Fox and other pro-Wall Street, socialist sources have spread the lie that Ron Paul can't win. In fact, according to the Rasmussen poll, for months Ron Paul was the ONLY Republican out-polling Obama. This continues to be the case. Today, Rasmussen announces that Ron Paul out-polls Obama 44% to 43%, while Obama and Romney are tied at 45%. The Rasmussen poll just sent this e-mail to its list:
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday
shows that 27% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that
Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty percent (40%)
Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating
of -13 (see trends).
Twenty-nine percent (29%) believe the country is generally heading in the right direction.
In a hypothetical Election 2012 matchup, President Obama and Mitt Romney
are tied at 45%. Matchup results are updated daily at 9:30 a.m. Eastern
(sign up for free daily e-mail update). Texas Congressman Ron Paul holds a one-point edge over the president, 44% to 43%. See tracking history for the Republican candidates.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Corey Robin's Reactionary Mind and the Historicity of Mass Murder
My op-ed "Corey Robin's Reactionary Mind and the Historicity of Mass Murder" appears in this week's edition of David Horowitz's Frontpagemag.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Will Republican Election Fraud Lead to a Three-Way, 2012 Election?
2012 marks the centennial of Theodore Roosevelt's
third-party presidential race. Roosevelt, the Republican founder of
big-government Progressivism, believed that a socialist state should govern
business. A century later, Barack Obama is in the midst actualizing
Roosevelt's vision. A century ago William Howard Taft opposed Roosevelt's
socialism and favored anti-trust suits to limit monopoly. To fight Taft,
Roosevelt ran on the Progressive Party ticket, enabling Woodrow Wilson to win
and to establish big government policies that included the federal income tax,
the Federal Reserve Bank, the Federal Trade Commission, and the precursor to
the United Nations: the League of Nations.
In 2012 Ron Paul needs to establish a new, libertarian party
that will hamstring today's Roosevelts: the socialist Democratic Party and the
fascist Republican Party. Unless Paul establishes a new party, democracy
will continue to diminish; your standard of living will continue to stagnate;
the United States' power will continue to decline; your personal freedom will
continue to contract. Totalitarian laws like the Patriot Act and the
National Defense Authorization Act will continue to multiply, and they will
restrict your freedom to an ever-tighter radius. Environmental regulation
will deprive you of your home. America's corrupt, crony-socialist state
will subsidize banks and big businesses--while your own wealth diminishes. This
will be done with the exuberant support of the American media, from Democratic
to Republican, from socialist to fascist, from Paul Krugman to Rush
Limbaugh. The only way out of the crisis is the moderate one: Ron Paul,
limited government, and the gold standard. The alternative is the
paper money system that Karl Marx, Joe Stalin, Benito Mussolini, Adolph Hitler,
Maurice Hinchey, and Ben Bernanke advocate.
Election Fraud Has Ended American Democracy
Progressivism is ambivalent about democracy. On the
one hand, the Progressives claimed to enhance democracy through the direct
election of senators, the referendum, and the recall. But some
Progressives advocated Jim Crow, and others favored exaltation of experts in
the Federal Reserve Bank and the Federal Trade Commission. Experts and
journalists would, in the opinions of Walter Lippmann and John Dewey, replace
or manage public opinion. Monetary issues, once the subject of vigorous
public debate, were removed from public discourse; Americans docilely accepted
that experts' dictatorial edicts about monetary policy were consistent with
their freedom. They are not. The experts have served as Wall
Street's stooges.
Following Progressives like Lippmann and Dewey, Fox, The
New York Times, and MS-NBC have eviscerated public choice by distorting
facts. For example, in a series of recent Rasmussen public opinion polls
Ron Paul was found to be the only major Republican candidate to out-poll Barack
Obama in a general election. At the same time, propagandists like Rush
Limbaugh repeatedly claim that Ron Paul can't win. The Republican media bias
against Paul was seen in the camera's editing out Paul during the presidential
debates. The networks cut segments where Paul spoke. In describing vote
counts, newspapers listed Paul last even when he won; moreover, they did not
mention elections which Paul won, such as the Virgin Islands primary. As
a result, Paul polls only 10 percent among GOP primary voters.
The death-knell to Rush Limbaugh's and Fox's credibility has
been their unwillingness to discuss election fraud in Maine and Iowa. It
is one thing that Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Hannity, and the rest of the Wall
Street-controlled media (NBC, MSNBC, CBS, and ABC) lack journalistic standards
and do not cover Paul's candidacy accurately. It is another that Limbaugh
panders to a Republican Party that routinely engages in election fraud.
When Lincoln Eagle publisher Mike Marnell asked me to
write about election fraud, I was skeptical. Like many born in another
era, I still have faith in American institutions. I remained unconvinced when I
read the Ron Paul and Alex Jones websites' accusations of election fraud
against Ron Paul. It may be true that turnouts to Ron Paul events are
many times greater than turnouts to Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich events--even
as Paul wins 10 percent of the primary vote. For example, 8,500 people
came to hear Paul at Cal Berkeley; 6,000 came to see him at UCLA; 6,200 came to
hear him at Cal State, Chico. These young, dynamic audiences form a
nucleus for a potentially revolutionary force. The Founding Fathers did
not have a larger or more dynamic nucleus than this. But that is not
evidence that elections have been rigged, for a vibrant, vocal minority may be
a minority still. This is especially so because GOP primary voters do not
reflect mainstream opinion. Whereas the Rasmussen poll has repeatedly
found that Ron Paul is the only Republican candidate able to defeat Barack
Obama in November, it also finds that only 10 percent of Republican primary
voters support Paul.
As I read about election fraud, though, I learned that a
University of Chicago-based research center called the Argonne National
Laboratory has publicly demonstrated that today's election machines sold by
firms like Premier (Diebold) and Dominion (Sequoia) are easily gamed.
Argonne Laboratories' Vulnerability Assessment Team found that a hacker who
inserts alien electronic devices (at a cost of $10 to $26) into a computerized
machine can readily engage in man-in-the-middle attacks. The
Vulnerability Assessment Team says that voting machines are frequently stored
for weeks at a time in schools, libraries, and other unsecured locations.
Even the level of sophistication that Argonne Laboratories
describes hasn't been necessary for the GOP to butcher election
processes. Several election observers' Websites, including www.bradblog.com and Bev Harris's
blackboxvoting.com, have uncovered
substantive proof of voter fraud in both the Maine and Iowa
caucuses. These websites' methods do not, however, contemplate
electronic vote manipulation of the type that Argonne says is easily
accomplished. In one instance, a Ron Paul supporter in Iowa found
an apparent typographical error that caused the Iowa caucus to mistakenly go to
Romney over Santorum. When this one error was uncovered, the GOP was
forced to reverse the results and hand the win to Santorum. In Maine, the
distortions were egregious. Although Ron Paul lost in Maine by 194 votes,
the Maine GOP did not count Washington County, which had 6,876 registered
voters, according to Ms. Harris. In other words, there is little reason
to believe that the Maine Republican primary was valid. American democracy,
RIP.
In effect, there is a combination of factors that lead to
questions about the GOP's ethics in conducting this year's primaries.
First, there is Fox's and Limbaugh's unfair and unbalanced coverage that
reflects the needs of its owner, Rupert Murdoch, and Wall Street. Second,
there is overt voter fraud that was uncovered in Maine and Iowa, and may exist
in every state (if it was uncovered in two states, might it not exist without
being uncovered elsewhere?) Third, there is the susceptibility of voter
machines to manipulation--a problem that has not been addressed here in Ulster
County or anywhere else. The GOP certainly has not addressed the
problem. After all, the new systems were the GOP's idea in the first
place.
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