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Newt Gingrich and the 1994 Republican Revolution

This is an extensive movie on “Newt Gingrich and the 1994 Republican Revolution” in 15 parts. All parts are contained in a playlist and each part plays automatically when the last one finishes. Start watching by clicking the video below.

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February 7, 2012 at 12:00 am Comments (6)

Watch All of the 2012 Super Bowl Ads Here!

Click the player below to play all of the ads for Superbowl 2012!

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February 6, 2012 at 7:31 pm Comments (0)

Is Hopeless Mitt Romney a Sociopath?

It’s another presidential election and once again the republican establishment is telling us who we really should want: Mitt Romney. This is the same establishment that gave us the previous losers, Bob Dole in 1996 and John McCain in 2008. Not suprisingly, both Bob Dole and John McCain are behind Mitt Romney this time.

Amazingly, Mitt Romney is even worse than either McCain or Dole. They both served in the military, while Romney hasn’t. Dole was dull, McCain was ornery, but Mitt Romney is outright loathesome. And while McCain and Dole were not great speakers, Romney is a robotic gaffe machine. Mitt Romney’s gaffes are not just absurd, like Joe Biden’s, either. His gaffes are downright nasty: “I like to fire people.” and “I’m not concerned about the very poor.”

Here’s a chilling thought. Maybe Mitt Romney’s gaffes aren’t really gaffes at all. Maybe those gaffes reflect a man who is truly out of touch, or maybe worse. Maybe deep down, Mitt Romney is really an unfeeling sociopath. After all, this is the same man who put his dog in an “air-tight” container on the roof of his car for a 12-hour drive. He is also the man who proudly declared that “corporations are people, my friend.”

There’s much more to support the sociopath theory. Mitt Romney’s flip-flops on issues are legendary, even among politicians. It isn’t just that Mitt flip-flops, but that he does it with utmost conviction–without thinking or caring what the consequences are. In fact, he seldom considers the consequences of anything that he does.

In this election cycle, Mitt Romney has created huge attack ad campaigns filled with lies and character smears. He dragged out former colleagues of Newt Gingrich to trash him. Before the South Carolina primary, Romney backer Matt Drudge broke the phony story that Newt Gingrich asked his ex-wife for an “open marriage.” Before the Florida primary, Matt Drudge and the National Review screamed bald-faced lies, echoing the Mitt Romney ads that claimed Newt Gingrich had opposed Ronald Reagan.

It was around that time that I realized that Mitt Romney had been behind the parade of countless women and sex lies that were brought out to smear former, front-runner Herman Cain. The fingerprints matched. Who else would do such a thing?

Campaign ads from Mitt Romney have been close to 99% negative. Voter participation has dropped and most of the conservative base now hates Mitt. He hasn’t yet considered the consequences of all this in the general election. He always assumed that he would pay off who he has to when he gets there.

That’s how Mitt Romney lives. His company, Bain Capital, bought out Clear Channel so that now he literally owns the conservative talk radio hosts Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, etc. He paid for endorsements from TEA Party candidates, like Christine O’Donnell and Nikki Haley, through campaign contributions.

It seems reasonable to conclude that he paid off Ann Coulter and many others in the press to lie for him, as well. Never before have we heard so many lies and smears.

So goes the mind of a sociopath. He believes that he can do whatever he wants without consequence. It’s not surprising, then, that in this election cycle, the cliche has become reality: This really is the most negative campaign ever.

This is Mitt Romney; he will say anything to win. He doesn’t just lie, he does so with absolute insistence. Words like “never” and “always” are used frequently, along with tones of strong indignation–the bigger the lie, the stronger the indignation. How dare anyone doubt him?

Finally, the true mark of a sociopath is his belief that commonly accepted rules don’t apply to him. Nowhere was this more apparent than when Mitt had his interview with Brett Baier on Fox News. Brett is as mild as they come, but Mitt Romney became extremely testy over common questions on immigration and health care. At the end of the interview (see the video), Mitt Romney complained that the interview was “overly aggressive” and “uncalled for.” And this was Republican-friendly Fox News.

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February 6, 2012 at 2:29 pm Comments (0)

Ann Coulter: Romneycare Shows the Failure of Even Statewide Universal Care

In October 2011, Ann Coulter called Romneycare a failure. This was just four months before she wrote her column “Three Cheers for Romneycare,” which praised Mitt Romney’s health care plan and deemed it a success. We’ll just call this another flip-flop for Mitt.

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February 5, 2012 at 12:32 pm Comment (1)

Ann Coulter Flip-Flops for Mitt Romney

It’s incredible to see how many times Mitt Romney has flip-flopped on issues. In fact, there are so many that I’ve created a huge catalogue of Mitt Romney flip-flops that grows larger everyday.

These days, Ann Coulter has come out as a strong supporter of Mitt Romney for president. Virtually every day she is out saying something in support of Mitt: “He’s the most electable.” “He’s the most conservative.” She is becoming more and more like the lying candidate who she supports.

In fact, much like the flip-flopping Mitt Romney, Ann Coulter has flip-flopped on supporting him. In 2008, she was for him. In 2011, she was against him because he would lose. Now, she’s claims that he can win. See for yourself in the videos below. We’ll call this the flip-flop for Mitt Romney campaign.

Ann Coulter now regularly calls Mitt Romney the most conservative candidate. It’s funny that, in 1994 Senate campaign, Mitt Romney said that he “was an independent during the time of Reagan/Bush.” Then, in the 2002 Massachusetts Gubernatorial campaign, Mitt Romney affirmed that “his views are progressive.” Never fear though, Ann Coulter assures us that he’s the most conservative. Sure Ann, whatever you say.

Ann Coulter CPAC 2008: “I think he is our best candidate.”

Ann Coulter CPAC 2011: “If we don’t run Chris Christie, Romney will be the nominee, and we’ll lose.”

Ann Coulter now says that Mitt Romney can win.

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February 5, 2012 at 3:11 am Comments (0)

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