What we want from the Republicans

posted at 6:42 pm on August 14, 2009 by Doctor Zero

The Republicans have been pretty quiet while the Democrats self-destruct over their health care power grab. The angry citizens confronting imperial Democrats at town-hall meetings have been doing a fine job of expressing themselves so far, but eventually their anger will fade, and it will be time for the G.O.P. to step up and offer them an alternative to the Obama nightmare. They would be well advised to develop a clear understanding of what their constituents want, and what the country needs.

We need more than just a slight discount on the insane debt Obama has saddled the country with. It takes nothing away from the magnitude of the Obama failure to acknowledge that he doubled a deficit that was already far too large. We need a Republican leadership that can address the basic immorality, and inevitable disaster, of Big Government spending sprees, rather than just offering a few adjustments to spending priorities and calling it “compassionate conservatism.” The Republican electorate is not simply waiting for its chance to toddle up to the federal vending machine, stuff a trillion-dollar bill in the slot, and order its favorite snacks.

Republican candidates must recognize the Obama disaster as a unique opportunity to explain the fundamental flaws in the statist model our nation has pursued for generations. Obama was not a transformational figure. He merely jumped liberalism ahead by a few election cycles, and demonstrated the final, fatal absurdity of its philosophy. Republicans should take this unique opportunity to attack the horrendously mistaken, supposedly invulnerable assumptions which have guided the devolution of our federal government since the New Deal. Obama was the inevitable product of machinery that has been groaning and clanking in the American basement for decades. We don’t want Republicans to tell us how they could deliver the nanny state for a bit less money than Obama wanted to spend. We don’t want to hear the 2008 Democrats portrayed as well-meaning reformers who just over-reached a little bit, or handled the marketing effort for their programs badly. We need leaders with the courage to head down into the basement with sledgehammers, and start knocking Roosevelt and Johnson’s nightmare machine to pieces. It’s not enough to just roll the current madness back a little, then let the whole tragedy play itself out again, with our children as the captive audience.

Every politician runs on a platform of “change.” We want change in 2010… but, for once, we want the government to change. We’ve had enough of people like Obama trying to use the government to change us. We’re tired of being slammed with thousand-page bills that tell us what we have to sacrifice, and what we’re not allowed to do. We want to see some one-page bills that list things the government is not allowed to do.

We reject the assumption that virtue is the exclusive province of the State. We’ve had enough of being told we’re morally obligated to hand over our fortunes to thieves who squander it on fleets of luxury jet aircraft and endless foreign junkets. We see nothing moral about giving the State a dollar, so it can give a nickel to someone it finds deserving of our compulsory charity. We see the State as a necessary expense to secure our safety, and like all expenses, it should be kept to a prudent minimum.

We know that opportunity dies alongside risk and responsibility. America remains a land of incredible possibilities, populated by a brave and resourceful people. It is not well-served by an arrogant, power-hungry government that sees itself as the stern nursemaid of a dying nation, whose pain it seeks to manage by spreading misery as evenly as possible. We don’t need politicians to hold us down in our hospice beds, until we stop thrashing around.

We demand leadership that recognizes our virtue, instead of insulting us for daring to question theirs. We expect them to propose clear, carefully drafted laws that citizens of good faith can follow, without relying on an arcane priesthood of lawyers to manage every aspect of their lives. We expect politicians to cheerfully submit their proposals to public debate… and when those laws are ratified, we expect politicians to obey them. We elect representatives, not rulers. Self-government means the political class is obliged to live in the world their legislation creates.

We’re looking for political competence, as well as intellectual ability. It does little good to vote for people who have the right ideas, but no clue how to implement them. Political campaigns are not undergraduate lectures, revival meetings, or accounting seminars. The rules for Republican candidates are bitterly unfair… and extremely well-known. We don’t want to see any more deer-in-the-headlights expressions from candidates who can’t believe their “friends” in the media have betrayed them. We don’t want candidates who hide below decks while staffers run their campaigns aground. We absolutely do not need any Republican politician stupid enough to think he can get away with something just because Barack Obama did. The last Republican leader who should have been surprised by savagely dishonest Democrat attacks was Barry Goldwater, and he’s been dead for ten years. Conservatives are attracted to candidates who seem like “ordinary folks.” Well, there is nothing the Washington power elite despises more, and understands less, than “ordinary folks.” Every conservative candidate should be ready to deal with it.

We need confident leaders who draw strength from their conservative convictions. We don’t need any more candidates who internalize the Left’s caricature of Republicans, and begin their campaigns by drafting their concession speeches. We don’t need candidates who spend their time telling the voters what a fine upstanding statesman their honorable opponent is – the Democrats have a dozen television networks, and hundreds of newspapers, to handle that task. Republicans should have the fortitude to remind the voters about the bottomless corruption of the Democrats, and make the case that the horror show chronicled in Michelle Malkin’s new book is an inevitable result of Big Government, not a perversion of it. That means we don’t need any more clowns from the G.O.P. angling for a spot in the paperback release of Michelle’s book. For a conservative candidate, sincerity is strength, and cynicism is cancerous.

We don’t need opportunistic politicians who think the path to power involves carving a tasty slice from the Republican electorate, then tossing the rest to the wolves. The fiscal and social sides of conservatism are not warring camps to be played off each other. America needs both of them, for capitalism and freedom are both powerful and just, and they deserve an argument that is both logical and passionate. We don’t need candidates who see the 2010 campaign as their audition for a lucrative job as a CNN consultant in 2012. Our leadership must have higher ambitions than becoming the Left’s new favorite pet.

We ask our candidates for the faith to return control of our lives and wealth to the people. We ask for the determination to battle the inevitable wave of voter fraud that will be deployed in the next few elections. We ask for the humility to trust the people of a free nation over its ruling class. We ask for the vision to see that thirty-year-old bad ideas are not permanent fixtures that must be accepted forever. We ask for the wisdom to understand that all of this will be incredibly difficult… and the spirit to go ahead and do it anyway.

We are the great-grandchildren of the patriots who brought that spirit into the world, with the birth of our nation. We have heard the case from those who believe that nation should be dismantled, and witnessed the vile tactics they deploy to achieve that end. Americans have seen enough of Barack Obama’s party. Soon, they will turn to the loyal opposition, and ask if they have anything better to offer. The Republicans should have their answer ready, and be prepared to read it from memory, without the aid of a teleprompter.

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the digger on August 14, 2009 at 7:55 PM

coldwarrior,
British torture victim Binyam Mohamed to be released from Guantánamo
They cut off my clothes with some kind of doctor’s scalpel. I was naked. I tried to put on a brave face. But maybe I was going to be raped. Maybe they’d electrocute me. Maybe castrate me.
They took the scalpel to my right chest. It was only a small cut. Maybe an inch. At first I just screamed … I was just shocked, I wasn’t expecting … Then they cut my left chest. This time I didn’t want to scream because I knew it was coming.
One of them took my penis in his hand and began to make cuts. He did it once, and they stood still for maybe a minute, watching my reaction. I was in agony. They must have done this 20 to 30 times, in maybe two hours. There was blood all over. “I told you I was going to teach you who’s the man,” [one] eventually said.
They cut all over my private parts. One of them said it would be better just to cut it off, as I would only breed terrorists.

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 7:57 PM

“Paging Michael Steele………….. Paging Michael Steele………

……. Doctor Zero will see you now!”

Seven Percent Solution on August 14, 2009 at 6:59 PM

LMAO!!! :D

I’m not hatin’ on Michael… but it really couldn’t hurt a thing for him to read DocZero’s awsomely awsome post a couple o’ hundred times.

Murf76 on August 14, 2009 at 7:58 PM

Doctor Zero
for PRESIDENT
or at least replace Micheal Steele

lwssdd on August 14, 2009 at 8:02 PM

without the aid of a teleprompter.

Aww, TOTUS doesn’t like you!

upinak on August 14, 2009 at 6:45 PM

Have Teleprompter Will Travel reads the card of the man.
A cipher without a thought of his own in what he’s turning into a bankrupt land.

His ah, oh, umm, loose mouth heeds the calling of an Aliksky wind.
A man without a clue of his own is the cipher called Obamadin.

Obamadin, Obamadin, Where do you roam?
Obamadin, Obamadin, Just be sure to never leave your teleprompter at home.

He travels on to dissemble and deceive whenever he feels he must
His yearning for power is his guiding lust

These are legends that themselves do spin
Of the Ventriloquist Alinsky’s dummy
Of the cipher called Obamadin

Obamadin, Obamadin, Where do you roam?
Obamadin, Obamadin, Just be sure to never leave your teleprompter at home.

MB4 on August 14, 2009 at 8:03 PM

excellent column

flyoverboy on August 14, 2009 at 8:04 PM

Just came back from a town hall with Senator Tom Coburn. It was a bit different from those we’ve seen with the Dems. When Coburn came in the room, he got a standing ovation from all of us. While there were a few Dems (maybe 25 out of 750) in the room, there were questions from both sides and he answered them well. The “mob” was not unruly and I had to assure a Democrat in front of me that while we disagree with her, we love her and calmed her fear that we would want her harm (she confessed to be a MSNBC watcher so of course she was misinformed).
A few points from the meeting:
a) There’s a frustration in the red states that we’re represented by conservatives, but are still helpless to get anything done. Coburn suggested we all influence our friends and relatives in the blue states to be part of the waking giant. (We’ve got relatives in Baltimore that we’ve convinced to go to the 9/12 March on Washington with us.)
b) We need to work harder at the state level to be sure we get the Federal govt. out of our affairs. Coburn cited several state bills that had the OK legislature gotten past our Dem governor, we would have more separation from the Feds.
c) Coburn will be on Meet the Press on Sunday. Imagine a doctor/senator talking about health care! Of course, he is vigorously opposed to the House and Senate bill. But he is for tort reform, and for reducing the bureacracy in health care.
d) For the most part, Coburn handled himself well. He explained his vote for TARP under Bush, telling us that their would have been a run on banks and money market funds had TARP not passed, and that he would vote that way again if he had to. But he has voted against Porkulus, Omnibus, Earmarks, and tried to get conservative bills through the Senate (of course to no avail.)
One good question raised: “We are tired of seeing Obama try to deceive the people every day on TV. Yet where is the Republican leadership in informing the people, showing them the pitfalls of Obamacare and getting an audience and teaching and leading?” Everyone applauded with that one. Coburn said they are trying to get TV coverage (such as his Meet the Press interview), but it is difficult to get on TV.
One of the most impressive parts of his answers was when he pulled his pocket Constitution of the United States out of his jacket pocket and indicated he has tried to kill legislation that oversteps the Constitutional powers of the Federal Govt.
He left the meeting as well-liked as when he arrived. If only all our Senators were like him.

Christian Conservative on August 14, 2009 at 8:07 PM

Will this courageous GOP candidate have the cajones to take on our “privileged public class”?

You know, the ones who demand we pay for their pensions and lifetime benefits far beyond anything we will be able to provide for ourselves.

The ones who demand we fill up the coffers of their pension funds…while they spend every dime in our Social Security fund.

Will this courageous candidate point out that there are way too many of them and they cost too much? Not to mention the imperious burden they put on the people.

Public pensions and benefits are a time bomb that makes the people furious. Some politician needs to get in front of the parade.

jeanneb on August 14, 2009 at 8:07 PM

And for God’s sake put an end to all these infernal CZARS!

Disturb the Universe on August 14, 2009 at 6:56 PM
I agree comrade! Power to the proletariat!

Fighton03 on August 14, 2009 at 7:10 PM

Coincidentally, I’m doing Vodka shots while reading this thread…..

Red State State of Mind on August 14, 2009 at 8:10 PM

Dr. Zero strikes again, and strikes right at the heart of the problem.

I am a reluctant “Republican” I started voting as a registered independent in 1976, a presidential election year. Over the course of many years and many elections, I have voted for Rs, Ds and Is. A few years ago I registered as a Republican, more so that I could vote in a primary. In NJ if you don’t belong to a party you can’t vote in primary elections. However, I still consider myself an independent conservative. I’m seriously looking for a leader like Dr. Zero who can truly articulate and stand up for the conservative, “republican” position. So, Dr. Zero, are you running, what are you running for and where do I contribute?

Willie on August 14, 2009 at 8:13 PM

unclesmrgol on August 14, 2009 at 7:30 PM

There is no need to dismantle social security, or even medicare/medicade.

What is needed is a robust economy where good people find employment that pays well, that recognizes their abilities, and their education. Where people are free to choose their own goals, and where responsible people save and invest in their own retirement.

You get there by getting government out of the way. You get there by cutting taxes on income, taxes on business, taxes on property, and cutting government spending. The end result is prosperity for all, and you won’t need social security.

Skandia Recluse on August 14, 2009 at 8:16 PM

-We demand of our candidates the faith to return control of our lives and wealth to the people.

-We demand the determination to battle the inevitable wave of voter fraud that will be deployed in the next few elections.

-We demand the humility to trust the people of a free nation over its ruling political class.

-We demand the vision to see that thirty-year-old bad ideas are not permanent fixtures that must be accepted forever.

-We demand the wisdom to understand that all of this will be incredibly difficult… and the spirit to go ahead and do it anyway.

Bullets work pretty good. With some tweaking, this could turn into something.

KCB on August 14, 2009 at 7:18 PM

Arrows are usually effective too.

Jimmy Doolittle on August 14, 2009 at 8:17 PM

If Republicans cannot offer the choice, they need to step aside and let us form a new party.

rockmom on August 14, 2009 at 6:57 PM

You rock Mom!

Willie on August 14, 2009 at 8:20 PM

This will be all for not if we rally behind candidates in 2010 that have hidden flaws.

here in Colorado, people are getting behind certain candidates with the same sort of blind faith that masses embraced Obama with. Dudes just speaking in platitudes, not really addressing the issues du jour…

We need to Vet the Sh$t out of our people now. Weed out the weaklings now.

Ed Graef on August 14, 2009 at 8:27 PM

You are talking about the Republican party right? The same group of morally deficient morons that lost the last election by nominating a RINO and thinking that was a good thing? The same group of useful idiots who let this happen over the past 20 years without saying a thing? That GOP?

flytier on August 14, 2009 at 8:42 PM

Who is this Dr. Zero, and what do we know of him?

I like the cut of his jib.

Hugh G. Rection on August 14, 2009 at 8:45 PM

The Republicans have been pretty quiet while the Democrats self-destruct over their health care power grab

Pretty quite? Like 0 dB. A feather makes more noise when it hits moist ground.

Geochelone on August 14, 2009 at 8:47 PM

If Republicans cannot offer the choice, they need to step aside and let us form a new party.

rockmom on August 14, 2009 at 6:57 PM

You got that right.

Geochelone on August 14, 2009 at 8:47 PM

Christian Conservative on August 14, 2009 at 8:07 PM

I had the same experience when I attended my Congressman’s (John Culberson) town hall last week. There were probably 300 people in attendance, with only 1 person speaking up in favor of Obamacare. He explained that he was a Type 1 diabetic and can’t get insurance because of his pre-existing condition. When he said that, Culberson said to him, “That’s what I want to hear. I want to hear how healthcare isn’t working, and I want to help you get the kind of coverage the rest of us get.” That got lots of applause, and I agree with him. BTW, Culberson isn’t on the golden healthcare plan Congress gets, either. He actually pulled out his Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Texas card to prove it.

He also said one thing that clearly defines the struggle we are in: Liberals cannot win in a fair fight. He is censored by SanFanNan from sending out any newsletters or correspondence to constituents, using his Congressional budget, that uses the words “Democrats”, “liberals”, “cap and trade”, and any other of a laundry list of words. He’s free to send anything he wants on his own dime, but obviously can’t afford to send correspondence to 650,000 people. The system is rigged.

Dominion on August 14, 2009 at 8:51 PM

Although I will say that Obama’s plan to end Bush’s extraordinary rendition program is almost worth ignoring all other issues and just voting for that.

So it will be a shame if Obama does not keep his word.

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 7:00 PM

Get used to that empty feeling; he has not yet kept any of his promises. Not to close Gitmo; or end rendition; not the promises he made to gays.

massrighty on August 14, 2009 at 9:02 PM

I’m not hatin’ on Michael… but it really couldn’t hurt a thing for him to read DocZero’s awsomely awsome post a couple o’ hundred times.

Murf76 on August 14, 2009 at 7:58 PM

i’m not hating on Michael Steele either, but I made an attempt to send it to him; hopefully he will read it and even more hopefully, he will get the concept. Again, great respect for Dr. Zero

Willie on August 14, 2009 at 9:03 PM

massrighty,

Actually I’ve been taking a closer look at the Scott Horton article recently.

The guy who was renditioned was taken to the U.S. for a trial, which would qualify it as a regular rendition.

So I am relieved to see Obama is not engaging in torture.

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 9:17 PM

massrighty,

Obama promised during the campaign to continue rendition but to end extraordinary rendition.

The two things vastly different concepts with similar names.

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 9:18 PM

massrighty,

Obama promised during the campaign to continue rendition but to end extraordinary rendition.

The two things vastly different concepts with similar names.

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 9:18 PM

Not really; if you pretend as a majority of the Court does, that the Constitution applies to the battlefield, then it applies ALL THE WAY. If we got bin Laden and he isn’t provided counsel then he can’t be tried.

Chris_Balsz on August 14, 2009 at 9:22 PM

Okay, Repub reps, here are YOUR talking points – for the Sunday shows and all other appearances.
When do these great points become a commercial to air on all the lefty lib stations? I see their crap commercials on Fox all day. Hummm??

LoneStarGal on August 14, 2009 at 9:24 PM

What the GOP needs is a viable, angry third party. Most of us disaffected conservatives couldn’t begin to stomach the evils of the democrats, but (as 1994-2006 showed) the GOP is just not relevant to our int’rests. “Smaller government. yay.” Well, how about sunsetting _every_ _single_ _federal_ _law_ and forcing the repassage of all of that nonsense, in public, out loud? How about term limits?

I hope that the spirit of Reagan & Lincoln & Goldwater never goes away, but as for the GOP, hiring a flim-flam man like Steele to revitalise their party and make it relevant to the Minorities & Moderates is stupid. But I guess they’re paying him well to be excoriated in the press as an Uncle Tom. The members of certain minorities who can see straight aren’t going to be drawn in by such silliness, and the democrat-for-life types aren’t going to view any idiotic rebranding as a legitimate option when they believe that the GOP are all secretly Klan members.

fronclynne on August 14, 2009 at 9:24 PM

We don’t want Republicans to tell us how they could deliver the nanny state for a bit less money than Obama wanted to spend.

AMEN, Doctor Zero!

Turn this country around, back to what the Founders envisioned.

PattyJ on August 14, 2009 at 9:24 PM

If Republicans cannot offer the choice, they need to step aside and let us form a new party.

rockmom on August 14, 2009 at 6:57 PM

Although I hear your frustration (and share it,) I have a different take.

We conservatives need to put our principals “out there,” and coalesce behind them, and a group of spokesmen, and finally, a candidate.

If we do this, the Republican party will “come with us.”
This will have the effect of refocusing the party (sort of a takeover, without the need of forming a new party.)

massrighty on August 14, 2009 at 9:25 PM

It’s impossible to elect a candidate who rejects statism when the majority of the electorate supports statism. America has changed since Reagan.

JohnJ on August 14, 2009 at 9:26 PM

goldwater. sigh.

kelley in virginia on August 14, 2009 at 9:27 PM

It’s impossible to elect a candidate who rejects statism when the majority of the electorate supports statism. America has changed since Reagan.

JohnJ on August 14, 2009 at 9:26 PM

Well, the majority of the electorate also thinks taxes should be no more than about 25% of people’s income, so that’s incompatible with statism.

I would also argue that one of the main reasons the state has been able to increase its role in day-to-day life is that the money to fund that increase has been borrowed, both from foreign countries and from the Social Security trust fund. Now that we are running up against the limits of that borrowing, it’s probably going to be tougher to sell statism.

venividivici on August 14, 2009 at 9:47 PM

It’s impossible to elect a candidate who rejects statism when the majority of the electorate supports statism. America has changed since Reagan.

JohnJ on August 14, 2009 at 9:26 PM

I would argue that the majority of the electorate does not support statism, but rather suffers from a level of apathy never before seen. They’ve been hammered so hard with the socialist propaganda for the last 40+ years that at this point their only thought is, “Who cares?”. I see that as a failure of the conservatives/libertarians to do their jobs and constantly have the message of freedom and liberty in the spotlight. Of course, most of the electorate attended public schools, so their attention span and memory are both pretty short.

Dominion on August 14, 2009 at 9:51 PM

It’s impossible to elect a candidate who rejects statism when the majority of the electorate supports statism. America has changed since Reagan.

JohnJ on August 14, 2009 at 9:26 PM

So, should we simply give up? Or, keep fighting, with passion and reason, where we can!

massrighty on August 14, 2009 at 9:51 PM

I made a terrible mistake last fall of donating to the republican party and now I get mail screaming for a donation. Guess what fellas, I screamed for years and it fell on deaf ears. You did nothing and your votes prove my statement. Now you’re screaming for money. I ‘m still screaming for five gallons of ink. Because it’s the stroke of the pen that changes things not the money you’re begging for. I’m waiting for the party to get real. They are in the past, this goodie two shoes crap is blase’. The lefties are craping in their jeans because the grass roots are making some sense and fighting fire with fire and that is something new for the left.

mixplix on August 14, 2009 at 9:53 PM

I agree with massrighty. This movement must be led by the people, not fall into passive mode expecting politicians to pick up the slack. That means staying on the offensive. Politicians won’t, not yet. Bit by bit we’re busting the illusion that you can’t take on the Left without the power of their cultural dominion crushing you. Republican politicians are way behind us on this. They fear the Left, fear being ridiculed on Jon Stewart or taken to task in the NY Times, or the numberless other humiliations and marginalizations the media tries to wield over the Right. We’re instructing politicians on the power of the people and the rightness of our ideas fearlessly expressed.

rrpjr on August 14, 2009 at 10:00 PM

We conservatives need to put our principals “out there,” and coalesce behind them, and a group of spokesmen, and finally, a candidate.

If we do this, the Republican party will “come with us.”
This will have the effect of refocusing the party (sort of a takeover, without the need of forming a new party.)

massrighty on August 14, 2009 at 9:25 PM

I think it is already happening. Sarah Palin is up in Alaska in front of her laptop pounding out Facebook messages. All of them have what we are looking for. She is brave, honorable, honest, and trustworthy. She said she would be campaigning for folks next year. She will be campaigning for folks that believe what we all believe and will act on it. Watch who catches her eye. I trust her judgement. I believe that she will be refocusing the party. I don’t think we will have to start a new party. All those RINO’s will be following her.

BetseyRoss on August 14, 2009 at 10:00 PM

What I want from the republicans is every politician that is republican to be mad crazy nuts in love with the constitution to the point they can almost spit it out verbatim.

I want them to defend it even if it means these politicians have to sacrifice their lives to defend it, and shut down congress and/or the senate if anything sketchy like cap & tax or healthscare starts snaking it’s way through. They should be carried from the chambers screaming soundbytes and kicking ass in defense of the constitution.

I’m sick of empty promises. “contracts with America” that have tiny print leading to massive debt and socialism.

I want the republicans to ‘out’ every single son0fab1tch that tries sneaky power plays that are outside of the scope of the government as defined by the constitution.

I want the republicans to declare war on socialism within the borders of the USA, and offer plane tickets out to every socialist piece of sh1t in office…or not in office.

This is a country for FREE people who must be RESPONSIBLE for themselves and their actions. This needs to be highlighted, outlined, and screamed from the rooftops. We need the leftists so depressed they slit their wrists or walk to Oaxaca.

That’s what I want from republicans. It’s not so much really.

Spiritk9 on August 14, 2009 at 10:08 PM

BetseyRoss on August 14, 2009 at 10:00 PM

I pray you are correct. But agree with rrpjr that it’s up to us to make the difference.

We’re instructing politicians on the power of the people and the rightness of our ideas fearlessly expressed.

rrpjr on August 14, 2009 at 10:00 PM

They can try to dis us, call us names, try to isolate us, try to take the “moral high ground” away from us, but if we keep growing and pushing, speaking truth and making our voices heard, we will prevail.

John Quincy Adams once said, “Posterity — you will never know how much it has cost my generation to preserve your freedom. I hope you will make good use of it.”

We may have to “pledge our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor” as they did to preserve our posterity’s freedom.

Christian Conservative on August 14, 2009 at 10:16 PM

Sigh. Some self-described libertarians are just useful idiots for the left. Ayn Rand said, “Above all, do not join the wrong ideological groups or movements, in order to ‘do something.’ To join such groups means to reverse the philosophical hierarchy and to sell out fundamental principles for the sake of some superficial political action which is bound to fail. It means that you help the defeat of your ideas and the victory of your enemies.” Anarchism is the enemy of freedom.

alliebobbitt on August 14, 2009 at 10:28 PM

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 7:44 PM

What kind of dope are you smoking? If Bush violated the law and the Constitution – you have DEMOCRATIC MAJORITIES in both houses – and the Department of Justice controlled by Obama.

Prosecute him. But you won’t because …

You have no case.

HondaV65 on August 14, 2009 at 11:23 PM

I have a feeling by the time 2012 rolls around people will be longing for the days when GWB was president.

redridinghood on August 14, 2009 at 11:51 PM

Ticked that I missed this. Found out about it the next day. I did watch the videos of the TH on his YouTube channel. I recommend y’all watch them–informative. He totally shut down this jerk who cussed at a lady who had the mike, although she could clearly hold her own against such asshattery.

tkinTX on August 14, 2009 at 11:53 PM

Doc, If someone hasn’t already mentioned this, you should edit this down and make it an online petition. Get a bunch of signatures and send it to the RNC, and every elected Repub.

mrsmwp on August 14, 2009 at 11:57 PM

Smart folks like Doctor Zero and others are closing in on this… If you’ve not had a read of Karl’s ideas for the RNC, catch his WAKE UP call = MUST READ!

SkinnerVic on August 15, 2009 at 12:07 AM

Decent, except for the dig on attorneys, which I happen to be. Please stop demonizing my profession? Unless you want anarchy, you will always have laws, and in a complex society, complex laws, at that. I’m proud of my ability to help my clients understand and navigate the law.

voxpopuli on August 15, 2009 at 1:48 AM

I agree with massrighty. This movement must be led by the people, not fall into passive mode expecting politicians to pick up the slack. That means staying on the offensive. Politicians won’t, not yet. Bit by bit we’re busting the illusion that you can’t take on the Left without the power of their cultural dominion crushing you. Republican politicians are way behind us on this. They fear the Left, fear being ridiculed on Jon Stewart or taken to task in the NY Times, or the numberless other humiliations and marginalizations the media tries to wield over the Right. We’re instructing politicians on the power of the people and the rightness of our ideas fearlessly expressed.

rrpjr on August 14, 2009 at 10:00 PM

Agree, though they have every reason to be just afraid as they were yesterday. Luckily the “mob of tea-baggers” (or “teabag of mobsters”, hard to pin anyone down on which it’s supposed to be) is making headway in spite of this.

And part of the reason IMHO is because there is no single target, no single person, for the Left to go after – those speaking out at town hall meetings are essentially anonymous people.

Since the left’s entire M.O. is to single out politicians and other well-known people individually, and craft smears just for them, the smears have more “legs” because the charges are specific. But they’re not able to do any of this to the crowds of thousands showing up at town halls, and the only way to demonize them is to lump them together into a “mob”, a single entity with imputed ulterior motive.

But that’s an inherently weak proposition, because no one can credibly assert for a second that every member of a 10,000-strong “mob” cheated on their spouse for example, or hired an illegal alien housekeeper, filled in the wrong figure on Line 34a of their 1040, lied on their Countrywide mortgage application, etc.

That’s the power in this movement, from the point of view of neutralizing the Left’s assault machinery. Their demonization of citizens can only apply to the collective, it can’t really apply to individuals within that collective, so it restrains the Left to only those charges that can be applied across the board: “extremists”, “racists”, etc. They can’t credibly accuse the entire mob of having done any of the things that they can do to individuals.

And, funny thing is, it’s taken a huge bite out of the Left’s aresnal. Plus, every time one of the “extremists” credibly demonstrates how they’re not “crazy”, “extreme” or “racist”, the Left has a harder time making the rap stick.

Individual politicians OTOH should stay very very afraid. If they think this movement gives them any protection whatsoever, they’ll find out otherwise the moment one of them tries to step out in front. (Of course, the press could thwart most of this nonsense overnight if they began to apply their own purported standards of objectivity consistently across the board…)

RD on August 15, 2009 at 1:54 AM

Decent, except for the dig on attorneys, which I happen to be. Please stop demonizing my profession? Unless you want anarchy, you will always have laws, and in a complex society, complex laws, at that. I’m proud of my ability to help my clients understand and navigate the law.

voxpopuli on August 15, 2009 at 1:48 AM

Que?

Didn’t detect demonization in the slightest. And I would hope that everyone involved here, including the author, is more than aware of the good work done by those of your profession who don’t overstep their bounds.

Or turn what was once a sensible, assimilable, principle-driven body of law into an arcane, priesthood-driven Codex Arbitraria.

I hope that would still leave a lot of open territory for those in your profession to engage in the sensible, honest practice of law. God knows we need more of those in the profession.

RD on August 15, 2009 at 2:10 AM

DZ, I’d suggest you read through Paul Ryan’s bill, known as the Patients’ Choice Act. It’s co-sponsored in the House by Ryan & Rep. Nunes & by Sens. Burr & Coburn in the Senate. It’s only 250 pages or so.

LFRGary on August 15, 2009 at 2:37 AM

Everyone needs to check their city, county, and state for indigent health care programs that already cover the uninsured.
In Hillsborough County, Florida we have this: The Hillsborough County Health Care Plan.
The average monthly cost per enrollee served plummeted from about $600 to $250 over a period when most health care costs were rising. visit their site: http://www.cjaonline.net/Communities/FL_Hillsborough.htm

The following statement is from the website of: Communities Joined in Action (Hillsborough County’s Plan)
“It’s a fact. Communities across America are expanding access to heath care, reducing costly emergency room care, and improving public health by connecting local providers and using resources in new ways. We can show you how and help you reinvest for better results. Contact us today for a free assessment.” http://cjaonline.net/OurServices.htm
Florida KidCare: Through Florida KidCare, the state of Florida offers health insurance for children from birth through age 18, even if one or both parents are working. It includes four different parts. When you apply for the insurance, Florida KidCare will check which part your child may qualify for based on age and family income. Some of the services Florida KidCare covers are: Doctor visits, Check-ups and shots, Hospital, Surgery, Prescriptions, Emergencies, Vision and hearing, Dental, Mental health.
Florida KidCare Eligibility
Children ages 0 through one, up to 200% of the federal poverty level, are covered under Medicaid (Title XIX and Title XXI funded)
• Children ages one through five, up to 133% of the federal poverty level, are covered under Medicaid (Title XIX funded)
• Children ages one through five, at 134% to 200% of the federal poverty level,are covered under MediKids (Title XXI funded)
• Children ages one through five, above 200% of the federal poverty level, are covered under MediKids full pay
• Children ages 5 through 18, up to 100% of the federal poverty level, are covered under Medicaid (Title XIX funded)
• Children ages 5 through 18, at 101% to 200% of the federal poverty level, are covered under Healthy Kids (Title XXI funded)
• Children ages 5 through 18, above 200% of the federal poverty level, are covered under Healthy Kids full pay
Children’s Medical Services for children with special health care needs is available for Title XIX and Title XXI-funded children.
http://www.floridakidcare.org/

The 2009 Poverty Guidelines for the 48 Contiguous States and the District of Columbia
Persons in family/Poverty guideline
4/$22,050
Add $5,520 in Alaska (27,570).

So aid is available for a family of four up to an income of $44,100 (55,140). Is that poor. Not by the Guidelines.

How many different plans do we already have offering HEALTH CARE FOR ALL?

mydogwonthunt on August 15, 2009 at 3:36 AM

Amen Dr. Zero.

Mr. Smith? America is calling, please go to Washington.

numbeddown on August 15, 2009 at 3:52 AM

Excellent essay, Dr. Zero. Would that someone in the effete Republican party were able to say such words on an election platform and mean them.

Just.Wow.

Wanderlust on August 15, 2009 at 5:59 AM

Well said!

I would add one thing. You said, “Conservatives are attracted to candidates who seem like ‘ordinary folks’.”

I think that we need conservative candidates who ARE ordinary folks and not ones who just SEEM like them. We need to return to the concept of citizen servants in place of career politicians. If career politicians are the only ones qualified to “do” politics, then we are electing a ruling class and not representatives.

Some may feel that real ordinary folks aren’t qualified or capable to run government. But if you know how to read and are committed to not vote for any bill until you have read it, then you are more qualified than any of the people currently serving in the Senate, the House of Representatives or the White House.

It does seem a shame that it should take so little to qualify someone for high office. It is an even greater shame that those currently serving don’t even meet such minimal standards.

There was another article on HA yesterday talking about how Obama is prepared to “risk being a one term President”. What if we had conservatives running for office with the intention of only serving one term? There is such a large pool of qualified people to draw from here in America that no one in government is so important that they are irreplaceable.

Ordinary American on August 15, 2009 at 6:12 AM

Thanks, Doc, for a terrific post.

Really good ideas expressed on this thread. The KEY is to elect state and local candidates who are committed to small government and local control. The problem is Imperial Washington, and if we don’t wrest power back to the state and local level it won’t matter what specific policies the Imperial Republican’s advocate – they’re part of the problem.

KCB:

Thanks for creating that bulleted list. I’ll be sharing it with everyone I can think of.

Christian Conservative:

Tom Coburn is the real deal, isn’t he? Mary Fallin had a town hall Aug 13 in OKC that drew about 1300 people. She’s the only one I’ve noticed so far who’s running for governor. I intend to support the candidate who believes in the 10th Amendment and will duke it out with the feds when the time comes. Do you think she has the chutzpah we need?

JackOkie on August 15, 2009 at 6:52 AM

We need a new ‘contract with America’ not unlike Newt Gingrich in 94′, except with an articulate Bobby Jindall machine-gunning the talking points for reforming the insurance industry. If the American people had the answer bottled for them by the likes of such a skilled orator, we’d conquer both house and Senate in 10′ and 12′!

ntmaloney on August 15, 2009 at 6:58 AM

I was thinking of what ‘change’ would look like, politically, and I came up with a basic metric: 30% turnover in the House of Representatives.

I checked to see when that happened last: 1934.

In the 20th century the elections that had 30% (or close to it) turnover in the House: 1904,1912-16,1922 and 1934.

The startling thing is that no House prior to the 1898 election ever RETURNED 70% of the members as incumbents. It is a clear light-switch event that went on after that, with the solidification of party machine politics followed by pushing through Amendments to remove Statehouse say in the US government via Senate picks and direct taxation of the people via shifting proportions due to income. Plus the House then limited the size of the body so as to help protect incumbents via the method of ending the increase in the number of districts.

From the First Congress to 1898 no Congress ever returned 70% of its members to power: the American People regularly threw the bums out and with gusto. Congresscritters knew their place and it wasn’t an assured one. Now the parties have entrenched themselves so you can’t dig them out save for rare times at the margins and nowhere near sending 30% home to mull over the error of their ways.

Term limits are nice, but don’t address the fact that our districts are far too large to actually KNOW who is representing us… not by name but by face and actually having some chance of actually getting to know the person involved beyond just a meet’n'greet or gripe session that lasts 20 minutes if you can even schedule that through their staff flacks. Why do they need large staffs, anyways? Can’t they be bothered to read and write bills which is their JOB? If it is ‘too complex’ that means we need a much, much larger House… which will get you much more infighting, eagle-eyed members eyeing each other to see who is corrupt… and more people means bills marked down until they get understandable. I do NOT elect a Congressional staff but a Representative to represent me.

I thought conservatives wanted to ‘conserve’ our history and lead their lives by it? Then why having the House size capped? Can’t they do their jobs? And if their jobs are ‘too hard’ because of too much in the way of government size and regulation that has to have ‘oversight’ that points to there not being enough House members to do THAT job, either. And I don’t elect their staff to do it for them, but elect them to do the job themselves. As it is I am quite certain that no member of Congress actually does much, if any oversight and hand it all over to their staff.

Tell you what, as the amount of staff plus Congress critters in the House is just around the Constitutional 1:30,000 range, why not just make districts for them and let them run for my benefit to be heard in the House in compact and impossible to gerrymander districts? They will all cooperate with each other… right? No? Hmmmm… yup, that would be representative democracy if they didn’t, pretty much the definition of it.

We are a big country, now. We have private corporations with more managers than the size of Congress by multi-fold… so the idea that Congresscritters wouldn’t be able to handle the work load is ludicrous if you return being a Representative to the status of ‘job’ not ‘stepping stone to perennial incumbent status’.

The size of the rest of government, the bureaucracy is far too large. The size of the House, however, is far too small to represent the people as Representatives. And what, exactly, is the problem with bills getting chopped down to bare essentials so they can pass a huge House? I have zero problems with that. None. Might remind them they have a job to do, not a platform to pontificate from.

How about we ‘conserve’ the value of representative democracy by making it widely representative like it was intended to be by the Founders and continued to be up to 1913? Really Democrats should have no fear of that… it just means that their party would have to adapt to local politics, and they can do that, right? You know, neighborhood and small town level? Surely the Republican party could do that?

No?

If not, why not?

The problem with political corruption is not too much money in politics but too few politicians to make it irrelevent. Double the number of politicians, the money gets divided in two. Quadruple, divide by four. A Maximum House has over 9,000 members… political corruption in a body that size? Is it even possible? No company, no elite group, no organization can corrupt a body where the people are represented at a 1:30,000 level. And we can steal a page from the Open Source Community of ‘many eyes giving clean code’ for bills. But that would mean conserving representative democracy and meaning it.

Nothing that Democrats or Republicans are comfortable with in the era of modern telecomms, virtual town halls, telephone conferences and no staff for House members. That tells me much about how much representative democracy is now feared by America.

ajacksonian on August 15, 2009 at 7:46 AM

Someone should send this to Sarah Palin. Hey, Doctor Zero, you could be her speechwriter!

disa on August 15, 2009 at 7:53 AM

My 2c’s worth:

Tom Coburn’s speech on Feb 4th is a must read!! I like what he said. I have been checking into Brogdon and Fallin…. Tom puts it all out there on his site for all to see his record….from what I have seen and read the man does not falter!! He stands up for Conservative principles.

http//coburn.senate.gov/public

We absolutely need more like him! It is time to look into who we have at the state level that we can support. I suggest reading Liberty and Tyranny especially; The Conservative Manifesto, it is somthing to ‘get behind’ a starting point, somthing to build upon.

Myself, being a Permanant Resident Alien, paying taxes and contributing like every other American, I for one would like to have the opportunity to VOTE!! At the present time I am unable to afford becoming a Citizen, but why as a Permanant Resident Alien can I not vote?? I would like to see that changed.

Thank you for allowing me to be able to contribute….BTW, love Dr Zero’s essay!!

Onward Forward and Upward!!

RoxanneH on August 15, 2009 at 9:06 AM

Decent, except for the dig on attorneys, which I happen to be. Please stop demonizing my profession? Unless you want anarchy, you will always have laws, and in a complex society, complex laws, at that. I’m proud of my ability to help my clients understand and navigate the law.

voxpopuli on August 15, 2009 at 1:48 AM

As Tom Coburn pointed out yesterday in our town hall meeting, 65 Senators are attorneys. 65! That’s nuts! No wonder we can’t get tort reform on the table. If lawyers want to reclaim their good name, start doing what is right regarding tort reform and stand against your profession’s monopoly on our government. As we all can see, the lawyers in our House and Senate don’t make very good law. (Our founding fathers were not predominantly lawyers, yet they did a pretty fair job of setting things up.) I’m not saying all lawyers are part of the problem, but I would hope that many lawyers rather than see their profession trashed would stand up against the folly of these lawyers in DC. Become part of the solution.

Christian Conservative on August 15, 2009 at 9:54 AM

Christian Conservative, Tom Coburn is the real deal, isn’t he? Mary Fallin had a town hall Aug 13 in OKC that drew about 1300 people. She’s the only one I’ve noticed so far who’s running for governor. I intend to support the candidate who believes in the 10th Amendment and will duke it out with the feds when the time comes. Do you think she has the chutzpah we need?

JackOkie on August 15, 2009 at 6:52 AM

Tom Coburn is the real deal indeed, and from what I know of Mary Fallin, she’s a conservative, but I have been more impressed so far with Randy Brogdon, who has attended every one of our tea parties here in Tulsa. He is a State Senator who sponsored the Oklahoma Sovereignty bill (drawing the line where the Feds couldn’t cross based on the 10th Amendment). Henry didn’t sign it, but they passed it as a resolution anyway. He is definitely on the side of freedom and has done something about it. Fallin is going to have to go some to take my vote from him.

Christian Conservative on August 15, 2009 at 10:05 AM

massrighty on August 14, 2009 at 9:25 PM

You got that right. Instead of sitting around waiting for the GOP to come to us, we should instead go in the other direction–take it over. The alternative is to join the Democrats and attempt to shove them in the opposite direction.

Otherwise, we are just sitting around b*tching and moaning while other people are doing.

iconoclast on August 15, 2009 at 10:28 AM

Excellent treatise, Doc.

The optimist in me believes hopes that enough conservatives will heed your call and make 2010 the first step back to embracing this nation’s better angels.

However after the McCain trainwreck, it will be a pleasant surprise if it happens.

We need a conservative, not a politician. Unfortunately those two things seem unable to co-exist.

Rosetta on August 15, 2009 at 11:07 AM

Every politician runs on a platform of “change.” We want change in 2010… but, for once, we want the government to change. We’ve had enough of people like Obama trying to use the government to change us.

Priceless. Dr. Zero for President.

Huckabye-Romney on August 15, 2009 at 11:20 AM

Great article. I would only add that we need the RINO’s out of control of the party. They need to leave their positions and perhaps the party. They are infiltrators and traitors.

The RINOs muddy and confuse the message, giving real credence to the argument that there is little difference between the parties.

dogsoldier on August 15, 2009 at 11:39 AM

Is it okay to say that both parties suck?

Let’s see the GOP squandered all the good of the Contract with America and became “Compassionate Conservatives” and that really meant big spenders (just like the Dems had done for 40 years). Then Bush got us into a war to get rid of Saddam (I’m giving him the doubt on the pre-war intelligence issue) that left him crippled. Then he refused to use the bully pulpit for anything but fight for war funding. Then they tried to ram thru the Immigration bill for Big businesses and hoped that 20 million new voters would vote G.O.P (how did that work for you in 2008 GOP Rinos?). Then let’s see they piddled away the House and Senate leadership positions and gave us another entitlement (they KNEW that we couldn’t afford it). Then they continued to push the threat to National sovereignty that is the Trans Texas Corridor and NAFTA’s successor the North American Union. Then they nominated the worst presidential candidate on the GOP side of my lifetime. The man even said in a town hall in Minnesota (I think it was) “you have nothing to fear from an Obama presidency”. The moderates took that as a signal that it was okay to vote for what we have now. Then we get stuck with a bunch of Male, untelegenic, scared of the media types in the 2009 House and Senate. Other than that the GOP is awesome.

Then…..the DEMS?
Where to start? Welfare? 45 year failure that has destroyed the black community.
Now….they’re trying to do to the Hispanics the same thing that they did with the African-Americans.
First Marxist president in U.S. History, dismantling the U.S. piece by piece and wanting to unplug Granny to save Medicare/Medicaid/Social Security. I could exhaust myself writing all the ways this party sucks.

What are we left with as far as choices?

PappyD61 on August 15, 2009 at 11:42 AM

So if the GOP wants to succeed

Take lessons from the Wheelchair Mafia and start taking Obama to task.

Have a party leader that is telegenic and can speak as a Reagan Conservative.

Deny the premise that the Bootlick Media is in charge. When they try to ask you a stupid question that is tantamount to you having to apologize for being a Republican tell them to stick it where the sun doesn’t shine. Say something like this:

“You know Wolf I refuse to accept your analogy….we have failed to communicate that WE are the party of hope and change…..We should have had our butts kicked…but now we’ve learned our lesson.”

“Wolf, we need to be more fiscally responsible, we need a balanced budget amendment, we need term limits, we need to have common sense immigration reform, we need to require citizens that take Welfare or federal funds (if they can physically work) to actually WORK in the community or such. We need to stand strong in the world, stand proud, recognize American exceptionalism, be willing to LEAD the free world and not have to have a committee meeting to see what we should do.”

“Wolf, we also need to fly the flag and reinvigorate our Constitution and culture with Morality. We need less activism on the Court. We need to return to the founders ideas of individual responsibility. And lastly Wolf we need to stop this dangerous slide into soft tyranny….that will most certainly be a slide into real tyranny.” “That’s all I have to say Wolf”.

THAT is what we want the GOP to do.

Got it Boehner.
Got it McConnell.
Got it McCain…..etc. etc..

PappyD61 on August 15, 2009 at 11:52 AM

Kudos for yet another in a long string of exellent posts, Doc! FWIW, I forwarded it to not only conservative voters in my address book, but also to my GOP Congressman (with attribution, of course) urging all to read it and in the latter case, take it to heart and pass it to colleagues.

Term limits and abolishment of political parties would go a long ways towards dismantling the political class, which increasingly seems to be the problem. Of course blocs of like-minded representatives will always form, as they have to – but if you can get away from straight party-line votes…well! You just might have elected representatives truly representing the interests of those back home. Then we could start to address things like 1,000 page bills that no one who is supposed to actually reads.

Dare to dream…

Right on August 15, 2009 at 12:04 PM

This was most awesome. Thank you so much for posting it!

SueM on August 15, 2009 at 12:13 PM

Right on August 15, 2009 at 12:04 PM

I’m with you on term limits. But of course it will be over the career pols dead bodies (figuratively, of course) that they will vote that in. The tea party movement is going to have to grow exponentially for that to happen. Dare to dream indeed.
However, doing away with the party system, to me is inviting tyranny. We are seeing what is happening when one group has control of the executive, legislative and judicial branch of govt. With no opposing party out there, I’d hate to think where that would go. What we should want instead is electing politicians in both parties who stand for principles and the country rather than the party. Country first! Hmmm where have I heard that before?

Christian Conservative on August 15, 2009 at 12:27 PM

Christian Conservative on August 15, 2009 at 12:27 PM

Agreed – but how else to get away from Pelosi-types strong-arming members of the same party in order to get a vote on a controversial bill? A non-party system may just provide a principled rep enough moral leverage to say, ‘you know, it’s just not in my district’s best interests’ and while it may cost some political capital down the road, the amount of lost capital would be diminished, in other words the vote wouldn’t necessarily follow them forever. Thugs and bullies will always exist, but even they need to preserve good-will from time to time – until they get too powerful.

Right on August 15, 2009 at 12:42 PM

Doc Zero I was skeptical when I began reading your essay thinking, “here’s just another bozo with an opinion”. But I have to say – impressive. We had some great candidates (Duncan Hunter, Fred Thompson) in ’08 but they were systematically forced out by the dems, the MSM and our own GOP Hierarchy. And make no mistake, these 3 villainous groups were working in concert.

The fact is Doc Zero, the system has been designed and engineered to keep a true leader (as you describe) – out and maintain the status quo! The mistake that FDT and Hunter made is that they tried to run a conventional/traditional campaign. Which doomed them from the start. They knew no other way! And that is probably the same mistake Palin will make. Too bad they can’t understand – skirt around this Maginot Line, “machine in the basement” and charge on to victory. Darvin Dowdy

Darvin Dowdy on August 15, 2009 at 1:01 PM

I have a feeling by the time 2012 August rolls around people will be longing for the days when GWB was president.

redridinghood on August 14, 2009 at 11:51 PM

FIFY

Blacksmith8 on August 15, 2009 at 1:32 PM

You got that right. Instead of sitting around waiting for the GOP to come to us, we should instead go in the other direction–take it over.

iconoclast on August 15, 2009 at 10:28 AM

And that my friends is exactly how we got Mr. Reagan. Can you say let’s do it again? I knew you could.:-)

FREEDOM!

Blacksmith8 on August 15, 2009 at 1:36 PM

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 7:55 PM

Sorry, but when it comes to my country and Islam. I just really don’t care. After all, read about some of our early wars with the Indians and then realize we were 10 times worse, rightfully so in many cases.

Tim Burton on August 15, 2009 at 1:40 PM

We’re tired of being slammed with thousand-page bills that tell us what we have to sacrifice, and what we’re not allowed to do. We want to see some one-page bills that list things the government is not allowed to do.

Amen! Too big for a bumper sticker, but it will fit on a sign.

Vashta.Nerada on August 15, 2009 at 2:25 PM

I think that what Dr. Zero wants is for the Republicans not to be Republicans.

PersonFromPorlock on August 15, 2009 at 2:32 PM

Doc Z certainly understands conservative opinion. I don’t think he understands the GOP.

Usually it’s a good thing to run a “positive campaign” but the essence of our problem is, as The Doctor points out, that we have to make a 180 turn against the last 80 years of political momentum.

In other words, the leaders Doc Z is speaking to have to stand AGAINST any Federal or State pandering to racial preference, minority privilege, feeding the children, housing the homeless, welfare for illegals, i.e. AGAINST “social justice” as a function of government.

They must promise to cancel billions of dollars worth of social programs and proceed to fire hundreds of thousands of government employees nation wide. They must stand up for the 10th Amendment and relinquish their power in favor of the States and the people.

There’s not a chance in Hell that the GOP would give the slightest serious consideration to doing what’s required.

If Republican leaders were morally committed to their oath of office knowing the certain calamity our public debt will bring upon our children they would not require Doc’s advice to stand up for America. If they understood private property and free enterprise as the foundations of individual liberty they would not have outspent The Great Society when they had the gavel.

Great column Doctor but exhorting the comfortable losers in the GOP isn’t going to accomplish anything. What we need is people who will stand up and act. It’s started at the Tea Parties and the Townhalls. There has to evolve a new conservative movement whether in the GOP or out.

I hope some established pols, republican with a small “r”, like Gov. Perry will peel off and embrace popular conservatism in opposition to the GOP/RNC. Rubio is a good example. As in his case, the chance of the GOP backing our people is currently NIL.

rcl on August 15, 2009 at 2:32 PM

I think that what Dr. Zero wants is for the Republicans not to be Republicans.

PersonFromPorlock on August 15, 2009 at 2:32 PM

While I was composing my mini-treatise you said the same thing in one sentence. Excellent.

rcl on August 15, 2009 at 2:37 PM

What would be a GRAND idea is for you cats to take the states in which you have a majority and leave the union. Run your new country however you like.

The voters have spoken, and you clowns haven’t stopped whining about it since.

Don’t like the will of the voters?

buh bye!

bschmalfeldt on August 15, 2009 at 8:10 PM

Exceptionally well-written. Now, if they would only listen…..and act accordingly.

- Krumhorn

Krumhorn on August 15, 2009 at 10:11 PM

buh bye!

bschmalfeldt on August 15, 2009 at 8:10 PM

The last words you’ll hear from Drs. Blumenthal and Emanuel if we cave to your Party’s Death Cult.

rcl on August 15, 2009 at 11:11 PM

perhaps we should have an entirely independent form of representation and make it a capital offense for any special interest groups to bribe them. Start with electing people that are not lawyers and make no more than $100,000. make it a part time job, 6 months in washington, the rest in an office in the middle of where they represent so they can get a clue what the people actually want or need. All laws must pass in the states first.

workingforpigs on August 16, 2009 at 12:12 AM

workingforpigs on August 16, 2009 at 12:12 AM

We started with a system where Congress was made up of people with real jobs (some lawyers, many not) who would meet briefly, conduct businesses authorized by the Constitution, then go home. This mess is a result of straying from the Constitution’s original principles, which resulted from a lack of understanding by the American people of the purpose and meaning of the founding documents.

We need to repeal the 17th Amendment and have state legislatures select Senators. This would make them more accountable, because state legislators would feel heat from their constituents and that heat would actually mean something on a national level. It also makes term limits unnecessary–in fact, our original system makes term limits unnecessary, because the Constitution severely limits what the federal government can do in the first place.

Honestly, I don’t understand all this talk of a “federalism amendment” (in another comment). Our system is federalist. We need to return to the system, which would immediately show the vast majority of what Congress has done for the past 100+ years was unconstitutional (we also need to repeal the 16th Amendment taxing income–some say it was never properly ratified to begin with). This can only begin, though, with educating people about things such as original intent. In my view, the time is ripe, but it requires work and commitment, and I don’t know if the GOP is either up to it or even interested.

DrMagnolias on August 16, 2009 at 6:58 AM

Spathi on August 14, 2009 at 7:57 PM

You’re way off topic with this, nice try for a thread hijacking though. Gosh you’re right, we are so terrible, Guantanamo was a nightmare, where the inmates were forced to put on weight, etc, yada yada. Obama can close it, and they can all move in with you.

smellthecoffee on August 16, 2009 at 11:15 AM

DrMagnolias on August 16, 2009 at 6:58 AM

You are spot on:

Honestly, I don’t understand all this talk of a “federalism amendment” (in another comment). Our system is federalist. We need to return to the system, which would immediately show the vast majority of what Congress has done for the past 100+ years was unconstitutional (we also need to repeal the 16th Amendment taxing income–some say it was never properly ratified to begin with). This can only begin, though, with educating people about things such as original intent. In my view, the time is ripe, but it requires work and commitment, and I don’t know if the GOP is either up to it or even interested.

It is time to start to question local Reps and Senate to discover who will stand and deliver, this is not a task for the squeamish!! The ball is in OUR court now, and momentum must be kept up at a constant pressure and pace…..

Onward Forward and Upward!!

RoxanneH on August 17, 2009 at 11:52 AM

Tom Coburn is the real deal indeed, and from what I know of Mary Fallin, she’s a conservative, but I have been more impressed so far with Randy Brogdon, who has attended every one of our tea parties here in Tulsa. He is a State Senator who sponsored the Oklahoma Sovereignty bill (drawing the line where the Feds couldn’t cross based on the 10th Amendment). Henry didn’t sign it, but they passed it as a resolution anyway. He is definitely on the side of freedom and has done something about it. Fallin is going to have to go some to take my vote from him.

Christian Conservative on August 15, 2009 at 10:05 AM

Yes, I like Randy Brogdon…..he has got what it takes!!

Oklahoma politicians CAN lead the way!! Someone is listening and that speaks volumes.

Onward Forward and Upward!!

RoxanneH on August 17, 2009 at 11:58 AM

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