DaisypathAnniversary Years Ticker
Photo Albums at WiddlyTinks.com
Scrapbooking Ideas Photo Tinks by WiddlyTinks.com

Lili-bug

Sunday, November 02, 2008

The following excerpt is from: http://www.heraldextra.com

IN OUR VIEW: Barack Obama's socialist agenda

Daily Herald

Some have accused Sen. Barack Obama of being a socialist. But the truth may be worse.
A regular socialist would at least have the guts to clearly label his policy of nationalizing industries.
Obama and the Democrats appear to be seeking this goal by stealth.
True socialists just want to run the economy.
Obama and his allies have their eyes on your freedom.
Whatever tag is hung on Obama, his election would herald a massive redistribution of wealth and power to the government. If jobs are created, they will be government jobs, which do not create wealth but only spend taxpayers' money.

The candidate himself has been intoning with moderation. But the truth began to surface in his passing comment to "Joe the Plumber."
At an Ohio campaign appearance, Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, the plumber told Obama he was worried that the Democrat's tax proposals would prevent him from buying the business that he works for. Obama's reply was that he wanted to "spread the wealth around."
The candidate's far-left reputation was further reinforced after an interview surfaced from a Chicago radio station.

In it Obama lamented that the Supreme Court had "never ventured into the issues of redistribution of wealth, and of more basic issues such as political and economic justice in society." He said it was "one of the tragedies of the civil rights movement" that it lost track "of the political and community organizing and activities on the ground that are able to put together the actual coalition of powers through which you bring about redistributive change."
"Redistributive change" is jargon for government seizure of wealth, followed by handouts to selected social causes. And Obama is all for redistribution of your money.

The National Journal has rated Obama as the most liberal U.S. senator -- more liberal than Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an open socialist.

Look, for instance, at Obama's tax plans.
He is touting tax cuts for 95 percent of Americans.
But that is mathematically impossible. As the Tax Foundation has pointed out, 40 percent of the population pays no income taxes. That means a President Obama would be sending handouts averaging $2,000 to millions of people.
How will he get it?

By taxing the upper 5 percent.
History shows that this is financial suicide. To state what should be obvious, the rich pay their way. The richest 5 percent pay 60 percent of all income taxes.
Moreover, tax increases inflict their biggest harm not on Wall Street sharks but on productive small businesses.

Some estimates indicate that the Obama plan would raise taxes on 1.3 million small businesses (like Joe the Plumber's) that do so much to drive economic growth.
Discourage entrepreneurs from pursuing their dreams, and you'll kill jobs.

Obama's tax schemes will spread not the wealth but the pain.

But it doesn't stop there.
Obama and the Democrats plan to let the Bush tax cuts expire in 2010, which means a tax increase for you.
The senator doesn't count the tax cut expiration as a tax hike, but that's exactly what it is.
The tax question is but one example of what Obama's "redistributive justice" would mean.

What he and his fellow Democrats really want to redistribute is freedom, from abolishing secret ballots in organized labor to a reinstitution of the outmoded Fairness Doctrine to suppress conservative views on radio and broadcast TV.
In the early days of electronic media, the Federal Communications Commission ruled that broadcasters who give opinions on the airwaves must give equal time to opposing opinions.

The first result was that TV and radio stations shied away from any but the blandest ideas.
The second was that politicians used the rule to intimidate their political opponents. Overall, the public marketplace of ideas was diminished.
The Reagan Administration scuttled the Fairness Doctrine because the airwaves had become just one of many ways to get out a message. The proliferation of cable, satellite and Internet, for example, have created an abundance of channels over which virtually any opinion can be conveyed.
The Democrats want to reinstitute the Fairness Doctrine to shut down popular conservative radio commentators like Rush Limbaugh. The move would disproportionately affect conservative programming because liberal talk shows have relatively small audiences. Liberalism just doesn't compete well in the market of ideas.

Don't start thinking that the courts will protect you.
With a liberal Congress, Obama will be able to push through his judges of choice.
The liberal media and the government bureaucracy will be egging him on. There's little he could not do if he wished, and by all indications he wishes a lot.
Imagine, for example, Hillary Clinton on the Supreme Court engaging in "redistributive justice," and the federal government managing your health care.

Make no mistake: Obamaism aspires to dominate American life.

As Obama said himself in a revealing moment: "If you're going to be in the way of change, get out of the way - we're pushing you aside. Very politely of course. That's how we win elections."

Even now, more indications of Obama's real attitudes are bubbling up.
The Los Angeles Times holds a videotape that reportedly shows Obama raising a toast to former PLO mouthpiece Rashid Khalidi at a party in Chicago.
Khalidi was closely connected to unsavory characters in the Middle East, including sponsors of terrorism. (Denials of Khalidi's connections are conclusively debunked at
http://obamatoast.notlong.com)
Looking on as Obama raised his glass were two familiar cronies -- Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn, who were part of the domestic terror group that bombed the New York Police Department, the U.S. Capitol and the Pentagon in the 1970s.

More will likely be revealed about Obama after the election.
A theory has been advanced, for example, that Ayers, the domestic terrorist, was the ghostwriter of Obama's memoir, "Dreams From My Father."
The common linguistic threads identified by Purdue Ph.D. Jack Cashill are too strong to be ignored. (See http://obamabook.notlong.com for Cashill's analysis.)
Before 1990, when Barack Obama signed the deal to write his book, he had written close to nothing.

Then, five years later, this untested 33-year-old produced what Time Magazine called -- with a straight face -- "the best-written memoir ever produced by an American politician."
The book is infused with Ayers's distinctive literary style.

The only question now is which distinctive style Americans will send to the White House.
If it's Obama, brace yourself for a major push toward a socialist America that leaves Franklin Roosevelt in the dust.

This is a scary, scary election.
As anyone who knows me knows, I AM NOT A POLITICAL PERSON. I try NOT to watch the news, I shy away from any political discussions, I just don't like it at all.
However, in light of the vast changes that this election may bring about, I can't not share the truth.
I can't sit by and passively let a major catastrophe take place in this country without trying to do what I can to help to put things to light.

Democrat, Republican, whatever.

I just want this country to remain the greatest country in the world.

God Bless America.

now off to cling to my guns and religion...both of which I'm still able to do. at this point...

2 Comments:

At 8:40 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

More bad news today;


Obama Holds 6-Point Average Lead Over McCain in Polls (Update2)

By Jonathan D. Salant and Joe Sobzcyk

Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Barack Obama has an average lead of 6.4 percentage points over John McCain in national polls with two days left in the presidential campaign.

Polls released in the last week showed the Democratic candidate with leads ranging from three points in a Fox News survey to 13 points in a CBS News poll. The average of polls compiled by Real Clear Politics shows that Obama has been ahead between five and eight points since the beginning of October.

``Obama's is a campaign about gaining a lead and then holding it,'' said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University in New Jersey. ``McCain's last two weeks have not changed this. Most important, the context of the election has remained the same -- an economy in crisis -- so it is hard to get those numbers to move.''

After pulling ahead of Obama in some polls following the Republican National Convention in the first week of September, McCain's support slid as the financial crisis deepened, with voters considering Obama better able to manage the economy.

That trend has been reflected in the so-called battleground states where the presidential election will be decided.

Ohio

In Ohio, which no Republican has ever lost and still won the presidency, 50 percent of registered voters surveyed in an Oct. 25-27 Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times poll said they trusted Obama to make the right decisions about the economy compared with 38 percent who backed McCain. The poll showed Obama leading by nine percentage points over McCain in Ohio.

A Columbus Dispatch poll released today showed Obama has a six-point lead, virtually identical to the seven-point lead he held a month ago. If the Illinois senator's lead of 52 percent to 46 percent in the Dispatch poll holds, he will become the first Democrat to win more than 50 percent of the Ohio vote since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, according to the newspaper.

Obama also holds an advantage in other contested states, including Virginia, New Mexico, Colorado and Nevada, all of which were won by Republican George W. Bush in 2004.

A Denver Post poll released today shows Obama holding a lead of 49 percent to 44 percent for McCain among likely voters in Colorado, with unaffiliated voters -- who make up more than a third of the electorate -- backing the Democrat 57 percent to 32 percent.

Pennsylvania

Even so, McCain has pulled closer to Obama in Pennsylvania, according to an Oct. 30 Rasmussen poll. Pennsylvania and New Hampshire are two states won by 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in which McCain is still actively campaigning. The Republican nominee campaigned in Pennsylvania yesterday and plans to hold a rally in New Hampshire later today.

The Rasmussen poll of 700 likely voters conducted Nov. 1 gave Obama a 52 percent to 46 percent lead in Pennsylvania, compared with 53-46 four days earlier. The poll has a 4 percent margin of error.

In New Hampshire, a WMUR/University of New Hampshire poll released yesterday showed Obama with 52 percent support among likely voters compared with 41 percent for McCain. The poll, taken Oct. 29-31, surveyed 549 voters and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points.

Indiana

In Indiana, a state that hasn't backed a Democratic presidential nominee since 1964, Obama and McCain were tied at 47 percent. The survey of 900 likely voters taken Oct. 27-29 by the Downs Center for Indiana Politics at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne had a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points. Obama campaigned Oct. 31 in Gary, Indiana, speaking to a crowd of about 45,000 at a nighttime rally.

The final Richmond Times-Dispatch poll showed Obama leading McCain 47 percent to 44 percent in Virginia, with nine percent of voters undecided. Because Obama's advantage is within the poll's margin of error -- plus or minus 4 percentage points --- the contest in Virginia can be considered about even, the paper said.

McCain, 72, is in close races with Obama in Florida, North Carolina and North Dakota. Those states were won by Bush in the last election, and the Republican candidate needs to win them Nov. 4 in order to have a chance of gaining the 270 Electoral College votes required to win the presidency.

National Polls

In national polls, Obama led McCain, 51 percent to 43 percent in a Gallup daily tracking poll of those deemed likely to cast ballots based on past voting behavior and current intentions.

Obama led 49 percent to 47 percent in a Gallup poll taken Oct. 25-27, before his 30-minute ad was broadcast on network and cable channels on Oct. 29. The latest survey was taken Oct. 30 - Nov. 1 among 2,503 likely voters and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

A CBS poll released yesterday showed Obama's lead even wider, with 54 percent support to 41 percent for McCain. The poll, taken Oct. 28-31, surveyed 747 likely voters. Among the one-fifth of voters who already cast ballots, 57 percent voted for Obama and 38 percent backed McCain, according to the poll.

A Rasmussen daily tracking poll of 3,000 likely voters taken Oct. 29-31 gave Obama a 51 percent to 46 percent lead, with a margin of error of 2.0 percentage points.

And a survey by the Poughkeepsie, New York-based Marist College Institute for Public Opinion put Obama ahead of McCain, 50 percent to 43 percent. The poll of 543 likely voters taken Oct. 29 had a margin of error of 4.5 percentage points.

The latest CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey, the last before the election, showed 53 percent of likely voters saying they back Obama, while 46 percent support McCain. Obama's lead in this poll has ranged from five to nine points over the last month.

`Complacency'

``The main thing I worry about is complacency,'' David Axelrod, the chief strategist for the Obama campaign, said in an interview on ``This Week'' on ABC. ``If we are casual about this and we don't go to the polls and make our voices heard, then we could get a result that the polls don't project. That's why we're hopscotching all over the country.''

The Fox poll of likely voters found that 47 percent would vote for Obama and 44 percent for McCain if the election were held today. In a similar poll on Oct. 20 and 21, McCain trailed by 9 percentage points.

The Fox poll of 924 registered voters was conducted Oct. 28- 29 and had a margin of error of 3.0 percentage points.

 
At 11:51 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good for you taking on being a politcal advocate! However, and I'm sure this might not sway your positions, but perhaps before you share such delightful webposts in your quest to "can't not share the truth" try a google search to fact check some of these claims. Really - Obama is going to turn our country into a socialist government?? A mighty claim from Sarah Palin that is 'pants on fire' inaccurate - click on http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/826/ on Politifact.com to see the basis of the claim and how it is being distorted.

And if you search out the "Fairness Doctrine" you'll find an article from John Eggerton of 'Broadcasting & Cable' which quotes Obama's senior aide as follows "Sen. Obama does not support reimposing the Fairness Doctrine on broadcasters," press secretary Michael Ortiz said in an e-mail to B&C late Wednesday.
"He considers this debate to be a distraction from the conversation we should be having about opening up the airwaves and modern communications to as many diverse viewpoints as possible," Ortiz added. "That is why Sen. Obama supports media-ownership caps, network neutrality, public broadcasting, as well as increasing minority ownership of broadcasting and print outlets."

You are correct - this election has become 'scary', but mostly because of fear tactics and smear campaigns that distract from the real problems that this country is enduring right now. Will it really be such a terrible US to live in if our middle class thrives again? If we put in place policies to help our enviroment? If we strive to have adequate health coverage for all Americans and encourage preventative medicine rather than letting the insurance & drug companies lobby lawmakers to only help their interests?

Eight years ago I did vote for George W. because I believed that he would bring about reform and instill diginity to our country. That has not happened - we now have a greater debt, a loss of respect in the eyes of the world, and a larger gap between classes.

So, good for you that you are becoming more interested, and certainly get out there and vote - just be an informed voter.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home

get a free web page counter here
website-hit-counters.com