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Friday, July 11, 2014

I feel his frustration



Boehner goes off on the situation Barry created on the border.




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 Video 76

Mr. Speaker don't expect any help from the MSM. They're about as interested in what you have to say as they are investigating missing IRS emails.









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How absurd is this?







Barry's spending $3.7 billion of taxpayer money to… "address the issue at the border".

Hope Perry and the rest of the Republicans don't fall for this crap.

According to Louie Gohmert less than 3% of this money is actually going to secure the border. The rest is for taking care of illegals and providing lawyers and judges to help facilitate their citizenship.

So the US taxpayer is paying almost $3.7 billion to convert illegals into American citizens!

Bet 90% of them don't even know it. 

BTW... No one in the MSM calls them illegals anymore. They have to tow the line. So they're referred to as "undocumented workers" or "migrants". Reid once called them "undocumented Americans". Lately they morphed into "refugees". MSNBC is describing them as "freedom fighters". Matt Lauer recently christened them "refugee riders". You know,  just like Teddy Roosevelt and the Rough Riders. 

Its like the old saying... if you say it long enough people will believe it. Perception becomes reality. All you need is a complicit media and a citizenry dumb enough to believe it.

We have an abundance of both.
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Obama Ensares Perry and Other Repubican 2016 Candidates



President Barack Obama has mastered the art of neutralizing political foes with niceties, and now he can add Governor Rick Perry, a Texas Republican, to the list.


Obama and Perry had a "constructive" discussion and a "good exchange of ideas," the president told reporters yesterday after the two men talked immigration policy. "There's nothing that he indicated that he would like to see that I have a philosophical objection to," Obama said.


For Perry, who is considering a bid for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, the like-minded exchange with Obama may help his state cope with the stream of undocumented minors crossing the U.S. southern border while becoming a political liability in a quest for higher office. It's a partisan play employed by a White House that has damaged other Republicans with their own party's base.


Former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman's 2012 White House ambitions were undermined when he entered the race as Obama's former U.S. ambassador toChina. Former Florida Governor Charlie Crist wound up switching parties after Republicans hammered him for expressing thanks -- with a hug -- to the president as Obama visited his state to pitch his 2009 economic stimulus package. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie -- another 2016 presidential prospect -- took similar barbs from fellow Republicans after praising the White House's response to 2012's Hurricane Sandy.


Perry, who has been critical of federal government spending, vacillated in his public posture toward Obama's visit. After initially saying he wouldn't greet Obama on the tarmac at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, he then opted to participate in the ritual presidential handshake -- an image prominently captured by the news media.






Perry's Gamble




Perry's gamble is that appearing with Obama and asking for federal money to help with the immigration crisis won't tarnish the Washington-outsider brand he's trying to develop.


"Perry previously thrived among Republican base voters when he was seen as being the candidate to best prosecute a case against Washington and the Obama administration policies coming out of Washington," said Kevin Madden, an adviser to 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney. "I don't know if this alters that."


The upside for Perry is that images of him climbing onto Marine One, the president's helicopter, for a 15-minute ride and session with Obama will make him look more presidential to independent voters.


"Meeting with the president and advocating for better border security can do nothing but help the governor," said Representative Lamar Smith, a Texas Republican who sits on the House Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Control.




Not Enough



Perry, in a press release after their meeting, sought some distance with the president, saying Obama hasn't done enough to stop illegal immigration.


"Five hundred miles south of here in the Rio Grande Valley there is a humanitarian crisis unfolding that has been created by bad public policy, in particular the failure to secure the border," Perry said. "Securing the border is attainable, and the president needs to commit the resources necessary to get this done."


Obama parried, saying in a news conference after the get-together that there wasn't really much daylight between them on responding to the influx of children from Central America who have been traversing Mexico and crossing into Texas.


"The things that the governor thinks are important to do would be a lot easier to do if we had this supplemental," Obama said, urging Perry to get the Texas congressional delegation to support his request for $3.7 billion to address the issue. "It gives us the resources to do them."






Republican Reservations


Republicans in Congress are balking at the administration's call for the additional spending, which would be used to bolster security, care for the children who arrived in the U.S., and send some of them back to their countries of origin.


Even if Perry joins Obama in pushing for the plan, such efforts likely will fall upon deaf ears within a Texas congressional delegation that Republicans dominate.


Smith said Obama "doesn't need a dollar more" to fix the current crisis.


"The president has it within his power right now to send the right message, which is that he will enforce current immigration laws and that would greatly reduce the surge of illegal minors coming across the borders," Smith said.


Still, Texas Republicans -- including Perry -- may find themselves caught in a bind.






Federal Reimbursements



The Texas Conservative Coalition, a group of state lawmakers, sent a letter to the congressional delegation yesterday supporting a federal reimbursement of $68 million in state funds spent on combating the immigration crisis. The letter was agnostic on the question of whether Texas's two U.S. senators and its 36-member House delegation should support the president's package.


"We respectfully ask that you reimburse Texas for the full cost of our border security law enforcement surge, whether you grant the president's emergency supplemental appropriations request or not," the coalition wrote.


The complexities of immigration politics may help Perry with some fellow Republicans.


James Carafano, a vice president at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based group often aligned with the small-government Tea Partymovement, said Perry's request for federal assistance to backstop state efforts is appropriate.


"This is one legitimate thing where the state is actually helping the federal government out," Carafano said. "Securing the border is a federal responsibility."







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Thursday, July 10, 2014

This time he's right





Evidently not.

This one came back to bite him on the ass.





  A few other photo ops he wasn't interested in.









(talk about staging bullshit)







Just imagine if he was interested.

















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The Clinton years...somehow this one got by me





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Video 75












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Wednesday, July 9, 2014

10-year sentence for ex-New Orleans Mayor Nagin




On a tip from my brother Gary





Nagin was convicted Feb. 12 of accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars from businessmen who wanted work from the city or Nagin's support for various projects. The bribes came in the form of money, free vacations and truckloads of free granite for his family business.

The 58-year-old Democrat had defiantly denied any wrongdoing after his 2013 indictment and during his February trial.

Until his indictment in 2013, he was perhaps best known for a widely heard radio interview in which he angrily, and sometimes profanely, asked for stepped-up federal response in the days after levee breaches flooded most of the city during Katrina.

Nagin was a political newcomer when he won election as New Orleans' mayor, succeeding Marc Morial in 2002. He cast himself as a reformer and announced crackdowns on corruption in the city's automobile-inspection and taxi-permit programs. But federal prosecutors say his own corrupt acts began during his first term, continued through the Katrina catastrophe and flourished in his second term.

He drew notoriety for impolitic remarks, such as the racially charged "New Orleans will be chocolate again" after the city's African-American population plummeted post-Katrina, and his comment that a growing violent crime problem "keeps the New Orleans brand out there."





Moments before sentencing, a subdued Nagin made a brief statement, thanking the judge for her professionalism. He made no apologies. "I trust that God's going to work all this out," he said.

After the sentencing Nagin smiled and hugged supporters as he walked out of the courtroom with his wife, Seletha, and other family members and friends.

Nagin is to report to the federal prison in Oakdale, Louisiana, in September.

Nagin was alleged to have received roughly a half million dollars.

She noted character references showing him to be a devoted son, husband and father. And she said, despite his crimes, Nagin displayed "a genuine if all too infrequent" desire to help New Orleans and its residents after the 2005 catastrophe.

Most government pre-sentence reports and recommendations were not made public but a filing by defense attorney Robert Jenkins ahead of the sentencing hearing indicated prosecutors were pushing for a sentence of 20 years or more under federal sentencing guidelines.

Jenkins said that would amount to a virtual life sentence for the former mayor. Jenkins said Nagin's family needs him, there is no danger of Nagin committing more crimes and that the crimes for which Nagin was convicted constituted an aberration from an otherwise model life.

Prosecutors said the schemes that led to Nagin's conviction included two family members: His two grown sons were never charged with a crime but they were part of the family business that received free granite from a contractor. They also said that what Jenkins calls an "aberration" was behavior that spanned six years and involved multiple contractors.





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