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Saturday, July 05, 2008
How Jesse Helms Gave us Reagan
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 12:59 PM


"The George Bailey test" is a way of measuring the impact a person has had on the world.  It comes from the movie "It's a Wonderful Life," of course, which starred Reagan's friend Jimmy Stewart.  The test asks the question; what would the world be like if you had never been born?  When you ask that question regarding Jesse Helms, you begin to see what a dramatic impact he had on the U.S. -- and the world.

A lot has been written about Jesse Helms' senate career these last couple of days, but it should also be noted that without Helms (and the support of his friend Tom Ellis), we quite possibly would never have had a President Reagan. 

In 1976, Jesse Helms (then the junior Senator) first helped persuade Reagan to seek the presidency, and then engineered a stunning come-from-behind victory for Reagan in North Carolina.  This was Reagan's first victory over Ford, and it probably kept Reagan from dropping out of the race.  What is more, the win led to more wins and gave Reagan the momentum to go all the way to the convention, nearly wresting the GOP nomination away from sitting President Gerald Ford

Because of Helms' support, Reagan left the '76 campaign with the momentum and clout that would propel him to win the nomination in '80.  The truth is, we owe a debt of gratitude to Helms for everything Reagan was able to accomplish.

In fact, his early support of Reagan was so significant that even if you put aside his entire Senate career and accomplishments -- which were substantial -- Helms legacy would still be remarkable.  Without Helms' support in '76, we likely wouldn't have gotten Reagan in '80.

Another interesting thing to note about Helms is that he started out as a reporter.  Interestingly, Paul Weyrich -- a founder of the modern-day conservative movement -- also started out as a reporter.  It is ironic (but probably not surprising) that these men -- along with a movie star president -- were able to take on the media elites in the 60s, 70s, and 80s -- and often win.





Saturday, July 05, 2008
Kent Snyder: Helped Create Ron Paul Movement
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 12:53 PM
A few days ago the chairman of Ron Paul's presidential campaign passed away.  Kent Snyder was largely responsible for turning the Paul campaign into a national grassroots movement.  Our thoughts and prayers are with his family.





Saturday, July 05, 2008
Getting the Whole Story
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 11:49 AM
American MSM headlines proclaim heartening news for Barack, like "Polls: Obama leads by 100" (in today's Baltimore Sun blog), "Obama: Strength Out of Weakness" (column in The Washington Post) and "McCain struggles to regain his footing" (from the AP).

But look a little deeper.  It takes the Economic Times of India to report on the fact that "aggressive progressives" at Democrats.com are threatening to withhold money from the Obama campaign.  It takes Newsbusters to report that leftists like Tom Hayden are voicing deep concern for the Obama campaign in light of Barack's new equivocations about leaving Iraq.

This tells you two things.  One, that now more than even, the MSM may not be the best place to go to get the full story about what's really happening in the campaign (like that's a news flash . . .).  Second, it helps explain how liberals are so bitter and surprised when they lose elections.  Republicans are always getting bad news in the MSM (see McCain story above, for example).  But Democrats who restrict their reading to the MSM almost always see a sunnier picture -- and then, lo and behold, Election Day turns out to be a major disappointment.






Friday, July 04, 2008
Veep Talk (and more) on Fox ...
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 10:37 PM
I was on Fox earlier today talking about "veep" picks, as well as other political topics.



Special thanks to Matt Naugle for posting the video.





Friday, July 04, 2008
Why Jesse Helm's is the Country's Favorite Conservative Senator
Posted by: Matt Lewis at 10:25 PM
More than a decade ago, Morton Blackwell wrote a tribute to Sen. Helms.  Below is an excerpt.  Read the whole thing here.

Why has Sen. Jesse Helms for so long been our country's very favorite conservative senator? Why do we love him?

Let me count the reasons:

  1. In every word and deed, Sen. Helms embodies solid conservative principles. No one else in the Senate, no one at all, comes even close to his reputation for selfless, steadfast adherence to every tenet of our conservative philosophy. Name the issue, and I can tell you how he will vote. Name the issue. Free enterprise. Limited government. Strong national defense. Traditional values. Name the issue. Jesse Helms is predictable.

    That is why we admire and love him. And that is why he's the conservative liberals love to hate.

  2. Sen. Helms forces votes on issues the liberals don't want to vote on. Time and again, year in and year out, Sen. Helms has been the only conservative prepared to make the Senate vote on conservative issues where most politicians are on the opposite side from the American people. Think about all the liberal senators who have been defeated by more conservative challengers since 1972. It's a fact. Jesse Helms made every one of those liberals vulnerable. He gave them all voting records their challengers could run against. Jesse Helms makes democracy work.

    That is why we admire and love him. And that is why he's the conservative liberals love to hate.






Friday, July 04, 2008
Consider the Contrast
Posted by: Michael Medved at 4:11 PM

Striking Constrast in These Brief Bulletins from LBN News Alerts---

First, a PROFILE IN JELLO
 

LBN-PRESIDENTIAL BACK ROOM:   ***Senator Barack Obama said he might "refine" his Iraq policies after meeting with military commanders there later this summer. But hours later he held a second news conference to emphasize his commitment to the withdrawing of all combat troops from Iraq within 16 months of taking office.  

And then, a PROFILE IN COURAGE

CONDOLEEZZA RICE SAYS SHE'S 'PROUD' OF DECISION TO INVADE IRAQ": Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she's "proud" of the U.S. decision to wage the Iraq war and insisted that the world is not more dangerous than it was when George W. Bush took office. "We're now beginning to see that perhaps it's not so popular to be a suicide bomber. We're beginning to see that perhaps people are questioning whether Osama Bin Laden ought to really be the face of Islam," Rice, 53, said in an interview to be broadcast this weekend on Bloomberg Television's "Conversations with Judy Woodruff.






Friday, July 04, 2008
Happy Independence Day!
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 12:02 PM

Ronald Reagan, "What the Fourth of July Means to Me"

July Fourth is the birthday of our nation. I believed as a boy, and believe even more today, that it is the birthday of the greatest nation on earth.

The day of our nation's birth in that little hall in Philadelphia, [was] a day on which debate had raged for hours. The men gathered there were honorable men hard-pressed by a king who had flouted the very laws they were willing to obey. Even so, to sign the Declaration of Independence was such an irretrievable act that the walls resounded with the words "treason, the gallows, the headsman's axe," and the issue remained in doubt.
. . . 

In recent years . . . I've come to think of [Independence Day] as more than just the birthday of a nation.

It also commemorates the only true philosophical revolution in all history.

Oh, there have been revolutions before and since ours. But those revolutions simply exchanged one set of rules for another. Ours was a revolution that changed the very concept of government.

Let the Fourth of July always be a reminder that here in this land, for the first time, it was decided that man is born with certain God-given rights; that government is only a convenience created and managed by the people, with no powers of its own except those voluntarily granted to it by the people.

Thank you, troops, for preserving our freedom; thank you, heroes and heroines of all stripes who have led this country wisely and well -- and most of all, thanks to the Creator who has blessed us with a country so generous, and free, and fair.  Happy Fourth of July!








Friday, July 04, 2008
Thanks to Those Who Keep Our Independence
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 9:21 AM

First off, Happy Independence Day to all of the Townhall readers out there. I know many of you, like me, spend the holiday with friends and family enjoying apple pie and fireworks.  This is also a time for us to celebrate the bravery of our men and women in the Armed Forces, and their courage to keep us free.  My wife introduced me to this new campaign to show our support for the troops.  It’s very easy, but meaningful at the same time.

http://www.gratitudecampaign.org/fullmovie.php

It’s shocking how many times I have approached a soldier to thank him, and to see that he is embarrassed by it.  I’m sure most of it is due to their humble nature, but I can’t stop thinking that in this day and age, when cynicism and indifference seem to be laudable character traits, that maybe they’re just not used to the positive attention.  Either way, it’s best to shake their hand and give them a sincere “thank you” but this is a terrific gesture just the same. 

Have a happy, and safe Independence Day.






Friday, July 04, 2008
"I Have Not Searched For Maneuvering Room With Respect To That Position."
Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 7:35 AM
Obama, pillar of strength.

Charles Krauthammer continues to chronicle Obama's summersaults, but it looks like the only thing Obama won't change is his insistence on losing the war.




Thursday, July 03, 2008
Pretty Shameless
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 5:28 PM

If I had been a Clinton supporter -- or just a leftist committed to defeat in Iraq -- I'd be pretty bitter about this one.  Remember Barack's promises of immediate withdrawal from Iraq -- the ones that distinguished him from Hillary's more "nuanced" position?  Apparently, as Politico's Mike Allen reports, those Obama pledges are no longer operative:

Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) promised primary voters a swift withdrawal from Iraq, in clear language still on his website: “Obama will immediately begin to remove our troops from Iraq. He will remove one to two combat brigades each month and have all of our combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months.”

Not anymore. Heading into the holiday weekend, Obama and his advisers repudiated that pledge, saying he is reevaluating his plan and will incorporate advice from commanders on the ground when he visits Iraq later this month.

Anyone who's observed politics for any period of time is used to some finessing of positions between the primary and general elections.  But the scope and the boldness of Barack's flip-flopping is really breathtaking.

This should be a warning to any conservative or Republican who, in a moment of madness, might even contemplate voting for Barack (or not voting for John McCain).  Barack said what the left-wing constituency in the Democrat primaries wanted to hear -- and now he hasn't hesitated to crumple them up and throw them away like a dirty Kleenex.

Does anyone think he'd have the slightest hesitation about treating the moderates and independents he's courting now any differently, should he win the presidency?




Thursday, July 03, 2008
America Is Not An Accident
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 4:04 PM

This is the text of a speech I have delivered on many occasions to many groups, usually around Independence Day.  I know this is a bit long for a blog post, but I hope you will enjoy it and pass the message along.
----------------------------

“For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill, the eyes of all people are upon us, so that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken and so cause him to withdraw his present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword through the world…

We shall shame the faces of many… and cause their prayers to be turned into curses upon us till we be consumed out of the good land whither we are going.”

The words of the Pilgrim John Winthrop.

The image of the “city on a hill,” of course, comes from the Gospel of Matthew — the words of Jesus Christ in the Sermon on the Mount.

The “work [the Pilgrims] had undertaken” was a new life in a new world, free from persecution.

And the “present help” he referred to was the chance to reach the destination toward which his people were sailing when he delivered that sermon aboard the ship Arbella in the Spring of 1630, somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean en route to the New World.

This is not Christian revisionism — this is American history. 

From the earliest days of American civilization, the inhabitants of this continent have understood that the abundant wealth of resources and opportunity found in the New World is not man-made nor an accident of nature — but the generosity of our Heavenly Father.

In other words, not only was America a shining city on a hill, but Americans knew from the first that they were not the ones who screwed in the light bulb.

America is not an accident.


Read More...





Thursday, July 03, 2008
A Worrisome Sign for Obama?
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 3:33 PM
Check out this very unscientific, but perhaps revealing, poll from AOL.

Question is: "Is Obama politically ruthless?"  72% say "yes," 22% say "no" and 6% aren't sure.

The fact that this sort of question is even being asked seems to me to signal a grave danger for Barack Obama.  Part of what sparked the groundswell of support and excitement that catapaulted him past Hillary Clinton was the fact that he cast himself as the practicioner of a "new kind of politics."

Of course, it's hard to quibble with a strategy that's carried someone just four years out of the Illinois state senate (and just 17 years out of law school) to the nomination of a major political party. 

But promising a "new kind of politics" does carry a danger when it means that a candidate faces a choice:  Either he can do what he thinks it takes to get elected (i.e. flip-flopping left and right to jettison politically disadvantageous promises and positions) at the risk of tarnishing his brand and undermining the entire rationale for his candidacy -- or he can accept the almost insurmountable political handicaps that come with remaining true to the kumbayah style of politics that he extolled in his meteoric rise.

The problem at this point for Barack is that there's nothing he's done since clinching the nomination sends anything like a message that he's different from any other ambitious Democratic politician of the past.  And some of what he's done -- from playing the race card to allowing surrogates like Wesley Clark trash John McCain's military service to rejecting public financing -- actually smacks of a surprisingly hardened cynical opportunism.  It strikes me that if a large segment of the voters catch on to that, the entire rationale for his candidacy is in big trouble.

Once the veneer of the "new kind of politician" has been disproved by Barack's deeds, what's left?  A young man with a thin political resume and a lot of rhetoric that's been pretty effectively discredited by his own actions.




Thursday, July 03, 2008
Fred Thompson addresses National Right to Life conference
Posted by: Fred Thompson at 2:31 PM
Fred Thompson addressed the National Right to Life conference Thursday morning live on Townhall.com.  His prepared remarks are available here.

Video:

Part One

Part Two

Part Three





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How Jesse Helms Gave us Reagan

Posted by: Matt Lewis
7/5/2008

America Is Not An Accident

Posted by: Tom DeLay
7/3/2008

WEASLEY'S "JUDGMENT"

Posted by: Michael Medved
7/3/2008

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