Religious Right Rallies for Missouri Caveman Todd Akin

Their kind of candidate
Wingnuts • Views: 20,017

The real leaders of the Republican Party are very unhappy with the GOP establishment over their treatment of Todd “Legitimate Rape” Akin: Conservative Christians Rally Around Akin in Face of GOP Criticism.

Making the point yet again that Akin is no outlier in the conservative movement — his opinions may be reactionary and medieval, but they’re also mainstream.

(CNN) – Even as the official Republican Party continues to try to derail Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin over his remarks about “legitimate rape,” a powerful force within the GOP has begun rallying to the candidate’s side: the party’s socially conservative base.

Powerful Christian activists in the GOP have begun pushing back against party leadership, alleging it has gone too far in trying to thwart Akin and it is attempting to sideline issues that social conservatives care about, such as abortion.

The criticism is creating major tensions between the mainstream Republican Party and a key part of its base days before the GOP’s convention is set to open in Tampa, Florida.

“Following the pounding of Todd Akin by the GOP kings and lieutenants in the last 36 hours, I’ve come to the conclusion that the real issue is the soul of America,” wrote David Lane, an evangelical activist who’s influential in the Republican Party, in an e-mail to fellow activists Thursday morning.

“The swift knee-jerk reaction to throw Akin, a strong conservative pro-life, pro-family born again Christian under the bus by some in the Republican Party is shining the light on their actual agenda,” Lane continued.

[…]

In a note to supporters Wednesday night, conservative Family Research Council President Tony Perkins heaped criticism on the GOP for abandoning Akin.

“Todd Akin has a long and distinguished record of defending women, children, and families – and unlike the GOP establishment, I refuse to throw him under the bus over one inarticulate comment for which he has apologized,” wrote Perkins, who is in Tampa attending events leading up the convention.

“As for the GOP, it has no rational basis for deserting Akin when it has stood by moderate Republicans who’ve done worse,” Perkins continued. “Singling out Todd suggests a double standard, designed to drive out social conservatives.”

UPDATE at 8/23/12 11:44:41 am

Todd Akin in Tampa With Top Social Conservatives.

Rep. Todd Akin was in Tampa Wednesday night meeting with top conservative groups and donors, several sources confirmed to POLITICO.

The embattled Missouri Senate candidate flew to Tampa to meet with members of the Council for National Policy, a secretive coalition of powerful conservative and evangelical leaders, activists, and donors.

The Council for National Policy is a theocratic far right organization founded in 1981 by “End Times” fanatic Tim LaHaye. More information at SourceWatch: Council for National Policy.

The Council for National Policy (CNP) is a shadowy, secretive group dubbed “Sith Lords of the Ultra-Right” by the liberal blog DailyKos.[1] Mark Crispin Miller called CNP a “highly secretive… theocratic organization — what they want is basically religious rule” (A Patriot Act). Their membership (see below) is a Who’s Who list of the biggest names of the Radical Right.

“The CNP describes itself as a counterweight against liberal domination of the American agenda,” reported ABC News.[2]

CNP’s membership is comprised of leaders in the family values, national defense and decency movements woven by members of the Dead Billionaires Club like the Adolph Coors Foundation, the Koch brothers, Richard DeVos, Richard Scaife and other billionaires and foundations who have invested heavily in developing a complex web of far-Right groups, think-tanks and politicians over the last forty years to return the United States to its pre Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 19th century capitalist roots.[3]

Barry W. Lynn, the executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, told the New York Times about the CNP meeting ahead of the 2004 Republican National Convention, “The real crux of this is that these are the genuine leaders of the Republican Party, but they certainly aren’t going to be visible on television next week.”

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121 comments
1 SpaceJesus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:31:27am

yes. please. break away and make your own taliban jesus party

2 William of Orange  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:32:33am

Credits to Crooks and Liars for this one.

This is from 2010 but I just found it tonight, thanks to Upworthy. We've covered Michael Graham's tea party ways here before, most recently with an appearance he did on Megyn Kelly's show.

There's nothing unusual about the guy. He's just one in the right wing army of hate talkers who keep the base stoked up and angry. But on this day, with this interview, Graham got hit with the force of a hot Irish temper and an articulate politician all at once. He found himself completely out of his league. Michael D. Higgins was elected President of Ireland in 2011, but this interview took place while he was still leader of the Labor party. He is formidable when angry, which he was in this segment.

Graham was going down the usual neocon astroturf Tea Party road, and President Higgins served him a hefty helping of humility with applause included. This clip starts in the middle of the interview, where Graham has evidently labeled some people -- I'm not sure who -- as antiSemitic, which causes Higgins' Irish temper to boil over and explode on the air. Graham had no idea what hit him.

The funniest part is that Higgins does to Graham what Graham was hoping to do to Higgins. The crowd was stirred, all right, but not in Graham's direction. As he moves from health care to tea party racism to foreign policy and back again, all Graham can do is sputter.

The interview took place in Ireland, presumably in a pub, since there was a reference to Guinness and because I know firsthand that the very best political discussions always take place in pubs. I'm not sure if Graham was on some kind of international "dump on Barack Obama tour" or what, but I will note that Higgins is now Ireland's President and Graham is still a relative unknown who bows and scrapes to his tea party keepers while remaining relatively obscure in the larger hate talk universe.

Hetre's the transcript.


CNN should hire this chap!!

3 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:33:37am

Santa, I haven't been a good enough boy for this. Please don't take it out on me in December November.

4 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:33:47am

Tampa says they'll be OK, but can the GOP survive Hurricane Akin?

5 The Questionable Timing of a Flea  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:34:07am

The groups rallying around Akin...not just the man, but his rhetoric...are still part of the GOP mainstream.

Sending Akin to Coventry means nothing if the AFA and FRC still get their ring kissed by every prospective GOP candidate, because the latter are the organizations that have (among others) been selling ideas like personhood, "forcible rape is the only rape," and even "rape can't get you pregnant."

6 freetoken  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:34:17am

And speaking of this blending of religious fervor and politics, usually through the mechanism we call the "GOP":


After Delaying Release Of Voucher Documents, Louisiana To Send Taxpayer Funds To ‘Prophet’

Louisiana Superintendent John White, the public face of the state’s massive and much-maligned school voucher system, has been hammered both locally and nationally for his announced slate of school standards. Editorials, educators, and legislators have criticized the program, and the latest news — St. John the Baptist parish (the equivalent of a county) announced on Tuesday it could lose up to $2 million due to the program — only serves to emphasize the controversy.

In an attempt to assuage criticism, White said his department would finally release documents detailing the vetting process that the 119 voucher schools — 99 percent of which are religious — endured prior to their approval. He won’t, however, release the documents until September — one month after many of the students have begun studying at their new schools.

[...]

Indeed, criticism of the voucher system — which the Louisiana Supreme Court failed to block last Thursday — seems likely to increase once the documents are released. After initial tales of schools teaching antediluvian creationism and methods for preparing for the Rapture — including at least one school that discriminates based on religion and sexual orientation — it was reported that the Light City Christian Academy, located in New Orleans, had been approved for 80 students this fall, raking approximately $364,000 in state funds.

The school is not the only Christian institution that will be receiving state monies, but it is, thus far, the only one helmed by a man who says he “wears the mantle of an Apostle and Prophet.” Apostle Leonard Lucas, a one-term state representative, has been the subject of recent profilings for his charitable ventures, many of which are listed as “Not in Good Standing” by the Louisiana Secretary of State.

Should Light City meet the minimum voucher standards over the first year — that is, if they receive at least a state-issued grade of D-minus — they are eligible for an additional 83 students, which, if granted, would jump the K-12 school’s size approximately 400 percent from its 2011-12 total.

[...]

This is the Jindal-ization of the Louisiana education system. This is what happens when religious groups attempt to skirt the prohibition on state endorsing religions.

There is much backward thinking in the culture of America, and fighting against it has always been tough. The "cavemen", as Charles has succinctly put the neolithic gang that want to reassert their views, don't like modernity. Not at all.

7 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:37:39am

Yunno, Todd Akin is a bit like the character of Scratch in "Ice Age", and the GOP is the glacier...

8 dragonath  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:37:46am

I like the term "GOP kings and lieutenants". Those philistines!

9 Bubblehead II  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:37:50am

Related news.

Todd Akin in Tampa with ‘secretive’ conservative group

Politico reports that Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) was in Tampa Wednesday night to meet with ”members of the Council for National Policy, a secretive coalition of powerful conservative and evangelical leaders.”

10 The Questionable Timing of a Flea  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:39:17am

re: #6 freetoken

I'm sure all of that $350K won't be wasted or disappear into personal coffers. No sir. Not a chance.

11 jc717  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:39:47am

Getting the popcorn ready. This will be good.
The GOP spawn is all grown up and about to slay the parent.

12 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:41:03am
"For the good of the movement, for the good of the pro-life cause ... he needs to do what's best for the cause and throw himself on his shield."

That sound much less painful than throwing yourself on your sword, which is how it's usually said.

13 Shiplord Kirel  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:41:14am

Romney was the last wheezing gasp of the old Republican establishment. The religious right and the tea party are in command now. Sane Republicans who didn't care to pander and grovel to the nuts jumped ship a long time. Now, belatedly, even the panderers are becoming alarmed at the strength and virulence of the RR/TP axis. The denunciations of Akin represent a final, hopeless effort to push back. It is hopeless, though. If nothing else, the unseemly fight further weakens the Romney/Ryan ticket, with the far right poised to purge the establishment completely after the inevitable defeat this November.

14 mikec6666  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:42:11am

The cavemen from Geico are probably getting pissed off that you're dissing them by throwing around caveman pejoratively.

This is what they would say: Really Charles? Really? Nice.

Anyway, thought I would add that to the discussion.

15 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:42:31am

re: #11 jc717

Remember the scene from Aliens, where the pilot is flying the dropship and thinks her copilot walks in, turns and sees an alien, then the next thing you see is a blood splatter and the dropship crashing?

Its kind of like that.

16 freetoken  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:42:35am

re: #13 Shiplord Kirel

It's clear in the platform. The institutional GOP put in charge a guy who was supposed to moderate the whole process, but the committee was dominated by right wing religious types, so that is where they took the platform.

17 celticdragon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:46:11am

re: #11 jc717

Getting the popcorn ready. This will be good.
The GOP spawn is all grown up and about to slay the parent.

Chaos spawn can be a bit difficult to control...

18 Interesting Times  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:47:00am

re: #11 jc717

Getting the popcorn ready. This will be good.
The GOP spawn is all grown up and about to slay the parent.

19 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:48:05am

Is Romney Akin to talk about his taxes again?

20 celticdragon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:48:16am

re: #18 Interesting Times

[Embedded content]

Hatriots for Rapekin. Truth in advertising and all that.

21 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:49:20am

Akin Camp To Claire McCaskill: Why Don’t You Drop Out?

Todd Akin’s campaign advised Democrats on Thursday that their best hope of beating him would be to demand Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) step down as a candidate.

His comments came after pollster Rasmussen released a survey showing him trailing McCaskill 48 percent to 38 percent in Missouri’s Senate race, a stunning implosion, if accurate, given that he led all polls before his “legitimate rape” remarks led GOP leaders to disown his campaign. Akin’s campaign, however, believes the poll is encouraging news.

“The fact that Claire McCaskill is only polling at 48 percent after 72 hours of constant negative attacks on Todd Akin shows just how weak she is,” Perry Akin, the congressman’s campaign manager and son, said in a statement Thursday. “If she can’t break 50 percent after a week like this, Democrats should ask Claire to step down. Todd is in this race to win; we will close this gap and win in November with the support of the grassroots in Missouri and across America.”

22 lawhawk  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:50:18am

re: #21 Kragar

That's some might impressive F5 tornado level spin there for ya!

23 Shiplord Kirel  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:51:03am

The conservative but sane Kay Bailey Hutchison sure picked a good time to get out. She will almost certainly be replaced by Tea Party kook Ted Cruz, now famous for his warnings of a communist/UN conspiracy against our golf courses.

24 Charles Johnson  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:51:37am
25 Shiplord Kirel  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:52:40am

re: #21 Kragar

Akin Camp To Claire McCaskill: Why Don’t You Drop Out?

"Because I am going to win."

26 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:54:52am

re: #21 Kragar

Akin Camp To Claire McCaskill: Why Don’t You Drop Out?

'Please drop out, we are afraid of you' is, if nothing else, a novel strategy.

I know the moron brigade kept harping on the librul media trying to force out Akin, but, um, they know that it was their own party that was asking Akin to quit his campaign, right?

Right?

27 celticdragon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:55:26am

re: #23 Shiplord Kirel

The conservative but sane Kay Bailey Hutchison sure picked a good time to get out. She will almost certainly be replaced by Tea Party kook Ted Cruz, now famous for his warnings of a communist/UN conspiracy against our golf courses.

The golf courses must be nourished by our precious bodily fluids.

//

28 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:55:52am
29 lawhawk  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:56:42am

re: #23 Shiplord Kirel

But about golf: In a blog posting early this year, Cruz vowed that as senator he would fight against “a dangerous United Nations plan” on environmental sustainability that he said was aimed at abolishing “golf courses, grazing pastures and paved roads.” He blamed all this on the Democratic financier-philanthropist George Soros.

Really? The GOP is doing all it can to destroy the nation's infrastructure by not adequately spending on it - and reducing funds available for infrastructure projects but somehow the UN is going to abolish paved roads (along with golf courses and grazing pastures)?

That's nuclear level crazy talk. But that's what the modern GOP is sending forth these days.

30 Petero1818  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 11:57:58am

Well this is going to make for a very interesting convention. I don't think its going to be so easy to rally everyone to one position this time. Obama has to be enjoying this.

31 Tigger2005  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:00:04pm

Founders of the modern Conservative movement, Barry Goldwater in particular, warned and warned and warned the GOP what would happen if they let the extremists get a foot in the door. The thing is that Conservatism can be a rational, caution-based (as opposed to fear-based) political philosophy. But there is a very fine line between being cautious and being fearful and reactionary and immune to facts, reason, and compromise. The John Birchers of Goldwater's day exemplified the latter, and Goldwater made no bones about it, he insisted they could not be given a place at the GOP table. Then less than couple decades later the GOP did just that.

32 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Tears  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:00:51pm

re: #30 Petero1818

Well this is going to make for a very interesting convention. I don't think its going to be so easy to rally everyone to one position this time. Obama has to be enjoying this.

Romney is going to spend the entire convention kowtowing to the conservative right elements and convincing them that his administration will be their's; lock, stock, and barrel.

The real question is this - If Romney wins, is his administration truly simply the rightwing lapdog he told them it is, or is it simply a business-friendly one that will throw the religious right social agenda under the bus at the first opportune moment like St Reagan did?

33 Targetpractice  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:01:57pm

re: #30 Petero1818

Well this is going to make for a very interesting convention. I don't think its going to be so easy to rally everyone to one position this time. Obama has to be enjoying this.

It's gonna be one hell of an awkward affair, everybody trying to act as though they actually like their candidate and don't think that his running for the presidency is more painful than dragging themselves over a mile of broken glass. Especially when it comes time for the keynote address from the guy that everybody in the party really wishes had run this year.

34 engineer cat  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:02:38pm

re: #1 SpaceJesus

yes. please. break away and make your own taliban jesus party

i fully expect the republican party to split in two sooner or later

every once and a while one of these issues brings the rift to the surface, like those recurring crises about slavery that lead up to the civil war

35 Tigger2005  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:02:42pm

re: #32 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Waste

Romney is going to spend the entire convention kowtowing to the conservative right elements and convincing them that his administration will be their's; lock, stock, and barrel.

The real question is this - If Romney wins, is his administration truly simply the rightwing lapdog he told them it is, or is it simply a business-friendly one that will throw the religious right social agenda under the bus at the first opportune moment like St Reagan did?

There's too much money at stake now. There are a lot of very rich people pushing this far-right social agenda...it's not just inbred hillbillies and old people who vacation in Branson anymore.

36 The Questionable Timing of a Flea  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:03:49pm

re: #35 Tigger2005

There's too much money at stake now. There are a lot of very rich people pushing this far-right social agenda...it's not just inbred hillbillies and old people who vacation in Branson anymore.

Foster "Aspirin between the knees" Friess strikes me as the kind of guy who'd dig rape apologism.

37 engineer cat  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:04:11pm

mitt is gonna spend the whole week on tenterhooks praying that nobody says anything really stupid

38 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:04:14pm

re: #21 Kragar

Akin Camp To Claire McCaskill: Why Don’t You Drop Out?

Is this an onion parody? "Candidate urges opponent best thing to do is to quit"

39 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:04:34pm

"Missouri caveman." That's hilarious.

40 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:04:37pm

re: #32 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Waste

The real question is this - If Romney wins, is his administration truly simply the rightwing lapdog he told them it is, or is it simply a business-friendly one that will throw the religious right social agenda under the bus at the first opportune moment like St Reagan did?

Romney doesn't give a shit about any supporter who gave (various super-PACs) less than a few hundred grand, so obviously the latter.

Transparent pandering is transparent.

Wild-card is if Ryan could bend Romney to his will. I don't see this as in any way implausible.

41 Tigger2005  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:07:15pm

re: #39 Gus

"Missouri caveman." That's hilarious.

We have lots of nice caves in Missouri for him to live in. There might even be some dinosaur holdouts running around in them thar Ozark hills...after all the Flood was only 3,000 years ago and some of them may have survived. We can call him Todd "Flintflake" Akin.

42 engineer cat  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:08:53pm

democratic campaign spots i'd like to see

Ryan Abortion Position Identical To Akin's - Here, Listen To Ryan Explain It In His Own Words

Ryan Explains Details Of His Medicare "Reform" - Or, "We'll Have To Kill Medicare In Order To Save It"

Ryan Will Now Explain How He Will Cut Taxes For The Wealthy In A Revenue Neutral Way - Oops, No He Won't

Mitt And His Problems With The Truth

43 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:09:17pm

re: #41 Tigger2005

We have lots of nice caves in Missouri for him to live in. There might even be some dinosaur holdouts running around in them thar Ozark hills...after all the Flood was only 3,000 years ago and some of them may have survived. We can call him Todd "Flintflake" Akin.

Akinopithecus rapus

44 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:09:42pm

re: #23 Shiplord Kirel

The conservative but sane Kay Bailey Hutchison sure picked a good time to get out.

After seeing the beating she took in her race against Rick Perry, I knew the Texas GOP was off the fucking rails. I mean, they were nuts before, but that was the kicker. She was nothing if not a party loyalist and they treated her like shit.

I would never have voted for Kay in a million years, but she didn't deserve the treatment she got from the state party for running against Goodhair.

45 Tigger2005  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:11:27pm

re: #43 Gus

Akinopithecus rapus

Actually he is a subspecies:

Akinopithecus legitumus rapus

46 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:11:40pm

OT but I couldn't resist the irony in this:

47 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:13:59pm

re: #40 erik_t

Romney doesn't give a shit about any supporter who gave (various super-PACs) less than a few hundred grand, so obviously the latter.

Transparent pandering is transparent.

Wild-card is if Ryan could bend Romney to his will. I don't see this as in any way implausible.

The RR will turn on him with a vengeance...they are no longer a fringe group, and they are more beholden to their RR ideology than to any particular party or politician.

48 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:14:59pm

Oh for crying out loud. That Navy SEAL outed himself and not Fox News.

Update on outed Navy SEAL:

See the update here: [Link: www.motherjones.com...]

49 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:16:17pm

re: #48 Gus

Oh for crying out loud. That Navy SEAL outed himself and not Fox News.

See the update here: [Link: www.motherjones.com...]

No. Wait. Retract that.

50 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:16:44pm

I get a little spastic sometimes. ;)

51 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Tears  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:17:15pm

re: #47 Expand Your Ground

The RR will turn on him with a vengeance...they are no longer a fringe group, and they are more beholden to their RR ideology than to any particular party or politician.

Though I expect they might settle for a GOP there who simply won't veto the House "caveman" legislation. That puts a lot of pressure onto the Senate to keep things under control. (And I would bet money that if things went that way and a Democratic minority in the Senate started playing the same obstruction games the GOP one does now the Senate would modify its rules to prevent them from doing so.)

52 Mattand  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:20:15pm

re: #27 celticdragon

The golf courses must be nourished by our precious bodily fluids.

//

I hate golf. I'll be more than happy to pee on a golf course.

53 Charles Johnson  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:24:37pm
54 Targetpractice  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:25:26pm

re: #51 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Waste

Though I expect they might settle for a GOP there who simply won't veto the House "caveman" legislation. That puts a lot of pressure onto the Senate to keep things under control. (And I would bet money that if things went that way and a Democratic minority in the Senate started playing the same obstruction games the GOP one does now the Senate would modify its rules to prevent them from doing so.)

St. Norquist pretty much already declared that the point of electing Romney is just to have a hand to sign the bills that Congressional Republicans will pass.

55 blueraven  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:26:00pm

re: #18 Interesting Times

[Embedded content]

Account suspended? Twitter Gulag!!

56 aagcobb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:26:36pm

re: #32 Feline Emperor of the Conservative Waste

Romney is going to spend the entire convention kowtowing to the conservative right elements and convincing them that his administration will be their's; lock, stock, and barrel.

The real question is this - If Romney wins, is his administration truly simply the rightwing lapdog he told them it is, or is it simply a business-friendly one that will throw the religious right social agenda under the bus at the first opportune moment like St Reagan did?

Reagan didn't have to deal with a Congress full of angry teabaggers. If elected, Romney will have a problem. He will slash taxes on the rich because that is always the GOP's #1 priority. But he will then be faced with either deficits exploding toward the $2 trillion dollar level or shredding extremely popular federal programs. I predict if Romney is elected he will go with exploding deficits and blame them on Obama.

57 RadicalModerate  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:29:38pm

Worth mentioning:

Ted Cruz will be one of the key speakers on the first day of the Republican National Convention, along with Rand Paul and Rick Scott.

[Link: www.gopconvention2012.com...]

7:45 p.m. Reconvene
Remarks by Speaker John Boehner
Remarks by Governor Rick Scott (FL)
Remarks by RNC Chairman Reince Priebus
Video
Remarks by Senator Rand Paul (KY)
Various Speakers
Remarks by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (WA)
To Be Announced
Remarks by Artur Davis and video
Remarks by Senate Republican Candidate Ted Cruz (TX)
Musical Act
Remarks by Governor Nikki Haley (SC)
Remarks by Mike Huckabee
Remarks by Mrs. Luce’ Vela Fortuno
Remarks by Mrs. Ann Romney
Benediction by Sammy Rodriguez and adjournment

58 engineer cat  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:29:40pm

re: #56 aagcobb

Reagan didn't have to deal with a Congress full of angry teabaggers. If elected, Romney will have a problem. He will slash taxes on the rich because that is always the GOP's #1 priority. But he will then be faced with either deficits exploding toward the $2 trillion dollar level or shredding extremely popular federal programs. I predict if Romney is elected he will go with exploding deficits and blame them on Obama.

if romney is elected, the teabagger house of representatives will pass bills, and romney will sign them, period end of story. mitt will function as the teabag congress rubber stamp

and they'll all blame the resulting mess on obama kenyan socialism forever and ever and ever

59 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:30:15pm

I've been waiting for the moderate elements in the GOP to rise up for years and for the most part have been disappointed. Some have retired from public life (i.e. former Missou Senator John Danforth), but the party has only continued to get worse.

60 engineer cat  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:31:06pm

Idiotic Remarks by Speaker John Boehner
Idiotic Remarks by Governor Rick Scott (FL)
Idiotic Remarks by RNC Chairman Reince Priebus
Idiotic Video
Idiotic Remarks by Senator Rand Paul (KY)
Various Idiotic Speakers
Idiotic Remarks by Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (WA)
To Be Announced
Idiotic Remarks by Artur Davis and video
Idiotic Remarks by Senate Republican Candidate Ted Cruz (TX)
Idiotic Musical Act
Idiotic Remarks by Governor Nikki Haley (SC)
Idiotic Remarks by Mike Huckabee

fixed

61 Interesting Times  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:31:19pm

GOP convention speaker sez:

62 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:31:30pm

re: #54 Targetpractice

St. Norquist pretty much already declared that the point of electing Romney is just to have a hand to sign the bills that Congressional Republicans will pass.

63 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:32:19pm

re: #57 RadicalModerate

Worth mentioning:

Ted Cruz will be one of the key speakers on the first day of the Republican National Convention, along with Rand Paul and Rick Scott.

[Link: www.gopconvention2012.com...]

GOP conventions today are basically slightly weaker, slightly more television friendly replicas of annual CPAC and FRC conventions.

64 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:32:38pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

GOP convention speaker sez:

[Embedded content]

But of course Trump is an anti-vaccination clown. That dumbfuck never met a piece of science he couldn't ignore.

65 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:33:35pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

Someone had to hit the anti-vax talking points eventually. Not surprised it's Trump.

I'm still waiting for the GOP to add it to their platform. It's only a matter of time.

66 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:34:05pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

GOP convention speaker sez:

[Embedded content]

That kind of bullshit is going to kill a bunch of American kids.

67 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:34:44pm

re: #62 Lidane

Grover Norquist on Texas judge's insane tax plan: "Tax increases lead to civil unrest"

Taxation without representation is tyranny!

-Motto of the original Tea Party

Taxation with representation is also tyranny!

-Motto of the modern Tea Party

68 Interesting Times  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:34:48pm

re: #66 Decatur Deb

That kind of bullshit is going to kill a bunch of American kids.

69 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:35:14pm

re: #66 Decatur Deb

That kind of bullshit is going to kill a bunch of American kids.

Who cares? They'd just be poor kids that are a drain on the system or who are too lazy to work as school janitors.

/2012 GOP

70 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:35:49pm

re: #64 erik_t

But of course Trump is an anti-vaccination clown. That dumbfuck never met a piece of science he couldn't ignore.

Bet there's a high correlation between birtherism and anti-vaccination.

71 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:35:56pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

GOP convention speaker sez:

[Embedded content]

Holy shit!

72 dragonath  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:36:12pm

The GOP convention is going to be a cavalcade of crazy. Tuesday, in particular:

Janine Turner, actress and Tea Party activist.
Mia Love, Mayor of Saratoga Springs, UT and Republican candidate in Utah's 4th congressional district.
Rick Santorum, former U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania and 2012 Presidential candidate.
Kelly Ayotte, U.S. Senator from New Hampshire, accompanied by Jack Gilchrist, owner of Gilchrist Metal Fabricating.
John Kasich, Governor of Ohio.
Mary Fallin, Governor of Oklahoma.
Bob McDonnell, Governor of Virginia, accompanied by Bev Gray.
Bobby Jindal, Governor of Louisiana.
Sher Valenzuela, candidate for Lt. Governor of Delaware.
Susana Martinez, Governor of New Mexico.
Chris Christie, Governor of New Jersey.

I know some people like Condoleezza Rice around here, but I don't really have much respect for people who speak at Tea Party gatherings.

73 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:36:13pm

re: #69 Lidane

/2012 GOP

Polio doesn't give a shit how rich you are--viz. FDR.

74 celticdragon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:36:15pm

re: #44 Lidane

After seeing the beating she took in her race against Rick Perry, I knew the Texas GOP was off the fucking rails. I mean, they were nuts before, but that was the kicker. She was nothing if not a party loyalist and they treated her like shit.

I would never have voted for Kay in a million years, but she didn't deserve the treatment she got from the state party for running against Goodhair.

You know something has gone real fucking wrong when your local Perry supporters are saying shit like this:


Multiple former Hutchison advisers recalled asking a focus group about the charge that Perry may have presided over the execution of an innocent man – Cameron Todd Willingham – and got this response from a primary voter: “It takes balls to execute an innocent man.”

Texas...the state where people actually APPLAUD when they find out you executed an innocent man.

75 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:37:06pm
Janine Turner, actress and Tea Party activist.

This is really hard to swallow.

76 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:37:43pm

re: #66 Decatur Deb

That kind of bullshit is going to kill a bunch more of American kids.

FTFY.

Arizona whooping cough cases more than doubled from state averages last year as the disease spreads at a rate not seen in some 50 years, doctors said.

In 2011, Arizona saw about 670 cases of whooping cough, also known as pertussis, compared to yearly averages of between 200 to 300 cases.


One baby in Maricopa County has died from the disease this year.

[...]

77 SteelGHAZI  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:37:51pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

GOP convention speaker sez:

[Embedded content]

Fuck you, Trump. I was born autistic.

78 lawhawk  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:39:02pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

He can go screw himself and the hair he rode in upon. A person is exposed to more antibodies in a single day than are present in a vaccine. A baby is exposed to more in the first minutes of its life outside the womb than in any combination of vaccines.

79 celticdragon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:39:03pm

re: #59 Bulworth

I've been waiting for the moderate elements in the GOP to rise up for years and for the most part have been disappointed. Some have retired from public life (i.e. former Missou Senator John Danforth), but the party has only continued to get worse.

The moderates have fled. The party has become an unholy Randian/ religious right wing populist cult. If Mitt Romney is defeated, it will only strengthen the conviction that they have to increase the crazy...

80 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:40:57pm
“Todd Akin has a long and distinguished record of defending women, children, and families

Hahahahahahahah

81 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:41:48pm

re: #79 celticdragon

The moderates have fled. The party has become an unholy Randian/ religious right wing populist cult. If Mitt Romney is defeated, it will only strengthen the conviction that they have to increase the crazy...

But today's freeper threads included anger that the Akin screw-up deprives the True Conservatives of the opportunity to blame the Romney socialist RINO wing for the coming goat-screw.

(That's a very poor sentence--don't try to diagram it.)

82 Gus  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:42:18pm
83 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:42:28pm

re: #59 Bulworth

I rose up years ago.

I had to get up to leave the party.

84 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:42:31pm

re: #79 celticdragon

The moderates have fled or are in total denial. The party has become an unholy Randian/ religious right wing populist cult. If Mitt Romney is defeated, it will only strengthen the conviction that they have to increase the crazy...

FTFY. There are still some Republicans who refuse to believe that the party is now ruled by the wingnuts and religious loons.

85 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:43:13pm

re: #82 Gus

MORON!

86 aagcobb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:43:19pm

re: #73 Decatur Deb

Polio doesn't give a shit how rich you are--viz. FDR.

The rich will get their kids vaccinated. The anti-vacccer campaign is just a way to get the stupid rubes to agree to cut spending on vaccines for low income kids.

87 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:43:41pm

re: #84 Lidane

FTFY. There are still some Republicans who refuse to believe that the party is now ruled by the wingnuts and religious loons.

Imaginary principles are lovely things, but if you vote for today's GOP then I cannot call you a functional moderate, full stop.

88 dragonath  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:44:15pm

Huckabee, featured speaker on Monday:

"If Todd Akin loses the Senate seat, I will not blame Todd Akin. He made his mistake, but was man enough to admit it and apologize. I’m waiting for the apology from whoever the genius was on the high pedestals of our party who thought it wise to not only shoot our wounded, but run over him with tanks and trucks and then feed his body to the liberal wolves.”

89 erik_t  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:44:26pm

re: #86 aagcobb

The rich will get their kids vaccinated. The anti-vacccer campaign is just a way to get the stupid rubes to agree to cut spending on vaccines for low income kids.

I don't think that's true; much of the protection of a vaccinated person is due to the vaccinated people around them. Herd immunity.

I think it's much more likely that these people just don't have a fucking clue how science works.

90 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:47:50pm

re: #79 celticdragon

If Mitt Romney is defeated, it will only strengthen the conviction that they have to increase the crazy...

They are also the party of the Double-Downers

91 danarchy  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:48:52pm

re: #65 Lidane

Someone had to hit the anti-vax talking points eventually. Not surprised it's Trump.

I'm still waiting for the GOP to add it to their platform. It's only a matter of time.

Weird, I have always associated the anti-vax crowd with the fringe left homeopathy and crystals sort of folks.

I suppose there is some overlap there with the far right faith healing crowd.

92 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:49:18pm

re: #89 erik_t

I think it's much more likely that these people just don't have a fucking clue how science works.

You're talking about people who deny that the Earth is billions of years old, deny evolution, and deny global warming. The science of vaccines is way out of their leagues.

93 Kragar  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:49:53pm

Ryan: No Compromise On Sequester If Romney Wins

If Mitt Romney wins in November, he and a Republican Congress will fast track legislation early next year to replace across the board defense cuts with cuts to food stamps and other programs for needy Americans.

“In January our intention is that if we don’t fix it in the lame duck is to fix it retroactively once a new session of Congress takes place,” Paul Ryan, Romney’s running mate, told a crowd in North Carolina Thursday, “We have procedural way in the Senate to advance that legislation very quickly and get it to the next President of the United States who I believe is going to be Mitt Romney, to pass that into law and retroactively prevent that sequester from taking place in January.”

Ryan was referring to legislation House Republicans passed earlier this year to avert sequestration — the penalty Congress imposed on itself, on a bipartisan basis, for not reaching an agreement on more targeted legislation to reduce the deficit. Sequestration will cause deep, abrupt cuts to both defense and non-defense programs starting early next year, and for the next 10 years, unless Congress overturns it or replaces it with other savings.

94 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:50:01pm

re: #88 dragonath

Huckabee, featured speaker on Monday:

"If Todd Akin loses the Senate seat, I will not blame Todd Akin. He made his mistake, but was man enough to admit it and apologize. I’m waiting for the apology from whoever the genius was on the high pedestals of our party who thought it wise to not only shoot our wounded, but run over him with tanks and trucks and then feed his body to the liberal wolves.”

He's waiting for Rush to apologize? I don't think that's possible, because the only way to pry an apology out of Rush is to get dozens of his advertisers to drop him, and he doesn't have that many left.

95 Sol Berdinowitz  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:52:28pm

re: #88 dragonath

Huckabee, featured speaker on Monday: "If Todd Akin loses the Senate seat, I will not blame Todd Akin."

Blame the voters who refuse to elect a cretin...

96 allegro  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:52:46pm

re: #86 aagcobb

The rich will get their kids vaccinated. The anti-vacccer campaign is just a way to get the stupid rubes to agree to cut spending on vaccines for low income kids.

That will not help their children before they are old enough to vaccinate. It's the herd immunity that protects those little guys, poor and rich.

97 Bulworth  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:53:42pm
Ryan was referring to legislation House Republicans passed earlier this year to avert sequestration — the penalty Congress imposed on itself, on a bipartisan basis,

Although 'sequestration' was itself only adopted because the GOP House refused to lift the debt ceiling. IOW, the looming defense cuts are a GOPteabag creation.

98 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:54:31pm

re: #93 Kragar

Ryan: No Compromise On Sequester If Romney Wins

[Embedded content]

Retroactive!

99 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:55:18pm

re: #96 allegro

That will not help their children before they are old enough to vaccinate. It's the herd immunity that protects those little guys, poor and rich.

And the anti-vax insanity has infected some of the rich--the Hollywood set like McCarthy and her rubberfaced buddy. They influence the celebrity-struck middle class.

100 Lidane  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:56:32pm

Brief OT, but I'm one step closer to a real job. The company I interviewed with last week just contacted me to set up a second interview for this Friday.

I might just get a job before the end of summer. Sweet!

101 Mattand  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:56:33pm

re: #72 dragonath

The GOP convention is going to be a cavalcade of crazy. Tuesday, in particular:

I know some people like Condolezza Rice around here, but I don't really have much respect for people who speak at Tea Party gatherings.

Nor people who helped the Bush administration facilitate torture.

102 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:57:25pm

re: #100 Lidane

Brief OT, but I'm one step closer to a real job. The company I interviewed with last week just contacted me to set up a second interview for this Friday.

I might just get a job before the end of summer. Sweet!

Remember us when you join the filthy 1%.

103 Daniel Ballard  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 12:59:34pm

re: #6 freetoken

On the other side we have instances of utterly abysmal secular public schools. Like LAUSD. Despite the efforts of thousands of hard working teachers, it's a fail from lower management on up with terrible academic consequences for students.

So with the caveat that abuse is possible, I stand for vouchers and home schooling options for good parents in a tough spot like the city of Los Angeles.

I remember forced busing when sending my friends to urban schools and urban kids to the suburban valley was called a just solution, instead of fixing up the urban schools. Good parents need options besides moving or making more money for private schooling.

104 wrenchwench  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:08:49pm

re: #103 Daniel Ballard

On the other side we have instances of utterly abysmal secular public schools. Like LAUSD. Despite the efforts of thousands of hard working teachers, it's a fail from lower management on up with terrible academic consequences for students.

So with the caveat that abuse is possible, I stand for vouchers and home schooling options for good parents in a tough spot like the city of Los Angeles.

I remember forced busing when sending my friends to urban schools and urban kids to the suburban valley was called a just solution, instead of fixing up the urban schools. Good parents need options besides moving or making more money for private schooling.

I was in Fullerton then. They closed the Hispanic-majority elementary school and spread the brown kids all over town to comply with an integration order. The courts accepted that solution. The neighborhood and the kids suffered.

105 Ben G. Hazi  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:10:08pm

re: #58 engineer cat

if romney is elected, the teabagger house of representatives will pass bills, and romney will sign them, period end of story. mitt will function as the teabag congress rubber stamp

and they'll all blame the resulting mess on obama kenyan socialism forever and ever and ever

There's only one thing that would stop Mitt and a TPGOP House: the Democrat-controlled Senate.

We lose that and it's "good night, Gracie"...

106 A Mom Anon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:12:06pm

re: #99 Decatur Deb

Jenny McCarthy is a phony. Her son isn't autistic,he had a very severe seizure disorder that effected his development as a baby and young child. Once the seizures were under control,his development resumed and he's "cured of autism"now. The ONLY good thing that damned book of hers did was to talk about what having a child with a disability can do to a marriage. Had she stuck with that topic,she might have had some redeeming quality.

If I ever meet her(or Oprah,who gave her a national platform and credibility)I'm punching her in both ovaries. She's done so much harm with this bullshit. The so called experts she's associated herself with are scam artists that sell everything from supplements to chelation therapies to the nonsense about"indigo children",and she herself has made a small fortune from lending her name to some of this crap. Gah! It pisses me off,can't ya tell?

107 Ben G. Hazi  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:16:37pm

re: #72 dragonath

The GOP convention is going to be a cavalcade of crazy. Tuesday, in particular:

I know some people like Condoleezza Rice around here, but I don't really have much respect for people who speak at Tea Party gatherings.

Hrmmm:

Janine Turner, actress and Tea Party activist.

I remember watching her on Northern Exposure; too bad she apparently went full metal wingnut.

Just an aside, but she also hasn't aged very well per that head-and-shoulders pic of hers dated this year on her Wiki article , IMO.

108 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:18:04pm

re: #106 A Mom Anon

After our grand-daughter was diagnosed, it took us a year or two to talk our daughter down from vaxer crap. She's a trained biology teacher. The need for an explanation is that powerful.

109 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:18:55pm

re: #107 TedStriker

Hrmmm:

I remember watching her on Northern Exposure; too bad she apparently went full metal wingnut.

Just an aside, but she also hasn't aged very well per that head-and-shoulders pic of hers dated this year on her Wiki article , IMO.

I guess Victoria Jackson had a scheduling conflict.

110 Ben G. Hazi  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:26:17pm

re: #108 Decatur Deb

After our grand-daughter was diagnosed, it took us a year or two to talk our daughter down from vaxer crap. She's a trained biology teacher. The need for an explanation is that powerful.

People want answers for stuff like that and emotions get to a fever-pitch; logic and reason take a back seat in situations like that for a lot of people, even for those who should know better.

111 A Mom Anon  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:27:54pm

re: #108 Decatur Deb

Yep,I know,I went through the whole gamut of WHY,there just had to be some way to figure out how to make it better. I'm the Mom damn it,I have to be able to fix this or I've failed. Ack. You're so vulnerable at that point,and people like that dipshit blonde KNOW that and take advantage of it. Punch.In.The.Ovaries.

112 Dr Lizardo  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:30:17pm

re: #61 Interesting Times

Dr. Lizardo says;

Your toupee has obviously cut off the vital supply of blood to your prefrontal lobes. You might want to look into that.

113 b_snark (Fact-Checker Extraordinaire)  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:32:43pm

re: #91 danarchy

Weird, I have always associated the anti-vax crowd with the fringe left homeopathy and crystals sort of folks.

I suppose there is some overlap there with the far right faith healing crowd.

It's called 'Political Reach-around'.

114 Dr Lizardo  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:34:44pm

re: #70 Bulworth

I'd also bet there's a whole lotta folks on the right still prattling off on flouridation of drinking water.

Purity of Essence! Essence of Purity! We must protect our precious bodily fluids. Ever see a commie librul drink a glass of water?! ///


I get the feeling that the 2012 GOP Convention is going to resemble a giant meeting of the John Birch Society.

115 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:39:20pm

re: #114 Dr Lizardo

I'd also bet there's a whole lotta folks on the right still prattling off on flouridation of drinking water.

Purity of Essence! Essence of Purity! We must protect our precious bodily fluids. Ever see a commie librul drink a glass of water?! ///

I get the feeling that the 2012 GOP Convention is going to resemble a giant meeting of the John Birch Society.

At least one delegate to the convention is a 50s-era Bircher.

[Link: www.portlanddailysun.me...]

116 Dr Lizardo  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:48:11pm

re: #115 Decatur Deb

I'm becoming increasingly convinced that what we're witnessing in the GOP is nothing less than the revenge of the Birchers after they were shown the door by the likes of Goldwater and Buckley.

Unbelievable. Still, a gen-yuu-iiine Bircher, and a vintage model to boot! When I was growing up in Pasadena, one of my neighbors down the street was a Bircher. Nice enough fellow, to be sure, but my dad (Mr. Republican) always called him a ".....go**amn mental patient". My father had no use for the radical right whatsoever, generally regarding them as conspiracy theorists and cranks. He also used to complain about "....go**amn holy rollers taking over the (Republican) Party" back in the late 70s.

I still wonder sometime if my dad was somehow the inspiration for Red Forman in That 70's Show.

117 Decatur Deb  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:50:23pm

re: #116 Dr Lizardo

Their shit just never dies--it has to be squashed again every generation.

118 labman57  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 1:57:03pm

Self-righteous socially-regressive Christian conservatives have "pulled a Palin", suggesting that Akin is a victim of "gang rape" by the media.

I dunno -- can you be a rape victim if you screwed yourself?

To social conservatives, if a woman gets raped:
1) she was probably dressed scantily and therefore had it coming.
2) it was God's will, so give thanks for the blessed event.
3) sh*t happens, so suck it up and deal with it.
4) what's "rape"?

119 Our Precious Bodily Fluids  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 2:01:43pm

re: #79 celticdragon

The moderates have fled. The party has become an unholy Randian/ religious right wing populist cult. If Mitt Romney is defeated, it will only strengthen the conviction that they have to increase the crazy...

Hmm. Are they the bizarro-world version of Scientology? Devoted to the writings of a hypocritical, terrible hack of a writer that really seem to get their buttocks pumping up and down for some reason; utterly intolerant to the point of destroying all dissent from within; demonizing their critics; gathering vast sums of money both from their small-time followers and big-name celebrity endorsers; believers in their own version of science; and completely deluded that their beliefs reflect objective reality in any way?

120 Patricia Kayden  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 2:18:42pm

re: #42 engineer cat

democratic campaign spots i'd like to see

Ryan Abortion Position Identical To Akin's - Here, Listen To Ryan Explain It In His Own Words

Ryan Explains Details Of His Medicare "Reform" - Or, "We'll Have To Kill Medicare In Order To Save It"

Ryan Will Now Explain How He Will Cut Taxes For The Wealthy In A Revenue Neutral Way - Oops, No He Won't

Mitt And His Problems With The Truth

Yes Yes Yes! Wonder if anyone on the Obama campaign reads this blog. Would love to see such ads. They would hit R & R upside their heads.

121 wheat-dogghazi  Thu, Aug 23, 2012 7:16:18pm

re: #103 Daniel Ballard

If you haven't yet read it, I suggest Diane Ravitch's book The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education. She does a good job examining how NCLB, school choice (vouchers and charter schools), and the education community's habit of latching onto unproven fads lock, stock and barrel have destroyed what was left of America's public schools.

Ravitch was once a supporter of NCLB and school-choice, but admits in the book she was very wrong.


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