• Category Archives News and Politics
  • Presented With Letters, Ryan Admits Requesting Stimulus Cash

    After repeated denials, Paul Ryan has admitted he requested stimulus cash even after sharply criticizing the program.

    Ryan had denied doing so as recently as Wednesday, when he spoke to ABC’s Cincinnati affiliate, WCPO, in Ohio.

    “I never asked for stimulus,” Mitt Romney’s new running mate said. “I don’t recall… so I really can’t comment on it. I opposed the stimulus because it doesn’t work, it didn’t work.”

    Two years ago, during an interview on WBZ’s NewsRadio he was asked by a caller if he “accepted any money” into his district. Ryan said he did not.

    “I’m not one [of those] people who votes for something then writes to the government to ask them to send us money. I did not request any stimulus money,” the congressman answered.

    But as we’ve now learned, Ryan did write letters. He did request stimulus funds.

    “The Olympics may be over but Paul Ryan could have gotten a gold medal in hypocrisy,” a senior administration official told ABC’s Jake Tapper. “As someone who spends all day every day railing against government spending, but then secretly seeks millions in funds for pet projects, he is as Washington as it gets.”

    In 2009, Ryan wrote to Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Labor Secretary Hilda Solis asking for stimulus money to cover costs on two energy conservation projects in his home state of Wisconsin. In the letter, Ryan said the funds would help create jobs and reduce “energy consumption” in the state. At least one of the companies received the requested cash.

    Full article: http://abcnews.go.co … logEntry?id=17023828


  • Ron Paul: A notable omission from the list of speakers at the 2012 RNC

    The Republican National Convention, which is scheduled to last from 27 to 30 August here in Tampa Bay, is expected to draw thousands of visitors into the area. By Friday, 10 August, the Republican National Committee had released the majority of the names of the individuals which had received invitations to speak at the upcoming Republican National Convention. Some of these names include in Thursday’s edition of TBO.com include former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, Current Florida Governor Rick Scott, and Current Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi.

    Admittedly, the Republican National Committee claims there are a still few speaking slots, including that of the “Keynote Speaker of the Convention” have yet to be filled, and therefore the selection process has not been completed. However, there is one blatant and inexplicable omission from this list of chosen Republican speakers that could cost the GOP millions of votes in November: Republican Presidential Candidate Ron Paul.

    According to the rules set forth at the Republican National Convention in 2008, Ron has met the requirements for receiving a fifteen minute speaking slot. However, to this point, the Republican National Committee has chosen to remain silent on this issue.

    Mandated requirements to secure a speaking slot at the RNC

    According to the rules created and adopted by the Republican National Committee, a candidate for President only needs to have received a plurality, not a majority, of the assigned delegates in just five of the fifty states. At the time of publishing this article, Ron Paul had earned the plurality of the delegates in Iowa, Minnesota, Maine, Louisiana, and Nevada, which gives Paul the necessary five states. Paul may have also received a plurality of the delegates in Massachusetts and Colorado, which would bring the number of states to seven.

    Romney’s behind the scene work to disenfranchise Paul and his supporters

    However, even though the Romney campaign seems certain it has the Republican nomination won before the convention, its operatives have been working in states such as and Louisiana to ensure Paul cannot claim five states with a plurality delegates and in turn deny Paul’s legitimate right for a fifteen minute speaking slot at the Republican National Convention.

    This should lead many Americans to question why Romney would be working feverously to further disenfranchise a group of voters he must have to defeat Obama, and what he has to lose by allowing Ron Paul the fifteen minute speech he rightfully earned according to the rules of the Republican National Convention.

    The Real Delegate count versus the AP Delegate Count

    While the media outlets have always concentrated on the delegate counts calculated by the Associated Press (AP), which have continually ranked Ron Paul in last place in delegates, the more accurate calculations present a different proportion of delegates for each candidate. The AP has awarded Romney 1480 delegates versus 137 to Paul, and 806 still outstanding.

    However, the Real Delegate Count shows Romney with 1177 allotted and 419 leaning, Paul with 255 allotted and 263 leaning, and 2967 delegates still outstanding.

    Full article: http://www.examiner. … kers-at-the-2012-rnc


  • Paul Ryan’s disappointing reality

    Ryan seems like the perfect vice presidential candidate for the people who actually want a true-blue, tried and tested conservative on the Republican ticket.

    Except for one problem. He’s an imposter.

    Ryan’s big talk of small government bears little, if any, resemblance with how he actually votes.

    In national politics, where perception is almost always more important than reality, Ryan has managed to perpetrate one of the greatest scams in recent memory by making conservatives believe he’s a glorious mix of Ron Paul, Ayn Rand and Barry Goldwater.

    Would a supposed Tea Party darling vote with Hillary Clinton, Jesse Jackson Jr., John Kerry, Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Bernie Sanders on one of the past decade’s most important pieces of legislation? Of course not.

    Yet, that’s exactly what Ryan did when he voted in support of TARP, the $700 billion Wall Street bailout bill.

    Oh, and Ryan benefitted handily from that reprehensible vote. He recently snagged $12,150 from Wells Fargo, $10,000 from Goldman Sachs and $9,700 from Bank of America for his campaign coffers, according to campaign disclosures published by the website Open Secrets.

    The conservative cause’s golden boy has plenty more bad votes where that came from. In 2003, Ryan voted for Medicare Part D, which expanded government control of healthcare to make prescription drugs an entitlement — and cost Americans more than $55 billion annually, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Ryan also voted for the auto bailout, No Child Left Behind and ethanol subsidies.

    He even opposes repealing the Davis-Bacon Act, which requires federal construction contractors to pay prevailing wages. Davis-Bacon increases construction costs for taxpayers and discriminates against talented non-union workers. As a result of this AFL-CIO brownnosing, Ryan has racked up tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from labor unions, according to Mother Jones.

    Even “The Path to Prosperity,” Ryan’s deficit decreasing budget proposal, wasn’t nearly as fiscally conservative as he would have Americans believe.

    Ryan’s proposed budget, for example, does nothing to reduce America’s ballooning defense spending, which has doubled in the past decade, according to the White House Office of Management and Budget. The Cato Institute found that “The Path to Prosperity” only modestly decreases nondefense discretionary spending, does little to roll back the size and scope of federal bureaucracies and fails to actually provide for specific ways to trim Social Security — a major component of Ryan’s cost savings.

    At first blush, the inclusion of Ryan on the GOP presidential ticket appears to be a win for conservatives — and a welcome attempt by Romney to reach out to those Republicans who distrust him the most.

    However, the facts show that Ryan has a schizophrenic voting record on the issues he claims to care about the most — namely spending, entitlement reform and the national debt. His speeches may make him seem like a Tea Party hero, but his voting record has “RINO” and “unprincipled squish” written all over it.

    So what are Republican voters really getting with Ryan? In the end, something that not many of them actually want: More of the same old disappointing Republican Party that is unwilling to seriously address entitlement reform or reduce spending.

    Full article: http://www.timesfree … ty/?opinionfreepress