I could never understand Republicans who were not Billionaires or at least were well on their way to becoming Billionaires who were registered to vote as Republican or those “Regan Democrats” who voted Republican. They took the trouble to vote on Election Day not for candidates that would do them any good but for candidates that would actually cause them personal harm. For instance; the single largest crippling effect on small business and entrepreneurs in the United States is health insurance premiums. The single largest biggest boost for small business in the United States would be moving to single payer health coverage for all Americans. Yet the Republicans are unwilling to step away from the insurance company lobbyists.
I can only think that the ultra-wealthy controllers of the Republican Party think that those who constitute a majority of registered Republicans; those who’s personal income is less than $5 M per year, are idiots and will march in goose-step however their leaders demand.
Jim
One of the best critiques of Palin’s speech came from the Philadelphia Daily News writer Will Bunch
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Attytood: Palin's speech to nowhere
Sarah Palin delivered a great speech tonight -- for her party, for John McCain, for herself, for what she set out to accomplish. This was America's first real glimpse at the Alaska governor, and what we saw was a boffo politician who speaks in a plaintive prairie voice that channels America's Heartland like a chilling breeze rippling a field of wheat, who knows how to tell a joke, how to bring down the house and bring a tear to a few eyes. She is proud of her family, as she should be, and there is much to admire in her own "personal journey of discovery" (don't we all have these, by the way?) including her efforts to raise her son Trig. It is indeed nice to think that there would be an advocate for such children inside the corridors of the White House, although I'd surely like to hear what -- if anything -- she's done for special needs kids as governor of Alaska.
But...it was a great speech -- written for someone else, a male in fact, days before the Palin selection was even a gleam in John McCain's eye, but a great speech nonetheless. The pundits are fawning over it as I write this -- Tom Brokaw said she could not have been "more winning and more engaging" -- and in a world that is dominated by horse race journalism I can understand why, because I agree that Palin's one-of-a-kind story has given her long shot running mate a decent chance now of pulling this one out at the finish line.
It's a good metaphor, a horse race, because in the end it finishes right near where it started -- just as it will be for America if John McCain and Sarah Palin are sworn in on Jan. 20, 2009. Yes, it was a great speech politically, and a great night for her family, but an empty speech for America -- and for America's families. It was defined by its lowest moment, Palin's shameless lie about "the Bridge to Nowhere."
This was a Speech to Nowhere.
It was a Speech to Nowhere when Palin said that "I told the Congress 'Thanks but no thanks' on that Bridge to Nowhere, because that was a lie, and the worst kind of lie in American politics, a blatant falsehood that showed utter contempt for the American people that Palin pledged to serve, assuming we are too stupid to look up or know that truth, that she pushed for those funds in Congress and while she
Read the rest of the post here:
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/attytood/Sad.html
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