About Moe

Based in Washington, DC, I'm either hotness or a hotmess. You be the judge. More about me.

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May 26, 2010
How Meghan McCain blew it (and, by “it”, surprisingly, I’m not talking about a man’s…)

I have said before, rarely do I have as much fun on this blog as when I get to trash Meghan McCain. Luckily, I got a little present today when I went to check out if she had written anything lately. It turns out, she has. And, once again, her ignorance is on full display:

I’ve been intrigued by Ron Paul and his so-called revolution ever since the Texas renegade began making waves on the presidential trail in 2008—and his supporters began crashing nearly every major Republican event since he dropped out of that race. I can’t help but interpret the congressman’s cult-like, libertarian-leaning following as yet another indicator of a growing resentment of all people incumbent and in power in Washington.

First of all, let’s be clear. RON Paul is an incumbent who has proudly served in Congress for the better part of the last forty years–he left Congress and returned to his medical practice in 1984 only to return to the House in 1997, where he has been serving the state of Texas and the rest of America ever since. I believe that would make RON Paul the incumbent holder of the office, which would preculde “the congressman’s cult-like, libertarian-leaning following” from being “yet another indicator of a growing resentment of all people incumbent and in power in Washington.”

Meghan opens her blog post by arguing that support of Ron Paul, an incumbent, is an indicator of the growing resentment of “all people incumbent and in power.” He is an incumbent in power but, in her tiny, empty, brain, support of him is just another sign of the growing resentment of incumbents in general. I don’t even need to call her stupid at this point; her stupidity speaks for itself.

Oh, but she goes on:

So, almost by default, my fascination spills over to his son Rand Paul and his recent Senate primary race in Kentucky. Last week, the younger Paul claimed the state’s Republican nomination—thanks, in large part, to vast Tea Party support. Yet less than 48 hours later, he (now infamously) declared on The Rachel Maddow Show that, while he’s against racism and prejudice, he essentially believes that any business owner has a right not to serve a person because of his or her race, and that he would have voted against the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964.

To me, what’s most significant about this series of events is how quickly Paul—the Tea Party movement’s first truly notable candidate, both in name and national prominence—imploded on the national stage.

When someone runs for office, essentially, all he or she must do is answer questions about what he or she believes and why these beliefs will best serve the country. Yet anyone watching Paul’s interview with Maddow could see that he was unable to do that. Worse, he managed to confuse voters further about just where his libertarian ideals stand, raising new questions about his extreme libertarian view of how our country should be governed.

I know that Meghan may have been preoccupied promoting gay marriage, tweeting boob shots, and embarrassing herself more generally, she might have missed the fact that Rand Paul is not the first notable, national figure backed by the Tea Party movement. There is room for honest disagreement and discussion about this, but with the qualifiers of being both notable and national I would argue that Scott Brown was the first national and notable Tea Party movement candidate. Remember him? He was the 41st vote against Obamacare. He turned “Teddy Kennedy’s Seat” from blue to red and returned it to it’s rightful owners, The People. Ringing any bells, Meghan?

Meghan needs to settle it down, just a tad. It’s times like these she proves that she doesn’t understand Conservative, Republican, or Libertarian ideologies but rather the caricature of these ideologies as presented by the MSM. It is not racist to believethat the federal government has no right to tell a private business owner who he or she must serve, employ, etc. As the business owner, it should be their choice and in a free market system would be at their own peril.

Many moons ago, when I was still just a young rabble-rouser in college, my friends and I in the College Republicans (obligatory shout-out to Jason Mattera) offered a Whites Only Scholarship. Instantly, we were labeled as RAAAAACIST (remember, there are still five A’s in racist). Everyone kind of missed the point that was our point. All race based scholarships, including ones awarded solely to minority students excluding white, Asian, Native American, etc. students based solely on the color of their skin, were racist.

As we always did after pulling a stunt like this, we followed it up with an educated, conservative speaker on the topic. For the issues we were trying to address this time around, we had booked Reginald Jones with the help of the Young America’s Foundation. He came and spoke to a very large audience and said he supported our scholarship. It was our right to do it and if the minority students had a problem with it, instead of squashing our rights to offer our scholarship, they should exercise their rights to offer their own with criteria determined by them. But, this is all besides my original point.

Mr. Jones also spoke about the rights of private business owners. He didn’t have a problem with a business only hiring whites, blacks, hispanics, etc. He admitted, as a black business owner, he only hired blacks. His choice. If people disagreed with his choice, they could take their business elsewhere. If enough people did that, he would be out of business or have to change his policies, but that choice is his as a private business owner.

If a restaurant were to refuse to serve blacks, they would automatically be constricting their customer base by denying service to potential customers. That would be bad for business. In addition to that, there would be many people of different races and ethnicities so offended by a restaurant’s refusal to serve members of a certain race based solely on their race, they would lose even more customers that way. And, if I decided to open up a business next door with a big sign that let the world know that my restaurant served everybody, I would steal more business from him and eventually he would be forced to close down.

Even if he wasn’t forced to close down, what would be the big deal? If people want to be racist or bigoted, as long as they’re not hurting anyone else or infringing their rights, what should it matter? I don’t care if the local golf course doesn’t allow women, and not just because I don’t play golf, but because I can just go to another gold course that does. This is the kind of freedom of choice that both I and the golf course should be able to exercise in order to be in line with the freedom this great country stands for.

This is what Rand Paul was getting at. The federal government has no right to tell a private business owner who they must serveor employ. The federal government has no more right to tell a black person he must serve whites than tell a white person he must serve blacks. Period. This provision in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is an unconstitutional infringement on the rights of business owners and their private property. It is an unconstitutional interference in, and manipulation of, the free market system Republicans are supposed to stand for. This is why to anybody who has a brain and understands what the Republican Party claims to stand for could never suggest that Rand Paul imploded on the national stage or that he is a racist or a disgrace to the Tea Party movement. Perhaps he could have better explained his position, but it wouldn’t have matter because morons in the MSM lambasted him, painted him as a racist, and passed it on to slobbering idiots like you who have regurgitated the lie without giving his ideas any critical thought.

Let’s continue with your nonsensical rant:

Paul’s nomination could have been a moment of triumph for the Tea Party movement, as well as for Republicans, but instead it was an embarrassment. And I felt the disappointment firsthand, given that I agree with and support numerous things the Tea Party represents. Like many Americans, I’m angered by the intense spending going on under the Obama administration. But when the movement was given the opportunity to present specific solutions and answer real questions, its leaders nominated someone who—yet again—revealed weird, racist undertones, no matter how he wants to spin it.

I disagree with you that Paul’s nomination is an embarrassment rather than a triumph for the Tea Party movement, Republicans, and the country. Contrary to what you claim to think–as I strongly believe you are incapable of thinking as proven every time you speak, blog, or tweet–Rand Paul did not reveal “weird, racist undertones.” And, a quick question for the brainless wonder, what other candidate has the Tea Party movement nominated that revealed “weird, racist undertones?” The Tea Partiersas racists narrative has been disproven and is growing old. This is just another example of Meghan’s obliviousness to what is going on in this country. She is just a parrot for the left, claiming to be a member of the right.

But, wait, there’s still more:

I respect Paul’s ideological commitment to libertarianism, of which it’s quite obvious he’s a die-hard supporter, even if there are reasons there’s no real libertarian senator. And I, too, believe that the government should stay out of people’s lives as much as possible. Yet Paul seems to be taking these beliefs to an extreme, one that’s making even fellow Republicans uneasy.

With the midterm elections fast approaching, and the 2012 elections around the corner, let’s hope Paul isn’t a canary in the coal mine, if you will, for Republicans, but a cautionary tale. The lesson is clear: If we don’t nominate formidable candidates with wider appeal and a broader message, our party is dead in the water.

Yes, Rand Paul could just be an anomaly; the next Tea Party candidate who rises to national prominence could be the answer to the movement’s prayers. Yet I believe that Paul offers a lens into the Tea Party’s broader problems. While anger over the way the country is run is valid, when it comes to specifics—and to direct, clear solutions—things fall apart.

Paul’s role within the Republican Party (if any) has yet to be determined. But one thing I am sure of is that, until we start nominating candidates who have more realistic views of the complex world we live in and stop seeing things strictly in black and white (no pun intended), we are going to continue losing elections and becoming punch lines for late-night talk-show hosts.

I would love to hear what Meghan thinks are the reasons there is “no real libertarian senator.” I get the impression that she is implying there is no “real” libertarian senator because libertarian philosophy isn’t popular enough among voters to allow a libertarian candidate to win. I don’t think that’s the case, at all. I think that the Republican Party, if it stuck to what it’s supposed to stand for rather than what people like her and her father stand for (Democrat Lite), would be a perfect place for libertarian candidates (read: Ron Paul). Also, to run as a third party candidate instead of on the Republican ticket would lessen their chances of winning, no matter how broad their appeal, because our system is designed to ensure that only the two major parties are represented. RON Paul candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination in the last election is a perfect example of this.

No need to worry about RAND Paul being a canary in the coal mine. I have said before, the Tea Party movement is not necessarily a Conservative, Libertarian, or Republican thing. That’s how the press wants to paint it so they can brush it off, just as they tried to paint it as extreme, bigoted, violent, etc. They tried to marginalize and subtract from it. Unfortunately for them, that hasn’t worked because the TPM has broad appeal to people from all political walks of life, even those who have never been political before. The fact is, the government has gone too far and everyone knows it. No amount of fear mongering about those scary Tea Partiers is going to change that and in order to correct course the public will vote increasing numbers of libertarian leaning candidates in no matter what ticket they are on. Republicans should be thankful their primary voters are smart enough to put them ont he Republican ticket so they can correct the Republican Party and put it back on the side of the people instead of ont he side of government power.

People are very specific about what is wrong and how to fix it, and I believe that many of the candidates have been very specific about this, as well. Once again, you are regurgitating the left/MSM meme that the right has no solutions, no plan. That’s garbage. Big government folks like you might think that less government is a non-answer, a solution dodger, but the TPM and those people identifying with it think that is the solution to our problem, smaller government, less restrictions, and more freedom. Government can’t fix a problem, it can only create and exascerbate problems that it originally created.

Here’s what Meghan doesn’t get, Republicans need to stop taking advice from their enemies on who they should nominate; who is “electable.” That’s how they ended up with her father as their presidential candidate in the last election and we all know how well that turned out. The Republican Party needs to offer a stark difference, a real alternative, to what the Democrats are pushing and a libertarian-conservative ideology is just that. Late night talk show hosts are liberal. Let them make jokes. This isn’t about being the most popular kid among the media and show business elite. This is about offering candidates who will scale back government, taxes, and spending and restore our individual freedoms as endowed to us by our Creator. That’s what the Republican Party is supposed to stand for, but I guess Meghan didn’t get that memo.

Why does this woman have a job? Did Congress pass a bill that deemed her too big to fail? She is a perfect example of all that is wrong with America. She has no understanding of our history, generally, and our political history, specifically. She doesn’t even understand or know the history of the political party she claims to belong to. She offers no insight or original thought. Every blog about politics that she posts is just a reiteration of the liberal talking points. Instead of pontificating on subjects she knows nothing about, why doesn’t she just go back to whoring herself out in a more traditional way? Never mind. People aren’t going to pay for what they can already get for free.

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May 20, 2010
Scott Brown and Wall Street “Reform” = FAIL

When Scott Brown was first elected, I was a little bit suspicious. I had warned people that backing him was possibly a mistake. Everyone was so excited about a Republican being elected in Massachusetts it was like that forgot that the only people elected in MA are liberals, no matter what letter they choose to throw behind their names. But, not, he was going to stop Obamacare. I guess no one expected the Democrats to do whatever they had to do to win, like they have always done. They’re Democrats, not known for moral codes.

Here is some of what I had said at that time:

Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad that Brown was elected if for no other reason than to stop Obamacare, upset the political landscape with the unexpected, and put a check on the Democrats previously unchecked power. Politics are my sport of choice and I can appreciate a good upset. No matter how liberal Brown turns out to be, there’s still some satisfaction just in seeing “Teddy’s Seat” go from blue to red. Not that I care for the Republican Party or their big-government spending ways, but I hope the red that seat has turned is more in line with the red of Republicans than that of Stalin and Mao Zedong.

Looks like my hopes have been dashed as Brown just changed his vote on the Wall Street “reform” bill from “Nay” to “Yae:”

Wall Street reform cleared a crucial test vote on Thursday, all but assuring final Senate passage of the most sweeping regulatory overhaul since the New Deal.

The Senate voted 60 to 40 to meet the threshold to overcome filibusters and send the measure to a final vote within days. Three Republicans voted for it, and two Democrats voted against it.

The legislation aims to stop bailouts, shines a light on complex financial products and strengthens consumer protection, to a final vote.

Final passage, which will require only 51 votes, is likely to come within days.

“We’ve made great progress … it’s been hard to get to this point,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. “It’s been a good debate. It’s been the way the Senate should operate more often than it has.”

The bill failed in a similar test vote on Wednesday. One key change Thursday was that Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., switched his vote to “yes.”

“Senator Brown received assurances from Senator Reid and his leadership team that the issues related to Massachusetts in the financial reform bill will be fixed before it is signed into law,” Brown spokeswoman Gail Gitcho told CNN on Thursday.

When does Brown come up for re-election? It might be the perfect opportunity to change the narrative. It’s not anti-incumbant sentiment sweeping the nation. It’s anti-big government sentiment and I hope that sentiment drives the people to continue to vote these clowns out who vote for bills and legislation they never should have drafted in the first place. But, then again, how could they pay off their biggest donors, otherwise?

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Second Grader’s Mom should be deported; Calderon should STFU!

I first saw this clip this morning on The Today Show. For the millionth time, I am at a loss to explain why I allow myself to watch this show in the morning other than to get my blood boiling hotter than the cup of coffee I’m usually drinking when I watch it. I stole this clip from MSNBC, which infuriated me even more. Watch how the First Lady of the United States of America explains how we need to get all of the illegals their papers:

To be clear, I would bet money that this was all set up for the benefit of those who want to push their so-called immigration “reform” on our country the same way Obama has been planting softball questions by children and other sympathetic archetypes in town hall meetings across the country since he started having town hall meetings. This question was not unexpected by Michelle Obama and was no surprise to anyone else in the White House. Don’t be fooled.

 

I love the honesty that it is an extraordinary circumstance for the real world (even though, as noted above, this was staged and therefore not the real world) to intrude into a policy debate. Such candor about how disconnected our political elite in Washington are from the real world is amazing, but I’m sure he didn’t realize what he was actually saying. You know what real world circumstances I wish would intrude the immigration “reform” policy debate? The real world in which Robert Krentz, known for helping illegals found on his ranch, was shot by illegals trafficking drugs on his ranch.

Now, judging by the girl’s question, maybe she was confused, but pay attention to what she says. She says she thinks her mom says that she has no papers but that “Barack Obama is taking away everybody that doesn’t has papers.” Perhaps these students’ time wouldn’t have been better spent in the classroom perfecting their English, rather than skipping around with The Grinch, but that’s another story for another day. I can’t reiterate enough how clearly staged I think this whole exchange was, but let’s move past that, as well, and on to the Grinch’s response.

The First Lady of the United States of America said that we have to work on getting everybody the right papers. WRONG! No, we don’t. And, it is appalling that she, in her current position, would say such a thing. And, then, you can hear the kids all start clamoring as the girl says, “But my mom doesn’t have papers.” Well, then, little girl, it would seem that your mom is a criminal who disrespected this great nation. She broke the law to get here and she should go back to whatever country she came from and file for citizenship the same way every LEGAL immigrant has done.

I didn’t find this to be a “touching moment.” I found it to be a highly offensive moment. If it touched me, it wasn’t a good touch. And, I love how the female reporters concern is now people are going to try to find out who the mom is of the child. You know, the mom who is in our country illegally? Of course that’s the reporters first concern because that would be their MO. Remember how we really got to know “Joe the Plumber?” He asked a simple question and so the MSM tracked him down and ran front page stories revealing every detail they could find out about him, while trying to discredit him because he asked an unscripted question and the public didn’t react well to Obama’s unscripted answer about “spreading the wealth around.”

Here’s the thing, if this child is telling the truth, her mom is a criminal. The police and immigration services should be asking who her mother is, tracking her down, and deporting her. If the child had said that she heard Obama was putting all of the people who have murdered someone in jail and that scares her because her mom is a murderer, I’m pretty sure that would get a very different reaction. What if she had said that her mom was part of a “hate group” that went around beating gays and lesbians to death with Bibles? Would the press want people looking for her mother then? I mean, Obama is trying to stop these people, right?

As I have said before, I do feel bad for these children that their parents chose to use them as pawns in an attempt to exploit our citizens compassion to gain legal citizenship for themselves, but that is not my fault and not my problem:

Tough break, kid! We all have them. Get over it. Don’t blame Americans because your parent(s) snuck over our border illegally and gave birth to you in hopes that we would allow them to stay because their child was born on American soil and is therefore a US citizen. You are what is commonly referred to as an anchor baby. That’s not my fault.

If you want to place the blame on someone, you better start looking at Mami and Papi. They are the ones who created a situation in which their 12-year-old daughter had to decide between her country and her family. Americans didn’t do that to you and neither did the more abstract America. Your parents used you for their own benefit and now the media wants to pull on our heart strings by making our country (the one Julie chose over her own family) out to be the bad guy.

This is all ridiculous. You should not automatically be a U.S. citizen just because you are born on our soil. This is why illegals cross our border pregnant and have so many children once they are here. They’re hoping that if they ever get caught their childrens’ citizenship status will convince immigration officials to allow them to stay in the country.

Illegals need to turn it around. We don’t owe you. You knew the rules and you decided to go for the gamble. You gambled that if you could sneak around here long enough and give birth to enough kids on our soil that once caught you would be allowed to stay with a nod and a wink.

You took a chance and it didn’t pay off. You had children to legitimize and avoid punishment for your crime. What kind of parents would do that? And, what kind of parents would allow their children to stay behind? Take your anchor babies back to Mexico with you. We don’t want them here.

CNN, stop telling me their sob stories. These parents made a conscious decision to create this situation for their children. I didn’t. I refuse to feel any sympathy for them. As for the children, like I said earlier, don’t be mad at me. Direct your anger toward the responsible parties: sus padres.

Then, in other news:

Mexican President Felipe Calderon asked members of the U.S. Congress on Thursday to reinstate a ban on assault weapons to help clamp down on violence in both Mexico and the United States.

During his speech Thursday to Congress, Calderon said the challenge to Mexican security has “roots on both sides of the border,” including the high demand for drugs in the United States.

Tackling other politically sensitive issues such as immigration, the Mexican leader said, “I strongly disagree with the recently adopted law in Arizona. It is a law that not only ignores a reality that cannot be erased by decree” but also introduces the “terrible idea” that racial profiling is acceptable.

Calderon on Wednesday had characterized the Arizona law as discriminatory.

Now, I realize that Obama, and most other politicians in DC, is an insecure little girl sitting in the corner at recess hoping all of the other kids will play with her, but allowing a foreign leader to come into our Capitol and tell us what we should be doing, while condemning one of our states, is despicable. Can you imagine what would happen if Obama went down to Mexico and told them what laws they should reinstate and how they should treat their illegals? Yeah, that’s what I thought.

Maybe Calderon should take his wife and go back across that border. Perhaps if he could fix the problems in his own country we would have such a problem with the people of his country crossing over into ours. But, he doesn’t want to fix the problems in his country. He wants his people to keep invading because like those who cross our border illegally, he has no respect for our borders and our laws. It is his responsibility to clamp down on violence in Mexico, not ours. It is our president’s responsibility to clamp down on illegal immigration and the violence happening across our border. I know it gets confusing, but try to keep up.

Calderon, you are the president of Mexico. Stick to your own coutry and worry about your own laws and problems. You have no business coming into my country and telling my leaders what they should be doing to help you. They are here to SERVE me and my fellow citizens and they are not doing that by letting your citizens illegaly cross our borders. I’m sorry, but this is a friendship I’m willing to lose.

Obama, you are the president of the United States of America. Stick to our country, worry about our laws, and try eradicating the problem that is illegal aliens crossing our border from Mexico to traffic people and drugs, killing American citizens along the way. You are here to serve me, not some illegal. You wanted the job and now you’ve got it. Stop effing it up!

I have not spoken about the Arizona law until now. I fully support it. In fact, I support every state passing the same exact legislation. I wish that our elected officials would work to resolve the problems that are their responsibility, like the problem of illegal immigration, rather than sticking their noses in places the Constitution explicitly leaves to the people and the states. Perhaps if Obama wasn’t busy taking over the auto industry, student loan industry, health care, and bailing out Wall Street, he would have time to concentrate on the things that he is actually responsible for, like securing our borders so that our citizens aren’t slaughtered at the hands of illegals who should never have entered our country in the first place. Just an effing thought!

UPDATE: No need to worry about the girl’s mother. It has been reported that she won’t be deported. And, people wonder why we have a border/illegal immigration problem in this country?

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May 18, 2010
It’s the system, not the people.
Posted at 10:39 am, in: Corruption, Democrat Party, Republican Party

There is a lot of talk, lately, about this new found hope for America. The people are rising up. Tea Parties in the USA. Blah, blah, blah! Let’s vote the Democrats out! Restore the balance of power! Forget the political parties and the mainstream press! Let’s run candidates that believe what we believe and boot these elitist morons out!

Unfortunately, it’s not just the people in power that are th problem. There are too many aspects of our system that are the problem and, given enough time, the majority of new blood we vote in will forget where they started and how they got there and will abuse the system in the same way its being abused now in order to retain their power and fame. Don’t kid yourselves. It’s the sad truth.

I remember when I first got involved in politics. I was young and hopeful. I met Jason Mattera and we were going to change the world…or at least raise a hell of a ruckus on our college campus by challenging the PC status quoat every turn. Then, I came to DC for a summer program with The Fund for American Studies, through which I lived and took courses at Georgetown University while interning at the Washington Times. In fact, that’s where I met Stacy McCain, about six years ago.

At that time, I still had hope. The Republican Party wasn’t perfect, but it was the answer. This politician or that politician was always talking about how they were going to make things great. Except, they weren’t going to make things great. They were paying lip service to the talking points they knew placated their base so that they could retain their power.

Then, one day, hanging around the book store in Union Station I found Tom Coburn’s book, Breach of Trust: How Washington DC Turns Outsiders Into Insiders. After reading that book, it all changed, again. I became more disillusioned and cynical. Politics are dirty, sleazy game. The politicians have passed laws to protect themselves and keep themselves in their seats. That’s what they do. They get elected, then corrupted, and then they pass “bipartisan” legislation that helps incumbents keep their seats while blocking out third party candidates and primary challengers.

They all have drinks together, dinners, attend banquets. Democrat or Republican, all are corruptible and the majority of them become corrupted. They get used to the fame, the power, the money. They are treated like celebrities, except at the taxpayers expense. As much as I hate those morons in Hollywood, at least they’re paying their own way. I can choose not to see their shitty movies. I can’t choose to be exempt from the taxes, unconstitutional legislation and restrictions on my freedom those chosen to represent me decide to pass. I can choose not to put money in the coffers of the Hollywood class.

The system is broken. Sending home the people in power, now, will only help so much. At some point, the power tasted by the newly elected will start to corrode and corrupt them the same way it has almost everyone else who has ever tasted it. We deny human nature and the inherent flaws in our current political system and act like the naive children our political class thinks we are if we fail to realize this. Power corrupts and our system gives too much power to individuals and, typically, corrupts them.

Even if we voted out every person who currently holds political office, as long as the newly elected representatives don’t vote to make serious changes to our system, don’t term limit themselves, etc., they will become pandering morons who think they know better than us and will use their power in order to ensure that they retain their power. No elected official is above the temptation and the only way to lessen the temptation is to change the system, but what elected official is going to vote to change a system that protects them?

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