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Thread: Rick Perry

  1. #26
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    ^
    Katrina's are a once in a 30 year event and the Galveston hurricane that killed more folks - the worst natural disaster in America was >100 years ago.

    Back on topic:

    Governor Rick Perry thundered into first place the same week he announced his candidacy for president.



    It’s all about Texas jobs, jobs jobs.
    He can make ‘em. Obama can’t
    A Deplorable Bitter Clinger

  2. #27
    I don't know barbaro's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jesus Jones View Post
    And i just love how the media is ignoring Ron Paul despite coming in the top 2 in the straw poll!
    Yes, no doubt about it.

    Bachmann beat Ron Paul by 152 votes.

    He's partly ignored and GOP establishment because he stands up to the Military Industrial Complex, and also wants to troops to return to the US.

    Go Ron Paul!

  3. #28
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Maybe since Perry is in the spotlight now, he’ll have a chance to answer a few questions,……..

    1. Would a real Tea Partier back a massive, $175B infrastructure project, which would make it easier for Mexican trucks to enter the United States?

    2. Would a real Tea Partier, by executive fiat, force all 11 and 12-year old girls living in the nation’s second largest state to receive an STD vaccine?

    3. Would a real Tea Partier run up massive deficits, then balance the state’s budget with $6.6B of Obama’s stimulus?

    4. Would a real Tea Partier give illegal immigrants in-state tuition?

    5. Would a real Tea Partier face a primary challenge from an actual Tea Partier?

    Link: Five Questions for the Tea Party about Rick Perry’s Presidential Candidacy | Firedoglake


    And 10 weird Perry ideas that everyone should know (from his book),…….


    — 10. Social Security Is Evil: According to Perry Social Security is “by far the best example” of a program “violently tossing aside any respect for our founding principles.” (page 48)

    — 9. Private Enterprise Blossomed Under Conscription and Wartime Price Controls: Not only does he argue that the New Deal failed to end the Great Depression, but he asserts “recovery did not come until World War II, when FDR was finally persuaded to unleash private enterprise.” (page 48)

    — 8. Medicare Is Too Expensive But Must Never Be Cut: Both establishing Medicare in 1965 and expanding it to include prescription drugs in 2003 are examples of “an irresponsible culture of spending in Washington” (page 63), but establishing “‘councils of experts’ and panels of various sorts” to assess the cost effectiveness of different Medicare-eligible treatments is a “frightening” “scheme” that “undermines freedom” and can be fairly labeled “death panels” (page 81).

    — 7. All Bank Regulation Is Unconstitutional: Criticizing the Security and Exchange Commission’s rulemaking process under the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill, Perry asserts that “if the Constitution were shown the appropriate respect, Washington regulation writers wouldn’t have to worry about underrepresented views, because they wouldn’t have control over them in the first place” (page 94).

    — 6. Consumer Financial Protection Is Unconstitutional: Further reiterates his view that all federal financial regulation is illegitimate, listing the SEC on page 44 as part of a “federal alphabet soup” in which “undemocratic unelected Washington bureaucrats” are “now (dubiously) empowered to dictate their own preferences to the American people.”

    — 5. Almost Everything Is Unconstitutional: Regrets the existence of jurisprudence construing the Commerce Clause to permit “federal laws regulating the environment, regulating guns, protecting civil rights, establishing the massive programs and Medicare and Medicaid, creating national minimum wage laws, [and] establishing national labor laws.” Perry makes a partial exception for laws barring racial discrimination which he says fulfill “the intent behind the passage of the Reconstruction Era amendments.” (page 51)

    — 4. Federal Education Policy Is Unconstitutional: Cites the willingness of Republicans to vote for reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act as a “perfect example” of “losing sight of the fact that perfectly laudable policy choices at the local level are not appropriate (much less constitutional) at the federal level.” (page 87)

    — 3. Al Gore Is Part Of A Conspiracy To Deny The Existence Of Global Cooling: Jokes that the Social Security Trust Fund “must be somewhere in Al Gore’s lockbox, right next to his notes from inventing the Internet and that global cooling data he doesn’t want anyone to see” (page 60). Argues that moderates oppose curbing greenhouse gas emissions because “they know that we have been experiencing a cooling trend” (page 92).

    — 2. Not Only Is Everything Unconstitutional, Activist Judges Are A Problem: Having called the majority of the duly enacted modern welfare state and federal regulatory apparatus unconstitutional, Perry pivots to the complaint that “the [Supreme] court too often chooses to take it upon itself to govern and to develop policy” (page 114).

    — 1. The Civil War Was Caused By Slaveowners Trampling On Northern States’ Rights: Rather than simply citing chattel slavery as an exemption to his “states’ rights are good” principle, Perry argues that slaveholder activism in the 1850s was an example of big government federal overreach. “In many ways it was was the northern states whose sovereignty was violated in the run-up to the Civil War,” he argues, citing the Fugitive Slave Act and completely ignoring the human rights of the enslaved African-Americans of the south. He says “we can never know what would have happened in the absence of federal involvement,” ignoring again the fact that federalism would have bought peace at the price of continued slavery.

    he is, out there: The Ten Weirdest Ideas In Rick Perry’s ‘Fed Up’ | ThinkProgress
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  4. #29
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    it's the media in america who
    decide who's gonna be president,,yes ?
    never the people's choice.

    i always get the feeling that merkin politicians
    have been asleep for the last 40 years
    that vacant look with no real bright ideas or charisma
    they remind me of The Munsters.
    wait a minute: they had charisma.

  5. #30
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    The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 is to date the deadliest natural disaster ever to strike the United States. One benefit of a gay Texan may be to ensure the Soccer mum has no chance of being America's biggest disaster

  6. #31
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Yesterday I was reading an article on a conservative site (about how conservatives should keep Perry at arms length) and saw this in the comment section,………


    Expand Want to meet the REAL Rick Perry?

    Please allow me.

    Rick Perry was named as one of the worst governors in the nation for his history of ethical problems by the group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

    Along with his contention that Social Security, Medicare and most other entitlements are Unconstitutional, he thinks as well that the earth is 6,000 years old.. that women were created out of Adams rib... that the Statue of Liberty is part of an evil, secular, French Freemason agenda.... oh, and he feels that Constitution is in line with the notion that this is a "Christian Nation".

    His dogmatic devotion to these "Christian" ideals didn't seem to have been sullied when, after inheriting a ten BILLION dollar deficit from George W Bush (who was quoted as saying as he left office, "I'm glad I'm not the one to have to clean this mess up") immediately threw 161,000 children off of the "S-Chip" Program.. an insurance initiatlve that covered disadvantaged and handicapped kids... causing most of them to suffer even more, leaving many thousands of them hungry, hopeless and hundreds more of them to just lay down and die.

    He also thinks that it's OK to execute people even after their innocence was proven... and didn't blink an eye when, days before an expert was to give testimony, he rearranged the board at the Texas Forensic Science Commission to appoint one of his top lieutenants, John Bradley, as the new Chair. Bradley immediately canceled a hearing on the death of Cameron Todd Willingham, a man who was executed without having committed the crime he was accused of. There were at least 3 others who suffered the same fate.

    I'm sure the 'merciful Jesus' he prays to would be thrilled that he (and his cadre of 'Banana Republicans') hijacked millions of dollars from Texas' Electric Bill Assistance Fund.. money set aside to help pay summer electric bills for low-income residents... during the worst drought and heat wave in memory.

    And.. as Jesus healed the sick, Perry feels it is his righteous duty to 'lay hands' on every 6th Grade girl in Texas to begin undergoing a Gardasil vaccination series for the sexually-transmitted HPV virus... in fact, he issued an Executive Order in 2007 mandating just that... except it turned out to be a brother-in-law deal with his Merck lobbyist friends and former Chiefs of Staff.

    He also enacted a mandatory-sonogram-for-abortions law in Texas.... even for victims of rape and incest. This procedure must be accomplished via a procedure called a "Transvaginal Probe", in which a large "device" is wrapped in a condom and inserted into the vagina... basically a second rape, and it costs the patient between $100 - $400 to boot.

    I'm sure the Lord is reserving a special place in Heaven for his assistance.

    He seems to think it's perfectly fine that friends and donors whom he appointed to the Texas Teacher Retirement System Board (TRS) steered hundreds of millions of dollars set aside for educators -- and millions in fees -- right back to the firms run by his campaign donors.

    It seems that 'lying' is in sync with his embrace of the Ten Commandments as well.

    In 2007, Texans learned of of a massive sex abuse scandal at the Texas Youth Commission. When news of the scandal broke, Perry claimed he knew nothing about the abuse until he saw it in the paper. In fact, he and his office were informed of a stalled investigation into the abuse as early as February 2005, two years before news reports first came out.

    He didn't question any issues of "Constitutionality" when he coordinated with two business partners to flip land he had purchased and sold in order to profit more than $500,000. He covered-up this scandal by refusing to release the public listing agreement, attempting to hide the identity of the land buyer and hiding the fact that the buyer was a business partner with the original seller.

    He had no problem as he handed out $16 million in taxpayer dollars from the Texas Emerging Technology Fund to companies tied to his top political contributors... the public corruption scandal showed that he gave his “close friend” and campaign contributor David Nance a $4.5 million handout, despite the fact that Nance side-stepped two review boards to receive it.

    He feels that it was absolutely fine when he covered-up and refused to answer ethics complaints involving more than $1 million in potentially illegal state expenditures. One complaint zeroed in on the $816,000 in campaign dollars, reported in lump sums, for what Perry calls "mansion expenses." For months, Perry reported a flat monthly expense ranging from $3,000 or $6,500 as "mansion expenses" without any supporting detail -- a violation of campaign disclosure laws. The expenses were for Perry’s $10,000-a-month taxpayer funded rental mansion. Additionally, Perry failed to disclose $204,400 in debt on his College Station home from 2007-2009.

    He had no compunction in covering up Texas’ dropout crisis, pushing false dropout numbers to hide the fact that at least 4 in 10 Texas high school students do not graduate from high school or get a GED in four years.

    The Governor was just fine with his refusal to come to grips and be honest about the $27 billion budget shortfall facing the state of Texas.... a budget crisis which is devastating their economy (and will for many years).... a shortfall which is now “proportionately larger” than California’s.

    His ability to lie even about the "Texas Jobs Miracle" is unsurpassed....

    After belching out the old meme that "Government doesn't create jobs"... most that he touted were (you guessed it) Government jobs... but due to his 'brilliance', layoffs are looming.State budget cuts, championed by Mr. Perry to address a big budget shortfall, are prompting school districts around the state to lay off hundreds of teachers and other workers going into the school year starting next month.

    Those jobs seem to be expendable.

    What is not expendable, it seems, is the $25 Million in State funds so that Rick and his pal BJ "Red" McCombs (co-founder of the ultra-conservative, quasi-evangelical Clear Channel Communications) wants to build a (get this) Formula One Racetrack in Austin.. an additional $4 Million possibly coughed up by the city itself while "Formula One" is promoted nationwide.

    $25 Million could pay for 500 teachers at an annual salary of $48,000.00

    It stands to reason that a swaggering Texan would know that it is a good idea to look a gift horse in the mouth. Rick Perry rejected $555 million in unemployment insurance from the federal government, only to accept $14 billion in other federal stimulus dollars (directed at his friends and donors in business... the "job creators").

    It seems that the closeted secessionist didn't mind the Federal Government stuffing his cronies' pockets... hypocrisy being the least of his shortcomings.

    The truth of the matter is that Texas actually lost 352,500 non-farm jobs since 2008 according to seasonally adjusted data over the past three years... and they lost 61,600 additional since March 2011 alone according to the Texas Workforce Commission.

    The only "Miracle" is that this degenerate hasn't yet been struck by lightning.

    Texas standings against all 50 states on a variety of issues (1st means highest ranking, 50th means lowest ranking).

    • State Aid Per Pupil in Average Daily Attendance – 47th
    • Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) Scores – 45th
    • % of Population 25 and Older with High School Diploma – 50th
    • High School Graduation Rate – 43rd
    • Per Capita State Spending on State Arts Agencies – 43rd
    • Birth Rate – 2nd
    • Percent of Uninsured Children – 1st
    • Percent of Children Living in Poverty – 4th
    • Percent of Population Uninsured – 1st
    • Percent of Non-Elderly Uninsured – 1st
    • Percent of Low Income Population Covered by Medicaid – 49th
    • Percent of Population with Employer-Based Health Insurance – 48th
    • Total Health Expenditures as % of the Gross State Product – 43rd
    • Per Capita State Spending on Mental Health – 50th
    • Per Capita State Spending on Medicaid – 49th
    • Health Care Expenditures per Capita – 44th
    • Physicians per Capita – 42nd
    • Registered Nurses per Capita – 44th
    • Average Monthly Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) Benefits per Person – 47th
    • Percent of Population Who Visit the Dentist – 46th
    • Overall Birth Rate – 2nd
    • Teenage Birth Rate – 7th
    • Births to Unmarried Mothers – 17th
    • Percent of Women with Pre-Term Birth – 9th
    • Percent of Non-Elderly Women with Health Insurance – 50th
    • Rate of Women Aged 40+ Who Receive Mammograms – 40th
    • Cervical Cancer Rate – 11th
    • Percent of Women with High Blood Pressure – 16th
    • Percent of Pregnant Women Receiving Prenatal Care in First Trimester – 50th
    • Women’s Voter Registration – 45th
    • Women’s Voter Turnout – 49th
    • Percent of Women Living in Poverty – 6th
    • Mortgage Debt as Percent of Home Value – 47th
    • Foreclosure Rates – 10th
    • Median Net Worth of Households – 47th
    • Average Credit Score – 49th
    • Retirement Plan Participation – 47th
    • Amount of Carbon Dioxide Emissions – 1st
    • Amount of Volatile Organic Compounds Released into Air – 1st
    • Amount of Toxic Chemicals Released into Water – 1st
    • Amount of Recognized Cancer-Causing Carcinogens Released into Air – 1st
    • Amount of Hazardous Waste Generated – 1st
    • Amount of Toxic Chemicals Released into Air – 5th
    • Amount of Recognized Cancer-Causing Carcinogens Released into Water – 7th
    • Number of Hazardous Waste Sites on National Priority List – 7th
    • Consumption of Energy per Capita – 5th
    • Workers’ Compensation Coverage – 50th
    • Income Inequality Between the Rich and the Poor – 9th
    • Income Inequality Between the Rich and the Middle Class – 5th
    • Homeowner’s Insurance Affordability – 46th
    • Number of Executions – 1st

    link: Conservatives should keep Perry at arm's length | Campaign 2012

  7. #32
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Oh my. The mudslinging gets worse.

    A full-page ad paid for by a supporter of Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul in the Austin Chronicle asks, "Have you ever had sex with Rick Perry?"

    Ron Paul Supporter's Ad Asks, 'Have You Ever Had Sex With Rick Perry?'

    link to the ad:

    http://images.salon.com/news/politic...orrowadbig.jpg

    Will a Rick Perry boyfriend soon make an appearance? Is there a reward offered?

  8. #33
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    So who's the empty suit really :-

    Rick Perry Is a Socialist in a Secessionist Costume

    Despite all of these remarks (and others that I don't have room for here), Rick Perry is responsible for Texas being the second biggest state recipient of ACCA stimulus dollars -- ostensibly "redistributed" from tax payers in Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York and the president's home state of Hawaii.

    In 2010, Perry was confronting a state budget deficit of $6.6 billion. A constitutional amendment mandated that Perry balance the budget somehow, but instead of using a "rainy day" fund established with state money, Perry decided to tap a different source to fill the void. The stimulus. According to Politifact, Perry and the Republican-controlled Texas legislature requested, received and used $6.4 billion in stimulus money to help balance the budget. 97 percent of the budget shortfall was filled with stimulus money.

    There's more.

    In addition to the $6.4 billion to balance Rick Perry's budget deficits, Texas also used $5.7 billion in stimulus money in 2010 for "programs such as highway and bridge construction, child care development programs and weatherization assistance."

    That's a total of $12,100,000,000 in total stimulus money for Rick Perry's Texas in one year alone. Nearly seven percent of the total Texas budget in 2010 was stimulus money. That's a lot of "principle" being "tossed out the window."

    Bob Cesca: Rick Perry Is a Socialist in a Secessionist Costume


    He's got some great speechwriters (like Obama), but I think Ricks lies will catch him out. My moneys on Romney.

    Must admit, this was a catchy slogan for his base-
    “I’ll work every day to try to make Washington, D.C., as inconsequential in your life as I can”
    Just happens to be a porkie though. Then again, hows that hopey changey stuff working for you?

  9. #34
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    Perry: “I Love My Country More Than I Care About Obama’s Feelings”



    Texas Gov. Rick Perry, campaigning in the Granite State next door to Mitt Romney’s home state and Barack Obama’s preferred vacation spot, fired broadsides at both of his top rivals yesterday — with a jab at Romneycare and an unrepentant vow to keep speaking his mind no matter what the president thinks about it.“The rhetoric will probably get heated. I’m going to be outspoken, I’m going to be passionate, I’m going to be calling it like I see it,” Perry told the Herald in a one-on-one interview, as he shrugged off Obama’s recent scolding that he should be “more careful” about what he says.
    “And if I hurt the president’s feelings, well, with all due respect, I love my country and I love future generations more than I care about his feelings,” the 61-year-old governor added.
    Perry, who embraced the Tea Party even before GOP presidential hopeful Michele Bachmann, also brushed off Democratic attempts to paint him as a marginal candidate.
    “It’s the height of hypocrisy for this president to call anyone a marginal performer. If anyone is a marginal performer, it’s him. He has downgraded the good name and credit of this country,” Perry said. “Talk about someone who has marginalized America.”


    Put up your Mitts! - BostonHerald.com

  10. #35
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    http://blog.buzzflash.com/node/12956

    Rick Perry's board's 10-5 party-line rejection of a standard requiring students to learn that the nation's Founders "protected religious freedom by barring government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion over all others."
    Before that amendment was rejected, board member Cynthia Dunbar, a graduate of Pat Robertson's Regent University Law School, argued that the Founding Fathers didn't intend to separate church and state, but rather did intend to promote religion. The board approved her revisions, which included cutting Thomas Jefferson (author of the Declaration of Independence and promoter of the phrase "wall of separation between church and state"), and replacing him with religious figures such as St. Thomas Aquinas and John Calvin.
    That this historical and constitutional revisionism comes from people who fancy themselves faithful to the founding fathers might appear to be evidence of historical psychoses. Unfortunately, such mental impairment in relation to the facts of America's revolutionary foundation will affect generations of students in Texas, and around the nation. That is because Texas is such a large school book market that publishers often adapt their textbooks to the Lone Star State standards, instead of creating separate editions for the rest of the nation.
    It's also possible, as at least one analyst has noted, that Jefferson was removed from the curriculum because he was a deist, as were many of the great minds of the Enlightenment.


    Perry's appointed education board wants creation taught in schools & has eliminated Thomas jefferson from Texas high school text books
    as long as there are tests, there will be prayers in public schools.

    US political pondering: what % of CO2 deniers are also birthers who believe kangaroos walked to the ark

  11. #36
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    Quote Originally Posted by FlyFree View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by foreigner View Post
    Texas is such a large school book market that publishers often adapt their textbooks to the Lone Star State standards

    Comic books one presumes.
    the really concerning part is that because Texas has such a large population publishers cater to texas' board of education thus texas texts are used by other states.

    we know they have won when on the jeopardy game show:
    "This geologic feature was formed in 40 days"
    "What is the grand canyon"

  12. #37
    Thailand Expat Hampsha's Avatar
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    Seven ways Rick Perry wants to change the Constitution | The Ticket - Yahoo! News

    1. Abolish lifetime tenure for federal judges by amending Article III, Section I of the Constitution
    The nation's framers established a federal court system whereby judges with "good behavior" would be secure in their job for life. Perry believes that provision is ready for an overhaul.

    "The Judges," reads Article III, "both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behavior, and shall, at stated Times, receive for their Services a Compensation which shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office."

    Perry makes it no secret that he believes the judges on the bench over the past century have acted beyond their constitutional bounds. The problem, Perry reasons, is that members of the judiciary are "unaccountable" to the people, and their lifetime tenure gives them free license to act however they want. In his book, the governor speaks highly of plans to limit their tenure and offers proposals about how to accomplish it.

    "'[W]e should take steps to restrict the unlimited power of the courts to rule over us with no accountability," he writes in Fed Up! "There are a number of ideas about how to do this . . . . One such reform would be to institute term limits on what are now lifetime appointments for federal judges, particularly those on the Supreme Court or the circuit courts, which have so much power. One proposal, for example, would have judges roll off every two years based on seniority."

    2. Congress should have the power to override Supreme Court decisions with a two-thirds vote.
    Ending lifetime tenure for federal justices isn't the only way Perry has proposed suppressing the power of the courts. His book excoriates at length what he sees as overreach from the judicial branch. (The title of Chapter Six is "Nine Unelected Judges Tell Us How to Live.")

    Giving Congress the ability to veto their decisions would be another way to take the Court down a notch, Perry says.

    "[A]llow Congress to override the Supreme Court with a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate, which risks increased politicization of judicial decisions, but also has the benefit of letting the people stop the Court from unilaterally deciding policy," he writes.

    3. Scrap the federal income tax by repealing the Sixteenth Amendment.

    The Sixteenth Amendment gives Congress the "power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration." It should be abolished immediately, Perry says.
    Calling the Sixteenth Amendment "the great milestone on the road to serfdom," Perry's writes that it provides a virtually blank check to the federal government to use for projects with little or no consultation from the states.

    4. End the direct election of senators by repealing the Seventeenth Amendment.

    Overturning this amendment would restore the original language of the Constitution, which gave state legislators the power to appoint the members of the Senate.

    Ratified during the Progressive Era in 1913 , the same year as the Sixteenth Amendment, the Seventeenth Amendment gives citizens the ability to elect senators on their own. Perry writes that supporters of the amendment at the time were "mistakenly" propelled by "a fit of populist rage."

    "The American people mistakenly empowered the federal government during a fit of populist rage in the early twentieth century by giving it an unlimited source of income (the Sixteenth Amendment) and by changing the way senators are elected (the Seventeenth Amendment)," he writes.

    5. Require the federal government to balance its budget every year.
    Of all his proposed ideas, Perry calls this one "the most important," and of all the plans, a balanced budget amendment likely has the best chance of passage.
    "The most important thing we could do is amend the Constitution--now--to restrict federal spending," Perry writes in his book. "There are generally thought to be two options: the traditional 'balanced budget amendment' or a straightforward 'spending limit amendment,' either of which would be a significant improvement. I prefer the latter . . . . Let's use the people's document--the Constitution--to put an actual spending limit in place to control the beast in Washington."

    A campaign to pass a balanced budget amendment through Congress fell short by just one vote in the Senate in the 1990s. Last year, House Republicans proposed a spending-limit amendment that would limit federal spending to 20 percent of the economy. According to the amendment's language, the restriction could be overridden by a two-thirds vote in both Houses of Congress or by a declaration of war.

    6. The federal Constitution should define marriage as between one man and one woman in all 50 states.

    Despite saying last month that he was "fine with" states like New York allowing gay marriage, Perry has now said he supports a constitutional amendment that would permanently ban gay marriage throughout the country and overturn any state laws that define marriage beyond a relationship between one man and one woman.

    "I do respect a state's right to have a different opinion and take a different tack if you will, California did that," Perry told the Christian Broadcasting Network in August. "I respect that right, but our founding fathers also said, 'Listen, if you all in the future think things are so important that you need to change the Constitution here's the way you do it'.

    In an interview with The Ticket earlier this month, Perry spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger said that even though it would overturn laws in several states, the amendment still fits into Perry's broader philosophy because amendments require the ratification of three-fourths of the states to be added to the Constitution.

    7. Abortion should be made illegal throughout the country.

    Like the gay marriage issue, Perry at one time believed that abortion policy should be left to the states, as was the case before the 1973 Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade. But in the same Christian Broadcasting Network interview, Perry said that he would support a federal amendment outlawing abortion because it was "so important...to the soul of this country and to the traditional values [of] our founding fathers."
    ..

  13. #38
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    Today the media wants you to believe that Governor Rick Perry Wants to changes the US Constitution.

    Perry wants to protect and preserve the Constitution. He wants to save it from liberals who believe the Constitution gives them permission to force you to buy state-run health insurance.
    That’s what Perry wants.
    These progressive radicals have no shame.
    Here’s another hit on Perry from Reuters:
    Rick Perry risks scaring Wall Street Republicans

  14. #39
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boon Mee
    Today the media wants you to believe that Governor Rick Perry Wants to changes the US Constitution.
    From the article mentioned in the post.

    "Perry laid out these proposed innovations to the founding document in his book, Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America from Washington. He has occasionally mentioned them on the campaign trail."

    Did anyone read the book?

  15. #40
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    A change of ways,……….

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry used to be pretty frank when it came to the country’s Social Security system. In his fiery anti-Washington book, “Fed Up!”, published last fall when he had no plans to run for president, Mr. Perry called the program, which turned 76 on Monday, “a crumbling monument to the failure of the New Deal.”

    He suggested the program’s creation violated the Constitution. The program was put in place, “at the expense of respect for the Constitution and limited government,” he wrote, comparing the program to a “bad disease” that has continued to spread. Instead of “a retirement system that is no longer set up like an illegal Ponzi scheme,” he wrote, he would prefer a system that “will allow individuals to own and control their own retirement.”

    But since jumping into the 2012 GOP nomination race on Saturday, Mr. Perry has tempered his Social Security views. His communications director, Ray Sullivan, said Thursday that he had “never heard” the governor suggest the program was unconstitutional. Not only that, Mr. Sullivan said, but “Fed Up!” is not meant to reflect the governor’s current views on how to fix the program.

    Snip

    In an interview, Mr. Sullivan acknowledged that many passages in Mr. Perry’s “Fed Up!” could dog his presidential campaign. The book, Mr. Sullivan said, “is a look back, not a path forward.” It was written “as a review and critique of 50 years of federal excesses, not in any way as a 2012 campaign blueprint or manifesto,” Mr. Sullivan said.

    The campaign’s disavowal of “Fed Up!” is itself very new. On Sunday evening, at Mr. Perry’s first campaign stop in Iowa, a questioner asked the governor to talk about how he would fix the country’s rickety entitlement programs. Mr. Perry shot back: “Have you read my book, ‘Fed Up!’ Get a copy and read it.”

    In the book, Mr. Perry dings politicians who don’t have the courage to take on Social Security. So what is his position now? “The governor wants to see the benefits for existing retirees and those close to Social Security be strongly protected,” Mr. Sullivan said. Beyond that, “he believes a full review and discussion of entitlement reforms need to be had, aimed at seeing that programs like Social Security and Medicare are fiscally responsible and actuarially sound.”


    Garbage is still garbage no matter how much perfume you put on it or how much you dress it up,……….in the end it’s still garbage: Rick Perry Is Less 'Fed Up' Over Social Security - Washington Wire - WSJ

  16. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth
    benefits for existing retirees
    The elderly are traditionally a strong GOP constituency. Part of the reason the US is in the fiscal mess it is in was because Bush passed a Medicare 'free drugs to the elderly' program, unfunded as always.

    So now it's the "he didn't really mean to say that" phase then. He's got an awful lot of backpedalling to do.

  17. #42
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    The Lamestream Media will do anything to discredit a patriotic American like Rick Perry:


    A 16-year-old investment by Texas Gov. Rick Perry in a firm that rented pornographic movies is drawing new scrutiny in light of his just-launched presidential campaign.
    Liberal bloggers and a handful of news sites have been taking the Republican candidate to task for his 1995 investment in the now-defunct Movie Gallery, which at the time was an Alabama-based video store chain that attributed some of its profits from renting pornographic films.
    “They sold family-friendly material in the front but had adult rooms in the back,” said Patrick Vaughn, general counsel with the American Family Association, a socially conservative group that led the charge for years against Movie Gallery. The association more recently hosted and organized The Response, a high-profile prayer rally in Houston that Perry attended a week before kicking off his presidential campaign.
    In 1995, while serving as Texas’ agriculture commissioner, Perry bought between $5,000 and $10,000 worth of the company’s stock, according to his financial disclosure forms. Perry sold his entire investment the same year, campaign spokesman Mark Miner said.
    While critics contend that the investment doesn’t match Perry’s record as a social conservative, Miner said liberals are trying to create a story where there is none.
    “This company was a regional video store that he owned (stock in) for less than a year,” Miner said. This is nothing different than a Blockbuster chain.”…


    For shame...

  18. #43
    Thailand Expat Hampsha's Avatar
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    a high-profile prayer rally
    Boonme have you ever attended a prayer rally? Seem to be popular with your people. This whole Movie Gallery thing is shocking. To think that my hard earned dollars were going to Republican coffers when I rented 'Debbie does the Republican National Convention' is a shame! It's like one of those weapons-for-hostages-for-contras-for-cocaine-for-more war-for- alter sex schemes they always expose under rightwing administrations.

  19. #44
    I don't know barbaro's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by S Landreth View Post
    he thinks as well that the earth is 6,000 years old.. that women were created out of Adams rib...
    I know he's an Evangelical and also a Methodist - whatever that means.

    But he's a creationist and openly says so?

    The article is so biased, I cannot consider much of it to be true, however.

    I want to know about this "rick perry." He doesn't seem to sharp (and he reminds me of his Texan predecessor).
    ............

  20. #45
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hampsha View Post
    a high-profile prayer rally
    Boonme have you ever attended a prayer rally? Seem to be popular with your people.
    My people?

    What for you think 'they' are 'my people', eh?

    btw, Rick Perry Signs Pro-Life Pledge To Defund Planned Parenthood, Appoint Judges Who Won’t Support Roe v. Wade. Now, that doesn't sound like a too bad idea to me - protecting unborn life. Does it lump me with 'those' people?



    Texas Governor Rick Perry, who entered the GOP presidential race less than two weeks ago, is the latest Republican presidential candidate to sign a pro-life pledge put forward by the Susan B. Anthony List on abortion and judges.The pledge has the candidates promising to support only judicial nominees who won’t interpret the Constitution in a way that supports Roe v. Wade, select pro-life Cabinet members on positions affecting abortion policy, supporting legislation to stop taxpayer funding of abortions and Planned Parenthood, and to support a fetal pain bill that would ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.
    “I not only pledge to protect unborn life, but have a record of doing so in Texas,” Perry said in signing the pledge. “I have signed legislation requiring parental consent for a minor to obtain an abortion, and have long advocated adoption as an alternative to abortion in order to protect unborn children.”
    SBA List president Marjorie Dannenfelser said in response: “Governor Perry has been a long-time friend of, and leader for, the pro-life community. His signature on our pledge is more than welcome and we applaud him for his commitment to continue to fight for women and unborn children.”
    Perry joins Michele Bachmann, Ron Paul, Rick Santorum, Thad McCotter, and Newt Gingrich in signing the pledge. Governor Tim Pawlenty signed the pledge as well before dropping out of the Republican presidential race. Though they are running on pro-life platforms, Mitt Romney, Herman Cain, Gary Johnson, and Jon Huntsman declined to sign the pledge.

    Rick Perry Signs Pro-Life Pledge on Abortion, Judges | LifeNews.com

  21. #46
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boon Mee
    Rick Perry Signs Pro-Life Pledge To Defund Planned Parenthood, Appoint Judges Who Won’t Support Roe v. Wade. Now, that doesn't sound like a too bad idea to me - protecting unborn life. Does it lump me with 'those' people
    For people who complain about government interference in peoples lives, this does not make any sense to me.

    This is big time government interference. Just because it suits their agenda in this case to interfere, the moral majority thinks it is OK.

  22. #47
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    OBAMA VS. PERRY


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    ^I guess some think dropping napalm on innocent Vietnamese is patriotic.

  24. #49
    I don't know barbaro's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Boon Mee View Post
    OBAMA VS. PERRY

    National Guard? Was Perry a draft dodger, too? Perhaps he's too young. I definitely respect Obama more based on these picture.

    So, Perry was a fly boy for the Military Industrial Complex.

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    Rick Perry at 22 = Dougie Niedermeyer



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