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Down with Vichy Republican collaborators! Vive la Republican Résistance!

 

 

Down with Vichy Republican collaborators! Vive la Republican Résistance!

By: Ragin’ Patriot

So-called “moderate Republicans” tell us that the Republican Party must be pragmatic in a United States of changing demographics and “beyond the point of no return” advance of progressive’s social welfare programs … and so accede to creeping collectivism, our goal merely to buffer its excesses. These “voices of moderation” echo their Vichy predecessors in Nazi-occupied France, preaching acquiescence in the face of what they have resigned themselves to being the overwhelmingly inevitable.  Just as the freedom fighters of the French Resistance refused to heed that siren call of subservience, so to must today’s conservatives.

9/11 signified America’s belated recognition that Islamic terrorism is not a mere criminal or police matter, and begat the “War on Terror.”  Similarly, the election of Barack Obama is the catalyst for recognizing that “moderate Republicans” can no longer be considered a mere faction within a GOP “big tent”  — as will be seen, we can no longer afford the luxury of permitting “moderates” to exercise influence within the GOP, much less steer it.

There is no need here to repeat a “bill of particulars” to indict Barack Obama as a closeted collectivist — it is academic to debate whether he most closely adheres to the communist, socialist or fascist varieties of collectivism — intent on transforming the United States into a political and economic entity that would be unrecognizable to the Founding Fathers (indeed unrecognizable to anyone with even a cursory understanding of the text and spirit of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States of America).  The subterfuge underlying “Hope” and “Change” was clear to those who (unlike the “mainstream media”) gave more than a cursory glance to his background before the election, and with each passing day is becoming clear to more and more of our fellow Americans.  Obama is the culmination of a forty-plus year effort involving the Democratic Party; he became the chosen one to lead the final push completing the transformation of the United States to a European Democratic-Socialism model (the Constitution be damned).  Hence the “Obamessiah” phenomenon amongst “progressives,” for in their religion Marx is God, Woodrow Wilson and FDR patron saints, and Obama the Second Coming to bring heaven on earth after the Armageddon of U.S. dominance in the world.

The Democratic Party of today has metastasized into a party that would be unrecognizable by a Truman or JFK-era Democrat. The radicals of the 1960s have succeeded in taking over the party from the inside and, greased with the money of radical labor unions like SEIU, George Soros and others, have spawned radical groups such as ACORN and MoveOn.  Aided and abetted by the mislabeled “mainstream media,” this axis of collectivism is now rather openly completing the march that it surreptitiously began in the 1960’s – one commenced by working to erode the foundational principles and culture of the United States (invoking the tactics of Marxist theoretician Antonio Gramsci).

From upending the social fabric of America through corrosive mechanisms like eliminating the stigma of out of wedlock births, promoting homosexual marriage and “politically correctifying” our history to make us the bad guys, err, persons … to using government to create and perpetuate dependency, incrementally socialize medicine (Medicaid / SCHIP / Medicare and now Obamacare) … to using the tax code to punish success and make it ever more difficult for the middle class to sustain itself, much less enjoy the quintessential American dream of upward mobility.  They are aggressors who have commenced an undeclared but very real war upon our nation’s founding political structure, free-market capitalism and Western civilization’s Judeo-Christian social fabric.

Consider: would even the most liberal Democrat of the JFK era (much less the Truman or Roosevelt era), when told that within their lifetime their party’s position would be to condone widespread illegitimate birth, and an unwritten edict that one cannot question or criticize the mother for her irresponsibility (now considered acceptable) have agreed – or would they have laughed and said such a thing is unthinkable?

Would even the most liberal Democrat of the JFK era (much less the Truman or Roosevelt era), when told within their lifetime their party’s position would be to condone homosexual marriage have agreed – or would they have laughed and said such a thing is unthinkable?

Would even the most liberal Democrat of the JFK era (much less the Truman or Roosevelt era), when told that within their lifetime their party’s position would be to condone a refusal to secure our borders from an influx of millions of illegal migrants from Central America – coming here for the express purpose of birthing anchor babies and anchoring themselves onto the American welfare system have agreed – or would they have laughed and said such a thing is unthinkable?

Would even the most liberal Democrat of the JFK era (much less the Truman or Roosevelt era), when told that within their lifetime their party’s position would be to condone granting those illegal aliens amnesty and inviting them to legally bring their family members to America to latch onto our welfare system have agreed – or would they have laughed and said such a thing is unthinkable?

Would even the most liberal Democrat of the JFK era (much less the Truman or Roosevelt era), when told that within their lifetime their party’s position would be to condone not just abortion, but partial birth abortion have agreed – or would they have laughed and said such a thing is unthinkable?

You know the answer.

Regarding social issues, Democratic Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan spoke disapprovingly of “defining deviancy down” — his Democratic successors not only approve of this in the social realm, they actively embrace it as a weapon to be deployed socially, politically and economically.

Republican “moderates” — puppeting modern Democrat lines intended to frame the debate — assert that the GOP has shifted to the right, and too far.  Not at all!  The positions we support draw their genealogy from 1776, and the family resemblance is unmistakable.  However, as the foregoing examples show, it is the Democrat Party that has shifted radically left.

In recent decades the GOP has “succeeded” with flawed short-term tactics, such as tax rate cuts portrayed as tax cuts, but really aren’t  – since over time taxes are the reciprocal of federal budgets, the GOP presiding over an ever-expanding federal government has meant that it has actually presided over commensurate tax increases.

Meanwhile the Left has been succeeding at the strategic level — both by playing “Br’er Rabbit” to the GOP’s flawed tactics (“oh please don’t enact those ‘tax cuts for the rich’”) — while continuously eroding the foundations of American society and its Constitution — unarticulated to the public, and slowly so as not to be noticed, but very deliberately.  The modern Democratic Party was the stealth bomber of socialism, pounding away at what were generally accepted societal norms, and now its ACORN and SEIU infantry seeks to cement its final victory.

To the extent that there are “moderates” left within the Democratic Party, they are at the margins and exercise zero influence. If we who love America and what it stands for are to successfully defend against, and ultimately defeat this aggression by the radical left, we can afford no less within the GOP. The Republican Party must be a cohesive, determined and unapologetic force for what is right … for the RIGHT.  We did not start this aggression; we did not ask for it.  But we must confront it.  Not accept it.  Not appease it. Not collaborate with it. But DEFEAT it — totally and unconditionally.

The moderates’ “pragmatism” is American retreat. While occasional “tactical retreat” may be necessary, theirs is preemptive, unilateral and permanent retreat.  We are deploying politicians who view everything as a political matter (i.e., “how do we market the GOP to get enough votes to stay in office?”) against committed ideologues that are out to fundamentally change the United States, performing a revolution against the Constitution of the United States in all senses except a public declaration.

When faced with aggressors, one must oppose, not ignore – for to not oppose aggression is to de facto support it.  The “moderates” would have us ignore the aggressions of agendas not hypothesized, but zealously pursued by the Left with the intent to impose them: abortion, homosexual marriage; the hollowing out of Second Amendment rights; amnesty for illegal aliens and “family reunification” opening the floodgates to tens of millions of new welfare recipients being examples of critical issues in which the “moderates” preach preemptive surrender. For the most part these are either/or issues — one must be for or against, there is no middle ground – for the Left won’t “moderate” (does anyone believe that the Left will be satisfied with “civil unions,” or “paths to citizenship” without “family reunification”)?  There is no middle ground on abortion – the baby is killed or it isn’t.

Yet the “moderates” and “big tenters” would have us unilaterally and preemptively surrender the field without a fight.  For example, a majority of Americans want secured borders and traditional marriage.  So the Left’s agenda is in opposition to most voters. Yet the “moderates” want us to avoid those issues, lest we offend certain demographics, even as the Left continues its march to impose those minority positions – in which it will succeed if unopposed. At the same time, regarding issues in which polling indicates we might currently be “in the minority,” the “moderate Republicans” will cite this as why we must “soften” and “broaden” our approach.  So when the majority agrees with us we should shut up, and when it doesn’t we should climb aboard the Leftist train.  Huh?  What’s wrong with this picture?

So rather than being confident in the superiority of our positions, and having the confidence that the American people will embrace our positions once we expound them, the “moderates” would have us seek a non-existent middle ground, thus adopting by default the Left’s positions and paving the way for the full implementation of their entire agenda. If as to those positions we don’t actively oppose while they actively pursue – they will win and impose, and in full. So it is a fair question to ask of the moderates and big-tenters: “whose side are you really on?”

The French Resistance, facing the overwhelming military might of the Wehrmacht, but confident in the righteousness of its cause, did not take the “pragmatic” approach of appeasement, much less collaboration, but instead continued the fight. This set them apart from their fellow French who collaborated with the Nazis – the Vichy. One imagines that the “pragmatic” arguments made by the Vichy echoed in today’s “big tent” “Republicans” – “well, everything’s going the Nazi’s way, so we need to be reasonable, and we Vichy are the lesser of two evils.”

Even if ultimate victory is uncertain, even unlikely, is it not better to go down fighting in the cause of righteousness than to submit to subservience to government?  Collectivism is soft tyranny – are we not to fight it rather than listen to the “pragmatic” moderates who want to bow and make peace with subservience? Can we, facing an “army” of politicians, academics, airhead media talking heads and “community organizers” do no less than the French Resistance?  Is not the courage they displayed a characteristic shared by true Americans? Are we to shrink from confrontation with the likes of William Ayers, ACORN, media and entertainment airheads, ivory tower academics, Nancy Pelosi and Barack Hussein Obama?  If the French Resistance would take on the Wehrmacht and the Gestapo, are we to shrink from taking on the Democratic Party and the Ostapo?

Our cause is righteous, and like the French Resistance, we have allies too: Western civilization; the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; the sometimes hibernating but (as the post-911 reaction showed) still vibrant spirit of patriotism among a large swath of our citizens (particularly those who attended pubic schools before the advent of the 1960’s teacher unionization and accompanying leftist indoctrination) and plain old “common sense” that has not yet been snuffed out. Oh, and let us not forget the economic and spiritual misery that history has repeatedly shown inevitably follows the implementation of collectivist policies – creating fertile ground and future receptivity to our message of real hope, not the focused-grouped “HOPE” intended to Trojan horse the Democrat’s collectivist agenda.

We must be unapologetic conservatives proudly enunciating our continued fidelity to our Judeo-Christian heritage and the timeless gift bequeathed to us by the Founding Fathers, the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States of America – both to their letter and spirit.  One of the primary battlegrounds is that of the conventional wisdom, the accepted societal mores — and a large part of the weaponry involves language.  In true military fashion they have deployed camouflaged language. We must not adopt their camouflage and play by their rules; we must not let them succeed in their masquerades:

We must confront them regarding infanticide/abortion, masquerading as “choice.”

We must confront them regarding the mass migration of foreign nationals, entering and occupying this country illegally in order to “anchor” themselves to the American welfare system, masquerading as “undocumented.”

We must confront them regarding homosexual marriage, with its erosion of the foundational unit of human civilization, and thus its attack upon it, masquerading as “civil rights.”

We must confront them regarding the infringement of Second Amendment rights, masquerading as “common sense gun control.”

There are some who believe that time, and demographics, and a losing (if not lost) cultural war mean that we must “moderate” the GOP in order to “appeal” to the middle.  Hence comments such as “conservatives can’t win in New England, so we have to embrace ‘moderates.’” This is the voice of career politicians, reflexively loathe to take firm stands on anything, as their rubber-spined sense of survival means that they gravitate not toward leadership but its opposite – pandering to every possible voter by gyrating to offend none. This is the way of Vichy Republicans.

Vichy Republicans advocate that the GOP should be “sanitized” to appeal to moderate sensibilities – or that a GOP marketed solely upon “fiscal responsibility” will appease conservatives (who, like Blacks to the Democrat Party, are deemed a necessary nuisance to be paid lip service to keep their votes, but otherwise marginalized) – and that in the end we conservatives will rally around the Republican Party for we will have no other alternative.

NO!

We should not dilute our core values, much less abandon them, by supporting “moderates” because we have “no other alternative” or that they are “the lesser of two evils.”  Rather, the “moderates” who, e.g., are fiscal conservatives but are not social conservatives should have to hold their collective noses and still rally around the GOP because the Democrats present them with no alternative.

Nor should we heed the self-serving entreaties of “moderates” and “big-tenters” telling us we must support them out of party loyalty.  One suspects that the French Resistance took any number of Vichy around the back of buildings and gave them the same treatment they gave Nazi soldiers, notwithstanding the fact that the Vichy were fellow Frenchmen.  We should perform the political equivalent to collaborators with the radical Democrat agenda, and put the exercise of principles above the adoption of labels.  When moderates are running as “Republicans” we should sit on our hands – don’t contribute money, don’t volunteer for their campaigns, and don’t vote for them (not refrain from voting overall, just “sit out” any race in which a “moderate Republican” is the candidate). We should only support true Republicans – conservatives – in primaries and in general elections.  To do otherwise is to become collaborators ourselves, differentiated only by degree.

It is not disloyal to the GOP to refrain from supporting those who are disloyal to conservative principles, for conservative principles are Republican principles.  The moderates are the ones who are disloyal Republicans – disloyalty to the disloyal constitutes loyalty to the GOP.  Given the modern, radical Democratic Party, disloyalty to those who would appease or collaborate with them is loyalty to the United States of America.

For centuries our fellow citizens have put on the uniform, sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States of America, and come home wounded, maimed, or as a corpse.  Compared to that bravery and sacrifice, as we confront a danger internal, shall we shrink from confronting the aggressors on the political battlefield?  Shall we hold our tongues?  If we do, then not only do we grievously dishonor those who went before us, but don’t we also deserve to lose our country – this incalculable gift that was bequeathed us?

We must seek quick victory if possible to restore America.  But if quick victory is not possible, then at least halting their march to collectivism, and then incrementally eroding what they’ve erected, just as they have been doing to our country for oh these several decades now.

Down with the Vichy Republican collaborators!

Vive la Republican Résistance!

COMMENTS

  • ktsub

    Every Republican voted the exact same way on health care reform, even the “moderates” are against the plan.

    Scott Brown is a “moderate” is he better or worse than Martha Coakley or Teddy Kennedy?

    “We should only support true Republicans

    • raginpatriot

      Does John (McAmnesty) McCain represent the views of his state?

      Does Lindsey Graham?

      Your theory is nice, but discounts the advantages of incumbency and the Republican establishment (D.C. supporting incumbents in primaries — such as Specter / Toomey some years ago; Chafee-Laffey and Crist-Rubio).

      We need principled conservatives who’ll express same even in blue states … as Ronald Reagan did. Remember Reagan Democrats?

      • mbecker908

        thanks to the fact that his primary opposition is Hayworth and not Shadegg or Flake, does represent the views of the people of Arizona. Mostly because JD Hayworth is very, very well known and the voters have absolutely no use for him.

        McCain will win the primary by 20ish and will probably get 80+ in the general. Shadegg or Flake might well have beaten him in the primary. Oh well.

        Apparently Graham represents the view of the folks in his state because they reelected him.

        Bottom line, start developing credible conservatives to run. Until then McCain/Graham is what we’ve got. We’ve got six years to groom a candidate in Arizona (unless you don’t like Kyl, then we’ve got two) and we’ve got four to find somebody to run against Graham.

        • raginpatriot

          Part of the way we get credible conservatives to run is by supporting them in the primaries and NOT supporting Vichy Republicans whenever they run.

          Once an incumbent they are difficult to dislodge, and the GOP has for years been able to get us to support Vichy’s as the “lesser of two evils.”

          At this point in our history, we cannot afford this — one who supports continuing the move toward further statism, albeit at 1/2 speed instead of the Democrats’ warp speed even if we burn out the dilithium crystals in the process, still moves us in the wrong direction.

          We need moderates in the Democrat caucus to gum up their works, not in ours.

          • mbecker908

            you can’t beat something with nothing.

            We have to have credible candidates who are willing to take the chance and primary incumbents.

            Close to home, JD Hayworth running in the primary is like throwing stuff against the wall to see if it will stick. And it won’t.

            We can win, Toomey is – and was – a credible candidate. Scott Brown is credible (helped by the worst candidate in the history of US Senate races). We need to be working on a “farm team”.

          • Bill S

            Conservative in the primary, Republican in the general.

            This is Bill’s Law #1.

            You need not know anything else about how to vote. It’s as simple as that.

            As 908 points out, the biggest challenge is producing acceptable alternatives. When the appear, we support them. If they lose in the primary, we vote for the GOP winner and we move on to the next primary.

          • raginpatriot

            I agree with your scenario to the point that IF the GOP candidate in the general is reasonably (and reliably) conservative, though not as conservative as we’d prefer, then this is an acceptable course of action. Though the jury is still out on him long-term, Scott Brown under the circumstances was an acceptable risk in an attempt to derail Obamacare.

            I disagree when we’re talking “moderates” / Vichy. In recent political history we’ve had “Republicans” Jeffords / Specter / McCain-Graham / Chafee / Collins / Snowe stand with the Democrat-statist party and often provide the political tipping-point for advancing their legislation AND providing them cover with their media allies to portray it as “bipartisan.” (Recognizing that credit is due to many of them this time for standing firm against Obamacare.)

            Once in office, for example, Specter was able to harness the RNC machinery in his support in a primary against Toomey, stacking the deck against the Republican rank and file. The same occurred with Lincoln Chafee against Laffey. And of course there’s the fundraising advantages enjoyed by incumbents. in turn, real Republican candidates who might be inclined to run will, quite rationally, often refrain when there’s a “Republican” incumbent, no matter how noxious that incumbent is to rank and file Republicans.

            So I submit that especially now, with the current Trojan-horse collectivist revolutionary in the White House and his useful idiots in charge of Congress, not supporting Vichy in a particular race so that in the following race there is the possibility of a real Republican running against an incumbent Democrat is “the lesser of two evils.”

          • Bill S

            If you stay home or vote for a 3rd part or a Democrat, you are part of the problem. If you are insane enough to think that John McCain would be worse than having Barack Obama in office right now, then you are certifiably insane.

            God save me from “true conservatives”

          • raginpatriot

            >>If you are insane enough to think that John McCain would be worse than having Barack Obama in office right now, then you are certifiably insane.

            Stipulated that a President McCain would not be as radically left as Comrade Obama.

            BUT … a President McCain would have:

            – worked to purge conservatives from the GOP (he has been doing so now, recruiting and raising money for “moderates”

            – pushed for amnesty and family reunification (while pressuring Republicans in Congress to go along out of party loyalty

            – would support cap and trade and the hobbling of our economy under “green” camouflage

            – would have “bipartisaned” and reached “across the aisle” a partial socialization of medical care (albeit not as far or as fast as Obamacare)

            AND WOULD HAVE DEMORALIZED THE GOP CONSERVATIVES / TEA PARTY SUCH THAT THERE WOULD BE LESS EFFECTIVE OPPOSITION TO THE STATIST AGENDA THAN THERE IS NOW.

            I submit for consideration that over the long-run, a President McCain would have been more harmful, for with Comrade Obama the statists have largely had to expose their desired end-game and in so doing have fostered a counter-movement to defend our country and its founding ideals. With a President McCain, we’d have had a slower bipartisan movement in that direction, and a disillusioned and demotivated opposition.

          • Bill S

            You ready for immigration “reform”?
            Cap and trade?
            Financial “reform”?
            Card check?

            Because all of the rest of those are going to hit the House and Senate floors within the year. You can thank Barack Obama for that. If John McCain had been in the Oval Office, it is a pretty sure bet that none of those would be signed by John McCain.

            Now, go ahead – say it out loud: “I’m glad Barack Obama beat John McCain”. Say it. You basically already did in your comments. I want to make sure it’s down in black and white so the moderators can see who you are.

          • raginpatriot

            >>it is a pretty sure bet that none of those would be signed by John McCain.

            Uh, remember McCain-Kennedy … the illegal alien amnesty bill?

            Same topic that McCain mini-me Lindsey Graham has recently been collaborating on with Chucky Schumer?

            Uh, remember John McCain, while running for President, endorsing “cap and trade”?

          • mbecker908

            You probably should think twice about your next step.

          • raginpatriot

            I suspect that the moderators are amply capable of understanding the context of my diary posting, subsequent comments / exchanges and the spirit behind same (whether or not they agree or disagree is another matter).

            I ceased harboring hopes for “glad” when McCain got the nomination, for I realized that no matter who won the country would erode further leftward, the only difference between the candidates being the rate of erosion. After years years of “compassionate” erosion under George W there was no palatable (“glad”) alternative.

            In fact, as far as domestic issues / policy are concerned, we haven’t had a real Republican President since Ronald Reagan left office.

            While we can never know for sure, I suspect that without Comrade Obama’s rapid movement there would not be a Tea Party or conservative resurgence, for under McCain there would have been a sense of helplessness as our own party (or what should be our own party) would be part of the problem, not part of the solution.

          • mbecker908
          • raginpatriot

            Yeah, I guess I could have displayed “moderate intelligence” by having been excited by the prospect of Gang of 14 leader, McCain-Feingold and McCain-Kennedy author as President and de facto GOP leader.

          • Bill S
          • Bill S

            Are you glad that Obama was elected instead of McCain?

            Answer, please.

          • raginpatriot

            Asked and answered.

            I am not glad that Obama was elected instead of McCain.

            And I would not have been glad had RINO-in-Chief McCain had been elected instead of Obama.

            Each present different problems, neither was part of the solution we need.

            We won’t know for several years now, but there is a real possibility that if the opposition, e.g., Tea Party, conservative real Republicans rally, that the Obama administration, in spite of its early victories, will actually mark the beginning of the reversal of the creeping statism that has been expanding since Woodrow WIlson.

            Conversely, under a McCain Presidency, there is no question that the creeping would have continued, just as it had under George W, and a dispirited conservative / patriot movement would probably not have arisen for it would have seen no hope in Washington amongst either party … similar to the conservative dissatisfaction but passivity / resignation during George W’s terms.

            The one good argument IMHO for McCain vs. Obama was / is Supreme Court nominees, and even here I’m not sure how much better Mr. Bipartisan’s selections would have been — I suspect that he would have given Senate Democrats some sort of “advice and consent” before he even nominated someone.

          • aesthete

            but the healthcare plan that he was in favor of was miles away freer than the pre-ObamaCare status quo, and though it wasn’t perfect, fixed several of the problems with the current, employer-based system.

          • raginpatriot

            McCain’s plan as proposed was indeed better. And even when (inevitably) he’d “bipartisaned” with his “good friends” in the Democrat caucus, the end result would still have been better than Obamacare (almost anything would be better than what was enacted, particularly since this de facto bakes-in the next step to “single payer” by eventually forcing private insurance out of business).

            But again, with his support of amnesty (not to mention cap & tax) we’d still be moving left as a country — instituting programs that take on a life of their own.

            Amnesty in particular did it for me with McCain. He was / is in effect signing onto the the immolation of the GOP and conservatives — does anything really believe that legalizing 12-20 illegals, and then allowing them to legally bring tens of millions of their relatives here under “family reunification” — thereby adding tens of millions onto the welfare rolls — would not cement-in a permanent Democrat voting majority? Certainly the Democrats behave as if they believe it.

            And Republicans in Congress, already pretty much rubber-spined, would have been far less likely to oppose amnesty under a President McCain than they will be under a President Obama.

            That is a major reason why I concluded that while McCain would be better in the short run than Obama, we need to look at the big picture / longer term, and that he was actually posturing to make things worse.

  • http://www.theprecinctproject.wordpress.com ColdWarrior

    You also said, “We must seek quick victory if possible to restore America.”

    You outlined all sorts of goals; I didn’t see any concrete strategy for how to achieve them.

    May I suggest you get into the Republican Party in your new southern home as a “card carrying member” of it — as a precinct committeemen? I assume you aren’t one only because you made no mention of being involved in actual Republican Party politics.

    You can learn more about it at my blog linked below. If you’re not already a “card carrying member” of the GOP, I hope you’ll become one asap.

    Thank you, and welcome to Redstate!
    ColdWarrior
    No More Scozzafavas!
    Become a Republican precinct committeeman. NOW!

    • raginpatriot

      In my former state I was an at-large GOP delegate, and was active in that state’s chapter of the National Federation of Republican Assemblies.

      I am already registered here as a Republican, and do plan to become active once I get settled in more (employment search and general settling-in are more immediate priorities).

      • http://www.theprecinctproject.wordpress.com ColdWarrior

        and will be doing in your new locale. And I hope you’ll keep us posted as to your progress!

        Thanks again,
        ColdWarrior

        • raginpatriot

          ColdWarrior,

          No thanks necessary. Whatever I’ve done pales in comparison to what those in uniform are doing.

          Back in my college days I read “Gulag Archipelago” — this made me appreciate how blessed I am to live in this country. (At the time I was a Poli Sci major at BU, and the notorious Howard Zinn was Department Chair! The efforts at indoctrination failed miserably with me.)

          With Obama we are in an existential battle for this wonderful country that was bequeathed us, and paid for with the blood and toil of our forefathers. If we citizens do not now rise to the challenge, we deserve to lose it.

          • http://www.theprecinctproject.wordpress.com ColdWarrior

            was on active duty in the Army.

            Thereafter took a conversational Russian course being taught by a husband and wife who were Russian Jews. I discussed with them extensively how they lived in Russia. They had advanced degrees, but lived and worked on a collective farm in a one-story army barracks style building with a communal kitchen and sheets between their “living quarters,” which consisted of a small space with a bed. And, of course, communal toilets and showers.

            Thereafter, I had the opportunity to speak at length with a Russian KGB general who had defected. He was still being debriefed and was in “protective custody.” He was big and menacing and looked the part. He had left his wife and teenage son behind in a country in Europe where he had defected. I asked him if he had ever discussed his plans to defect with his wife or son. I received the answer I thought he’d give. He looked at me like I was out of my mind to ask such a foolish question. “Never!” “Why not?” Again, I knew the answer, but I wanted him to say it. “Well, of course, because I couldn’t trust them — I wasn’t sure whether they would alert my superiors. I couldn’t take that chance.”

            Oh, and I was enlightened by one of my lefty law professors in the mid 1980s who matter-of-factly explained to us in Contracts how the economy in the Soviet Union didn’t function all that differently than here in the States and that contract disputes were handled in much the same way there as here. He had been Jerry Brown’s Yale law school roommate and he wore Soviet style shoes. I didn’t have the heart to ask him what happened there in the Soviet Union the few times that the workers went on strike inside the gates of a company. How, typically, the Soviet Army was called in to surround the factory and evacuate all of the surrounding homes so there would be no eyewitnesses. And how every time the end was the same. The workers were starved into submission or, if need be, the tanks simply were used to breach the walls and gates and then all the strikers were shot.

            Here’s an eyewitness account of one such massacre of workers in 1962:

            http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/eastern/novocherkassk.html

            My foolish professor undoubtedly had never read anything by Solzenhitsyn about the “Workers’ Paradise.” Not even this:

            http://www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/arch/solzhenitsyn/livenotbylies.html

            Thank you.
            ColdWarrior
            No More Scozzafavas!
            Join the REAL GOP. Become a Republican precinct committeeman. NOW!

          • raginpatriot

            ColdWarrior,

            I too attended law school in the mid-1980′s.

            As expected, the faculty was overwhelmingly liberal (the term du jour then), what would be called “progressive” today.

            Once in criminal law class the professor (of course opposed to the death penalty) was talking about how it costs more to execute prisoners (due to the lengthy appellate process) than to incarcerate them for life. I responded in front of the class that “this is why we need more executions, then we’d get the economies of scale!” No doubt I was a marked man after that and I remain convinced to this day that though ostensibly the grading is blind, that it is not and that I was impacted.

            In any case, I don’t donate alumni contributions to my undergrad or law school — I see no reason to underwrite the “progressive” academy. If faculties were balanced, that’d be fine. But of course we know that via tenure decisions they work to exclude the other side.

            BTW, I assume that you’ve read it, but if not by all means read Jonah Goldberg’s “Liberal Fascism.” Another book sure not to make it onto college political science class reading lists (I read Gulag on my own in college — the class reading lists were almost exclusively pro-communist).

          • renny

            the primary outcome vote chooses.

            Whether conservatives or so-calle RINOS, the Republican numbers are important in Cong., because the leadership positions goes to the majority party. We only have Pelosi, Reid, Frank Waxman, Dodd, yadda because of the Dem. majority.

            So, if my choice in a general election is Dem. Menendez or a Rep. Chaffee-type, I am going to vote Chaffee, because that candidate, if winning, leads to a majority of Reps. Republicans get the important leadership positions.

  • jdw4america

    If we falter now, the hopes of our children and our grandchildren, indeed the hopes of the world dies. I know the left doesn’t believe it, and through its propaganda machine (MSM) it bleats out its anti-American garbage, but here is the place whereby freedom lives or dies FOREVER.

    The wolves are at the door – Marxists, Fascists, Fatalists – all slobbering for our blood. If we yield this nation, where does freedom rise again?

    Europe? HA! Asia? Don’t think so! Africa? How? The Middle East? Be serious. South America? Sure. Our neighbors – Mexico ? Please. How bout Canada? Don’t make me laugh!

    It’s us or nobody. Ladies and gentlemen, this is OUR hour.

    Use the tools available to us right now – those already in office. Keep the pressure on them to draw a line in the sand until November. Call, write, email, register, volunteer and show up! Support those who pledge to turn back the tide, and if they do not keep their word, vote ‘em out.

    They think we’re scared – they’re right, we are. BUT – and this is a big deal, we are NOT COWARDS. This is our country, and no left-wing group of whiny adolescent extremists are taking it from us, unless we let them.

  • raginpatriot

    That scenario works if the GOP leadership is conservative.

    Unfortunately, as we’ve learned the hard way (Hastert, McCain, Graham, McConnell) it is populated by “seniority” based career hacks of the moderate ilk, or at least leanings.

    We need DeMints, not DeRINOs.

  • izoneguy

    NBC Trick – You know – like they did with Conan O’Brien….
    Bring in the new bill and convince everyone they will like it…..
    7 months later you pull the bill and bring back the status quo….

    Imagine how shocked voters will be when 2 weeks before
    the Nov election – Obama in secret – kills his newborn bill
    in the crib.

    At least that would make a great script? Heh….

    Obama is finding rabbits now to pull out of his arse before November….