Any Rudy Republicans here?
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
Any Rudy Republicans here?
-Has had Marital affairs
-Pro gay rights
-Pro Choice
-Pro Gun Control
-His record is weak on illegal immigration.
Nationally, Foxnews.com lists:
Giuliani 30.0%
Thompson 16.0%
McCain 15.6%
Romney 12.3
Besides his slamming Hillary Clinton, and constant praise to Ronald Reagan...where is the appeal?
I just don't get it. If he gets the republican nod, isn't that a pretty big condimnation of President Bush? Because Rudy can't actually be your first choice with those glaring discrepencies. Can he be?
Please help me understand, because I am having a hard time keeping my hypocracy paint brush tucked away.
-Pro gay rights
-Pro Choice
-Pro Gun Control
-His record is weak on illegal immigration.
Nationally, Foxnews.com lists:
Giuliani 30.0%
Thompson 16.0%
McCain 15.6%
Romney 12.3
Besides his slamming Hillary Clinton, and constant praise to Ronald Reagan...where is the appeal?
I just don't get it. If he gets the republican nod, isn't that a pretty big condimnation of President Bush? Because Rudy can't actually be your first choice with those glaring discrepencies. Can he be?
Please help me understand, because I am having a hard time keeping my hypocracy paint brush tucked away.
- Nightshade
- DBB Master
- Posts: 5138
- Joined: Sun Jun 17, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Planet Earth, USA
- Contact:
I'm guessing he's assumed to be the strongest candidate in a field of weaklings and nobodies- and anyone's gotta be better than accepting Hillary as president.
The republican side of the field looks like its full of \"Bob Dole\" clones.
The republican side of the field looks like its full of \"Bob Dole\" clones.
.
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
Re: Any Rudy Republicans here?
Gooberman wrote: -Has had Marital affairs
So? Big deal. This should not even be public knowledge (well, Guiliani went out of his way to make it public knowledge, but it still should factor absolutely 0% in an electoral decision)
-Pro gay rights
Sort of, kind of... let's just say his current explanation is along the lines of "I was for it before I was against it"
-Pro Choice
Would you believe that he tried to spin adoption statistics in New York City to make it look like he's pro-life? He was pretty damn pro-choice when he was mayor.
-Pro Gun Control
You can't be a NYC politician and not support gun control. It will destroy you in the press.
-His record is weak on illegal immigration.
What could he have possibly done about illegal immigration?
...snip...
Besides his slamming Hillary Clinton, and constant praise to Ronald Reagan...where is the appeal?
Because his campaign platform is "9/11 9/11 9/11 9/11 turrists 9/11 turrists 9/11 osama".
I just don't get it. If he gets the republican nod, isn't that a pretty big condimnation of President Bush? Because Rudy can't actually be your first choice with those glaring discrepencies. Can he be?
He's as much of a corrupt authoritarian f*ck as Bush is. Have you heard about the Bernie Kerik indictment?
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
I agree. However, my post isn't so much as criticizing Rudy as it is those whom would vote for him. The family values crowd. In fact, I'm not even criticizing in so much as I feel really confused on who is giving him that 30%.So? Big deal. This should not even be public knowledge (well, Guiliani went out of his way to make it public knowledge, but it still should factor absolutely 0% in an electoral decision)
It's not like Rudy is asking you to over look this or that flaw....hes asking you to vote for a liberal. And it currently looks as if that is not too much to ask!
I'm really confused how Pat Robertson could actually support such a candidate. The evangelicals of all people should be un-willing to compromise on their beliefs. Yet fielding Rudy is just that, its saying we don't really care about abortion and think its murder. We don't really think gay marriage is that important of an issue.
He could be conservative, he could have in the past come out against it. Again, Rudy is what he is, I'm just trying to make heads and tails of who the 30% are....and see if anyone here still has any respect for Pat Robertson.what could he have possibly done about illegal immigration?
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1557
- Joined: Sun Oct 07, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Richmond,B. C., Canada
Ask yourself if the Republicans really want to be in power for the next term when the nation will have to suck it up and admit failure in Iraq, when 500 Billion dollars in trade deficit will emasculate the dollar, when 500 billion dollars a year in deficit spending will force either deep service cuts or large tax increases.
If you run a Democratic Republican candidate and by some miracle he wins you can blame it on his liberal leanings, he's not a true party representative. If he loses then it is all the Democrat's fault pure and simple.
Time to dump the presidency for one term and let some poor sucker take the heat. It will likely be either the first woman president or the first black president and either way they will look like total failures and back up the conservative feelings that \"those people\" don't belong as President.
If you run a Democratic Republican candidate and by some miracle he wins you can blame it on his liberal leanings, he's not a true party representative. If he loses then it is all the Democrat's fault pure and simple.
Time to dump the presidency for one term and let some poor sucker take the heat. It will likely be either the first woman president or the first black president and either way they will look like total failures and back up the conservative feelings that \"those people\" don't belong as President.
Clothes may make the man
But all a girl needs is a tan
-The Producers
But all a girl needs is a tan
-The Producers
I don't believe the republicans who would vote for Rudy, would accept the premise of those statements. So I can't believe that is why they are voting for him.
Who knows, maybe it is.
Also, the only strong claim to conservatism that Rudy has is the War. It would be a tough sell that the war in Iraq was lost because Rudy supports gay rights...etc.
Who knows, maybe it is.
Also, the only strong claim to conservatism that Rudy has is the War. It would be a tough sell that the war in Iraq was lost because Rudy supports gay rights...etc.
- Lothar
- DBB Ghost Admin
- Posts: 12133
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: I'm so glad to be home
- Contact:
Re:
Personally, I'm not a big fan of Rudy (and I've thought Pat Robertson was a giant douchebag as long as I've been aware of who he was. It wouldn't surprise me if his endorsement is more anti-Hillary than pro-Rudy, and I can only hope it's another nail in the coffin of P-Rob's influence.) But I can see where Rudy's appeal comes from.
I don't like anybody's stance on gay marriage (government needs to get out of the marriage business entirely), so that's not a big negative for Rudy. I don't like his stand on gun control, but I like the way he dealt with crime in NYC by enforcing the little stuff. I really don't like his stance on abortion. But I do like his stance on the WoT, and I do like the prospects of his appointing good justices to SCOTUS. That mitigates my worries about his pro-choice stance quite a bit, particularly since I don't think any congress is going to manage to pass any abortion-related bill in the near future. The judiciary is the main fight right now.
That seems to be common sentiment among evangelicals -- we'd prefer somebody else, but Rudy's judicial choices are almost definitely going to be acceptable to us, and that's where abortion/gay marriage are going to be played out anyway. Given the choice between a candidate who'll veto pro-life bills and appoint liberal judges, and one who'll veto pro-life bills but appoint conservative judges, it's not a hard choice.
Rudy definitely isn't my first choice (Fred!), and I don't think he's the first choice of many of the "family values" types (P-Rob appears to be an opportunist, not a genuine supporter.) He's better than Hillary, though. And he's one of the top choices of a lot of military families, those who don't particularly care one way or the other about abortion or gay rights but who want us to pursue victory in Iraq and beyond. I think that's where the majority of the 30% is coming from.
Or, possibly, saying they don't think it's the most pressing issue of the issues they can sway in this election. Out of a field of weak candidates, Rudy's weaknesses aren't so bad.Gooberman wrote:hes asking [the family values crowd] to vote for a liberal.... its saying we don't really care about abortion and think its murder. We don't really think gay marriage is that important of an issue.
I don't like anybody's stance on gay marriage (government needs to get out of the marriage business entirely), so that's not a big negative for Rudy. I don't like his stand on gun control, but I like the way he dealt with crime in NYC by enforcing the little stuff. I really don't like his stance on abortion. But I do like his stance on the WoT, and I do like the prospects of his appointing good justices to SCOTUS. That mitigates my worries about his pro-choice stance quite a bit, particularly since I don't think any congress is going to manage to pass any abortion-related bill in the near future. The judiciary is the main fight right now.
That seems to be common sentiment among evangelicals -- we'd prefer somebody else, but Rudy's judicial choices are almost definitely going to be acceptable to us, and that's where abortion/gay marriage are going to be played out anyway. Given the choice between a candidate who'll veto pro-life bills and appoint liberal judges, and one who'll veto pro-life bills but appoint conservative judges, it's not a hard choice.
Rudy definitely isn't my first choice (Fred!), and I don't think he's the first choice of many of the "family values" types (P-Rob appears to be an opportunist, not a genuine supporter.) He's better than Hillary, though. And he's one of the top choices of a lot of military families, those who don't particularly care one way or the other about abortion or gay rights but who want us to pursue victory in Iraq and beyond. I think that's where the majority of the 30% is coming from.
Re: Any Rudy Republicans here?
Correct me if I'm wrong ... isn't that a lot like ol' Wild Bill's record?Gooberman wrote:-Has had Marital affairs
-Pro gay rights
-Pro Choice
-Pro Gun Control
-His record is weak on illegal immigration.
IMO...
- Giuliani = too liberal
- Thompson = don't think he's really committed (can talk the talk ... but action is slow and a bit undecided. Not good combo)
- McCain = just hasn't hit that "resonant" chord
- Romney = not yet sure about him
Even if Thompson doesn't become the nominee or President, I'd like to see him as a Republican commentator. He has a very folksy way of explaining his views in a way that isn't abrasive or condescending. Oh my gosh, what a concept. If you don't treat the opposition like misinformed babies, they might just listen to you!
I've been impressed by Fred as well, he has gone out on a limb on a few issues, and seems to be willing to tell people what they need to hear, not just what they want to hear.
Because of this, I have scratched his name off the list of legitimate candidates.
If there was a politician--that agreed with me on every single issue--but thought that it was ok to shoot black people if you found them to be inconvenient, and at the same time every other politician in my party was against this random shooting of black people...I would not even consider the origional politician, and would do everything I could to make sure that he didn't become my parties nominee.
These are the primaries, there is no need to sacrifice your beliefs here. I can see a conservative wanting Rudy over Hilary, but these are the primaries. Why do they want Rudy over Fred, Mitt, McCain, etc??
I used poor language when I said, "don't really care about abortion"....but the part of them not really thinking it is murder was dead on. Even in the "better of two evils" scenario you described...I would have to go with third party if I actually considered abortion murder.
Maybe the military-families are indeed where he is getting this support, but I'm surprised the evangelical negatives arn't washing it away.
Because of this, I have scratched his name off the list of legitimate candidates.
I could conceed every one of Rudy's liberal tendencies to this, except abortion.Lothar wrote:Or, possibly, saying they don't think it's the most pressing issue of the issues they can sway in this election. Out of a field of weak candidates, Rudy's weaknesses aren't so bad.
If there was a politician--that agreed with me on every single issue--but thought that it was ok to shoot black people if you found them to be inconvenient, and at the same time every other politician in my party was against this random shooting of black people...I would not even consider the origional politician, and would do everything I could to make sure that he didn't become my parties nominee.
These are the primaries, there is no need to sacrifice your beliefs here. I can see a conservative wanting Rudy over Hilary, but these are the primaries. Why do they want Rudy over Fred, Mitt, McCain, etc??
I used poor language when I said, "don't really care about abortion"....but the part of them not really thinking it is murder was dead on. Even in the "better of two evils" scenario you described...I would have to go with third party if I actually considered abortion murder.
Maybe the military-families are indeed where he is getting this support, but I'm surprised the evangelical negatives arn't washing it away.
- Nightshade
- DBB Master
- Posts: 5138
- Joined: Sun Jun 17, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Planet Earth, USA
- Contact:
It's going to fall on either one of two sides- the Hillary crowd (because they really want Bill back in some small way) or the 'anyone BUT Hillary' crowd that'll vote for a yellow dog before they vote for Hillary. Giuliani has shown he can fight while the other republicans have shown nothing to earn the confidence of their party.
.
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
"Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" - Mao Zedong
-
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: USA
Re:
I wish that Condoleezza Rice was running. I believe it would show what absolute crap the above statement is.Ford Prefect wrote:It will likely be either the first woman president or the first black president and either way they will look like total failures and back up the conservative feelings that "those people" don't belong as President.
On the Rudy question, he's the only Rep candidate that I've seen so far that's showed undeniable passion in his position on the WoT, which a LOT of people see as the quintessential issue of our day. A successful conclusion to Iraq is only one part of that. Iran is also looming, and right now, it looks like war or doing nothing would both be very bad scenarios.
I haven't picked my favorite yet, but I can certainly understand Rudy's appeal.
Re:
Iran is only looming because you have been told it is looming. There is no objective reason to believe that conflict with Iran is necessary, much less beneficial. The only reason the thought of Iran is in your head is because certain people in Washington have decided that we will invade. It's just a matter of pretense.Herculosis wrote:Iran is also looming, and right now, it looks like war or doing nothing would both be very bad scenarios.
-
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: USA
Re:
Umm, no. Not even close.DCrazy wrote:Iran is only looming because you have been told it is looming. There is no objective reason to believe that conflict with Iran is necessary, much less beneficial. The only reason the thought of Iran is in your head is because certain people in Washington have decided that we will invade. It's just a matter of pretense.
Here's what I see:
1. Iran is agressively moving toward nuclear weapons, and thumbing its nose at the world in the process.
2. Ahmadinejad has been very vocal about his desire to wipe Israel off the face of the planet.
3. He's excited about the escalation and seems to want to take his rightful place in what he sees as the apocalypse.
There's a very real possibility of some very bad stuff coming.
- Lothar
- DBB Ghost Admin
- Posts: 12133
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: I'm so glad to be home
- Contact:
DCrazy, please do not drag threads off topic. Thanks.
-----
Goob, certainly in the primaries, your pro-life voters should be supporting someone other than Rudy. Even reading P-Rob's statement, what he said was, in essence, that if Rudy wins the nomination, then he'd be acceptable to vote for in the general election. It wasn't a wholehearted primary endorsement. (And P-Rob is a loser anyway; I suspect his \"endorsement\" has more to do with money than anything else.) The \"evangelical negatives\" aren't going to wipe away Rudy's support in the primary because his support isn't coming from evangelicals. And they're not likely to wipe away his support in the general election because he's so much better than Hillary.
When it comes to general election, I'll vote for Rudy if he's the guy who gets the nod. A guy who'll veto pro-life bills and sign pro-choice bills (which rarely make it through congress anyway) but appoint judges who'll overturn Roe v Wade? That's a net positive, especially compared to Hillary*. It's like electing a racist if you know Congress won't put any race-related bills on his desk anyway, and he'll appoint judges who will overturn racist laws already on the books. His own racism won't actually hurt anything. I gotta hold my nose while voting, but I'll still vote for him.
* not to mention the damage Hillary-appointed judges would most likely do in other areas!
-----
Goob, certainly in the primaries, your pro-life voters should be supporting someone other than Rudy. Even reading P-Rob's statement, what he said was, in essence, that if Rudy wins the nomination, then he'd be acceptable to vote for in the general election. It wasn't a wholehearted primary endorsement. (And P-Rob is a loser anyway; I suspect his \"endorsement\" has more to do with money than anything else.) The \"evangelical negatives\" aren't going to wipe away Rudy's support in the primary because his support isn't coming from evangelicals. And they're not likely to wipe away his support in the general election because he's so much better than Hillary.
When it comes to general election, I'll vote for Rudy if he's the guy who gets the nod. A guy who'll veto pro-life bills and sign pro-choice bills (which rarely make it through congress anyway) but appoint judges who'll overturn Roe v Wade? That's a net positive, especially compared to Hillary*. It's like electing a racist if you know Congress won't put any race-related bills on his desk anyway, and he'll appoint judges who will overturn racist laws already on the books. His own racism won't actually hurt anything. I gotta hold my nose while voting, but I'll still vote for him.
* not to mention the damage Hillary-appointed judges would most likely do in other areas!
Re:
I'm not trying to drag the thread off topic. I refuse to vote for any politician who supports action against Iran, because they are not a threat to us. Guiliani is one of those people who is using the spectre of Iran to gain support. I am countering his argument through reason.
Not according to the IAEA... where have you heard otherwise?Herculosis wrote:Here's what I see:
1. Iran is agressively moving toward nuclear weapons, and thumbing its nose at the world in the process.
Nope. He claimed Pakistan would do it, though. When has Ahmadinejad threatened to use pre-emptive force against Israel? And then there's the entire question of whether that is our problem to begin with.Herculosis wrote:2. Ahmadinejad has been very vocal about his desire to wipe Israel off the face of the planet.
Absolute and complete conjecture, unless you're Ahmadinejad's personal psychologist.3. He's excited about the escalation and seems to want to take his rightful place in what he sees as the apocalypse.
- Lothar
- DBB Ghost Admin
- Posts: 12133
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: I'm so glad to be home
- Contact:
Re:
It's sufficient to say \"I refuse to vote for any politician who supports action against Iran\" without actually arguing about Iran, just like it's sufficient to say \"I will/won't vote for a guy who's pro-choice\" without actually arguing about abortion.
If you want to argue specifics on any given issue (Iran, abortion, gun control, immigration, etc.) take it to another thread. Don't make extra work for me.
If you want to argue specifics on any given issue (Iran, abortion, gun control, immigration, etc.) take it to another thread. Don't make extra work for me.
-
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: USA
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13691
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
Re:
Here are reasons that Pat Robertson is backing Guiliani. He's probably more electable than the other Republicans and likely has a better chance of defeating Hillary.
The other important fact is that he's also stated that if he's elected president, he WILL appoint strict, constructionist (i.e. right wing conservative) judges to the supreme court. Then the conservative fantasy will come true, a right wing stacked supreme court!
The Evangelicals want to elect the most electable Republican just to get a right wing supreme court, the end justifies the means. You'll note that it takes a very long time to turn over the judges in the supreme court, they're in for life and they either have to retire or die.
The other important fact is that he's also stated that if he's elected president, he WILL appoint strict, constructionist (i.e. right wing conservative) judges to the supreme court. Then the conservative fantasy will come true, a right wing stacked supreme court!
The Evangelicals want to elect the most electable Republican just to get a right wing supreme court, the end justifies the means. You'll note that it takes a very long time to turn over the judges in the supreme court, they're in for life and they either have to retire or die.
Re:
I consider myself to be moderately conservative. I certainly don't want a right-wing stacked Supreme Court, because that eradicates the ability of the panel to make informed judgments based on reason, debate, and discourse.tunnelcat wrote:The other important fact is that he's also stated that if he's elected president, he WILL appoint strict, constructionist (i.e. right wing conservative) judges to the supreme court. Then the conservative fantasy will come true, a right wing stacked supreme court!
I think the term "conservative" has been redefined slightly over the past seven years to really mean "right-wing". The practical politics you're talking about underscore that, and are certainly disheartening.
- Tunnelcat
- DBB Grand Master
- Posts: 13691
- Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2007 12:32 pm
- Location: Pacific Northwest, U.S.A.
I also consider myself somewhat 'conservative' but not like the Republicans are now. We've lost the original 'Goldwater Conservative' to a bunch of extreme right-wing, power hungry, bigoted, greedy, fascist religious zealots, in my opinion.
The Democrats aren't much better these days either. Spineless slugs and wimps being led around by Bush, come to mind as a descriptor for them. What's a voter to do?
One party (either one) with full control and power in all branches of government is a very bad thing for the future of our country.
The Democrats aren't much better these days either. Spineless slugs and wimps being led around by Bush, come to mind as a descriptor for them. What's a voter to do?
One party (either one) with full control and power in all branches of government is a very bad thing for the future of our country.