Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Feeling twisted about Newt

  Feeling sort of detached from the hundred debates the Republicans have conducted has both advantages and disadvantages.
  One by one, favored candidates blow it, are attacked and fall away.
  Winning the debates and being articulate aren't the only important aspects to defeating Barack Obama. Though Obama is an eloquent spokesman, particularly with his teleprompter, his machine is fearsome and thuggish.
  Newt did great in the debate last night again, it appears.
  His tenacity, his bullishness and, dare I say it, his honesty are refreshing in contrast with the other candidates, including Barack Hussein Obama.
  Tired of hearing the same drivel, voters are looking for someone who will actually stand up to the bullsh%t that this administration repeatedly offers by way of explanation, justification or governance.
  Newt is saying things a Romney candidate won't say. Just as Chris Christie bluntly answers treacly or politically correct traps liberals set for Republicans, Newt's in-your-face response to Juan Williams' accusation of racism for the food stamp remarks.
  Here it is.
  
  Newt is a flawed vehicle.  
  But aren't they all.
  And if they aren't, they surely will be by the time the media gets done with them.
  It's hard not to say bully for you, Newt.
  There's been a great deal of moaning about Mitt Romney as candidate, which has become quite vicious lately. Is Mitt worse than McCain? Is Mitt as bad as Obama? Do we have to give up on the fight against government health care if Mitt wins? Mitt's too nice. Mitt's too moderate.
  I suppose this is the nature of the rough and tumble of politics. 
  Liberals and conservatives will always disagree, just as they disagreed thousands of years ago. 
  Political wonks will always moan and wail about this problem or that problem. 
  It will not be a utopia, however we imagine this country.
  We understand the importance of this moment in history. 
  Is Newt the man? He organized and led the Congress out of the wilderness before; he certainly isn't very popular with some members of Congress right now for that act.
  We'll just have to see.
  I know one thing.
  I'm sick of moderation. Sick of pandering while the country fails. Sick, sick, sick of lies, falsehoods and fabrications that benefit only the politician. Sick of RINOs. Sick of liberal violence, accusations and dependencies.

1 comment:

  1. Yeah he took Juan Williams to the bleachers on that pitch. I think he may eventually be my man.

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