Sunday, September 2, 2012

Re: What I Saw at the Convention

She seems nice


She was a Lt Col

A video of her is on my YouTube Chanel BruceMajors

On Saturday, September 1, 2012, Keith In Tampa <keithintampa@gmail.com> wrote:
> I can't stand John Sununu, but I imagine I would have the same dislike for Karen Kwiatkowski.....
>
> On Sat, Sep 1, 2012 at 3:20 PM, MJ <michaelj@america.net> wrote:
>
> "This convention convened nothing and decided nothing. Onerous security, unhealthy and overpriced concession food in the Forum, the moment-by-moment scripting of the convention speeches, and the pervasive fear of the liberty and constitution segment of the crowd is what we will remember. Ten fat men in a room built that.
> "These devils dancing on the head of a pin ultimately amount to very little. What these men built isn't good, doesn't work, and won't sell. Their so-called conservative message – saving welfare programs to be paid for by unborn Americans, fighting wars on the other side of the world on borrowed money, cutting imaginary out-year federal budgets and calling that constitutional government – is falling flat."
>
> What I Saw at the Convention
> by Karen Kwiatkowski
>
> I spent a day of my life at the 2012 Republican Convention. The plan was to stay for full four days, but the choreographed and staged "decision-making" made the 2,000 plus delegates irrelevant. Republican Party members hoping to see democracy in action were left staring at a fuzzy gray screen, listening to static, beating their heads against padded white walls. No free man would subject himself to such idiocy. As Doug Wead so delightfully put it, the party has been reduced to "ten fat men sitting in a room."
>
> One of these fat men is John Sununu. Watching him on Tuesday afternoon steamroll the wishes of half of the delegate floor, and destroy what was left of the integrity of the GOP, I was strongly reminded of Nurse Ratched running the floor at the Salem State Hospital. In One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Ratched dominates her fiefdom sternly, with her contempt for her charges oozing with her every smirk, and every command. This evil queen saw criminality in a raised eyebrow, revolution in a meek request for equality. Punishment for dissenters would be quick, overwhelming, and comprehensive. John Sununu's totalitarianism was on display, and his goal seemed obvious: the literal and figurative lobotomy of the constitutional and liberty movement within the party.
>
> As with the Salem State Hospital, the world of the RNC convention, the world of ten fat men, their sycophants and enablers, is a small place, removed from natural law, and removed from the reality of America. This is the real blessing – we can and are walking away. Millions of us are literally and figuratively walking away from the kabuki theater of neoconservative statism posing as a popular problem solving. We can do this!
>
> If our own party's Nurse Ratched didn't frighten from the stage, we have Romney campaign lawyer and strategist Benjamin Ginsburg orchestrating totalitarianism from behind the curtains. He has been called a bête noire of the Tea Party, but he's really just a lawyer – the very kind of lawyer that Clint Eastwood was talking about.
>
> Romney's advisors include all manner of warfare-welfare statists. I'm not naming all the names here, but I think the flat and poorly received speech by head neoconservative statist John McCain said it all. The GOP media, notably on talk radio, carefully avoided all mention of McCain after his dismal and eye-darting display of war promotion as republicanism. If he isn't the original Manchurian Candidate, he'll certainly do.
>
> The ten fat men in the room rarely get up in front of the people, and they certainly don't take questions. The convention speakers were instead front men and women, and except for Clint Eastwood, all heavily scripted and controlled. I have one thing to say about the presentations given by the array of bright, handsome, pretty, clean and coiffed "conservative" speakers paraded before the podium for four days. They didn't build that! The lack of passion in the speeches, and the restrained audience response to them, indicated that they knew that none of them really owned the message. That's how democratic centralism works.
>
> Observers, attendees, and the

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