The Conservative Cave

Current Events => General Discussion => Topic started by: The Village Idiot on July 16, 2009, 07:06:41 AM

Title: Is the GOP dead yet?
Post by: The Village Idiot on July 16, 2009, 07:06:41 AM
Jon Kyl, Lindsay Graham and John Cornyn might talk tough on their FaceBook posts about the kinds of questions they'll ask, they have played nice and played paddy cake with the racialist nominee.

Don't you think its time someone asked her why she belongs to the racist La Raza?

These Republicans are going to end up giving us Shariah Law, and they wouldn't want to offend the Muslim radicals either.

She is going to get 80 votes, at least. I see no evidence that the Republicans have grown a spine. They told us to go ahead and vote for moderates "for the judges", its too bad they can't ask a question. Its too bad their so weak minded and jello spined they cannot ask her why she belongs to a racist organization.

It looks like the GOP is dead to me. It just hasn't hit the floor yet.
Title: Re: Is the GOP dead yet?
Post by: Chris_ on July 16, 2009, 01:40:48 PM
As doornails.
Title: Re: Is the GOP dead yet?
Post by: Chris_ on July 16, 2009, 02:57:04 PM
Damn I wish we had a Conservative party.
Title: Re: Is the GOP dead yet?
Post by: Chris_ on July 16, 2009, 03:24:48 PM
Damn I wish we had a Conservative party.

We could always infiltrate some sanity into the Libertarian party in the same way that the Progressives infiltrated their insanity into the Democrat and Republican parties. It might just scare the crap out of both the communist and the socialist parties to watch their support drift away as people start supporting "little 'L'" libertarian values in place of big government nanny state-ism from both of the other parties.

The founding fathers tried desperately to keep "parties" from entering the political system they established.  You'll notice that there is NO reference to parties at all within the text of the Constitution.  Washington warned against the drift towards parties in his farewell address.  Jefferson warned against them.  The "two party" system was the worst of all of the evils they warned us to avoid: the parties in such a system would contrive crisis after crisis in order to divide the American people, and secure more power for themselves.