The Conservative Thread: Back to Basics. Pass the Lasagna and Have a Flower!!

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I don't have MySpace, only Facebook. :sad1:

(On a funny note...my brother sent me a message on my Facebook this morning that he saw I had joined the "Yes We Did!" group. He was so excited and happy. I have no idea how that got on my profile...:confused3

Anyway, I wrote him back and cleared things up...:rotfl2:

I'm on facebook, too -- could we join a 'no we didn't' group?

BARF.

Hey, I'm on Facebook too and would love to be everyone's friend on Facebook. PM me if you're interested.

I don't have a Myspace page. Too lazy for it.

My DD (Meg) loves the dancing banana and is sitting right next to me - so this is for her: :banana: :banana: :banana:

On both facebook and myspace. I think we need a "no we didn't" group. Or how about, "Got Buyers Remorse?"

Anyone that wants to be my friend, PM me, I can use all the conservative friends I can get... :thumbsup2 We have to support each other. :cool1:

Anyone who wants to add me on Facebook, search by my name- "Corey Lyn"- and add the profile with the purple Christmas ornament as the profile pic.:lmao: I decided to quit being political (I was "Read My Lipstick- NObama 08- Keep Your Change") and start being Christmas-y.:goodvibes
 
My dad received this email and sent it to me. I think that it's valid:

Dear Customers and Suppliers:

As the CFO of a business that employees 140 people, I have resigned myself to the fact that Barrack Obama is our next President, and that our taxes and government fees will increase in a BIG way. To compensate for these increases, I figure that our customers will have to see an increase in our prices of about 8%. However, since we cannot increase prices right now due to the dismal state of our economy, we will have to lay off six of our employees instead. This has really been eating at me, as we believe we are family here and I didn't know how to choose who will have to go. So, this is what I did. I walked through our parking lot and found 6 Obama bumper stickers on our employees' cars and have decided these folks will be the first to be laid off. I can't think of a more fair way to approach this problem. These folks wanted change; I gave it to them.

If you have a better idea, let me know.

Sincerely,

J. T. Stegman


Unfortunately, I think will happen as businesses are forced to lay off employees because of that man's tax plan.
 

Anyone that wants to add me on Facebook, please do! Search for Kerry Mansfield, I'm in the Embry Riddle '11 and Columbus State '06 networks.
 
My dad received this email and sent it to me. I think that it's valid:

Dear Customers and Suppliers:

As the CFO of a business that employees 140 people, I have resigned myself to the fact that Barrack Obama is our next President, and that our taxes and government fees will increase in a BIG way. To compensate for these increases, I figure that our customers will have to see an increase in our prices of about 8%. However, since we cannot increase prices right now due to the dismal state of our economy, we will have to lay off six of our employees instead. This has really been eating at me, as we believe we are family here and I didn't know how to choose who will have to go. So, this is what I did. I walked through our parking lot and found 6 Obama bumper stickers on our employees' cars and have decided these folks will be the first to be laid off. I can't think of a more fair way to approach this problem. These folks wanted change; I gave it to them.

If you have a better idea, let me know.

Sincerely,

J. T. Stegman


Unfortunately, I think will happen as businesses are forced to lay off employees because of that man's tax plan.

If that's true, wow.
 
/
I'm going to contact our representative and I'm also going to tell all of my family and friends to contact their representatives and tellthem that we want them to vote for Spence.
 
My dad received this email and sent it to me. I think that it's valid:

Dear Customers and Suppliers:

As the CFO of a business that employees 140 people, I have resigned myself to the fact that Barrack Obama is our next President, and that our taxes and government fees will increase in a BIG way. To compensate for these increases, I figure that our customers will have to see an increase in our prices of about 8%. However, since we cannot increase prices right now due to the dismal state of our economy, we will have to lay off six of our employees instead. This has really been eating at me, as we believe we are family here and I didn't know how to choose who will have to go. So, this is what I did. I walked through our parking lot and found 6 Obama bumper stickers on our employees' cars and have decided these folks will be the first to be laid off. I can't think of a more fair way to approach this problem. These folks wanted change; I gave it to them.

If you have a better idea, let me know.

Sincerely,

J. T. Stegman


Unfortunately, I think will happen as businesses are forced to lay off employees because of that man's tax plan.



If this is true, all I have to say is:


:worship: :worship: :worship:
 
My dad received this email and sent it to me. I think that it's valid:

Dear Customers and Suppliers:

As the CFO of a business that employees 140 people, I have resigned myself to the fact that Barrack Obama is our next President, and that our taxes and government fees will increase in a BIG way. To compensate for these increases, I figure that our customers will have to see an increase in our prices of about 8%. However, since we cannot increase prices right now due to the dismal state of our economy, we will have to lay off six of our employees instead. This has really been eating at me, as we believe we are family here and I didn't know how to choose who will have to go. So, this is what I did. I walked through our parking lot and found 6 Obama bumper stickers on our employees' cars and have decided these folks will be the first to be laid off. I can't think of a more fair way to approach this problem. These folks wanted change; I gave it to them.
If you have a better idea, let me know.

Sincerely,

J. T. Stegman


Unfortunately, I think will happen as businesses are forced to lay off employees because of that man's tax plan.

Wow. Ummm.... I like that.:worship:
 
I find this to be encouraging for us-

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_pl147

I have a feeling we'll be hearing alot from Jindal in the coming months and the next three years or so. Oh, and also approached about running in '12.... Mississippi's Governor Barbour- needless to say, I am very proud to hear that one. :goodvibes
 
I find this to be encouraging for us-

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_pl147

I have a feeling we'll be hearing alot from Jindal in the coming months and the next three years or so. Oh, and also approached about running in '12.... Mississippi's Governor Barbour- needless to say, I am very proud to hear that one. :goodvibes

My lib buddy spoke very highly of Gov Barbour right after Katrina - that she was impressed with his fighting and not whining attitude - in sharp contrast to what was going on in LA at the time.

That lib buddy - might not be so lib after all...
 
Another encouraging word:

A Way Out of the Wilderness

By Jeff Flake
Wednesday, November 5, 2008; A26

Well, we Republicans have just made history. Not the type of history we wanted to make, mind you, but history nonetheless. Not only did we lose the White House but, after losing our House and Senate majorities in 2006, we followed it up last night with even steeper losses in Congress.

In January, Democrats will enjoy lopsided congressional ratios not seen since the 1970s. Let's face it: We Republicans are now, by any reasonable measurement, deep in the political wilderness.

The temptation for Republican members of Congress today will be to assume the role of the post-Watergate Republicans of 1974 and accept minority status as a permanent condition. Indeed, the terrain is more difficult for us now than it was in 1992. Then, Republicanism was still largely defined by the Reagan years. Today the party is defined in the public mind by the Bush presidency. We've got a steep hill to climb.

Much of the backroom maneuvering and media speculation in the coming weeks will focus on identifying new standard-bearers for the party. This is important, and after a second straight drubbing, the House Republican leadership should be replaced. But the far more critical task is determining what standard these new leaders will bear.

I suggest that we return to first principles. At the top of that list has to be a recommitment to limited government.
After eight years of profligate spending and soaring deficits, voters can be forgiven for not knowing that limited government has long been the first article of faith for Republicans.

Of course, it's not the level of spending that gets the most attention; it's the manner in which the spending is allocated. The proliferation of earmarks is largely a product of the Gingrich-DeLay years, and it's no surprise that some of the most ardent practitioners were earmarked by the voters for retirement yesterday. Few Americans will take seriously Republican speeches on limited government if we Republicans can't wean ourselves from this insidious practice. But if we can go clean, it will offer a stark contrast to the Democrats, who, after two years in training, already have their own earmark favor factory running at full tilt.

Second, we need to recommit to our belief in economic freedom.
Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations" may be on the discount rack this year, but the free market is still the most efficient means to allocate capital and human resources in an economy, and Americans know it. Now that we've inserted government deeply into the private sector by bailing out banks and businesses, the temptation will be for government to overstay its welcome and force the distribution of resources to serve political ends. Substituting political for economic incentives is not the recipe for economic recovery.

Most House Republicans opposed the recent bailout and will be in a strong position to promote economic freedom over central planning as the Obama administration stumbles from industry to industry trying to determine which is small enough to be allowed to fail and which is not. Since timetables will be in vogue, perhaps Republicans could even insist on a timetable for getting the government out of the private sector.

There are, of course, other pillars of the Republican standard -- strong national defense, support for traditional values and the Second Amendment -- but these are not areas where voters question Republican bona fides. In any event, as we have seen over the past several months, economic woes tend to subsume other concerns. We shouldn't complain. We can now play our strongest hand.

In some respects, raising a new standard was made easier by yesterday's rout. The Republican Party is not bound by election-year promises made by its presidential nominee. More important, the party is finally untethered from the ill-fitting and unworkable big-government conservatism that defined the Bush administration.

This is not to say that it will be an easy transition. Congressional Republicans picked up some unattractive habits over the years in an effort to hold on to power. Whether it was relying on the redistricting process to help us choose our constituents, using the appropriations process as an ATM or passing legislation -- such as a generous prescription drug benefit and a bloated farm bill -- to pacify individual constituencies, these habits and voting patterns will be hard to break.

But there is reason for Republicans to feel optimism. Politically, America remains a center-right country, and America loves a chastened and repentant sinner. As surely as the sun rises in the east, the Democrats will overreach.

As long as we Republicans are willing to admit our folly, get back to first principles and work like there's no tomorrow, we've got 'em just where we want 'em.


The writer, a Republican, represents Arizona's 6th District in the U.S. House.
 
The night we waved goodbye to America... our last best hope on Earth Last updated at 9:52 PM on 08th November 2008

"Anyone would think we had just elected a hip, skinny and youthful replacement for God, with a plan to modernise Heaven and Hell – or that at the very least John Lennon had come back from the dead.

The swooning frenzy over the choice of Barack Obama as President of the United States must be one of the most absurd waves of self-deception and swirling fantasy ever to sweep through an advanced civilisation. At least Mandela-worship – its nearest equivalent – is focused on a man who actually did something.

I really don’t see how the Obama devotees can ever in future mock the Moonies, the Scientologists or people who claim to have been abducted in flying saucers. This is a cult like the one which grew up around Princess Diana, bereft of reason and hostile to facts.

It already has all the signs of such a thing. The newspapers which recorded Obama’s victory have become valuable relics. You may buy Obama picture books and Obama calendars and if there isn’t yet a children’s picture version of his story, there soon will be. "

I love that last part ... I saw a children's book advertised online last night called "Mama Voted for Obama" which will help you "tell your children the story of how you took part in history". :sad2:

The OS have their panties in a twist over this. They soooo want to believe EVERYBODY is as enamored, of "the one", as they are.:rotfl: They can't even enjoy their victory. I wonder if they know how to be happy? There is one OS bashing Christians...:confused3
 
The OS have their panties in a twist over this. They soooo want to believe EVERYBODY is as enamored, of "the one", as they are.:rotfl: They can't even enjoy their victory. I wonder if they know how to be happy? There is one OS bashing Christians...:confused3

Let me get this straight - an OS is bashing Christians because some guy in the UK said that the US wasn't an enlightened utopia because 52% of its population voted for BO?

Newsflash! Their guy won!!!!!
 
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