Trump, Violence, Reform

found online by Raymond

From Libertarian Michael A. LaFerrara at
Principled Perspectives:

At this writing it’s unclear who started the violence that caused Donald Trump to cancel his 3/11/16 Chicago campaign rally, although it was most likely instigated by Leftist agitators. Disruption has been the Left’s modus operandi since the rise of the New Left in the 1960s.

But regardless of who initiated the violence, what is clear is that the anti-Trump protesters’ aim was to silence Trump. It was an overt attack on his right to freely express his opinions, and on the attendees’ right to hear what he had to say. Fortunately, Democrats and Republicans alike condemned the violence. Unfortunately, most major candidates managed to partially blame Trump’s rhetoric for, as John Kasich put it, creating “a toxic environment.”

I’m no Trump fan. But this is nonsense.


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Republican Chaos

found online by Raymond

Infidel seems to doubt that Republican officialdom will be able to stop Mr. Trump.

From Infidel 753:

A much-ballyhooed meeting of big-name wingnuts yesterday produced a call for a “unity ticket” behind which all anti-Trump Republicans could unite in a last-ditch effort to snatch the nomination away from the Orange Peril. So far, so good. But who should comprise that unity ticket? Cruz and Kasich are the obvious choices — yes, it means pairing an extremist religious wacko with a moderate religious wacko, but they’re the only two non-Trump candidates still in the race. But which one should get the top spot? And maybe some of the 14 ex-candidates should be considered? Cruz is even more hated by the party establishment than Trump is, and Rubio did pile up a passel of delegates even though he dropped out after losing his home state by 19 points, and, and…..

These people are hopeless.


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Scott Walker Needs To Endorse Ted Cruz

found online by Raymond

James proposes a noble gesture that won’t work.

From Wisconsin conservative James Wigderson:

It’s time for Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker to endorse Texas Senator Ted Cruz. When Walker withdrew from the presidential campaign trail, he called on other Republicans to consider dropping out to unite the anti-Trump forces around one candidate. His advice was ignored then and Donald Trump has built a delegate lead while the field sorted itself out.

There are only two Republican challengers to Trump remaining now, and only one of them, Cruz, has a chance of winning the nomination outright.


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Why the ‘Biden Rule’ is Garbage

found online by Raymond

Tommy performs vivisection on this favorite talking point of Republican office holders.

From Tommy Christopher, at the Daily Banter:

President Obama‘s nomination of DC Circuit Court Chief JudgeMerrick Garland has escalated the fight to replace deceased Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has taken to citing something called “The Biden Rule” as justification for not taking up Garland’s nomination, or any other from the current president.

That “rule” is, of course, not actually a rule at all, but rather one in a sea of bipartisan pull-quotes that have been deployed by one side or the other in order to prove that, gee whiz, senators like to get their way on lifetime appointments.


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Kasich Is Wrecking the GOP

found online by Raymond

From Jonathan Bernstein at Bloomberg:

Could John Kasich be single-handedly destroying a political party?

Either by helping Donald Trump win the Republican nomination or by dragging the party into an ugly contested convention, Kasich seems to be causing a lot of trouble.

Serious presidential candidates normally leave the race when they no longer have a chance to win. This is an important part of how the nomination system functions. If losers drop out, then voters in subsequent states — voters who might not follow politics enough to know which candidates are serious contenders and which aren’t — won’t waste their voters on the also-rans.

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Beer Halls, Brown Shirts and Trump

found online by Raymond

From Human Voices:

Oh my!

I haven’t lived in Chicago for a long time, but I don’t think the big Windy has seen a Friday night like this one since 1968. I don’t think our dear country has been as divided since the illegitimate war in Vietnam that killed tens of thousands of my generation and set the “Love it or Leave it” thugs against the rest of us.

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GOP Gapes at its Existential Crisis

found online by Raymond

Dick Polman of WHYY in Philadelphia takes a look at how the Republican Party is suddenly confronted by it’s own version of the abyss.

From The Moderate Voice:

It’s thigh-slappingly funny to recall that RNC chairman Reince Priebus said on the eve of this national race that “Republicans will choose from a deep bench of presidential material.”

After the latest round of contests and the latest winnowing of the field, here’s what the GOP is left with: A celebrity hate-peddler whose agenda is built on bluster, a far-right government-crashing ideologue who would lose 40 states, and a governor whose primary season record is 1-28.

Yes, folks, the GOP’s long-gestating existential crisis has finally arrived. What does it stand for as a party?

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Friday Night Raw!

found online by Raymond

From Max’s Dad:

This has all happened before. The white rage, the white fright, the white embracing of a demagogue who means none of what he spews. George Wallace was Donald Trump back in 1968. Capitalizing on the civil rights gains, the baby boomers getting all freedom-ee and listening to that hippie music and smoking that stuff and Afros, Wallace, the Guv-nah of Alabama who had famously stood in the schoolhouse door to keep the blacks out for an extra 5 minutes or so, was on a roll.

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Why Ask Pastors for Support When Tragedy Strikes?

found online by Raymond

From The Life and Times of Bruce Gerencser:

Let a tornado or flood devastate a community, and local pastors are often the first ones called to help the community understand the devastation and destruction. Let a student shoot up the local high school, and local pastors are called upon to help students cope with the senseless violence. Let a school bus carrying high school athletes veer off the road, resulting in the death of several notable students, and local pastors are asked to come to the school and console and support grieving students. No one bothers to ask: WHY should pastors be called for support when tragedy strikes? What possibly could pastors offer people other than a shoulder to cry upon?

In rural Northwest Ohio, the place of my birth and current residence, Evangelical pastors are routinely called upon to give help when tragedy strikes. I have to ask, what could Evangelical pastors possibly say that would help anyone make sense of tragedy? These men of God literally have nothing to offer but meaningless clichés:

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