Showing posts with label democrat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label democrat. Show all posts

Monday, September 5, 2016

Chairman Bennett issues a statement regarding Senate President Thibodeau's Press Conference

"I commend President Thibodeau for his steady stewardship of the Maine Senate under the Constitution and the proper rules of order.  As a former Senate President, I know the difficult role he has to appropriately lead the institution as a Constitutional officer and as the leading Republican in the Senate.

"President Thibodeau is right to call out the Democrat leadership for putting political advantage ahead of exercising their sober duties of office.

"President Thibodeau's measured leadership stands in stark contrast to the zealous efforts by Speaker Mark Eves and other Democrat leaders to have a costly, open-ended legislative session to re-litigate and overturn the 2014 election results."

The Maine Republican Party is the state’s premier political organization holding the State’s highest office, a U.S. Senator, a U.S. Congressman, and a chamber of the Maine State Legislature as well as many local elected municipal offices.

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Ulterior Motives Beyond Equality - Do All Lives Matter



A discussion on Facebook is taking place regarding the use of minority awards and scholarships and whether or not these awards and scholarships were still needed or even fair.  Do "black lives matter" as the current slogan that seems to be popular amongst the liberals is. Or maybe what we should be saying instead is "All lives matter". Lets keep color out. The following is a very real issue and one that maybe should be done away with:

The rationale for the separate minority awards and scholarships is that minorities were under-represented or overlooked. When Hattie McDaniel broke the color barrier at the Academy Awards, receiving top honors for Best Supporting Actress in her role as Mammy in "Gone With The Wind," no one seriously thought "Negroes" would be regular future recipients in 1939. Hattie, however, could not be ignored. One could make the case that for decades the separate awards and scholarships were appropriate. But we have come so far with integration (even electing and reelecting a Black president [actually half-Black]) that people are barely conscious of differences - unless that attention is imposed upon people.

I'll make one example, and see if you agree: After baseball became integrated and became well-staffed with Black, Latino, Asian and Caucasian players - based entirely upon their performance value to a team, do we still need a "Negro Baseball League?" I submit that many of these relics, such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), are no longer needed to promote equality, rather to keep the wounds of the past open for some other gain or reparation, and they have been co-opted by the political left to exploit past grievances for contemporary political gain.

The modern welfare state was created to get and keep minorities in the Democrat party. Lyndon Johnson was famously quoted as saying: "I'll have those niggers voting Democrat for the next 200 years." Keeping people in a victim class and in government dependency hurts as much, if not more, than segregation. The need for parallel race recognition awards ended a long time ago.

#blacklivesmatter; #alllivesmatter

Thursday, November 27, 2014

The Birth of the Democratic Party























Ever wonder when the or where the Democratic Party started? Happy Thanksgiving!

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Richmond Dominates Again for Democrats - CQ Roll Call Congressional Baseball

Let us hope that this lop-sided score is no indication of what is to come in the future. Enjoy.

Roll Call|Heard on the Hill

House Democrats may not be able to reclaim the majority for another decade because of redistricting, but for as long as Rep. Cedric L. Richmond, D-La., is an elected official, they’re certain to reign supreme on the baseball diamond.

Richmond, donning an old-school Brooklyn Dodgers No. 42 jersey in honor of the late Jackie Robinson, dominated the game, pitching 7 shutout innings, notching 4 hits and driving in 2 runs, to lead the Democrats to the most lopsided win in 52 years of CQ Roll Call Congressional Baseball, 22-0. The Louisiana Democrat told teammates and reporters he was sick before the game. Yet he recorded a Michael-Jordan-in-Game-Five-Of-The-1997-NBA-Finals-like performance, making everyone else on the field look like the out-of-shape congressional amateurs that they are.

Full story: Heard on the Hill

Related stories:

Could GOP Turn to Texas for Pitching Help?
Most Valuable Member of Congress?