Monday, December 31, 2007

Simply Awesome.



And from NRO's The Corner.....

Re: Thompson Makes His Move [Peter Robinson]

Wondering about the early response to Fred Thompson’s closing argument to the people of Iowa, I just spent a moment skimming the comments on YouTube. About a fifth of the several hundred posts seem unimpressed, but the rest are positive—many simply glowing. A sampling:

If you call yourself a conservative, you need to vote for this man!

Wow. Watch the whole thing; it's a little long. I had to wipe a tear from my eye at the end. THIS should be our next President. I know who I am voting for now.

Ladies and Gentlemen: The President of the United States of America!

Anybody with any patriotism that lives in this country, should see that Fred is right person for the Presidency. He is true to form! This just ignited a big fire in my gut!

WOW, When I watched this, it was like having one of the greatest Presidents of our time talking Directly to me.

That was AweInspiring, 

Thank You Fred!

This is what the American people have been waiting to here. Clear,powerful,humble,honest and Our next president,Fred Thompson

Damn!!!! just Damn!!!!!

While the other contenders are frantically saturating the Iowa airwaves with 30- and 60-second attack ads—Romney is guiltiest, if only because he’s richest—Thompson has sat himself down, looked into a camera, and spoken for a quarter of an hour, calmly and straightforwardly making his case. I myself find this impressive—in a way, moving. Thompson seems to have stepped out of the eighteenth century. He trusts voters to think. And if the comments on YouTube are at all representative, plenty of people agree.

Which brings me to a couple of questions for Our Man in Iowa, Byron York. How many Iowa Republicans will have the chance to see the Thompson video? Has Thompson’s campaign bought television time? Do they have the money? For that matter, is there a single television outlet in the Hawkeye State with any airtime left?

While we await Mr. York’s next dispatch, take a look at the Thompson video. Politics as, from time to time at least, they really ought to be.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Saturday, December 29, 2007

The OTHER half of the statement.

"I have the background, capability, and concern to do this and I’m doing it for the right reasons.”

Expect much hay, and by much I mean boatloads of it, over the, "I'm not particularly interested in running for President." comment.

You can already peruse the comments on any site that's running the story and hear cries of "fraud," "dump him," etc. Expect the shills to stomp their feet and threaten to leave the campaign. They'll claim that they're disappointed in "their man." Don't believe it. They're just piling on at a perceived weakness. And they had no intention of voting for him in the first place. This is merely an excuse to validate their own candidate.

How can truth be weakness? Personally, I don't think any candidate wants to run for President. It's merely a prerequisite for their quest for power. Fred doesn't have that. He's his own man, and doesn't need to be validated.

Not to worry. The true FredHeads remain true. Myself included.

Update 12/30...

As expected, as more information becomes available, the true picture emerges.

The transcript is below, when asked whether Fred has, " ...the desire to be president."

See these excellent write ups from Bob Krumm, "USA Today Dowdifies Fred.
"

And see
Jim Gerraghty's NRO Campaign Spot, "Fred Thompson, Knifed By Half-Quotes Again."

(But to be fair, don't let me force a decision; make up your own mind. -acyikac)

""That is a very good question... Not because it's difficult to answer, but because I'm gonna answer a little bit of a different way than what you might expect. In the first is wanting the opportunity. I wouldn't be here if I didn't. I wouldn't be doing this if I didn't. I grew up in very modest circumstances. And I left government and I and my family have made sacrifices for me to be sitting here today. I haven't had any income for a long time because I'm doing this. I figure if you're gonna be clean, you have to cut the [unintelligible] off. And I was doing speaking engagements, and I had a contract to do a TV show, I had a contract with ABC radio like I was talking about earlier and so forth... I guess one would have to be a total fool to do all of those things and to be leaving his family, which is not a joyful thing at all... if you didn't want to do it.

But I am not consumed by personal ambition. I will not be devastated if I don't do it. I want the people to have the best president they can have. (applause) When his talk first started it didn't originate with me. There are a lot of people around the country and both directly and through polls... liked the idea of me stepping up. And of course, you always look better at a distance, I guess. (laughter) But most of those people are still there and think it's a good idea.

I approach it from the standpoint of a deal... Of kind of a marriage. You know, if one side of the marriage has to be really talked into the marriage, you know, it's probably not going to be a very good deal for either one of them. But if you mutually think that this is a good thing — in this case, if you think this is a good thing for the country, the you have the opportunity to do some wonderful things together. I'm offering myself up. I'm saying that if I have the background, the capability and the concern to do this and I'm doing this for the right reasons... but I'm not particularly interested in running for president, but I think I'd make a good president. Nowadays, the process has become much more important than I think it used to be.

I don't know if they ever asked George Washington a question like this. I don't know if they ever asked Dwight D. Eisenhower a question like this. Nowadays it's all about fire in the belly. I'm not sure that in the world we live in today, it's a terribly good thing for a president to have too much fire in his belly.

I approach life differently than a lot of people. People, I guess, are wondering how I've been as successful as I've been in everything I've done. I've won two races in Tennessee by twenty points in a state Bill Clinton carried twice. I had never run for office before. I've never had an acting lesson, and I guess that's obvious. (laughter). When I did it, I did it. It wasn't just a lark. Anything worth doing is worth doing well. I've always been a little more laid back than most. I like to say I'm only consumed by very few things, and politics is not one of them. The welfare of my country, and my kids and grandkids, growing up, is one of them. (applause)

If what people really want in their president is a super type A personality, someone who has gotten up every morning and gone to bed every night and been thinking about, for years how they can be president of the United States... someone who can look you straight in the eye and say they've enjoyed every minute of campaigning... (laughter) I ain't that guy. (more laughter) [To questioner] So I hope I've discussed that, or I haven't talked you out of anything. I honestly want... I can't imagine a worse set of circumstances than achieving the presidency under a false pretenses, especially if you feel the way I do. I've gone out of my way to be myself, because I don't want anybody to think they're getting something they're not getting. I'm not consumed by this process, I'm not consumed with the notion of being president. I'm simply saying I'm willing to do what's necessary to achieve it if I'm in sync with the people. And if the people want me, or somebody like me, I will do what I've always done with everything else in my life. I will take it on and do a good job. You'll have the disadvantage of having someone who probably can't jump up and click their heels three times, but will tell you the truth. And you'll know where the president stands at all times.""

Friday, December 28, 2007

Children and Puppies

I've always tried to keep this blog....ahem, above board, i.e., not edgy. And I think I still succeed with this video. Pretty funny.

I'm sorry, they're just opportunistic dolts....

If the Huckabee campaign doesn't understand the difference between sympathies and apologies, they don't deserve to be elected.

Because, let's face it...they meant apologize... until it got warm in the kitchen.

Sorry, Mike. Ain't hap'nin'.


From CBS News' John Bentley:


PELLA, IOWA -- Just three short blocks from where Mike Huckabee was speaking at The Pizza Ranch in Pella, Iowa, Fred Thompson had harsh words for the Iowa front-runner from the Smokey Row Coffee House.

“I think that statements like ’we need to apologize’ – I’m not sure what Governor Huckabee meant when he said we needed to apologize for this assassination,” Thompson said, referring to a Huckabee quote that his campaign later clarified.

“I’m more concerned with what people around the world will think when they see a presidential candidate was apologizing for the assassination of former Prime Minister Bhutto.”

It was a rare unprovoked attack on Huckabee. Thompson has been reluctant to single out his opponents by name recently, and he was answering a question about the Democrats reaction to the assassination when he made the statement.

Thompson said his main concern was how that remark, where Huckabee offered “our sincere concern and apologies for what has happened in Pakistan,” could be misinterpreted by other countries.

“I wish he would clarify that because I don’t want that to be mistaken by other people around the world in terms of the implication that the U.S. somehow owed someone an apology about that assassination,” Thompson continued. “That’s hard to understand.”

The Huckabee campaign tried to help the senator understand. They later clarified that the governor meant “sympathies,” not apologies.

From Fox....

Coming Up on 'FOX News Sunday': Fred Thompson and David Yepsen

Friday , December 28, 2007

By Chris Wallace

Our exclusive guest this week is Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson, former Tennessee senator. Plus, The Des Moines Register's David Yepsen joins us.

We're just days away from the first-in-the-nation caucuses in Iowa where voters will begin choosing their party's nominees for president. The race is getting tighter as each candidate makes a final push to win the Hawkeye state's caucuses. Fred Thompson made a late entry into the field and started with high numbers. Now he's scrambling for a good showing with the hopes of gaining some much needed momentum. How does he plan to make it happen? We'll speak exclusively with the former Tennessee Senator from the campaign trail.

Plus, we'll get an insider's look at the first battleground for 2008 with one of the state's most influential and respected political minds. If any man knows Iowa politics, it's the Des Moines Register's David Yepsen. We'll ask David who's up, who's down and what surprises we might expect when the caucuses arrive.

Then, the death of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan has made the race instantly more serious. While the turmoil unfolds each candidate in the U.S. is making their case for why they are best suited to lead the nation. Has the sudden assassination brought terrorism to the forefront of voters' minds? Joining us to discuss the impact will be Brit Hume, Washington managing editor of FOX News; Mara Liasson of National Public Radio; Bill Kristol of the Weekly Standard and Juan Williams of National Public Radio.

So check your local listings and we'll see you on the next "FOX News Sunday."

Still the No. 1 issue for America

"Everything can change in a moment in the kind of world we live in today."

‘‘It will require resolve, unity and mental toughness to do what’s necessary on all fronts. It’s the forces of civilization against the forces of anarchy. It’s us against them and we need to realize that...’’

“This is a war that we’re engaged in. It’s an international conflict,” said Thompson. “It’s a global conflict. Al Qaeda wants to bring Western civilization to its knees.”

"It seems to me that the further we get from 9/11, the more people forget."

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Ottumwa Courier

Support Thompson


Ottumwa, Iowa. My kind of place.

Ottumwa is a progressive and productive community of 25,000 citizens located in a county of 35,000 people. Ottumwa has an impressive level of consumer traffic, an employee base with an exemplary work ethic and an environment that is decidedly committed to economic development. Come inside and let us show you all we have to offer. Ottumwa, Iowa is a great place to grow a business and raise a family. Come inside and look around. Welcome!

Ottumwa Courier Editorial Board

Fred Thompson is the unlikely candidate. Perfectly content with his status as a former senator and Hollywood actor, Thompson says he happy in his private life.
But despite the pitfalls of the rough and tumble world of politics, the Republican says Washington, D.C. needs a “consistent” conservative to lead the United States into a new direction.
Thompson is unapologetic on his views and is a straight-shooter.
“These are clearly challenging times. I don’t think we’ve fully come to terms with the kind of world we live in,” he told members of the Courier editorial board recently.
Indeed, Thompson believes work must continue in Iraq despite growing concerns American troops should return home.
We have to “finish what we’re doing,” he said, adding the United States must continue the fight there and in Afghanistan.
Thompson said the United States can no longer ignore the instability in Afghanistan and in nearby Pakistan because of issues ranging from the Taliban to the country’s economic dependence on the opium trade.
When it comes to domestic issues, Thompson again admits there are no simple answers.
On energy concerns, he believes in “a balanced approach to energy security that increases domestic supplies, reduces demand for oil and gas, and promotes alternative fuels and other diverse energy sources.”
He also seeks “an energy policy that invests in the advanced technologies of tomorrow and places more emphasis on conservation and energy efficiency.”
But the answers are not readily available.
“Oil independence, in the near future, is not to be had,” Thompson concedes, adding he thinks Americans are “willing to trade some discomfort to get some honesty.”
On economic issues, Thompson is blunt. The time is now to reform the American economy.
He says the country needs “market-based approaches to reform that guarantee benefits for those who need them and embrace personal responsibility and cost-effectiveness without raising taxes.”
Thompson said “it is a moral imperative that requires action now” and he wants a full account of the government’s fiscal books for “all to see and understand.”
The man from Tennessee is no-nonsense, speaks plainly and believes action is needed now, not later.
“There’s very little credibility coming out of D.C. to deal with these problems, so I think there’s an opportunity for someone who is willing to speak the truth,” he said.
Fred Thompson will do just that.

Copyright © 1999-2006 cnhi, inc.

Two Icons.

Bump, because it's Important.

Folks, along with the blogburst, take another look at the below ad, and please...contribute. Either look to your right and click the contribute button, or go directly here.



Fred on the Benazir Bhutto assassination

Fred's sittin' pretty

From our friends at Real Clear Politics, quoting Strategic Vision...

Fred at 15%, a solid third.

1. If the 2008 Republican presidential caucus were held today between Rudy Giuliani, Mike Huckabee, Duncan Hunter, John McCain, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, and Fred Thompson, for whom would you vote? (Republicans Only; Names Rotated)
Mike Huckabee 29%
Mitt Romney 27%
Fred Thompson 15%
John McCain 14%
Rudy Giuliani 4%
Ron Paul 4%
Duncan Hunter 1%
Undecided 6%

The Swamp and FredSpeak

From The Baltimore Sun...


More than anything, Thompson excelled in offering aphorism for almost every issue. An example of Fred-speak:

On corruption in Congress:

"It was so cold in Washington the other day, the politicians had their hands in their own pockets."

On low taxes:

"A dollar belongs in the pocket of the person who earned it."

On the global struggle against terrorism:

"This is the forces of civilization against the forces of anarchy. And it's us against them."

On not being beholden to special interests:

"I wear no man's collar."

On the challenges the next president will face:

"We don't know what's around the corner. It's gonna take a steady hand on the plow."

On global warming not yet being proven:

"We can't tell if it will rain tomorrow, but we can tell you what happened 1,000 years ago?"

On his capacity to respond to terrorist attacks:

"I don't want to be henny-penny or things of that nature, but I've been there."

On being plain-spoken:

"What you see is what you get and that's what you get with me."

With that, Thompson left the room to the tune of what may be his campaign theme song, "Free and Easy Down the Road I Go" by country singer Dierks Bentley.

In case you are curious, here are the lyrics:



Pair of boots and a sack of clothes
Free and easy down the road I go
Hangin' memories on the high line poles
Free and easy down the road I go
Free and easy down the road I go

Ragweed's rockin' on the radio
Free and easy down the road I go
So I keep rollin' like an old banjo
Free and easy down the road I go

Got the sun shinin' on me like a big spotlight
So I know everything is gonna be alright

Ain't no tellin' where the wind might blow
Free and easy down the road I go
Livin' life like a Sunday stroll
Free and easy down the road I go
Free and easy down the road I go

If you only get to go around one time
I'm gonna sit back and try to enjoy the ride

I could make a million or wind up broke
Free and easy down the road I go
Can't take it with you when you go so
Free and easy down the road I go
Someday I know it's gonna take me home so
Free and easy down the road I go
Free and easy down the road I go

FromThe Boston Herald

Fred Thompson candidate platform from The Boston Herald
By Associated Press | Thursday, December 27, 2007 | http://www.bostonherald.com | Candidate Profiles

High priorities: tax reform, immigration, war in Iraq and terrorism, education reform
Abortion: Pro-life.
Capital Punishment: Supports capital punishment.
Education: Thompson believes that the federal role in education is “too intrusive and too bureaucratic.” He calls for state and local governments, which are closest to the parents, the kids, and the schools, to implement changes and innovations that improve their education systems. He supports giving parents more choices in public education, reviewing federal programs for cost-effectiveness, reducing federal mandates, returning education money to the states, and empowering parents by promoting voucher programs, charter schools, and other innovations. He pledges to promote transparency to assess performance, promote accountability, and share innovations in education at all levels.

Energy/Environmental Issues: Thompson believes that U.S. dependence on foreign sources of oil threatens national security and puts economic prosperity at risk. He pledges to increase U.S. energy independence and invest in alternative energy sources to produce a healthier environment. He also plans to encourage research and development of technologies that will improve the environment, especially the reduction of CO2 emissions.
Experience: Former senator, lawyer, lobbyist, character actor.
Gay Marriage: Opposes same-sex marriage; would let states decide whether to allow civil unions
Health Care: Thompson believes that access to affordable, portable health care can be made available for all Americans without imposing new mandates or raising taxes. He believes current government programs must also be streamlined. His health care plan calls for: (1) realigning programs and creating a system around individual consumers and patients by providing more information and more opportunities to choose affordable health care options, (2) improving the individual health of Americans by shifting to a system that promotes cost-effective prevention, chronic-care management, and personal responsibility, (3) modernizing delivery and administration of care by encouraging the widespread use of clinical best practices, medical information technology, and other innovations, (4) increasing competition and consumer choice while streamlining regulations through market solutions that benefit individuals and reduce costs for employers, and (5) promoting and speeding up medical research and life-sciences innovation.
Immigration: Thompson opposes the comprehensive immigration reform proposal that called for increased border enforcement combined with a path to legal citizenship for illegal immigrants already living in the U.S. Supports concept of “attrition through enforcement” – a reduction in the number of illegal immigrants living in the U.S. by stepping up border security and enforcement against illegal immigrants and their employers. Pledges to double number of immigration agents to handle interior enforcement, to increase the number of border patrol agents and increase detention capacity. Also pledges to maximize prosecution of “criminal alien” gangs such as MS-13. Also pledges to strengthen entry/exit tracking of illegal immigrants and to reduce backlogs for legal immigrants.
The war in Iraq: Thompson calls for an effort to defeat terrorists abroad, beginning in Iraq and Afghanistan. Thompson has plans for: (1) a larger, more capable, and more modern military, (2) a missile defense system that can protect the U.S. and its allies from long-range ballistic missiles, (3) an enhanced intelligence community, with robust human-intelligence capabilities, focused on terrorism and proliferation, (4) a robust approach to homeland security that will protect the nation from terrorists, (5) a strengthened system of global alliances, and (6) a judicial system that deals with the realities of terrorists and unlawful enemy combatants.
Social Security: Thompson’s plan for Social Security reform would allow individuals to set aside 2 percent of their payroll into a private retirement savings account with a government match. Thompson would also index Social Security payments to inflation, not to wages, for future retirees. Combined, Thompson says his plan would save $4.7 trillion and preserve the Social Security system for future generations. Current retirees or those nearing retirement would not be affected.
Stem Cell Research: Thompson opposes expansion of federally-funded embryonic stem cell research.
Taxes and Budget issues: Thompson’s tax reform proposal ties economic growth to tax cuts. He supports making the 2001 and 2003 Bush administration tax cuts permanent and also supports permanently repealing both the estate tax and the alternative minimum tax. He also pledges to give individual taxpayers “choice” – either remaining under the current tax code or opting for a “flat tax” code that would simplify taxpaying for Americans who opt for it. He also supports abolishing the IRS “as we know it.”

http://www.fred08.com/

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Substance.

Blogburst for Fred!

From Right Wing Nuthouse, a request...


Dear Friends,

I am writing to ask for your help.

All of us know the long odds faced by Fred Thompson in his efforts to win the GOP nomination for president. I’m sure you are all aware that Fred has undertaken pretty much of a do or die bus tour of Iowa in order to finish strongly in the Caucuses on January 3.

Many of you have already taken steps to support the Thompson campaign in a tangible way by placing fundraising widgets on your sidebar and writing about the campaign. In this way, each of us alone has done whatever we can to support Fred in his efforts.

But at this, the 11th hour of the campaign in Iowa, I think it would be a very effective fundraising tool if as many of us as possible were to participate in an old-fashioned Blogburst, writing a post asking readers to donate to the campaign while embedding a fundraising widget in the post for convenience.

I propose Thursday, December 27 for the Blogburst. If you have an email list, I would urge you to ask your subscribers to donate. If you know of other bloggers who support Fred, please forward this email and ask them to participate as well.

Not expecting a “money bomb” but even a few tens of thousands of dollars would help, I’m sure. Given the number of readers represented in the blogs listed here (where I got all of your email addresses) and your cooperation, I feel confident we can give a real shot in the arm to the campaign.

I don’t think any of us believe that our endorsement of Thompson alone means that much in the long run. But working together, uniting for one day and speaking with one voice, I think we could make a significant impact on Fred’s chances in Iowa. After all, when the candidate you support rolls the dice as Fred has, the least we can do is back his play to the best of our ability.

No need to respond to this email. Just do it.

Merry Christmas,

Rick Moran
Right Wing Nuthouse

We can do this folks. Fred can do this.

Contribute. Please.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Breath of Fresh Air Alert!

It does take mettle to go to Iowa and promise NOT to throw boatloads of money at your constituents.

From the Waverly (Iowa) Democrat newspaper, when asked what Fred will do for Iowa farmers.


"I would continue to enjoy the fruits of their labor. I’ve been looking all over Iowa for a bad steak and I can’t find it. Been trying my best. It’s not a matter of what I would do for the farmers. Farmers are not looking for a president to hand them something. Farmers want fair treatment and a chance to prosper in a free economy and that’s what I would help ensure. There’s a lot of programs we’ve got out there, some of which are good programs, some of which are not. And I think that we need to work our way through that and make sure we’re doing what’s good for the country, not just the farmers, not just the people of Iowa, not just the people of Tennessee. But good for the country. A sound policy that makes sense. I think there’s a lot more that we could do for the working farmer in terms of ecological programs and environmental programs - land conservation, soil conservation - that would be fair and it would be beneficial to the nation and to Iowa and to our country. We’re going to have to phase out the corporate welfare system we’ve got, however. There are extremely rich people living in skyscrapers in Manhattan that are receiving subsidy payments. I think that’s wrong. I’d put a stop to that if it was within my power. That still continues in this latest Farm Bill and it’s not right. There ought to be a cutoff at some level and it’s not right to have millionaires receiving farm subsidies."

Saturday, December 22, 2007

God Bless Them All

NYC

Quick trip to New York was wonderful. My wife and daughter were in heaven over Macy's, while I took the boys to the 86th floor of the Empire State Building. While it's always inspiring, I can't help but see the void towards the Battery.

The tree at Rockefeller Center was particularly pretty this year. Blue lights add a lot. The windows at Saks Fifth Avenue had the theme of a new children's book, Snowpeople, narrated by Marlo Thomas, with proceeds going to St. Jude's Children's Hospital. (A great organization founded by her dad, Danny Thomas.)

For families going to NYC, if you want a good, inexpensive meal, delivered by some of the best waitstaff in New York, check out Junior's on West 45th, just off of Broadway. And if you've never had an egg cream, you don't know what you're missing.

I'll get some photo's up when they're downloaded. Lots of last minute shopping to do today. Check out the links above to get in the spirit.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

An aside.

New Yorker's are a tough lot.

Here we are. Year's later. Still tough. Still resilient. Still accepting and loving.

I worked there. Ten years. Best of my life. Lived. Commuted.

Best days as a commuter are the day before Thanksgiving and the last working day before Christmas. Hustle. Bustle. Packages. Happy. Escape. Joyous. Busy. Giddy. Rush. Bust. Gush. Lush.

And too soon over. But...New Yorkers , who a mere six years ago, suffered destruction....

Survive, and enjoy. And thumb their noses, with a resounding Bronx Cheer, and tell those who harm us, "Fuggedaboutit." Not with an exclamation point, but a period. Because we can shout, but now we won't. We'll just deal with it. You don't understand the New York resolve. But you will. Any doubt? Check out Billy Joel.

God, I love New York, and miss you so.

Tomorrow, it's my Miracle on 34th Street. And, I'll be there. Every year. Like you. It's my commitment to America, and in turn, New York.

You stayed. Me too.

And here's a blessing. And a "Thank You" to New York.

Merry Christmas and Peace on Earth.

“I’m not going to have any new wrinkles.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/20/us/politics/20thompson.html?_r=1&ref=politics&oref=slogin

New York Times weighs in.

Step up. Please.

Chuck Norris? Heh.



h/t http://rightwingnews.com/

The Surge is Working!


The groundswell begins. These are strong words from influential conservatives and they won't fall on deaf ears. Combine this with Fred's push through Iowa, and watch his numbers rise.

Here's a great endorsement from Red State.

http://www.redstate.com/stories/elections/2008/the_envelope_please


"Many writers, in praising Thompson, have indicated that one of the more laudable things about his candidacy is that he is more interested in doing something than he is in being somebody."

With further thoughts from The American Spectator...

http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=12439


"Amazing, isn't it, how much ground the solidly conservative Thompson can make up, just by ambling along? "

And Mary Katherine Ham, via Town Hall.

http://www.townhall.com/blog/g/6a5b7c12-8ada-412c-a77b-55b1b2a90bee

"And, outside of on-the-ground work in Iowa, Fred's been doing some seriously cool stuff to endear himself to conservatives. "

And from Iowa's 5th District Congressman, Steve King...

http://www.siouxcityjournal.com/articles/2007/12/17/news/latest_news/0f6b32f63f5fbd3f862573b40063dbb3.txt

"There is only one candidate who epitomized the full spectrum of our conservative values"

Good reads. All.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Iowa Bus Tour and Laura Ingraham

“Where I stand does not depend on where I’m standing.”

And, he'll be sitting on The Laura Ingraham Show today, second hour.


Hartford-New Britian WDRC 1360 10am-12pm
Hartford-New Britian WMMW 1470 10am-12pm
New Haven WELI 960 7-10pm M-F
New London WXLM 102.3 10a-12pm M-F
Torrington WSNG 610 10am-12pm
Waterbury WWCO 1240 10am-12pm

Monday, December 17, 2007

No reed in the wind.

Midwest commonsense can appreciate this, and it's why I think Fred will do well in Iowa.

Oh, and the fact that others try to be what they're not, helps, too.

"It seems like the name of the game is to stick with your game plan, do what you set out to do with your message. Don't try to change your message. Don't try to be something that you're not."

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/12/16/ftn/main3623725.shtml

THE MYTH IS HIM

http://www.thestate.com/local/story/260042.html

Fred's very solid in South Carolina. This Chicago Tribune piece, reprinted in The State, South Carolina's pre-eminent paper, may explain his popularity.

Life had structure, rules, things you could count on.

The Washington Post takes a background crack at Fred. As reprinted in the Hartford Courant.

http://www.courant.com/news/nationworld/hc-thompson1217.artdec17,0,6860917.story

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Fashionably Late.

Fred Thompson: The Stand-Up Guy Who Stood Up Too Late?

A reasonable analysis by NRO's Byron York. However, after yesterday's debate, I'm as optimistic as ever, and believe the anti-candidate candidate will do just fine.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NzNmMTMyZTgzMDM1NTFmNjk5NjBiZDIyMjcwNDU5Yzk=

School's out!

He also had the obvious moment of the day when he took on the officious moderator, refusing to go along with one of those idiotic "raise your hands" questions.




http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/470waesg.asp

It's a little hard to make out, but it looks like Paul and Huckabee raise their hands, then abruptly put 'em down when Fred refuses. It's follow the leader, all over again.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

follow the trail to the vids.....

Biggest Threat
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=3612936n

Biggest Mistake
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=3581699n

Climate Change
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=3608549n


Maverick Who Loves the Law

Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/1213/p01s04-uspo.html





Fred Thompson: a maverick conservative who loves the law
The GOP presidential hopeful has often defied his party and colleagues to chart his own course.
By Ariel Sabar | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Washington

Just a couple of weeks after the 1999 shooting massacre at Columbine High School, with emotions still raw and bipartisan calls for tougher action against crime, Sen. Fred Thompson (R) of Tennessee convened a hearing whose title, "Federalism and Crime Control," sounded like a law class.

In his opening remarks, Senator Thompson pointedly noted his vote a few years earlier against a school gun ban. It should not have become law, he suggested, nor should Washington enact new laws now. "It's a deeply rooted constitutional principle that the general police power belongs to the states," he said, before calling a parade of scholarly witnesses to buttress his argument.

It was an odd time for a dispassionate look at federalist theory. Fifteen people had been killed in one of the worst school shootings in US history. Even the National Rifle Association had scaled back its annual meeting.

But in many ways, it was signature Thompson: a defiant faith in his own judgment, an indifference to political fallout, and a near zealotry about the limits of government. A few days after his hearing, he not only opposed a juvenile-justice overhaul backed by his own party but was one of just three senators to vote against funds for a set of antiviolence programs.

"In all of the years I worked for him and all the vote memos and summaries I wrote for him, he never once wanted to know what the [party] leadership wanted him to do," recalls Bill Outhier, a former Senate aide. "It stemmed from a larger view of his role in the Senate, which was not to do things for political reasons but to do them because he thought they were right."

Goldwater influence

Thompson traces his political values to the 1960 book "The Conscience of a Conservative," the small-government manifesto by Barry Goldwater, the blunt-spoken senator who founded the modern conservative movement but never won the presidency.

Thompson read the book in college, and found himself drifting away from the Democratic politics of his parents. Associates say that as a young man, he was fascinated by historical figures who seemed to put principle before politics, like John Adams, who represented the British soldiers implicated in the Boston Massacre.

"That influenced him," Fred Ansell, another former aide, says of a book on Adams Thompson spoke of reading in his younger days. "Here was a courageous thing to do, and it was not done for calculated political gain. But by being courageous, it helped John Adams politically."

That temperament has suited Thompson, who in his years on Capitol Hill found himself at odds with own party and, at times, the entire Senate.

An analysis by the Washington Times found that Thompson was the sole "no" vote on more bills and amendments during his eight years in the Senate than any other Republican, even though his party was in power for much of that time. One measure he opposed encouraged schools to adopt zero-tolerance policies for drugs and violence. Another shielded volunteers from lawsuits.

The lonely votes flowed from an often doctrinaire belief that statehouses and town halls should set most policy, not Washington.

His distrust of the one-size-fits-all approach is as much personal as it is political. From his deliberately late entry into the presidential race to his refusal to talk about his faith, Thompson has rarely paid heed to conventional wisdom about how to run campaigns or win elections.

"I'm going to do it the way I want to do it," he recently told a reporter who asked about his light campaign schedule. The remark could well be a personal credo.

Thompson's celebrity owes less to his Senate years than his career as a Hollywood character actor, most notably as District Attorney Arthur Branch in the NBC drama "Law & Order." But on the campaign trail, Thompson, with his Southern patter and imposing physique, seems to promise nothing so much as authenticity.

"Fred is Fred," he said at a South Carolina campaign stop in November. "He may not be everybody's cup of tea, but that's who he is and that's not going to change."

Early on, basketball over books

Growing up in Lawrenceburg, Tenn., a factory town near the Alabama border, Thompson wasn't anyone's idea of an up-and-comer. His father, Fletcher, ran a used car lot, and his mother, Ruth, kept house; both were high-school dropouts. A strapping 6-foot-5, Thompson was a class clown better at basketball than books. The staff of his high-school yearbook captioned his photo, "The lazier a man is, the more he plans to do tomorrow."

"If you'd have lined up everybody in the high school and said one of these will be a presidential candidate one of these days, he'd have been the last one picked," recalls Bobby Alford, president of the Lawrence County Historical Society, who coached Thompson at summer youth baseball.

As a boy Thompson prayed twice a week at the First Street Church of Christ and went to a Wednesday Bible class, recalls Jan Clifton, a friend since childhood. He was baptized there in his early teens.

Churches of Christ have their origin in a principle that would become a signpost for Thompson's secular beliefs: a suspicion of central authority. Rooted in the 19th-century Restoration Movement and concentrated in the South, the churches are nondenominational, have no headquarters, and teach the Bible as the only source of faith.

"They were trying to restore what they perceived as first-century Christianity," says Kevin Lewis, a theologian at Biola University, a Christian college in La Mirada, Calif.

Musical instruments and candles are banned from services, because, a church-affiliated website says, "there is no authority for engaging in acts of worship not found in the New Testament."

"They didn't put up with a lot," Mr. Alford says.

Thompson's faith remains a prickly subject, and to the dismay of some conservatives he has declined to discuss it during the campaign. He has said that he attends church when he visits his mother in Tennessee but does not go regularly at home in McLean, Va.

"I have no apologies to make about my religion or my relationship to Jesus Christ or God," he said with characteristic frankness in a CNN interview earlier this month. "I'm OK with the Lord and the Lord's OK with me, as far as I can tell."

Moving up

In many ways, Thompson happened into a great deal of his success.

He was about 17 years old when his girlfriend, Sarah Lindsey, a schoolmate from one of the town's prominent Republican families, told him she was pregnant. Thompson asked her to marry him, and, despite some doubts, the Lindseys arranged a ceremony.

"It definitely changed him," Ms. Clifton recalls. "He stepped up and took on a lot of responsibility."

Two more children came quickly. To pay for college, he worked odd hours sorting mail, assembling bicycles, and selling shoes. (He divorced Lindsey in 1985 and was remarried in 2002 to Jeri Kehn, with whom he has two children.)

His association with the Lindseys moved him into a higher social circle, and hearing his wife's uncle and grandfather talk about their law careers raised his aspirations. "A lot of people along the way oftentimes saw more in me than I saw in myself," Thompson told a hometown crowd in Lawrenceburg in September, soon after announcing his bid for the GOP presidential nomination.

He graduated from Memphis State University with good enough grades for a scholarship to Vanderbilt Law School.

Thompson was a Republican in the Democratic South, and being in the minority paid almost immediate dividends. Richard Nixon was elected to the White House a year after Thompson's graduation from Vanderbilt. The administration quickly hired Thompson as an assistant US attorney in Nashville.

When Howard Baker Jr. – Tennessee's first popularly elected GOP senator – was searching for a manager for his 1972 reelection bid, Lamar Alexander, then a Baker aide, recommended Thompson. "The first thing was, he was a Republican, and there weren't many Republicans in Middle Tennessee at the time," Mr. Alexander, now Tennessee's senior senator, said in a phone interview, describing what he saw as Thompson's chief asset.

watergate performance

Baker won reelection and invited Thompson, just 30, to serve as minority counsel to the Senate Watergate committee. Investigating a GOP president – the man who effectively gave him his first government job – Thompson was in a position few Republicans would envy.

But Thompson turned it to his advantage. At a hearing, he asked the question that exposed Nixon's secret taping system to the public. He emerged as a minor celebrity, the levelheaded lawyer willing to follow facts wherever they led.

It was another turning point. It deepened his distrust of federal authority, proved both parties were vulnerable to corruption, and hardened his belief in the value of principles.

"In [Nixon], as with so many others, I could find no underlying philosophy by which all things could be measured," Thompson wrote in his 1975 book on Watergate. "In the end, I think that this, more than any other factor, caused his undoing. There was no anchor there; no roots."

election to senate

After a career as a lobbyist and actor, Thompson was swept into the Senate in 1994 with the so-called Republican revolution, filling the seat Al Gore vacated when he became vice president. For the first time in 40 years the GOP controlled both houses of Congress, and it was a heady time for ideologues. Yet just a year into office, Thompson was going out of his way to highlight differences with his party.

"Attached is a [paper] noting your independence from 'the party line,' " a senior aide wrote in a January 1996 memo titled "Breaking from the Republican Pack." The memo catalogued a long list of votes against the GOP majority on campaign finance reform, consumer protection, and states' rights.

Before making policy choices, associates say, he'd often pore over the Constitution, the law, and the writings of the Founding Fathers. "He's a lawyer's lawyer," said Powell Moore, a former Senate chief of staff. "He's risen to the top of three professions: politics and law and movies. But the one he reveres, and is most dedicated to, is the law."

Before leaving the Senate in 2002, Thompson pushed for term limits, a Congressional pay freeze, and a raft of measures to make government leaner and more efficient. But in the end, he was better at standing firm than getting results. He compiled a slim record of legislative achievements, beyond his advocacy for the McCain-Feingold campaign-finance reform, a report on government waste, and an annual cost-benefit analysis of new regulations.

His oversight of hearings into the role of Asian money in the 1996 campaigns of Bill Clinton and Mr. Gore put him in a national spotlight and fueled talk of a presidential candidacy.

But the independence that had served him well as a prosecutor and investigator ruffled feathers in the clubby confines of the Senate. He vexed his GOP colleagues by trying to widen the probe to Republican campaign abuses, and failed to convince Attorney General Janet Reno to appoint an independent counsel to investigate the alleged Democratic misconduct.

In 1999, he broke with all but a few Republican senators by voting to acquit President Clinton on one of the two articles of impeachment. "The president's perjurious statements concerned matters that the Founding Fathers would not have considered to be impeachable 'high crimes and misdemeanors,' " he wrote in a draft statement.

"A lot of Republicans were upset about" his vote, Mr. Ansell, his former aide, recalled. "He had over 100 calls from people who were very irate."

Ansell said that Thompson consoled himself by quoting Edmund Burke, the 18th-century Irish statesman who defied crown policy by defending the American Revolution: "Your representative owes you, not his industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays, instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your opinion."

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Good Lord.

Has it been that long?

Apparently so. I'm in the new job, have a damaged thumb, and zero time.

But...

I'm going to get back in the game....

Fred has been great, and I'll load the videos as they hit.

Everyone's predicting the money, and while I understand that money drives much in politics, I'm a firm believer that substance will surpass form.

I'm back, and here goes.