whatever was politically expedient.</p>
<p>The longer is that due to my concerns about the PATRIOT ACT I was unsettled enough to become involved and got roped into organizing around that issue (by a woman I didn&#8217;t yet realize was basically a communist) and suddenly spending large amounts of time researching and discussing political issues, becoming increasingly concerned about the fate of our country, and being exposed to a wide cross section of New York City&#8217;s activist community.  (pretty much everybody <em>except </em>Republicans) It also gave me an opportunity to explore and question a lot of issues on which I had casual opinions (For example, I was inclined to &#8220;anti-war&#8221; until I hung around the anti-war movement) The group that most welcomed me was the local Libertarian chapter &#8211; with other right wing third parties also being quite friendly and supportive of my endeavors.  I thought some of their ideas were crazy (actually, I still think that) but they were enjoyable to argue with and through various discussions, reading,etc. I came to be quite fiscally conservative and more clearly pro-life. I found that I wished the LP was just a little less extreme with the fiscal conservatism and would drop the socially liberal part &#8212; but didn&#8217;t explore the GOP until deciding to get involved with the Republican primary &#8212; from which point on I was immersed.<br />
Is there a point to this story? Yes, several:</p>
<p>1. Give people something TO DO. It&#8217;s  easy to hold habitual opinions for years.  I apathetically voted Democrat for years &#8212; busy with other pursuits and assuming that neither party would be especially harmful.  When people engage and take on responsibility they need to want to understand the issues a lot better-  and also be put in contact with people who can inform them much better than the media.</p>
<p>Possible options:</p>
<p>a.  local initiatives opposing the implementation of Obamacare (like the referendum Montana just passed)<br />
b. other states rights issues<br />
c. co-ordination of support networks for unwed soon to be mothers,</p>
<p>or any number of other possibilities ( a lot of this may already be being done)</p>
<p>#2. Partner with other groups who have areas of common ground. (For e.g. is there a local Libertarian or Constitution Party event that a local GOP chapter could look into co-sponsoring and encouraging people to attend) For years I rubbed shoulders with everybody BUT Republicans and think, in retrospect, if I&#8217;d been thrown in with Republicans sooner I would&#8217;ve sooner gotten on board.</p>
<p>#3. Hold Talk-Back type events encouraging people who disagree with Republicans on various issues to come and voice their concerns.  I&#8217;ve never heard of any group actually doing that &#8211; but think there could be interest.  The urge to just be heard out by those who disagree with you is strong in at least some people. It could be an opportunity to begin dialogue and /or correct misconceptions.</p>
<p>#4. The left never sleeps. The battle to take back the White House raged continually for 8 years. Every issue of legitimate concern for a broad swatch of the population was used as an opportunity to push a kitchen sink program of left wing priorities.  (For example: The Iraq War was an opportunity to blame the capitalist system and chant things like &#8220;Money for healthcare not for war, etc., etc.)<br />
* I put an asterisk because &#8211; while I&#8217;m conservative compared to the national average, I&#8217;m probably still moderate compared to many others at Redstate on some issues.</p>
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		<title>Cowboy Poetry All Over Again&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Oct 2012 08:46:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=172</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Romney&#8217;s mention of Big Bird pays brilliant dividends as Obama self inflicts a possibly fatal wound and doesn&#8217;t even know it. For all the disadvantages of having most of the print and televised media firmly in the tank for the Democrats &#8211; there are also  a lot of silver linings. For example: Liberal media holds Republicans accountable (I suspect if one were to tabulate the &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again-2/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Romney&#8217;s mention of Big Bird pays brilliant dividends as Obama self inflicts a possibly fatal wound and doesn&#8217;t even know it.</p>
<p>For all the disadvantages of having most of the print and televised media firmly in the tank for the Democrats &#8211; there are also  a lot of silver linings. For example: Liberal media holds Republicans accountable (I suspect if one were to tabulate the number of lies told in the past 30 years by Democratic Presidents vs. Republican Presidents the number would be exponentially higher for the former) and perhaps that attracts a higher caliber of candidate, there&#8217;s also the&#8230;er&#8230;blessing  of being constantly inundated with examples of how the other side thinks, what and how they will attack and what to avoid.</p>
<p>If you were to ask any random American &#8220;What are the negative stereotypes about Republicans?&#8221;  probably 90%+ could give you a passable answer.  But &#8211; even among professional politicians and political operatives at the highest levels &#8212; it&#8217;s become  abundantly clear that (at least some) Democrats have no idea when and why they&#8217;re perceived as ridiculous.</p>
<p>You would think that a President who somewhat recently  saw the opposition party rack up its largest gains in a century &#8212; in an obvious rebuke of his policies &#8212; who just lost a debate worse than any President in the history of televised debates&#8230; to a candidate who has a (now) very evident appeal to independent voters &#8211; You would think that a President in that situation would want to reach out to the middle &#8212; making every effort to appear reasonable and centrist.</p>
<p>Instead Obama is playing into numerous liberal stereotypes (sappy blatantly emotionally manipulation arguments, willful obtuseness, obliviousness to the national debt, etc., etc.) reminding people of some of the most absurd and frustrating moments of his Presidency (  Harry Reid screaming bloody murder over the proposed cutting of funding for cowboy poetry, seemingly constant budget fights, near government shut downs, etc.) and &#8211; more importantly &#8212; he&#8217;s playing right into the biggest  negative stereotype that are specific to him &#8211; and amplifying his worst traits.<br />
The most glaring mistake is in his use of the straw man argument.  It&#8217;s always been a favorite Obama tactic and well known object of ridicule on the right  - but for him to claim that Governor Romney thinks defunding Sesame Street will &#8211; by itself &#8211; completely solve the federal debt crisis is brazen beyond anything he&#8217;s said in the past. Not only is it absurd on its face  but it&#8217;s very clearly NOT the position Governor Romney very clearly stated in one of the most memorable exchanges of one of the most watched debates in history which occurred not even a week ago.</p>
<p>In the past Obama has probably gotten by (to a large extent) with endless straw men because the liberal media isn&#8217;t going to point them out and in the echo chamber there&#8217;s likely to be little awareness of the actual Republican position.  But this time is different because he&#8217;s lying about events &#8211; when even Democrats already know the truth.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy to see why liberals would not want to defund PBS and especially NPR &#8212; but they lack the wisdom to see that it&#8217;s a fight they can&#8217;t afford. Even with Gallup finding that 72% of the country thinks Governor Romney won the debate &#8211; Obama continues to repeat the same lame, discredited claim with which he lost so badly &#8211; unable to let go of a losing argument.</p>
<p>It&#8217;d be difficult for even the best satirist to caricature Obama more thoroughly than he&#8217;s caricatured himself (he never successfully &#8220;caricatured&#8221; Romney at all &#8212; at least not in the traditional meaning of the word &#8212; which means exaggerating traits a person actually has not just making stuff up) as there are few things more absurd than screaming for continued subsidies for a kids tv show as our nation is in danger of bankruptcy.</p>
<p>Point being that the opportunity for victory could not be clearer &#8212; and investing time and/or money now could scarcely be more certain of being rewarded.</p>
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		<title>Cowboy Poetry All Over Again</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Oct 2012 06:55:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=169</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Obama campaign self inflicts a quite possibly fatal wound &#8212; and doesn&#8217;t even know it. For all the griping about the liberal media (which is valid) it&#8217;s easy to miss the silver linings that come with having  most members of certain types of media hating us, our party, and all for which we stand.  For one thing the liberal media holds Republicans accountable.  If &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/10/10/cowboy-poetry-all-over-again/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Obama campaign self inflicts a quite possibly fatal wound &#8212; and doesn&#8217;t even know it.</p>
<p>For all the griping about the liberal media (which is valid) it&#8217;s easy to miss the silver linings that come with having  most members of certain types of media hating us, our party, and all for which we stand.  For one thing the liberal media holds Republicans accountable.  If you were to tabulate the number of lies told in the past 30 years by Democrat vs. Republican Presidents ( a gargantuan task) it&#8217;s almost certainly a safe guess that the difference would be beyond exponential.  But besides being character building for Republicans, there&#8217;s also a big advantage in having the media constantly inundating us with reminders of how the other side thinks &#8211; and what impressions must be avoided.</p>
<p>If asked to describe the negative stereotypes about Republicans &#8211; any Republican &#8212; heck, any adult US citizen could probably give you a passable answer.  But with this latest &#8220;Big Bird&#8221; attack &#8212; it&#8217;s become obvious that the Obama Administration hasn&#8217;t the slightest clue of what&#8217;s been happening outside their echo chamber 0r how they have been perceived.  Perhaps they&#8217;ve started believing their own press so much that they&#8217;ve forgotten hoq chose to rebuke them less than 2 years ago.</p>
<p>Not only does this  latest outcry/taunt play into multiple  liberal stereotypes ( sappyness/ naked emotional manipulation, willful obtuseness to the possibility that any institution could conceivably survive without constant government subsidies, etc.,etc ) serve as a reminder of all the most frustrating, damaging and absurd moments of his Presidency (the stimulus, cowboy poetry,</p>
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		<title>And suddenly the tables turn&#8230; (why Newt supporters shouldn&#8217;t be calling for anyone to exit right now)</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/02/07/and-suddenly-the-tables-turn-why-newt-supporters-shouldnt-be-calling-for-anyone-to-exit-right-now/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/02/07/and-suddenly-the-tables-turn-why-newt-supporters-shouldnt-be-calling-for-anyone-to-exit-right-now/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Feb 2012 05:07:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=162</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Our persistently crowded field could easily be the start of Romney&#8217;s undoing. Not to trivialize the matter but as we head into the next round of contests, I&#8217;m reminded of  the Broncos in their final regular season game. They lost and,  if the Raiders beat the Chargers,  would&#8217;ve been out of the playoffs.  But the Chargers won, and instead it was the Raiders who were &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2012/02/07/and-suddenly-the-tables-turn-why-newt-supporters-shouldnt-be-calling-for-anyone-to-exit-right-now/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our persistently crowded field could easily be the start of Romney&#8217;s undoing.</p>
<p>Not to trivialize the matter but as we head into the next round of contests, I&#8217;m reminded of  the Broncos in their final regular season game. They lost and,  if the Raiders beat the Chargers,  would&#8217;ve been out of the playoffs.  But the Chargers won, and instead it was the Raiders who were out.</p>
<p>Despite Speaker Gingrich having rightfully earned his place in the conservative Hall of Fame, being terrific at come backs, and easily the best athlete available &#8211; right now &#8211; with regard to the upcoming caucuses-  he&#8217;s behind by 20, has the ball on his own 20 yard line with no time outs and there&#8217;s only 2 and a half minutes to go.</p>
<p>Barring some miracle involving outperforming the polls by 22% and/or suddenly mysteriously appearing on the Missouri ballot, Newt can&#8217;t (realistically) expect to win more than one caucus tomorrow and even that&#8217;s a long shot.</p>
<p>But he definitely needs Romney to lose.</p>
<p>Enter Rick Santorum and Ron Paul.</p>
<p>One of the most  frustrating things about Governor Romney is that while his qualifications are largely illusory, his competitive advantages have been very real. However, we&#8217;ve now reached a point in the contests where many of the elements that seemed to lend advantage now turn to the advantage of his competitors.</p>
<p>The splitting of the conservative vote and the (maddening) early tendency of some &#8220;non-Romneys&#8221;  to go after others while largely giving Romney a pass ( or even rescuing him) has undoubtedly helped Romney to this point, so has the short amount of time between contests, and his over the top media support.</p>
<p>But now Romney finds himself described, not only as the frontrunner, but as the &#8220;presumptive nominee&#8221; or at least &#8220;the prohibitive frontrunner&#8221; and he&#8217;s facing fresh challengers that are relatively untarnished and  have a head start campaigning in the upcoming caucus states.</p>
<p>Whatever his campaign may claim, Romney doesn&#8217;t seem to have prepared for the long haul.</p>
<p>He could easily lose 3 out of the next 4 contests and &#8211; if so- can&#8217;t help but lose momentum.  It&#8217;s conceivable  (and not even that unlikely) that Romney will lose Minnesota, Missouri and Maine and only win Colorado because of the Mormon turnout.</p>
<p>The problem with front runner status is you have to keep it.</p>
<p>But that would be only the beginning of Mitt&#8217;s many troubles.  Almost any (plausible) scenario that involves Mitt losing would be really good for Newt.  Looking at a couple of them:</p>
<p>1. Santorum wins MO, Gingrich MN, and Paul ME:   Newt gets a huge bounce, silences those declaring his campaign dead, and seriously solidifies his role as Romney&#8217;s main rival (especially when he had less time to campaign than Santorum).  Santorum&#8217;s win builds the narrative that Romney is being rejected by the majority of his party and can&#8217;t win a 2 man race.  Paul winning Maine would just be icing on the Romney-Can&#8217;t-Seal-The-Deal cake.</p>
<p>2. Santorum wins both MN &amp;MO,  Ron Paul wins ME: Santorum would get a huge bounce and the media would try and paint him as Romney&#8217;s new main rival but unless he beat Newt by a truly enormous margin this won&#8217;t be that effective (Newt could point to the fact he just beat Santorum by 19 points in Florida, 11 in Nevada and that  Santorum had a lot more time to campaign in the caucus states) BUT I actually think this is the scenario most likely to ensure Romney&#8217;s undoing and Newt&#8217;s probable victory.</p>
<p>Santorum winning 2 states on the same day would be game changing for Romney. He could no longer just flex his money and go nuclear on Newt every time  he starts surging for fear of sending them to Santorum.  His media people would also lose the ability to triangulate:</p>
<p>So far the worst attacks on Newt (from the media)  have rested on the (paper thin)  pretense of Newt being uniquely unacceptable &#8211; as though they were attacking him for the good of the GOP and the country itself and not just to help Romney. To give context to these screeds the apparently harmless Santorum is often held up as another acceptable alternative and a much worthier opponent than Gingrich.</p>
<p>If Santorum is a threat, then obviously this can&#8217;t continue, but they also can&#8217;t go nuclear on Santorum without losing all credibility.</p>
<p>Romney could debate (both) opponents but couldn&#8217;t go scorched earth anymore and so could no longer rely on running an almost entirely negative campaign.</p>
<p>Romney would be entirely out of his element but Newt would be quite comfortably in his.</p>
<p>Santorum, in the meantime would be taking a lot more fire and getting a lot more scrutiny &#8211; which would blunt his momentum and start to bring up his negatives.</p>
<p>(And if Santorum continues to spout the sort of blatantly false claims he posted here yesterday, his negatives will go way up anyway)</p>
<p>Anyway, my point is that however you slice it, unless Romney wins 3 out of the next 4 contests we&#8217;re likely to come out of February with a Newt that&#8217;s rested and ready, a vetted Santorum, and a very beatable Romney who&#8217;s finding life suddenly much more complicated.</p>
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		<title>What Makes a Conservative? [Restored]</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/12/17/what-makes-a-conservative/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/12/17/what-makes-a-conservative/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Dec 2009 09:50:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=103</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What is a conservative? A few years ago I probably would&#8217;ve answered that a conservative was someone who is pro-life, pro-gun, &#38; in favor of less regulation, low taxes, a free market economy, a strong defense, and stiff criminal justice laws. Now I&#8217;m inclined to see &#8220;conservative&#8221; as one of those amorphous terms that can be manipulated to mean whatever the base wants it to &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/12/17/what-makes-a-conservative/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What is a conservative? A few years ago I probably would&#8217;ve answered that a conservative was someone who is pro-life, pro-gun, &amp; in favor of less regulation, low taxes, a free market economy, a strong defense, and stiff criminal justice laws. Now I&#8217;m inclined to see &#8220;conservative&#8221; as one of those amorphous terms that can be manipulated to mean whatever the base wants it to mean.</p>
<p>Mitt Romney who was formerly pro-choice, created a liberal friendly health plan, supports/ signed an assault weapons ban, wouldn&#8217;t take a position on the Surge and even hinted that he favored secret timetables in Iraq was deemed worthy of conservative support, whereas McCain who has a 25 year pro-life record, who wanted an increasingly free market approach to health care, who is much more pro-gun than Romney and who gave the Surge his full throated support was labeled a liberal regarded as the lowest of scum.</p>
<p>As an unrepentant McCainiac, It&#8217;s difficult not to see this as arbitrary, even capricious. Furthermore, it&#8217;s hard not to think that some conservatives are more interested in conformity &#8211; in having an opportunistic and weak candidate who can be counted on to always appease them despite having no real convictions than having someone who is capable of standing on principle rather than automatically yeilding to pressure and who is &#8211; for that reason &#8211; less easy to control.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not saying I&#8217;m right, I&#8217;m just saying the criteria does not seem clear or consistent and at the moment I&#8217;ve come to take a bit of a cynical view of the matter.</p>
<p>Been thinking a lot about Erick&#8217;s piece &#8221; Noun vs. Adjective&#8221;. As I understand it, he was making a distinction between Republicans who merely have conservative views, and those who truly have conservative convictions similar to how some Christians lead lives that are truly Christ centered and others only go through the motions. Leaving aside the question of who&#8217;s a conservative and who isn&#8217;t; it raises the question: how do convictions develop? what brings about spiritual or idealogical maturity?  Pastor Tim Keller teaches that the fruit of the spirit cannot be manufactured by human effort. You can and should create fertile conditions (by spending time with God, in the word, in fellowship, etc.) to allow God to work in your life but it is the Spirit that grows your fruit. You can&#8217;t shame a person into genuine spiritual growth and trying to force yourself to be more spiritual just doesn&#8217;t work. I expect it is the same with ideological growth.</p>
<p>Exposure to conservatism can cause a person to be move to the right. Case in point: Meghan McCain. Prior to the 2008 election she self described as an Independent but after spending time with &#8211; as she put it- some of the smartest Republicans in the country she fell in love with the Republican party. Now &#8211; I would&#8217;nt describe her as conservative (nor, I think, would anyone) but it seems clear she&#8217;s become <em>more</em> conservative than she was before.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve seen conservatives get all worked up over Meghan McCain and I really don&#8217;t understand why. She&#8217;s called a RINO - ok, but even if that were true, so what?  She&#8217;s doesn&#8217;t hold elected office and I highly doubt she&#8217;s likely to become so influential and persuasive as to inspire hardcore conservatives to suddenly be more liberal. She&#8217;s been called a useful idiot- again, what does it matter? Is anyone really mistaking her for the voice of the conservative movement? Would it somehow be better for her to be a self described Independent and to be doing interviews, writing columns, etc. that are even more critical of the GOP and less in agreement with what it stands for? Would you want her to conform to whatever views Redstate is currently supporting when she hasn&#8217;t been honestly convinced?</p>
<p>There are plenty of passionate ideologues who faithfully parrot the party line but don&#8217;t bother to think for themselves at all. Ideology actually can be used as an excuse not to think or to conveniently oversimplify issues. As one libertarian put it &#8221; the great thing about libertarianism is that whatever issue you have &#8211; you just plug it into the formula and you know the right position&#8221;  I&#8217;ve seen libertarians who &#8220;plugged into the formula&#8221; and came up with conclusions like &#8220;We need to legalize private ownership of nuclear weapons.&#8221; &amp; &#8220;we never should have fought in WWII&#8221;   I once attempted to have a conversation with a self professed socialist whose response to even the most obvious questions ( like &#8221; how would you motivate people to work if there&#8217;s no financial incentive?&#8221; ) was to get flustered and tell me to read Che Guevara. He clearly view Che as a prophet but didn&#8217;t really bother to think about what he wrote.</p>
<p>Plato wrote that &#8220;evil is unconsciousness&#8221; I submit that it is better to have the wrong view honestly than to profess the right views for the wrong reasons.</p>
<p>Erick writes about waging a &#8220;civil war&#8221; with the &#8220;Republican Establishment&#8221; well, it&#8217;s important to realize that wars have casualties.  There are drawbacks to this kind of rhetoric:</p>
<p>1. Party infighting is very unattractive to new Republicans and also to independents and/or disaffected Dems who may be considering the GOP. Admittedly, I don&#8217;t know what has been tried in terms of trying to reconcile differences with the establishment but from Ericks&#8217;s blog, Nessa&#8217;s diary, and the various comments my impression is that attacking the establishment is something close to a first recourse and there is little interest in trying to iron things out more peaceably.</p>
<p>2. It gives the impression that RedState is very exclusionary. Most people thinking of joining the GOP or of becoming a more active participant are not likely to want to have to prove their worthiness or be interrogated as to their level of conservatism. It&#8217;s difficult enough to find time for activism without the prospect of being subjected to a lot of verbal abuse and other nonsense.</p>
<p>3. It starts the finger pointing. When Erick blamed Mitch McConnell for the GOP only having 40 Senators I restrained myself from inquiring whether those self-proclaimed conservatives who grumbled constantly during the last election, refused to lift a finger or give a dime, &amp; proudly stayed home bear no responsibility. (Now, after being called an idiot and a liberal anyway, I&#8217;ve refrained from restraining.)</p>
<p>4. Speaking of fellow Republicans as if they were the enemy greatly dampens enthusiasm and tends to cause uneccessary divisions. A lot of the disagreement seems to actually be about tactics not deep ideological differences. I&#8217;m reminded of the Bible and Paul&#8217;s instructions not to quarrel over matters of decorum, etc. It goes even beyond speaking negatively about other Republicans and whatever happened to Reagan&#8217;s 11th commandment?</p>
<p>5. Such a willingness to become unpleasant, to split hairs over who is conservative to the core vs. who is merely conservative in practice, to lump John Boehner who consistently spoke out against the Porkulus in with Charlie Crist who supported it, has the potential to create the impression of narrowness and ideological rigidity which is an impression that is likely to encourage candidates and even activist to pander rather than say what they really think.</p>
<p>But the point about wanting conservatives with genuine convictions is valid. How are such convictions formed?</p>
<p>Exploring Erick&#8217;s parallel to Christianity:</p>
<p>Pastor Tim makes an important distinction between a &#8220;restrained heart&#8221; and a &#8220;supernaturally changed heart&#8221;.  A restrained heart might refrain from obvious sinning but it will only be going through the motions. There&#8217;s no life in it , no real passion (except for perhaps self regard) and the sinful, worldly nature still manifests itself in less obvious ways.)</p>
<p>Since converting to Christianity I&#8217;ve attended Bible studies at three different churches. The first was literally a cult and &#8220;studying the Bible&#8221; literally consisted of telling how each verse was interpreted. I left rather quickly but had time to notice that nearly everyone always seemed to be tired and most of the people I talked to one on one admitted to being really depressed. They were the furthest thing from an example of victorious Christian living.</p>
<p>At the second church there was no attempt at brainwashing but there was far too much willingness to lecture.  I once had a group leader criticize me - within the text of her prayer &#8211; for asking that we continue to pray for my agnostic brother. It had been something I&#8217;d prayed about constantly for months and that I&#8217;d asked the group to pray about for 3 weeks &#8220;And he just came to church with me for the 2nd week in a row. God is listening! So everybody, please keep praying that he gets saved!&#8221; Rather than praying this she asked &#8221; and please help Andrea to have patience and know that you&#8217;ll save her brother IN YOUR TIME.&#8221; I&#8217;d been reading &#8220;The Purpose Driven Life&#8221; and the author was big on having strong Christian friends and all my best friends were agnostic or very casual Christians - but I didn&#8217;t want to be friends with any of the people in that group and try though I might, I couldn&#8217;t will myself to want to.</p>
<p>At Redeemer my experience has been totally different. The first time I attended a Bible study with folks from Redeemer I was nervous and shamefully careless &#8211; gesturing with an uncapped pen in my hand- I accidentally marked the hostess&#8217;s beautiful suede couch. I was mortified but she assured me, with a warmth that was obviously sincere, that it was not a problem at all.</p>
<p>She could&#8217;ve screamed at me, could&#8217;ve demanded I pay for a new couch, but what would it have accomplished? I would&#8217;ve felt even worse, but it would&#8217;ve almost certainly reduced my participation. Instead, her generousity of spirit clued me in that I&#8217;d met someone unusually close to God.</p>
<p>A  conforming conservative who has adopted a righteous tone and all the right positions might be able to appease the base, spouting right wing platitudes and attacking the usual suspects but he/she is not going to be able to persuade and attract others. If anything, they will probably repel the rest.  As Pastor Tim teaches, genuine growth is always organic &#8211; it takes time and can&#8217;t be forced.</p>
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		<title>Democrats Do the Most Damage to Their Own</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/29/dont-lose-that-victim-mentality/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/29/dont-lose-that-victim-mentality/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Sep 2009 07:13:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[race baiting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[who are Democrats really hurting?]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=88</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[     A teacher friend of mine who&#8217;s incredibly passionate about her job, told me a story that &#8211; better than anything else I&#8217;ve heard or seen- illustrates what an Obama Presidency means to the black community. She told of several formerly problem kids who&#8217;d had no goals, no work ethic, kids who literally were planning to just collect welfare, who overnight became inspired to study &#8211; to try &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/29/dont-lose-that-victim-mentality/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>     A teacher friend of mine who&#8217;s incredibly passionate about her job, told me a story that &#8211; better than anything else I&#8217;ve heard or seen- illustrates what an Obama Presidency means to the black community. She told of several formerly problem kids who&#8217;d had no goals, no work ethic, kids who literally were planning to just collect welfare, who <em>overnight </em>became inspired to study &#8211; to try out for better programs, to strive for a real career&#8230;immediately after Obama won the election.  &#8221; I don&#8217;t care if he knows what he&#8217;s doing. To give them that&#8230;&#8221;at which point she seemed too moved to finish the sentence.  I couldn&#8217;t agree with the &#8220;I don&#8217;t care if he knows what he&#8217;s doing&#8221; part, but I did come away from the conversation feeling like maybe electing a (partly) black President would, in itself, bring some positive changes. Not enough to make up for the drawbacks of this<em> particular </em>black President&#8230;but maybe more than I realized.</p>
<p>       According to Rasmussen, the number of African Americans who thought they had a fair shot in life literally DOUBLED the day after Obama was elected. I have black friends who honestly thought Obama would lose because of racism. I privately thought that was nuts and, as a white chick, it&#8217;s easy for me to feel like they shouldn&#8217;t have needed Obama to win to believe America offered equal opportunity, but then I remember the chills that went up my spine when saw Sarah Palin was McCain&#8217;s choice of running mate-and I could hardly believe she was really the pick. I remember the lump in my throat when I heard the deafening welcome she received at the Republican National Convention. I didn&#8217;t expect to feel heartened by Rush Limbaugh&#8217;s full throated Palinmania or to respect him more as a result, but I did. It&#8217;s not like I was sitting around consciously thinking most of the GOP was sexist- but, before Sarah Palin, I wasn&#8217;t sure they weren&#8217;t. It hadn&#8217;t been tested. I can imagine that might be how a lot of black Americans felt before Obama. Though I get the impression racial identity cuts a lot deeper and is something that &#8211; from the outside- it&#8217;s probably close to impossible to fully understand.</p>
<p>     Character, hard work and perseverence, faith in God- ideally that&#8217;s all you really need but it&#8217;s a lot easier if somebody has blazed a trail before you and that can propel you farther. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was an innovator of detective stories but he was enlarging on an idea of Edgar Allan Poe&#8217;s and later &#8211; quite clearly, he fed the imagination of Dame Christie.  (Poirot is remarkably similar to Holmes in quite a lot of ways while still &#8211; of course- being unique).  Practically all of modern art owes some homage to Picasso who opened up new territory and permanently changed the landscape. Likewise Whoopi Goldberg was once interviewed about Star Trek and said when they cast a black women she went running through the house saying &#8220;Mommy, mommy, there&#8217;s a black woman on t.v. and she ain&#8217;t no maid!&#8221; and she knew at that moment that she could be anything she wanted to be and do anything she wanted to do.</p>
<p>      Bill Cosby stood on the shoulders of Dick Gregory. I was surprised to see Cosby included in a book of political comedians. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know he did political comedy&#8221; He didn&#8217;t. Other black comedians talked constantly about race issues. It was expected. That was their niche. Cosby has the audacity to not to limit himself to that niche and he became a superstar. Not in spite of his race, and not because of it. Simply because he was **** funny. But he could do that  because Dick Gregory had already broken the color barrier &#8211; so he could move past it.  So why are we going backwards?</p>
<p>    I wonder. Are these kids still feeling the same optimism and motivation that they felt the day Obama was elected? Is it unaffected by months of constant race baiting? When they&#8217;re hearing that townhall protesters are showing up carrying swastikas, when they&#8217;re told that those who don&#8217;t support Obamacare are opposing it because of racism ( especially when a solid majority oppose it &#8211; and it could easily shift to an overwhelming majority)  when Diane Watson says people oppose Obama&#8217;s policies because they don&#8217;t want the &#8220;first President who looks like me&#8221; to succeed, what does that do to their newly formed conviction?</p>
<p>      I&#8217;d like to think that it won&#8217;t matter. I hope that the impressionable young minority kids who were (literally) moved to change their lives will continue on their new and improved path. Hopefully they&#8217;ve already  seen some rewards from their efforts: the satisfaction of accomplishment,  praise of teachers and parents, ehanced self esteem, a new inherent interest in learning, etc., etc. I hope that&#8217;s the case, but it feels a lot like wishful thinking.</p>
<p>       I&#8217;m reminded of the response of (at least some) members of the black community regarding Michael Steele. To them it didn&#8217; t mean anything that he was chosen for the extremely important post of RNC chair. The jury was out until they saw how he was treated. So, it seems logical that the thinking would be about the same with regard to Obama&#8217;s Presidency and the message &#8211; loud and clear- is that Obama is being disrespected and held back because of his race.</p>
<p>    Democrats want to present those who oppose Obamacare as a small, fringe group &#8211; but anyone who&#8217;s paid any attention has to know it&#8217;s a majority.  So what is the message the MSM is really sending to black Americans? That America is deeply and inherently racist and the white folk want you to fail? Play the race card as much as you can and use it like a bludgeon? One thing is clear, they&#8217;re definitely sending the message that the color of one&#8217;s skin is really, really important.</p>
<p>    I thought we were past that.</p>
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		<title>Dangerous Communist Fantasies and Their Common Manifestations</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/19/dangerous-communist-fantasies-and-their-common-manifestations/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/19/dangerous-communist-fantasies-and-their-common-manifestations/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Sep 2009 04:37:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[communism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entertaining mutiple incompatible notions at once]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obamacare]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=67</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Earlier today I walked past a couple of signs. The first said &#8220;Capitalism We Have A Problem&#8221; and the second &#8220;Make Love Not Capitalism&#8221; and thought how typical this was of  anti-capitalist sentiment. The message is clear: capitalism is bad, evil, uncool, etc. communism/socialism is cool. It&#8217;s the romantic unexplored, rebellious, compassionate road not taken (never mind that it has been taken over and over and never with good results) but &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/19/dangerous-communist-fantasies-and-their-common-manifestations/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Earlier today I walked past a couple of signs. The first said &#8220;Capitalism We Have A Problem&#8221; and the second &#8220;Make Love Not Capitalism&#8221; and thought how typical this was of  anti-capitalist sentiment. The message is clear: capitalism is bad, evil, uncool, etc. communism/socialism is cool. It&#8217;s the romantic unexplored, rebellious, compassionate road not taken (never mind that it <em>has </em>been taken over and over and never with good results) but despite the hipness of being left wing in NYC I&#8217;ve never met a single person who could explain to me HOW communism would make anything better.</p>
<p>I once asked a couple representatives of the &#8220;<a href="http://www.redstate.com/laborunionreport/2011/10/09/occupywallsts-neo-communist-system-of-collaboratism-revealed/">Communist</a> Revolutionary Party&#8221; how their system would play out on a day to day basis, for instance, could I still be a clown? After a couple attempts to dodge the question the communist with neatly trimmed hair and a shirt and tie told me that, no. the government would dictate what I did for a living (apparently he didn&#8217;t consider this slavery) &amp; the scary skinny, apparently unbathed, t- shirt wearing communist with unnaturally black hair that badly needed cutting as well as combing launched into a diatribe about how &#8220;Instead of worrying about whether (I could) be a clown, (I) should be worrying about workers in sweatshops in China town cuz that&#8217;s a **** of a lot more important&#8221; never mind that the practices of the China town sweatshops are likely already illegal, this- in a nutshell- is the most common  &#8221;argument&#8221; given for destroying the &#8220;capitalist system&#8221; : There are people in need. Some people are rich while others are poor. This is wrong and&#8230;it logically follows that any wants/needs/desires beyond mere survival are frivolous and something we&#8217;re all obligated  to sacrifice to the &#8221;greater good&#8221; of feeding and clothing those who are probably in this country illegally in the first place.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve noticed that card carrying communists like to talk about equality and how capitalism is the root of all evil that holds us back from a better world but they don&#8217;t generally want to talk about how this better world would be acheived. They&#8217;ll happily suggest books. Maybe that&#8217;s because it&#8217;s easier than saying &#8220;first we need to seize the wealth of all the rich people &#8211; and kill them if they resist&#8221; but actually I think, quite possibly they just haven&#8217;t really thought about it.</p>
<p>Outright communism paints a revolting picture: toil and drudgery undertaken for the mere sake of surviving or for , as Che Guevara puts it &#8220;a new society in which individuals would have different characteristics: The society of communist human beings.&#8221; This bizarre notion that communism could somehow create a super enlightened race would seem to to have little or no appeal for most Americans, but looking at &#8220;The Che Reader&#8221;, Guevara seems to acknowledge this natural aversion and addresses how to overcome it:</p>
<blockquote><p>    &#8221; To build communism, it is neccessary, simultaneously with the new material foundations, to build the new man and woman&#8230;.. Society must be converted into a gigantic school.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Chilling words, as I consider the many manifestation of this &#8221;school&#8221; in our own country and particularly in my city: the &#8220;free economics&#8221; class I started to take at a school here in NY , the &#8220;anti war&#8221; rallies, the campaign against the PATRIOT Act that I was heavily involved with until I realized it&#8217;s actual agenda (which the woman who started it flat out admitted to me) factions of &#8220;the Green Party&#8221;, etc. all of which were used to promote communism. Then there are other institutions that don&#8217;t neccessarily promote communism,per se, but do lean in that direction: the MSM obviously, but also unions including- to my dismay- Actor&#8217;s Equity Association. Hollywood, public education,&#8230;the usual suspects.</p>
<p>The hard truth is it seems to be working - not 100% , of course, as America has too long a history of freedom and enterprise but more and more  Americans seem to be losing their instinctive aversion to socialism. 3 illusions that are fairly prevalent in my anecdotal experience:</p>
<p><strong>#1.Thinking Socialism and a Free Market are Not Mutually Exclusive:</strong></p>
<p>An April 11th Rasmussen survey found only 53% of Americans still believed capitalism is superior to socialism, 20% disagreed and 27% were not sure BUT here&#8217;s the weird part: in a slightly earlier survey fully 70% said they prefer a free market economy. This would suggest that at least 17% of the population think that &#8220;socialism&#8221; and &#8220;a free market economy&#8221; may not be mutually exclusive. But this doesn&#8217;t just show itself in surveys. I have friends who enthusiastically support Obamacare in general but who passionately agree with me that it&#8217;s wrong to have an individual mandate &#8211; but, of course, they want people to be guaranteed access to insurance no matter what their preexisting condition. One friend talked about &#8220;the criminally high price&#8221; of individual insurance but likes the community rating system that causes those high rates.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a sort of consistency in that these friends don&#8217;t want to hurt the poor or middle class and individual mandates is the part of Obamacare that would raise expenses even on those making $19,000 a year (which you could barely live on in New York City even without health insurance) but they don&#8217;t seem to consider that without the mandate Obamacare falls apart. ( I expect Obama knew that during the primaries and simply lied) If insurance companies are forced to cover people no matter what &#8211; why not wait till you&#8217;re sick to buy insurance?</p>
<p>Too many folks just aren&#8217;t thinking things through. It&#8217;s like they think we can create some ideal, utopian society by grabbing piecemeal, the parts of communism that they like and somehow it won&#8217;t compromise our freedom or productivity. The hard truth is, you have to make trade offs in life, to decide between one course or another. Too many Americans want to have their cake and eat it too.</p>
<p>This actually ties in with the next illusion:</p>
<p><strong>#2. Not Recognizing Communist Ideas as Communist in Nature</strong></p>
<p>I&#8217;ve met Green Party members who talked about how we should have a planned economy as if it was a totally new concept, not connected to anything else in history and somehow ideologically neutral &#8220;it&#8217;s neither left, nor right, it&#8217;s forward&#8221;  (which, of course, sounds a lot like &#8220;progressive&#8221;) and still others who said the tax structure should be arranged so &#8220;everybody makes about $50,000 a year&#8221;. Aside from the moral question of whether this would be right- those who support it seem not to give the slightest thought to how it would actually be acheived. &#8220;Everybody&#8221; making at least $50,000 a year would ( I assume) mean every couple gets $100K. (An income that would&#8217;ve put them in the upper 20% of American households in 2007) How they would bring everyone up to that rather comfortable (in some areas, downright well off) standard of living while removing all incentive to work doesn&#8217;t concern them and they seem to miss the next logical step &#8230; forcing people to work at the point of a gun &#8211; just as guaranteeing insurance to the already sick means forcing healthy people to buy insurance they don&#8217;t need .</p>
<p><strong>#3 The Maddening and Absurdly Inaccurate Notion that Cuba is Thriving Under Socialism</strong></p>
<p>This topic really needs its own diary. Briefly, as I&#8217;m sure you all know, the left loves to promote the idea that Cubans love socialism (which I guess is considered interchangable with and the more pc term for communism) they do this generally by posting misleading statistics taken out of context.</p>
<p>One common claim: Cuba has virtually no homelessness. 85% of Cubans own their own homes and mortgage payments can&#8217;t exceed 10% of a household&#8217;s combined income. Let&#8217;s consider these claims in light of this information from &#8220;The Housing Dimension in Cuba&#8217;s Urban Crisis: Havana as a Case in Point&#8221;</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">&#8220;Even a superficial visitor would be impressed by the deterioration and outright destruction that this once proud and beautiful city has experienced since 1959. The visual aspect of the older part of Havana resembles in many places the destruction experienced by cities in Europe during World War II. The complete collapse &#8220;derrumbe&#8221; of buildings, or the partial derrumbe leaving only its external structure, is impressive. Rubble from those &#8220;derrumbes&#8221; often is left in place for long periods, obstructing the streets and sidewalks. No less impressive is the generalized state of disrepair in the form of lack of paint and peeling of the external structure and the outright partial derrumbes, with buildings that have gone without adequate maintenance for decades.&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">Official statistics corroborate the visual perspective. According to 1997 statistics, metropolitan Havana had over 2,200,000 inhabitants living in 560,000 dwellings. Of these, half were ranked as defective or in bad condition, while 60,000 were beyond repair and should be demolished. There are 75,000 with &#8220;apuntalamientos&#8221; and over 7,800 are waiting to be &#8220;apuntaladas&#8221; to prevent their derrumbe. (San Lazaro) According to the same source, by 1996 there were 188 marginal neighborhoods, lacking the most essential services, comprising 23,000 dwellings and 76,000 residents. Another official report indicated the presence of 1,500 (ciudadelas-cuarterias), 1000 of which were ranked in bad condition. Due to the derrumbes, a total of 6,000 families needed shelter (albergue), while only 350 had received it; also 500 multidwelling buildings were in great risk of a derrumbe and 40 were considered to be &#8220;miracously&#8221; still standing.&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>
<p align="justify">If this research is accurate, then that would mean many of the &#8220;85%&#8221; who own &#8220;their own home&#8221; actually own it jointly with other members of their family and that at least half are living in horrible conditions. This carries out over other statistics as well.</p>
<p align="justify">  It&#8217;s better to rent a house than own a hovel.</p>
<p align="justify">More to say about Cuba but it&#8217;s going to need to become it&#8217;s own post.</p>
<p align="justify">CG</p>
<p align="justify">
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		<title>Bambi&#8217;s Health and Fitness Tips</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/16/bambis-health-and-fitness-tips/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/16/bambis-health-and-fitness-tips/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Sep 2009 06:21:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA["Stimulus"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Correlation-Does-Not-Equal-Causation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silliness]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=55</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Another Bambi Diary. This one I wrote awhile back. It&#8217;s less topical now than it was &#8211; but hopefully y&#8217;all will still get it. My mom loves it &#8211; but it is rather goofy. ( I am a clown, after all) Dear New York Times,       I have discovered the secrets of weight loss and wellness &#8211; please publish them immediately because I know your &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/16/bambis-health-and-fitness-tips/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Another Bambi Diary. This one I wrote awhile back. It&#8217;s less topical now than it was &#8211; but hopefully y&#8217;all will still get it. My mom loves it &#8211; but it is rather goofy. ( I am a clown, after all)</p>
<p>Dear New York Times,</p>
<p>      I have discovered the secrets of weight loss and wellness &#8211; please publish them immediately because I know your readers are at a loss to do anything and desperately need my help.</p>
<p>       Back in January I started drinking milk again &#8211; I&#8217;d read that it causes weight loss and it&#8217;s true! I lost a couple pounds. So then, I started thinking: if milk is good, ice cream&#8217;s probably better. Now I&#8217;ve lost 20!</p>
<p>    Critics told me that eating a pint of Haagen Daz every day wouldn&#8217;t do anything to reduce my waistline and &#8211; if anything would make me gain weight and perhaps develop diabetes down the road but that&#8217;s because they&#8217;re status quo worshipping fools who are blinded by hatred, idealogical rigidity and dairy phobia. The pounds are off and you can be assured that not only did I lose 20 pounds but &#8211; more importantly &#8211; I saved myself from gaining 485,000 pounds. I&#8217;ve rescued my body and prevented what would have almost certainly been death by obesity.</p>
<p>    (The haters persist in pretending the weight loss would&#8217;ve happened anyway due to the 6 miles I run a day. Yeah. WHATEVER.)</p>
<p>     Anyway, now that I&#8217;ve unlocked the secret of rapid weight loss it&#8217;s time to rid the world of disease! Times, I have to tell ya.  Earlier this year I was sooo sick &#8211; horrific sinus infection and ear ache and like, congestion and everything. It was the worst illness in a generation and, of course, 100% the fault of President Bush and his party who have controlled Congress and the White House for the last 8 years and generated bad vibes and stuff that infected the air. Anyway, things were looking bleak and there was no end in sight until I used Netflix&#8217;s instant viewing option and watched &#8220;The Good, The Bad and The Ugly&#8221;! Sure enough my pain ebbed and I started to heal.</p>
<p>    My mother had had the chance to impliment her method &#8211; which involved the same tired ideas she brings up every time I get sick (going to the doctor, taking medicine) that morning. I&#8217;d humored her by going to the see a man in a white coat &#8211; but I came out feeling no better than before. I took the little white thing he prescribed and it made no difference. If anything all the walking around just made me feel worse. It wasn&#8217;t until afterwards when I laid down on the couch, drank fluids and watched Clint Eastwood that I started to feel better. (My aunt has pneumonia and I&#8217;ve been desperately trying to get her to watch &#8220;Dirty Harry&#8221; but she won&#8217;t do it. Maybe if you guys publish this she&#8217;ll finally take responsibility for her health!)</p>
<p>     There are people who say it was actually the policy my mother instituted that caused me to get better,  but these people are stupid and they should stop talking.</p>
<p>      You see I&#8217;m always right.  Even if I&#8217;m wrong. Things would always have come out better if people would&#8217;ve listened to me. Take the so called &#8220;Surge&#8221; for example. People say it &#8220;worked&#8221; and &#8211; in a limited sort of way it has &#8211; ( I don&#8217;t expect lesser intellects to fully grasp the ways it hasn&#8217;t) but, you see we will never know what would&#8217;ve happened if MY plan ( playing ping pong with Osama and handing out free dental floss) had been implimented instead.</p>
<p>Sincerely,</p>
<p>Bambi</p>
<p>It&#8217;s really no more stupid than the &#8220;Stimulus&#8221; package. <img src='http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_wink.gif' alt=';)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
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		<title>Those Racist Jackboot Wearing Republican Peons Need To Be More Respectful</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/those-racist-jackboot-wearing-republican-peons-need-to-be-more-respectful/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/those-racist-jackboot-wearing-republican-peons-need-to-be-more-respectful/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Sep 2009 01:42:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Double Standards]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hypocrisy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joe Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lack of Left Wing Self Awareness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Satire]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=36</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear New York Times,      I&#8217;ve never been so outraged as when that ignorant South Carolina cracker Wilson insulted our President. I could&#8217;ve bashed his head in. How dare he interrupt Obama&#8217;s speech! How dare he accuse him of lying. Obama, of course, was lying but that isn&#8217;t the point.  It&#8217;s a matter of respect . It&#8217;s a matter of decorum.      Republicans are all bringing up  Democrats booing  George W. Bush during his State of the &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/those-racist-jackboot-wearing-republican-peons-need-to-be-more-respectful/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear New York Times,</p>
<p>     I&#8217;ve never been so outraged as when that ignorant South Carolina cracker Wilson insulted our President. I could&#8217;ve bashed his head in. How dare he interrupt Obama&#8217;s speech! How dare he accuse him of lying. Obama, of course, was lying but that isn&#8217;t the point.  It&#8217;s a matter of respect . It&#8217;s a matter of decorum.</p>
<p>     Republicans are all bringing up  Democrats booing  George W. Bush during his State of the Union which really just shows how idiotically clueless they are! George W. Bush was a priviledged white male and so (obviously) fair game. Barack Obama is half black and therefore the hope of all oppressed peoples.</p>
<p>    If anybody is going to accuse President Obama of lying, it certainly can&#8217;t be an old white guy from a state that still flies the Confederate flag. It&#8217;d have to be somebody black and very enlightened (it goes without saying that a black Republican is out of the question seeing as they&#8217;re all race traitors).</p>
<p>      This would seem to be obvious but, as we know, this is <em>no party of Einsteins (1) </em> 78% of Republicans think the world is flat, only 1% are scientists and 99.999% of them are racists (though 95%  are too stupid to know it) They really need to sit down, shut up and support the black President, but being racists and too stupid to recognize his superiority, they carry on their childish antics and incite hooliganism and terrorism and stuff. It&#8217;s only recently been getting attention, but the childishness actually started some time ago. Remember when John Boehner had a temper tantrum and threw the Stimulus bill on the floor because nobody&#8217;d read it?</p>
<p>     Honestly! How ignorant can you get? Of course Congress never reads bills.  It&#8217;s like the &#8220;terms and conditions&#8221; thing on websites. Nobody ever actually <em>reads</em> it. People have lives. Besides unless you&#8217;re a paranoiac you trust that the company isn&#8217;t gonna put anything creepy in there. It&#8217;s the same with legislating. Democracy is based on trust. You trust that whoever wrote the bill did a good job and vote with the Democrats.  But the retarded wingnuts (probably mindlessly following Boehner who really needs to be censured) have all become obsessed with this idea that Congress should be reading legislation before voting it into law. This puts congress people in the awkward position of not really being able to explain. It&#8217;s like when little kids ask about things they can&#8217;t  understand yet&#8230;.</p>
<p>      President Obama has been exceedingly patient with the brownshirted hooligans from the <em>pants on fire party (2</em>).  Sure he&#8217;s ignored their phone calls, given them no input on the bill, called them liars and fear mongers &#8211; but given their outrageous conduct and seeing as they&#8217;re all idiots that&#8217;s only to be expected. Rather than embarking on serious debate, they&#8217;ve used <em>lies, misinformation and scare tactics (3) </em>to incite citizens to go to townhall meetings <em>carrying swastikas(4) </em>and <em>terrorizing (5) </em>lawmakers with things like booing, talking out of turn, and, of course this stupid insistence that they read the bill.  Unfortunately we live in such a <em>stupid country (6) </em>that a majority of Americans have been sucked in by it.</p>
<p>      Which brings me to my point. Obama has been far to soft on the opposition. Sure he&#8217;s smeared them, marginalized them, lied about them, etc. but it isn&#8217;t enough! They&#8217;re still swaying the ignorant. We need to <em>execute the entire GOP (7)</em>  and we need to do it now while we still have 60 votes! These are terrible people! They hate the poor and <em>think the purpose of our society is to indulge their own self centered jet set fantasies(8) </em>but more importantly they don&#8217;t know how to show any respect to those who don&#8217;t agree with them.</p>
<p>     I know some will suggest a more moderate position and I&#8217;m open to that. Maybe if we start off just murdering just a few thousand, it will teach the rest civility.</p>
<p>I love you guys&#8217;s paper!</p>
<p>Sincerely,</p>
<p>Bambi</p>
<p>Obviously this is a bit of over the top silliness mocking the double standard Democrats seem to have in terms of conduct but many of the insults (those numbered) are from actual Democrats. How anyone acts like Joe Wilson committed some kind of unprecedented outrage is beyond me.</p>
<p>(1) &#8220;No party of Einsteins&#8221; is from Charles Blow of the NY Times</p>
<p>(2) &#8220;pants on fire party&#8221; was from some writer Lori Z wrote a diary about. She gave no justification whatever for referring to the Republican party as a whole as liars</p>
<p>(3) lies, misinformation and scare tactics &#8211; is, of course from Obama and &#8211; as far as I can tell &#8211; is the Democratic party line</p>
<p>(4) obviously it was Nancy Pelosi who said town hall activists were showing up carrying swastikas</p>
<p>(5) it was also Charles Blow of the NY Times who said town hall activists were &#8220;terrorizing&#8221; law makers</p>
<p>(6) Bill Maher said we&#8217;re a stupid country</p>
<p>(7) Mike Malloy said the entire GOP should be executed presumably in a desperate plea for attention cuz nobody knows or cares who he is otherwise</p>
<p>and (8) it was Robert Creamer of HuffPo who said Republicans thought our society exists &#8220;just to indulge their own self centered jet set fantasies&#8221;</p>
<p>There was some Democrat who actually mocked the idea that it was important to read the bill but I&#8217;ve forgotten who.</p>
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		<title>8 Years Ago Today</title>
		<link>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/8-years-ago-today/</link>
		<comments>http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/8-years-ago-today/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Sep 2009 19:40:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><a href="/users/clowngirl/">clowngirl</a> (<a href="/clowngirl/">Diary</a>)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/?p=41</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[         Everyone remembers what they were doing when they learned of the most devastating attack in our history and how they felt in the days that followed. When  people are murdered some say their spirit does not rest. It stays earthbound and cries out for justice. I&#8217;ve never really believed that but going down to the visit the sight of the worst terrorist attack in our history &#124; <a class="moretext" href="http://www.redstate.com/clowngirl/2009/09/11/8-years-ago-today/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>         Everyone remembers what they were doing when they learned of the most devastating attack in our history and how they felt in the days that followed. When  people are murdered some say their spirit does not rest. It stays earthbound and cries out for justice. I&#8217;ve never really believed that but going down to the visit the sight of the worst terrorist attack in our history - maybe it was the ash that still lingered in the air, the portion of a building that hadn&#8217;t yet come all the way down, maybe it was because I knew what had happened but I could just <em>feel </em>people had died there and died horribly. In that in that moment their deaths became terribly real to me, and I won&#8217;t even forget it.</p>
<p>     We were attacked without provocation and without cause.  It was a cowardly attack on American civilians perpetrated by terrorists because a sick ideology that exploited their poverty, their faith, and their prejudices. Terrorists who are willing to brainwash even little children.</p>
<p>      Being new to the city, I suffered only the general anger and grief, but for so many others the loss was much, much more personal. A friend of mine lost her father.  Other friends who worked in the World Trade Center lost nearly all their co-workers. People they&#8217;d known for years. Many felt lucky to have survived. I remember hearing anecdotes about people who were never, ever late for work but due to some fluke occurence.. they missed their normal train. My mom remembered that I&#8217;d applied for a job in the restaurant at the top of the WTC and rejoiced I hadn&#8217;t gotten it. The switchboards in the building I live in were overloaded that day as with everywhere else in the city and we swapped stories about unexpected people who had suddenly called to make sure we were alive.</p>
<p>        It was also today 8 years ago, that the New York Times ran its story on Obama&#8217;s friend and long time associate, Bill Ayers. He said he didn&#8217;t regret his acts of terrorism and wishes he&#8217;d done more. A few days after that Obama&#8217;s pastor quoted Obama&#8217;s early role model, Malcolm X in saying &#8220;America&#8217;s chickens have come home to roost&#8221;. Today it especially saddens me that he is our President and that as our President he sees fit to release terrorists and to possibly prosecute men who acted to protect their country following orders that were completely legal at the time.</p>
<p>       The question arises &#8220;How did this happen?&#8221;  and I&#8217;m not sure I know the answer.  We had a young President, one who saw his clear duty was to protect our country but who wasn&#8217;t prepared for anything like 9/11. He took bold and decisive action and wasn&#8217;t too concerned with explaining the need for it or engaging a lot of public debate before hand. The PATRIOT ACT was passed without being read and many- including myself- were alarmed at the expanded government powers.  Kierkegaard wrote something like  that &#8220;when a greater fear is present, the lesser fear disappears&#8221; and I think this was/is true for many who had concerns about the Bush Administration. They became so terrified at how Bush might presumably  abuse his power that the threat of terrorism ceased to be real. I met a Ron Paul supporter actually said &#8220;Al Qaeda doesn&#8217;t exist&#8221;.</p>
<p>     Ironically, for me, it was being around anti-war types that first got me thinking maybe we did need to invade Iraq (I was on the fence about it the day we invaded and still don&#8217;t have a firm opinion about whether that was the right decision -  though the question is now academic) but others went right down the road to crazy town. Perhaps it is difficult for people to balance/consider differing priorities because we so often fear or want one thing so much more than another.</p>
<p>        I hope this diary doesn&#8217;t come off as argumentative or anything. It isn&#8217;t meant to be. It is today, very much just a diary -  an attempt to process my thoughts on the anniversary of 9/11.</p>
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