Re: Move

I understand what Quinn Hillyer is trying to do, and I sympathize, but I highly doubt it would work out. For the life of me, I don’t see any of the people he mentions doing anything. Even if they did, I really don’t think it would work as well as he seems to think it will. Favorite son candidacies are a thing of the past, just as brokered conventions are. In my opinion, this is a good thing, as this means no proverbial “smoke-filled room” sweetheart deals. As interesting and newsworthy as they may be, I don’t see it happening or being a net benefit for the Party.

I don’t have much of a grudge against McCain, and I don’t hold contempt for him like some others on the right do. Maybe it is merely a function of my youth, I really do not know. In my mind, he has basically won the nomination fair and square.

I made a New Year’s pldege to go to the wall for any Republican nominee. I intend to carry that out.

 

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Pittsburgh Catholic Coverage of the March for Life

This week’s edition of my favorite Pittsburgh newspaper has extensive coverage of the March for Life. Here’s a much better photo of Bishop David Zubik than the one I posted earlier. Click for a larger version:

Here is the main news story:

Youthful enthusiasm reigns at March for Life (part 1)

March (part 2)

Here is a photo of some Pittsburgh area students who went to the March:

Students rally for life at the Verizon Center

Here is the Homily given by Pittsburgh’s Auxiliary Bishop Paul Bradley at the noon Mass back in the ‘Burgh on January 22:

Don’t stand by as God’s plan becomes a nightmare by Bishop Paul Bradley

 

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State of the Election

This theocon’s thoughts on the current state of the presidential election:

-With Rudy Giuliani gone, there are no more pro-aborts running on the Republican side. The danger of a pro-abortion Republican being elected president is gone.

-With John Edwards gone, we no longer have to listen to his nonsense. There are only two Democrat presidential candidates left to speak their pro-abortion socialistic crap.

-The current Republican front-runner, John McCain, is hated by many conservatives. I don’t like him very much myself. However, he fits my three requirements for a candidate in that he (1) is pro-life, (2) is a judicial originalist and (3) will fight Islamic fascism. Because he fits my requirements, I will have absolutely no problem voting for him if he wins the nomination.

-Only Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama remain on the Democrat side. I would consider the election of either of them to be a disaster. However I would much rather Hillary get the nomination, since I think she isn’t so much a true believer in far-leftism as she is just a power hungry megalomaniac. Obama seems to really believe all of the far-left stupidity that comes out of his mouth. Furthermore, Obama is far more charismatic than Hillary, and would probably get a lot of young people out to vote for him who would normally stay home on election day. So I support Clinton because Clinton isn’t as far-left and because she would be easier to defeat in the general election.

-After he comes in last in every state in the upcoming “Super Tuesday”, Ron Paul should do us a favor and finally drop out of the race. The real contest is between McCain, Romney, and Huckabee. Paul is never going to get the nomination, and he should stop pretending that he has a chance.

-An interesting point to ponder: Liberals hate George W. Bush for three main reasons; His pro-life stance, the war in Iraq, and his tax cuts. Liberals claim to love John McCain. John McCain, who is pro-life, in favor of the war in Iraq, and in favor of tax cuts. Hmm! How could that be? They can’t really denounce Bush as an evil woman-hating warmongering economic idiot without making the same claims about McCain, and yet they do! Could it be that liberals are full of it?

 

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Re: “Sen Santorum, The First Move Is Yours”

Rick Santorum will be on the O’Reilly Factor tonight to discuss entering the Presidential race.

No, but he’ll be on the Factor discussing the election, an no doubt hammering on Senator John McCain again.

 

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Montco Daily Dose

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It’s time for another shot.

Pa-13th: Three Republicans
Committee & Chair
Tim Briggs & Jim Matthews
More On the Fundraiser

(more…)

 

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Re: “Sen Santorum, The First Move Is Yours”

Fred,

The other day Lowman Henry alluded to the same point.

He writes…

Republican rules, however, require all candidates for delegate to officially run “uncommitted,” even if the delegate candidate supports a particular Presidential candidate. Thus, in the voting booth, Republican primary voters have no way of knowing which delegate candidates support which presidential candidate unless they have researched that matter before closing the curtain.

This creates unusual and often uncontrollable dynamics. For example, in 1980 George H.W. Bush won the Pennsylvania Presidential “beauty contest,” but superior grassroots work by the Reagan campaign delivered most of the state’s delegates to Reagan.

Good news for water cooler blogger Jeff Moyer who told me he wouldn’t run for delegate because Fred dropped out. You have until Feb 12th Jeff!!!

Add in the wild card fact that delegate seats to the national conventions are often won by party activists and elected officials who have name identification and organizations they can count on to get elected. Many who win delegate seats will be truly uncommitted because they are people who routinely go to conventions, but who may not feel strongly about a particular candidate.

And so Pennsylvania’s primary is largely being won or lost by the delegate recruitment and petition signing currently underway. If the GOP approaches the September convention with the outcome in doubt, the Keystone state with its large number of technically uncommitted delegates could in fact be the key to winning the nomination.

 

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“Sen. Santorum, the first move is yours.”

Quin Hillyer proposes a new, old strategy, for derailing Senator McCain’s “inside strait” march to the Republican presidential nomination:

The way to force an open convention is for conservative candidates to amass delegates pledged to themselves rather than to McCain or Huckabee. And the way to do that is by reviving the old stratagem of the “favorite son” candidacy. Rather than having a candidate try to run nationally, a candidate can compete just in his own home state. Win the state, or at least a majority of the delegates thereof, and you go to the convention with some bargaining power.

The filing deadlines for presidential primaries or caucuses in seven states, boasting 285 convention delegates, occur after Super Tuesday. Mega-state Pennsylvania, with 74 delegates, allows candidates to qualify up until Feb. 12. The filing deadline in South Dakota isn’t until March 25. If favorite sons run and win in all those states, and if Mitt Romney continues to fight McCain and Huckabee throughout the primary season, then the favorites sons could, collectively, hold the balance of power at an open convention.

IN RECENT WEEKS, Pennsylvania’s former Sen. Santorum has gone on a tear in criticizing his former colleague McCain. He has been saying that behind closed doors in the Senate, McCain consistently fights against even allowing floor consideration for conservative issue after conservative issue. Well, here is Santorum’s chance to block McCain: Qualify for the presidential primary in Pennsylvania, fight a hard campaign, and win it. 

 

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Pa-12: Vs. Murtha

Great bio of Lt Col Bill Russell who’s running against everyone’s favorite Pa Congressman Jack Murtha.

 

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The Continued Proclamations of King James III

Hear ye, Hear ye, all subjects of the Crown in the faire countye of Montgomeryshire..

History Began in the Year of Our Lord Nineteen Hundred and Ninety Nine.

(Referenced Mario is Mario Mele, King of his own time who sat upon the Chairmans Throne in Montgomeryshire from 1992 through 1999, coincidentally with the help of Prince Hoeffel)

For all of the proclamations of King James the Third, click here.

 

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Sports News

Good News, I guess.

John Kruk (yes, that John Kruk) is on Aqua Teen Hunger Force.

One of my favorite Phillies of the early 90’s era, it’s good to see he’s done something with his post-baseball career.

CBK + Number 7 = Love 4 Ever

The pair announced to reporters that they have been “fooling around, on and off” for at least two months. “It’s mainly physical,” Roethlisberger explained.

“They don’t call him ‘Big Ben’ for nothing,” Knoll quipped. At least two reporters present at the press conference were seen vomiting slightly in their mouths following that statement.

“We might be 52 years apart in age, but we’re both still teenagers in the bedroom,” Roethlisberger said.

 

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Perzel Strikes Back

Un. Freaking. Believable.

House Democrats’ plans to provide deeper school property tax cuts to more Pennsylvania homeowners were thrown off track Tuesday night by an old Republican nemesis.

On a 159-36 vote, members from both parties rushed to back an amendment sponsored by former Speaker John Perzel, R-Philadelphia, that would redirect all proceeds from the state’s casino taxes to pay all school tax bills for senior citizen homeowners who have incomes of less than $40,000.

The Perzel amendment would effectively eliminate school property taxes for those 600,000 seniors, but it would provide no cuts for the rest of the state’s 3.4 million homeowners.

Because why would we make policy when we could play political football?

 

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Body Trafficking

Who knew there was a market? (well, I did)

A nurse admitted Wednesday he plucked body parts from 244 corpses in Philadelphia and helped forge paperwork so the parts, some of them diseased, could be used in unsuspecting patients.

Lee Cruceta, 35, of Monroe, N.Y., was the lead cutter in a group that trafficked in more than 1,000 stolen body parts for the lucrative transplant market, authorities say.

Cruceta pleaded guilty Wednesday to conspiracy, taking part in a corrupt organization, abuse of a corpse and 244 counts each of theft and forgery.

Prosecutors also expect accused ringleader Michael Mastromarino, 44, of New York, to plead guilty, Assistant Philadelphia District Attorney Bruce Sagel told a judge.

Mastromarino, a former oral surgeon, paid funeral directors $1,000 per corpse, then sold the parts to tissue banks, Sagel said. The body parts fetched up to $10,000 apiece, though the tissue banks resold them to hospitals for many times that amount, he said.

Actually, I think if more people were allowed to sell the body parts (post-death, where applicable), there would be a lot more available for transplants etc.

Gruesome? Well… not as much as other “procedures” in medicine today. Certainly not as icky as the under-the-radar corpse trade.

Think about it.

You could sell a kidney, while you’re still alive. Yes, the kidneys would go to the highest bidders. But as more kidneys came on the market (we’ve all got a spare), prices would fall.

Right now your drivers license says “ORGAN DONOR”… what if it said “ORGAN SELLER”?

Hospitals would then get a cut (heh) of the cost for handling fees. Brokers would be around to take care of the transaction. An entire on-the-up-and-up economy would be born.

Side benny is that people would take care of their gear to fetch the best price.

“Low cholesterol?” Clean bill of sale.

“Low weight?” Mo’ money.

“No smoking?” Cough up the cash.

Altruism only gets you so far, that’s why we have waiting lists… but people are dying all the time.

 

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Impeachment Rally

What are these people going to do in 2009?

Bush Derangement Syndrome becomes plain derangement eventually.

Impeachment Rally, Thursday, Jan. 31, 5-6 PM, Broad and Cherry

Judging by the number of honks we get most of this city is for impeachment of Bush/Cheney.

A couple of jagoffs standing in the middle of north Broad Street during rush hour?

I could pull that off.

But the bigger question… are they being honked with or at?

 

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Montco Daily Dose

It’s been a while…

Friend(s) of King James Fundraiser
The Run for Treasurer
The Committee Races

(more…)

 

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Mr Creosote

Mmm…. we all love pork.

A little more won’t hurt.
waferthin.jpg

For all the talk about cutting federal spending, Pennsylvanians and their elected officials have a taste for government spending.

The Pennsylvania congressional delegation secured hundreds of millions of dollars among the 11,144 earmarks — worth $15 billion — that Congress put in appropriations bills passed just before Christmas.

Despite talk about fiscal conservatism, Pennsylvanians are accustomed to their legislators bringing home the bacon.

President Bush’s call to reform earmarks in Monday’s State of the Union address sounds good. Earmarks have financed projects from a Pittsburgh Zoo polar bear exhibit (former Sen. Rick Santorum) to cancer research (Sen. Arlen Specter and U.S. Rep. Tim Holden, D-Schuylkill) at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.

But don’t expect anybody to give up a single bite of the federal pie anytime soon. That goes for lawmakers, lobbyists or the same constituents who complain about excessive government spending.

And now for something completely relevant.

Monty Python, Mr Creosote

 

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Soccer In Chester

or…. “what happened to property tax reform?

Bringing a professional soccer team to Delaware County is about to take a huge step closer to reality.

Make that 45 million steps closer.

The state is poised to announce an agreement to kick in $45 million to partially fund construction of a Major League Soccer stadium in Chester, the Daily Times learned Tuesday — though official details were scant.
According to multiple sources, a formal announcement of a letter of intent from the state is scheduled for Thursday in Delaware County.

State Sen. Dominic Pileggi, R-9, of Chester, did not return calls for comment Tuesday, and his staff kept equally mum. Gov. Ed Rendell’s staff said he is planning to be in the county for an event Thursday, but wouldn’t go farther than that.

State Rep. Thaddeus Kirkland, D-159, of Chester, said — as he understands it — both the stadium package and additional monies to fund projects he has pushed for, such as a supermarket and programs for students of the struggling Chester Upland School District, will be part of the announcement.

$45 million here, $45 million there, pretty soon all of the casino revenue is pissed away.

 

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Bush’s Strategic Vision

Tigerhawk quotes an interesting assessment by Stratfor of the emerging alignment of powers in the Middle East and President Bush’s goals there.

The president’s primary goal in 2008 is simple: reaching an arrangement with Iran. Ideally, this would be a mutually agreed upon deal that splits influence in Iraq, but we have already moved past the point where that is critical. Al Qaeda, the reason for being involved in the region in the first place, is essentially dead. The various Sunni Arab powers that made al Qaeda possible have lined up behind Washington. Iran and the United States may still wish to quibble over details, but the strategic picture is clearing: a U.S.-led coalition is going to shape the Middle East, and it is up to Iran whether it wants to play the role of that coalition’s spear or its target. And the Bush administration has the full power of the United States — and one long year — to drive that point home.

This is a fascinating perspective. What seems to be emerging in West Asia is something similar to what the US constructed in Europe in the 1940’s — a defensive strategic alliance (NATO), led by the United States, that ensured American dominance in the region for decades to come.

We should also note that the Bush administration has also been forging similar strategic alliances in East Asia. There the United States, Australia, India, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have established a series of agreements on military, environmental, and economic affairs aimed at creating a “strategic partnership” to counter China’s growing influence. [here] and [here]

Finally, we should note the resurgence of NATO. Responding to Russian and Iranian provocations several senior European military officials have proposed a radical reorganization of the alliance. Wretchard at the Belmont Club explains:

The gist of the proposal is that the West should stand ready to conduct a pre-emptive nuclear strike against “key threats” like “political fanaticism and religious fundamentalism” and “international terrorism, organised crime” which are on the brink of acquiring weapons of mass destruction.

But that is not all they propose.

[T]he generals call for an overhaul of Nato decision-taking methods, a new “directorate” of US, European and Nato leaders to respond rapidly to crises, and an end to EU “obstruction” of and rivalry with Nato. Among the most radical changes demanded are:

A shift from consensus decision-taking in Nato bodies to majority voting, meaning faster action through an end to national vetoes.

The abolition of national caveats in Nato operations of the kind that plague the Afghan campaign.

Read the report here.

Essentially this would decouple NATO’s decision-making apparatus from the EU’s political leadership and integrate it far more closely into the American strategic complex. It is interesting that the authors of the report cite Bush’s Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates’ criticism of the EU and its constraints on effective action.

What Bush is building is a globe-spanning set of mutual security arrangements, not unlike those of the Cold War, aimed at containing the major anti-western powers of Russia, China, and Iran as well as preventing the spread of nuclear technology. He is attempting to establish a framework for future American global involvement that will serve as an alternative to the largely dysfunctional UN and the EU. It is a bold vision, as are most of his initiatives, and it guarantees US global involvement for some time to come, regardless of who occupies the Oval Office.

 

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Re: Back To the Past

Alex,

For what it’s worth, here’s my take on the Florida results.

Both parties have their iconic figures from the recent past. For Republicans, it is Reagan — for Democrats, it is Kennedy. Both men, as they are currently portrayed are fantasies — idealized, larger than life images rather than the complex, fallible human beings they really were. Both images have a powerful emotional hold on the imaginations of the core partisans who yearn for a return to the glory days of yesteryear. In that sense the activist elements of both parties are reactionary, no matter how much they might prattle on about “change”.

But history keeps on keeping on, and neither Kennedy nor Reagan really fits today’s world very well. In Florida we saw voters in both parties decisively reject the images of the past to embrace a new vision of the world. Democrats rejected Kennedy-style naive idealism for Clintonian amoral pragmatism while Republicans rejected the Reaganite ideal of limited government for a guy who will expend a lot of loot on the military and will not object to liberal proposals for massive social spending. They rejected Huckabee’s evangelical populism and Rudy’s urban weirdness decisively, and as for Paul’s radical libertarianism, it didn’t even register a blip on the radar screen. The big loser all around on all sides was the ideologically driven, “politics of principle”.

What struck me most is that the ghost of Tom Tancredo is beginning to take its toll on the Republican candidates. Latinos turned out in large numbers to vote for McCain, whom they saw as an opponent to immigration reform. That was probably decisive. It was certainly a big factor in Gov. Crist’s decision to endorse McCain and Jeb’s refusal to endorse anyone.

Exit polls also showed that the Republican “base” turned out for Romney, but that wasn’t enough to beat McCain, or even to make the election very close. Another poll, shown on MSNBC, affirmed that better than two-thirds of the voters were “satisfied with” or “enthusiastic” about President Bush. He is by no means the pariah the MSM has made him out to be.

I have said it before, and I say it again — the Republicans should quit looking for the next Reagan, and instead start looking for the next Dubya.

 

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History: The King James Version

Episode IV: A New Version

In today’s tale, His Royal Highness explains the solicitor situation.

For all of the proclamations of King James the Third, click here.

 

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For Whom the Bell Tolls

It’s 9:35 PM, and with 66% of the vote in, Florida delivers its 57 delegates to John McCain with 36%.

After Florida effects: (sorry about bad typos)

Paul- Was he ever running? Aside from raising millions of dollars, this Texas Congressman is a joke w/ only 3%.

Thompson- Ironically he does better than in NH, and he is out.

Huck- An embarrasing fourth place finish in a southern state. He didn’t even win evangelicals, ending up tied w/ McCain and behind Romney. I would not be suprised to see him out tommorrow, as he is broke and now with no momentum to speak of.

Rudy-The polls were proved correct, and Rudy placed a distant third, but above Huck. Natioanal Review is reporting he will drop out and endorse McCain. No suprises.

Romney- Places second, but not really close enough to really threaten McCain. He will be able to stay in the race, but he is set to be railroaded over. Pity.

McCain- the obvious winner. John McCain pretty much captures the nomination tonight, as this victory sets him on a path to capture most of Rudy’s vote and a good part of Huck’s even if he does not drop out. If he does not screw it up, he is certain to capture an clear majority on Feb. 5 and then defeat Romney again and again until he cries Mommy. He destroyed the meme hat he can not win in a closed primary.

Now is time for McCain to offer up the olive branch.

Congrats, Senator McCain. You deserve it, for your service to this country and your sheer willingness to fight.

 

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