► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Rick Perry’

Regarding Herman Cain

by Mojambo ( 103 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, George W. Bush, Mitt Romney at October 3rd, 2011 - 8:30 am

I like Herman Cain but in  no way (in my opinion) is he qualified to be president of the United States of America. Being good with the zingers is not a qualification, otherwise we could nominate Billy Crystal or Dennis Miller – or worse, Newt Gingrich.

by Jonathan S. Tobin

Conservatives have spent the last several months chewing up and spitting out a number of Republican presidential hopefuls as well as some who haven’t run. If you eliminate those who haven’t done well when exposed to scrutiny, like Michele Bachmann​ and Rick Perry​, that means Republicans must either make their peace with Mitt Romney​ or re-examine their misgivings about the other candidates. Given the choices, that’s not much fun. So, it’s no surprise this has led to a second look at some who have very little chance of winning the nomination.

[…]

Thus, Herman Cain’s moment has arrived. His straw poll triumph in Florida over Rick Perry has led some thoughtful writers such as the Wall Street Journal’sDaniel Henninger and our own John Steele Gordon to ask why Cain shouldn’t be given serious consideration. Both buy into the notion electing a businessman without any government experience is a good idea given our economic problems. They rightly point out he has some good ideas about finances. But both also ignore or rationalize Cain’s ignorance about foreign policy while being seduced by the possibility the Godfather Pizza exec could split the African-American vote. While Cain has established he’s good at delivering cliché-laden one-liners in debates, there are still good reasons for conservatives not to waste time on him.

[…]

But that is exactly why Republicans ought not to duplicate that experiment. We’ve just seen what it’s like when you have a president who hasn’t much idea of what he’s doing, so why would a similar fault in a candidate be considered a recommendation? For all of the popularity of rhetoric about our disgust with veteran political hacks, successful presidents have to know how Washington works. Maybe governments ought to be run more like businesses but, like it or not, governments are not the same thing as fast food franchises.

It also bears repeating that despite the obvious emphasis on economic issues this year, a president’s first and most important responsibility concerns defense and war and peace issues. That’s something that even those, like George W. Bush, who entered the office with no thought of devoting much attention to foreign policy, have learned. When he began running for president, Cain’s ignorance of the world beyond our borders was almost complete. He’s uttered some memorable clunkers in which he said we could stop Iran from getting nukes with energy independence, had no idea what the Palestinian “right of return” was, and admitted he hadn’t a clue about what to do about Afghanistan. Since then, he’s cleaned up his act a bit and learned a few one-liners about supporting Israel that he will repeat whenever given the chance. But it’s still fairly obvious he doesn’t have a grasp of these topics. While we may have elected a number of presidents with no direct foreign policy experience, even most of that number knew more than Cain.

Last, there is the idea that Cain could split the African-American vote. But there is no reason, other than Cain’s own assertion to believe that this could happen. Enthusiasm for Obama among his base is probably diminished, but there is no sign whatsoever African-Americans are likely to jump ship even for a black Republican.

[…]

Read the rest: Re: Herman Cain?

For the pro Herman Cain argument we have the following.

by John Steele Gordon

Dissatisfaction with the other candidates and his own strong performances in the debates has lifted Herman Cain from who-do-these-guys-think-they-are territory to a-long-shot-but-who-knows land. Certainly a mark of that new status is yesterday’s Wall Street Journal column by Daniel Henninger.

The main objection to Cain is that he has never held public office. Given the fact that Barack Obama has never held anything but, I’m not sure that that is such a disqualifying attribute.

Potential presidents’ résumés are usually judged according to political experience, executive experience, and foreign-affairs experience. Cain has only the executive experience, and did pretty well at it, according to Henninger. But are the other two so vital? Of the last six presidents, only George H. W. Bush and Obama can claim “foreign-policy experience,” and Obama’s consisted of nothing more than two years as a Senate backbencher (the last two years of his Senate career consisted almost entirely of running for president). Bush II, Clinton, Reagan, and Carter had all been governors.

[…]

So I don’t find Herman Cain’s résumé fatally defective. And his nomination would have two big plusses. One, it would rip the race card right out of the Democrats’ hands and two, it would set up a race between—in Glenn Reynolds marvelous phrase—Cain and Unable.

Read the rest: Herman Cain?

Proven Leadership

by savage ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2012, Headlines, Politics, Republican Party at September 22nd, 2011 - 8:00 am

Any questions?

Christiane Amanpour is upset with Perry’s standing with Israel

by Mojambo ( 8 Comments › )
Filed under Headlines, Israel, Palestinians at September 21st, 2011 - 4:43 pm

Christian Imawhore has always been pro Arab and pro Muslim. More credit for Rick Perry.

by Christiane Amanpour

Gov. Rick Perry’s support for Israel’s right to build new settlements and a possible end of US aid to the Palestinian Authority not only break with the Obama administration’s policies, but goes even further than George W. Bush’s Middle East approach.

In a speech this morning in which he called the Obama administration’s Middle East policy “naïve, arrogant, misguided and dangerous” – Perry called for drastic measures if a UN vote to recognize Palestinian statehood goes through. He said in that case, he would urge the closure of the Palestinian diplomatic office in D.C., an end of US aid to the Palestinian Authority and a stop to US funding of the United Nations.

I caught up with Perry after the speech and asked him about the wisdom of cutting off the Palestinian Authority funding. Would it actually endanger Israel, as the money has helped both Israeli and Palestinian security forces  to work together and dramatically reduce violence over the past several years?

The governor told me his tough message is designed to prod both sides back to the bargaining table. He said that he believes there is no option other than direct negotiations between the two parties, Israel and the Palestinians.

Perry’s  remarks on the controversial Jewish settlements will surely spark some heat.  At this morning’s event just a few blocks from the United Nations, Perry first said the issue needs to be resolved by the parties themselves, but later in response to another question, he said:  ”Israel should be allowed to keep building (settlements).”

The official US position is just the opposite – calling on all sides to avoid unilateral actions that harm the peace process – including the construction of new settlements. That has been the position of every recent US president, including George W. Bush.

Former President Clinton told me Sunday on This Week that he believes Congress would be unwise to cut the funding for Palestinian security.

The whole issue may be coming to a confrontation this week at the United Nations General Assembly meeting and a possible vote on recognizing Palestinian statehood. Former British prime minister and special envoy to the Middle East, Tony Blair, told me Sunday that frantic efforts are being made to avoid such a showdown and return instead to the negotiating table and diplomatic steps for a two-state solution.

Perry affirmed that he supports a “two-state solution” but only if it is directly negotiated by the two sides.

[…..]Perry found support this morning from pro-Israel supporters who say they are frustrated with the Obama administration. New York State Assemblyman Dov Hikind, one of the organizers of this morning’s event, had a loud message for Obama: “We don’t like your policy on Israel.”

Hikind says he’s not a knee-jerk Democrat and warns Obama and all candidates: “We will not support you if you are wrong on Israel.”

While saying he was not making endorsements, he turned to Perry and said, “but I like this gentleman and his relationship with Israel.”

Read the rest – Perry’s fierce defense of Israel breaks new ground

Charles Johnson attacks Rick Perry over his support of Israel

by Phantom Ace ( 88 Comments › )
Filed under Blogwars, Diary of Daedalus, Humor, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, LGF, Progressives at September 20th, 2011 - 8:00 pm

To all those who hate Chucky threads, my apologies, but this has to be brought to light.

The moment we have all called for is almost at hand. In order to be fully accepted by the Far Left, Charles needs to throw Israel under the bus. So far he has formally refrained for doing this. Instead, the Cheetos King has minions like Iceweasal, and jihadi supporters like Pro Life Liberal and Gus802 attack Israel. Like a mafia don who doesn’t want his hands dirty, he just sits back and allows Israel bashing at Little Green Footballs. Well finally, Chuck shows his colors.

Rick Perry recently stated that “I also as a Christian have a clear directive to support Israel. “ This is not a controversial view and one shared by many Christians of all denominations. The Cheetos King decides to attack Rick Perry’s support for Israel. He does this to give the anti-Israel crowd some meat and get in his bash of anything related to Christianity.

This is a backhanded way for Charles to throw Israel under the bus. Chuck can’t bring himself to openly break with that nation. Instead he goes after its supporters as a means of isolating that nation. This is an act of an intellectual coward.

Could you have imagined in 2005 Charles attacking someone for supporting Israel? In 2011 supporting Israel gets you attacked on LGF. Supporting Jihad gets you praised and even guest posting privileges.

The Sage of Culver City’s “Why I break with Israel” thread is probably in draft mode as we speak.

Zuess Krankypants has his take on this over at The Diary of Daedalus.