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Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

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  • Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

    http://buchanan.org/blog/just-say-no-pays-off-4543

    ‘Just Say No!’ Pays Off

    The polls and pundits are all in alignment now.

    The Republican Party is headed for a victory Tuesday to rival the biggest and best of those that the party has known in the lifetime of most Americans.

    In 1938, the GOP won 72 seats in the House.

    In 1946, Republicans swept both houses and presented Harry Truman with a “fighting 80th Congress” that contained three future presidents: John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon.

    In 1966, Republicans picked up 47 House seats to set up the comeback of Nixon, who had led the party out of the wilderness of Goldwater’s defeat.

    In 1994, the Republican Revolution added 52 House seats and captured both chambers for the first time since Eisenhower’s first term.

    Looking back on those Republican triumphs, and forward to Tuesday’s, what do these Republican off-year victories have in common?

    In all four — 1938, 1946, 1966 and 1994 — the GOP won not because of what the party had accomplished or the hopes it had raised, but because Republicans were the only alternative on the ballot to a Democratic Party and president voters wished to punish.

    By 1938, America had had its fill of FDR, as the Depression returned with a vengeance and his aristocratic arrogance became manifest in the crude attempt to purge Democratic senators and pack the Supreme Court with six new justices who’d rubber-stamp his New Deal.

    In 1946, Truman was perceived to have been as naive as FDR in trusting “good old Joe” Stalin, who was imposing his murderous Bolshevik rule on 100 million Eastern Europeans and whose Maoist allies were waging war on America’s ally in China. What our boys won on the battlefield, our diplomats have frittered away, the country believed.

    In 1966, the nation was reacting viscerally to the stalemate in Vietnam, rising casualties, campus disorders, soaring crime, and riots in Harlem and Watts, all seen as the legacy of LBJ’s Great Society.

    In 1994, it was gays in the military, Hillarycare and the public perception that Bill Clinton was more liberal than he had let on that cost Democrats both houses. The post-election spin that the nation had rallied to Newt Gingrich’s “Contract with America” was pure propaganda.

    Tuesday’s election, too, will be no embrace of the GOP, but rather a repudiation of what Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi have come to represent. All are seen as power-hungry politicians of an out-of-touch regime that is seizing control of private wealth and private lives as it fails in its duty to win our wars, balance our budgets and secure our borders.

    Republicans will be the beneficiaries of this repudiation, as Republicans are, almost everywhere, the only alternative on the ballot, and because they are seen correctly as having opposed the Obama agenda with near drill-team solidarity.

    Every Republican in the Senate but Arlen Specter and the ladies from Maine voted against Obama’s stimulus bill. Every Republican in the House, save eight, voted no on cap-and-trade. Every Republican on Capitol Hill voted no on Obamacare. More GOP senators opposed Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan than opposed any Supreme Court nominee in memory.

    Tuesday, obstructionism reaps its reward.

    On Tuesday, the nation, including millions of Obama voters, will come out to empower the Party of No, even as the nation voted in 2006 and 2008 to throw out that party. While many did respond positively to Obama’s politics of hope and change in 2008, as they ousted the Republicans, the nation, after Tuesday, will have voted in three straight elections in four years to be rid of its ruling regime.

    The United States is starting to look like the French Fourth Republic.
    After France lost Indochina, began losing Algeria and was flipping from one premier and one party to another, the call went forth from an exasperated nation to Gen. DeGaulle to come and take charge of affairs.

    Consider the critical issue facing America today — the budget and trade deficits, the soaring national debt, an unemployment near 10 percent for 14 straight months — and how neither party seems to have the cure.

    While George Bush’s tax cuts did not cause this, they did not prevent it. And if Republicans believe that his deficits did cause it, why have those Republicans not addressed the causes of those deficits — Bush’s wars, Bush’s tax cuts and Bush’s social spending on No Child Left Behind and Medicare drug benefits?

    Yet, if liberal Democrats are right and deficits are the correct Keynesian cure for recession, why have Obama deficits of $1.4 and $1.3 trillion failed so dismally? Paul Krugman says they are not large enough. Perhaps, but the country is about to end the experiment.

    The Federal Reserve, having used and broken every tool in its toolbox, including doubling the money supply and setting interest rates at near zero, will now bet the farm on inflation, starting Nov. 3.

    Both parties have lost the mandate of heaven, and neither knows if its economic philosophy even works anymore.

    We are in uncharted waters. The country is up for grabs.

  • #2
    Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

    Ole' Pat Buchanan has gotten most things right since at least 2002.

    He clearly understands that wars bring about the death of republics, that the United States doesn't have to "run" the world,
    that the Neocons were idiots, and that an activist court goes hand-in-hand with an activist executive branch, both of which
    have usurped much of the legislative function that has resulted in "presidential wars", among other unconstitutional abominations.

    He is far too controversial to have ever been President, but had the Bushite morons listened to him the country would have been spared
    the Iraq fiasco, most of the deindustrialization, and the Pelosi fiasco as well.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

      Tuesday’s election, too, will be no embrace of the GOP, but rather a repudiation of what Obama, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi have come to represent.
      Total nonsense.

      The GOP will win big tomorrow (47 seats), but it won't be because of a repudiation of anything or a support of anything. They will win because the same 10% of the unaffiliated electorate that decides every election, is pissed off at the world and wants to punish whoever is in office. All the polls show that this is anti-incumbency, pure and simple. This is the uninformed electorate making yet another uninformed vote. Most of them can't even name their representatives much less name any issues their representative supports.

      They watched their 401K's drop, their house values drop, and their neighbor just lost his job. They have no idea what they're voting for, other than something different.

      EJ
      We are entering a troubled period when our world may soon be ruled by demagogues, voted in by an angry, distrustful, and confused public.
      http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...ght=demagogues

      The dark ages have now begun. The confusion, distrust, and anger can now be purchased by corporations and Oligarchs who's money has been proclaimed as speech. Pat Buchanan has done more than his share of fueling the fire and clearing the path for the demagogues to come forward and reign over our future.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

        It kind of cracks me up to read so often here how any time people get fed up with this BS we call government, they are discounted as "angry and confused". I guess they are supposed to just sit around and sip on their herbal tea, sighing, and hoping for change. Maybe if we "hope" really hard, these bastards won't stick it to us too roughly. Perhaps we can just use our intellect to convince the political class that their raping of the nation for the last 20 years was wrong, and they'll go away quietly?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

          Were in a revolving door period. Obama got elected on a wave of disgust of government two years ago and now it's his turn. We're stuck with picking between two corrupt and anachronistic political parties. In a multiparty system both these parties would be in the dustbin of history.
          On Tuesday the GOP will crow they have a mandate just like the Democrats did two years ago. The reason they're doing well at the polls is the American people hate the Democrats more right now. It's not love for the GOP and the sentiment could turn on a dime.
          The greatest problem facing both these parties is that our economic problems are structural. The business cycle is not going to kick in in 18 months and give them the opportunity to claim the credit for the upswing. The upswing is nowhere on the horizon making the political future of many of the people getting elected tomorrow pretty bleak.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

            Anyone have the average loss of seats for a President's first mid-term election handy?

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

              Originally posted by we_are_toast View Post
              Total nonsense.

              The GOP will win big tomorrow (47 seats), but it won't be because of a repudiation of anything or a support of anything. They will win because the same 10% of the unaffiliated electorate that decides every election, is pissed off at the world and wants to punish whoever is in office. All the polls show that this is anti-incumbency, pure and simple. This is the uninformed electorate making yet another uninformed vote. Most of them can't even name their representatives much less name any issues their representative supports.

              They watched their 401K's drop, their house values drop, and their neighbor just lost his job. They have no idea what they're voting for, other than something different.



              http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...ght=demagogues

              The dark ages have now begun. The confusion, distrust, and anger can now be purchased by corporations and Oligarchs who's money has been proclaimed as speech. Pat Buchanan has done more than his share of fueling the fire and clearing the path for the demagogues to come forward and reign over our future.
              And off course the uninformed always seem to vote republican, haha. You're right that they are voting for something different and they should. The only bad thing is they are not voting for anything different. The republicrats have been in control of the country for a long time. At the core there are very small differences between the parties, especially in the way they govern.

              Originally posted by BigBagel
              Were in a revolving door period. Obama got elected on a wave of disgust of government two years ago and now it's his turn. We're stuck with picking between two corrupt and anachronistic political parties. In a multiparty system both these parties would be in the dustbin of history.
              The problem is the political insiders (democrats and republicans in government) have set up the system so that no outside party can get traction. Election laws have been changed (the mccain-feingold finance reform act) to make it harder for 3rd parties and outsiders to register, get on the ballot etc. Anyone who thinks finance reform acts are actually ment to "reform finance contributions" is incredibly naive. All they do is make it harder for the outsiders...
              Last edited by tsetsefly; November 01, 2010, 11:26 PM.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

                This is what it always comes down to....
                Douche and Turd
                Tags: SOUTH
                PARK
                more...

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

                  Originally posted by we_are_toast
                  Total nonsense.

                  The GOP will win big tomorrow (47 seats), but it won't be because of a repudiation of anything or a support of anything. They will win because the same 10% of the unaffiliated electorate that decides every election, is pissed off at the world and wants to punish whoever is in office. All the polls show that this is anti-incumbency, pure and simple. This is the uninformed electorate making yet another uninformed vote. Most of them can't even name their representatives much less name any issues their representative supports.

                  They watched their 401K's drop, their house values drop, and their neighbor just lost his job. They have no idea what they're voting for, other than something different.
                  Spoken like someone who either has low reading comprehension or didn't even read the article.

                  Buchanan is specifically saying that the Republican official position is hypocritical, and that its impending electoral success is solely due to a repudiation of the President in power.

                  Originally posted by we_are_toast
                  The dark ages have now begun. The confusion, distrust, and anger can now be purchased by corporations and Oligarchs who's money has been proclaimed as speech. Pat Buchanan has done more than his share of fueling the fire and clearing the path for the demagogues to come forward and reign over our future.
                  Uh yeah. Buchanan is the one who pushed for all those foreign adventures. The deficit spending.

                  Or not.

                  What Buchanan is - beyond the religious label successfully stuck on him by his own party - is a classic American Libertarian/isolationist.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Ole' Pat Buchanan gets it: The Republican Party will win because it is the Party of No

                    Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                    What Buchanan is - beyond the religious label successfully stuck on him by his own party - is a classic American Libertarian/isolationist.
                    In short, not a neoliberal. Hence he is marginalized....

                    (His White House past alone probably keeps him from losing his media voice altogether)

                    Comment

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