Why the GOP is a one issue party

Major points of the video:

After Sarah Palin’s speech at the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis, Palin became the life of the party, and an admittedly formidable foe to the Democrats because of her out-of-the-beltway conservatism, and has made everyone forget that party leaders are uninterested in the conservative values that she represents.

Conservatives have been uncomfortable with John McCain because of his support for capaign finance reform, opposition to drilling in ANWR, his vote against the Bush tax cuts, his suscribing to global warming histeria and his support for a bill that would have granted amnesty to illegal aliens.

However, despite McCain’s liberal positions on other issues, Republicans seem to think that he is the best man to fight the war on terror.

Rudy Giuliani and Joe Lieberman were selected to represent the party at the RNC.  Giuliani is extremely similar to Hillary Clinton in almost every area except for the war, but his ability to invoke 9/11 suddenly makes him a Republican star.  Lieberman, despite being further to the left than Obama, is also selected to speak.  Lieberman was Al Gore’s running mate in 2000.  He supports universal health care, supports partial birth abortions, he is anti-gun, and opposed Samuel Alito’s appointment to the Supreme Court.

When WTMA host Richard Todd asked Cindy Mosteller why the Republicans were embracing Joe Lieberman, she said “Because he understands the importance of 9/11.  This is a big tent party.”  However, the tent was apparently not big enough for Republican congressman and presidential candidate Dr. Ron Paul, who was not allowed normal credentials at the RNC, despite his own convention (rally for the republic which drew more than 12,000 people) discussing reducing the size of government, returning to the constitution, and bringing the Republican party back to its conservative roots, and Ron Paul being introducted by Barry Goldwater Jr. whose father, Barry Goldwater, was the conscious of the conservative movement for half a century.  Paul was not even let into the doors at his own party’s convention due to his opposition to the Iraq war, despite him getting more votes in the primaries than Rudy Guiliani and Fred Thompson, who both had speaking roles at the RNC.

When Cindy Mosteller was asked why anti war Republicans like Ron Paul, North Carolina congressman Walter Jones, or Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel are not given a voice at the convention, she replied, “If you get a tent too big it’s bound to have holes in it.”  She added, “Hagel could not even get up on a national stage and even make a case… and you know why?  Because the surge has, by God, worked.”  So much for the big tent.

You are not to be tolerated in the Republican Party if you agree with the majority of Americans who are against the war in Iraq, yet being pro gun control, pro socialized health care, pro-choice, and pro-amnesty is perfectly acceptable as long as your are pro war.  If you are a staunch conservative, yet against the war, you are no longer welcome in the Republican Party.

The definition of a neoconservative is one who believes that America’s greatness is measured exclusively by our willingness to dominate the globe politically and militarily.  For neocons, foreign policy is primary and every other issue is secondary.

The 2008 McCain campaign (and nomination) represents the takeover of the Republican Party by neoconservatives.   Sarah Palin, who once supported anti-war conservative Pat Buchanan for president, now mouths the same neoconservative foreign policy rhetoric that defines the new GOP.

Sarah Palin, like Spiro Agnew to Richard Nixon and Dan Quayle to George H.W. Bush, will be a conservative vice president who has virtually no impact on the moderate President they serve.  McCain will more likely appoint Joe Lieberman as Secretary of State than give Sarah Palin any responsibilities more important than office secretary.

The only reason McCain picked Sarah Palin as Vice President is to pacify traditional conservatives on the many issues they still care about so that in Republican victory, McCain and the neoconservatives can get to work on their only issue - War.

McBama the great deceiver

McBama
Yes, Barack Obama and John McCain are essentially the same person.  Sure, they differ on issues such as health care, the war in Iraq, and other partisan politics - but how are they similar?  McCain and Obama are both pro-immigration.  McCain and Obama both want to let the federal reserve system continue to destroy the dollar.  Both are war mongers.  Obama has advocated invading Pakistan and McCain, as everyone knows, wouldn’t mind our troops being put in harms way in Iraq for another century.   Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who thinks that 500,000 deaths of Iraqi children is “acceptable”, is on Obama’s foreign policy advisors list.   Neither Obama nor McCain would take a nuclear first-strike against Iran off the table in favor of diplomatic negotiations.  Obama and McCain both voted for the Patriot Act, which allows for needless invasion of privacy and erodes personal liberty in the name of a false sense of security.  Both Obama and McCain are members of the Council on Foreign Relations.  Obama and McCain are both in bed with and corrupted by special interests and lobbyists, despite both adamantly denying such.  McCain and Obama both support the majority of, if not every word of, the ten planks of the communist manifesto.  McCain and Obama are two sides of the same coin, two shills for global government, masquerading as opposing candidates and campaigning on wedge issues designed to avert attention away from the issues that will determine the direction of the country.   They both talk out of both sides of their mouths.  Don’t be fooled!  Read, understand, and defend the Constitution!  Please check out Chuck Baldwin for president 2008!