Category Archives: conservatives

Melissa Clouthier and I talk blogging at RightOnline 2010

So PJTV is ridiculously proprietary and won’t let me embed the video (Dude. Even Jon Stewart let’s you embed video from their site, guys), but I still wanted to mention this conversation Melissa and I had regarding the conservative movement online, specifically regarding bloggers..

Obviously, we only had a few minutes to talk, but I think that this is an important discussion to have. We ARE making strides online, and I think that a lot of times we don’t give ourselves enough credit for the things we have done.

The important part of this whole thing is that we need to make the transition from online to offline. Everything we write and say and every connection we make online doesn’t matter at all if it doesn’t translate to showing up at the polling places on November 2nd and changing the way things are done in Washington.

So go listen. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this: PJTV’s Stephen Kruiser interviews Melissa and I at RightOnline 2010.

The Degradation of Decorum and Odd Role Reversals

In case you missed it, teabagging is now an acceptable term from Presidents.

Here’s the thing. I’m younger than a lot of my readers. I was 11 when I learned what a “Lewinsky” was from my President. Classy, right? That’s a huge problem. It brought something that was not even on my radar into every day conversation, and made it not only acceptable, but entertainment. If I was older, I probably would have been humiliated. However, it was just novel and funny to a middle schooler, and our President made it okay.

Unfortunately, in the past few days both President Obama and President Clinton have referred to us as teabaggers. I wish I was making this stuff up. Say what you will about Bush, but he was faithful to his wife, and he never would have called the opposition “teabaggers”. As Melissa Clouthier pointed out on twitter yesterday, “Do we really want the President of the United States using a term that describes one person sucking another person’s testicles ?” We can’t be PC about this.

Our silver tongued President referred to us as “those tea bag people” while among Democrats, and it was caught by a reporter. That’s all we are, right y’all? Tea baggers who show up with guns and rant about how Obama is a Kenyan Muslim?

Um, no.

I had a fascinating conversation with a self-professed liberal author this week. She was working on an article and seeking to understand the Right. After an hour long conversation in which we discussed my stance on war, education, free markets, freedom, capital punishment, drug legalization, and everything else we could cover, she closed with “well, you’re not a bad person, and you’re not crazy.” Um, thanks?

She acknowledged that the media had made a “caricature” of us. She was stunned to find out I’m not a birther. I was like, no, honestly a lot of us cringe when we see those signs at events. That’s not what we’re about. In short, “It’s the economy, stupid!” It’s not about Obama, or abortion or anything but freedom and the desire for the government to get off our collective back.

However, I can’t fault her for expecting a rabid, gun toting, illiterate degenerate. As a California liberal, her coverage comes from the main stream media. I was grateful for the chance to give her some insight to the idea of personal accountability and liberty. Did I make a convert? No. I know she didn’t mean her closing comment as an insult. But it’s sad that it took an hour long conversation for her to reach that conclusion… and that she felt it necessary to qualify that I wasn’t a racist nut job at the end.

What else can we expect? We have been reduced to a caricature of what we really are. We are portrayed as a racist, fringe minority by Republicans, the media, and the President… can we really expect people who don’t know us to take us seriously? I don’t have an answer. I’d like to think that people would understand freedom and therefore see the motivation. That hope is dimming.

The short story is that we’re NOT insane. I have to look at it this way: it’s indicative of our culture on a larger level. We demonize what we don’t understand, and we demonize the things that are a perceived threat. The idea that people are threatened by freedom is an article unto itself. There was an article a short time ago that referred to conservatism as “brain-dead” and lamented the loss of our great thinkers. This is all part of the same cultural shift. That’s our world. The sound-bite media and the fear of the opposition is not a problem confined to conservatism. I suppose, though, that when conservatism in the past has relied so heavily on it’s scholars, it’s more of a loss. The Left, at least for the past 40 years or so, has relied on activism. It has a history of social change, protests, and revolts. The Right, not so much.

Isn’t it odd to see the roles reversed? The conservatives are the ones protesting and revolting. We’re the ones showing up in force, because we have no other choice. Meanwhile, we have our Glenn Becks and Keith Olbermanns in a talking points war, doing their best to mock and discredit one another. I don’t think things have been so polarized in our country in a really long time.

So where are we headed? When there is no decorum from the highest elected office in the nation, when we are simply reduced to caricatures of ourselves, do we have power? Do we actually have a voice?

Yes. We do. We saw it last week at the polls, and we will continue to see a swing. I believe we’re at a breaking point, and in America, I believe we will break on the side of freedom.

Michele Bachmann's House Call. And My Job Shouldn't Exist.

I have some seriously mixed emotions right now. Today was amazing. I was blown away by the shift in the GOP Representatives. There were so many who were FINALLY getting it. It was like they realized we weren’t going away, and they’d better get on board. It’s about time. I have been busting my tail all week to help anyone I could help with logistics. This was an odd event in that no one was really in charge. Rep. Bachmann (who I have openly admitted to having a girl crush on) announced it, a few talk show hosts and Fox News supported it, and we came. Oh, we came.

Wide_Crowd_Shot

Amazingly, most people were on message today. Which is always impressive, because a lot of the time people choose their pet issues and make a sign about it. And then I’m like, um. This is about taxes, why are we talking about marriage again? Anyway, with the exception of the total whackjobs that were dressed as demons torturing Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid in the fires of hell, I was pretty impressed with the focus.

The crowd estimates ranged from 20k to 30k – which was amazing considering there was a five day notice. I spent the first part of the day elated. I was so thrilled that so many people saw the importance of just showing up. But I’ve been thinking about my job lately, and about what people give to be at these things – it’s not cheap, and no, we’re not paying anyone’s way. No one forced these people on to the streets or to wait in line for hours to meet their representatives.

Cannon_Building

My job, in short, should not exist. At all. There should not be organizations that do nothing but babysit the government. We shouldn’t even have to say things like “Spending a trillion dollars is a bad idea”… you’d think that would be common sense. Obviously that is not the case. I’ve heard so many stories of people who have drained savings accounts, taken off work, run up credit cards… anything they could do to get here. And it really makes me sad that we’re at the point where people HAVE to do that. Why should we have to bring thousands and thousands of people to their doorstep and figuratively bang down their doors to get them to listen? It’s a sad state of affairs.

I hate that I have to do what I do. To be completely honest, I would not have chosen to live in Washington at all. This city has never been on my radar. I’d be completely content back home in NC with my friends and family. But I have to be here. And so do so many others. And it sucks.

Days like today give me hope. This is honestly the first time that I’ve ever really felt like they were listening. The GOP representatives couldn’t jump on board fast enough. So many spoke to us and supported what we were doing.

A powerful moment for me was when I went with a New Jersey constituent to meet with his representative – a squishy Republican named Leonard Lance. He voted for TARP. He voted for Cap and Trade. He seemed shaky and almost scared when we entered his office. Everyone there could not have been nicer. He was happy to let us all come in, even though we weren’t in his district. He looked at us and said “Your voices are being heard. I’m going to vote no.” I was blown away.

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All in all, what we’re doing is working. I have no doubt in my mind that the Representatives have heard us, and they’re afraid to ignore us anymore. This is not about this bill or that bill or any particular Representative or Senator. It’s not about Obama. It’s not about Nancy Pelosi. As much as she makes my skin crawl.

It’s about freedom. It’s about liberty. It’s about people who want their kids to be free. That’s why we show up.

Defending The American Dream

So, there was a conference this weekend – it’s that time of year – and since I live in DC it came to me. I’m still enjoying that part of my new life.

I didn’t even really know I was going, but I reckon it just sort of happens that way when you work at the Leadership Institute. Somehow I found myself on a panel and Blogger’s Row (where, incidentally, I did nothing but tweet). It was, however, a blast.

This is my philosophy on conferences: The teaching is incidental. When I go, I focus on meeting people. The energy and conversation that comes from having a handful the most active Americans in the country is just awesome. My coworker and I have been sitting here all day bouncing around ideas and strategizing, still fired up.

Short story: I learn more from an hour sitting in a room with a bunch of bloggers and activists and thinkers than I do in an entire weekend of panels and lectures. Not that they aren’t beneficial, because there was certainly some great information provided by AFP this weekend, I just think that collaboration of ideas is unbelievably powerful.

The weekend was full of training, panels, and “tweetups”. We had a ball. Some photos:

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Melissa, Me

Teri, Em

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GOP: Standing in the way of Utopia.

Because clearly they’re entirely too accomodating to dissenting viewpoints.

If anything, the Democrats’ problem is that they permit too much dissent—unlike the Republicans, who demand “lockstep marching.” In fact, if Democrats would learn to be just a little less tolerant of dissent, they might get a lot more done.

Yeah, they just get STEAMROLLED. Poor little Democrats, bullied by the Republicans over and over again. Like that time they kept the House floor open to make sure that Republicans also had time to speak. Or maybe that time they took the time to hear the concerns of the public on the stimulus package before it was rammed through.

Or maybe when they listened so closely to concerns about health care. They were SO RECEPTIVE to widespread concern that President Obama didn’t have to go on TV 4 times a day for an entire 3 month stretch to say the SAME THING over and over. Republicans were just bastards who didn’t bother offering any other plans.

Uh, right. (Side note: I need a sarcasm font desperately.)

They have done everything in their power to silence protesters and dissenting voices. Period. The media coverage has been laughable.

They have a 60 seat supermajority in the Senate. They have a 70 seat advantage in the House. They have a President who is willing to ram through as much horrible legislation as possible. They don’t need one Republican to accomplish anything. Not one nasty little GOPer has the ability to stand in the way of the their Utopian society under Team Lightbringer.

I have no patience for the pity game. Man up, lefties. You have the power to do whatever you want. You claim the the whole world wants your version of America. In the words of our President, “the stars have aligned”. Why aren’t you making this happen?

Democrats are realizing that their constituents don’t want them to support these proposals. They’re risking their jobs by consistently casting “yes” votes for bad bills. We are the ones that hired them. We have the ability to fire them.

WE are the ones standing in their way- you, me, and everyone else who has voiced their opposition. Keep holding their feet to the fire.

You Might Be A Racist…

Hilarious. From Fingers Malloy.

If you are against socialized medicine and you are a white conservative, you may be a racist.

If you are a liberal democrat and were at one point a member of the KKK (Senator Byrd), you are NOT a racist.

If you oppose government bailouts, don’t like being told what car to drive, what food to eat or are against the Fairness Doctrine, you may be a racist.

If you are a liberal democrat of color and you oppose a white conservative president, you are NOT a racist.

If you are a white conservative and you supported people like Clarence Thomas, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell, Linda Chavez, Alberto Gonzales, Carlos Gutierrez, Samuel Alito, Dana Parino and Elanie Chao to become Justices of the Supreme Court or high ranking government officials, you are not only a racist but you hate women.

If you are a liberal of any color and opposed those nominations, you are not only NOT racists, you are patriots.

If you are a white conservative and you oppose communists advising the president, you are a racist.

Well done, Malloy.

Smart Girls take on Nashville!

What an incredible weekend! The inaugural Smart Girl Summit took place in Nashville, Tennessee this weekend. Smart Girls came from all over to learn, network, and just have fun.

I rode from the DC area with SGP Cofounders Stacy Mott and Teri Christoph. After a LONG ride to Nashville, we got in and had dinner with a fabulous group of people – yes, there were boys present, I promise. It was good to be back in Nashville, and to meet everyone that I already felt like I knew so well.  Everything came together beautifully, and I think I speak for everyone on the leadership team when I say that it surpassed expectations.

We all knew that Michelle Malkin, Liz Cheney and Marsha Blackburn would be great. They are all fantastic women, and worthy of keynote status on their own. The one that surprised me was Robin Smith – she had half the women in the room contemplating running for Congress by the time it was all said and done.  She’s the former head of the Tennessee GOP and is currently running for TN-3.

My favorite moments came from the women, many of whom had never been to an event like this, and were coming away with ways to become more involved at home. The training sessions offered by American Majority were overflowing, and the biggest feedback we got was “Can we make it TWO days next year?” Rest assured – we will offer even more next year.

Stacy Mott and Teri Christoph poured themselves into this for months, as did the rest of the SGP leadership team: Michelle Moore, Rebecca Wales, Kristen Hawley, and Katie Favazza.

Short story? If you weren’t there you missed out on some amazing time with smart, motivated, and generally awesome men and women. However, you can come to DC about this time next year for SGS ’10! I was there, so there are photos. Enjoy!

Jenny Erikson, Michelle Lancaster, Me, and Lisa Mei in the Grassroots Training session... naturally, I was tweeting.

Jenny Erikson, Michelle Lancaster, Me, and Lisa Mei in the Grassroots Training session... naturally, I was tweeting.

Kimberly Haney and I - one of my favorite women!

Kimberly Haney and I - one of my favorite women!

Never too busy to cheese for the camera...

Never too busy to cheese for the camera...

Liz Cheney and I.

Liz Cheney and I.

Michelle Malkin and I at the fundraiser.

Michelle Malkin and I at the fundraiser.

Me and RFC Radios Fingers Malloy.

Me and RFC Radio's Fingers Malloy.

Duane Lester, Me, Andrew Riley, and Thomas LaDuke... the RFC Radio boys.

Duane Lester, Me, Andrew Riley, and Thomas LaDuke... the RFC Radio boys.

TX State Coordinator for SGP Michelle Lancaster, Kimberly Haney, and I.

TX State Coordinator for SGP Michelle Lancaster, Kimberly Haney, and I.

Kristen Hawley, Michelle Malkin and I on the way to dinner.

Kristen Hawley, Michelle Malkin and I on the way to dinner.

See Duane Lester’s post at All American Blogger for some videos.

Dowd, Carter, and the liberals who cry wolf…

Racism exists. This is a fact. It is not, however, as prevalent as it was in the 60′s and prior. There is no denying the fact that we’ve made great strides to bridge the gap between races. Kathleen McKinley grew up in Mississippi in the 60′s – these are her thoughts:

I think anyone who reads me on a regular basis knows how passionate I am about the race issue. Growing up in the 60′s in Mississippi as a child of integration, I saw real racism, up close, and horrifying. When people like Maureen Dowd call people racist that are no such thing, she diminishes what happened back then, and she makes the word racist nothing more than a slur.

She should be ashamed.

This goes for everyone. For the likes of Maureen Dowd and Jimmy Carter to come out with these blanket accusations means that really, they’re desperate. They have no idea how to react to what’s going on, and the racism is their default – there’s no way to definitively refute it, so the accusations work. They’ll go out of their way to spin our media coverage into that of a KKK rally… which would be funny if it didn’t mean intensifying the problem.

Ron Miller weighs in on being a conservative, black candidate who expressed his concerns with Obama’s policy proposals campaign:

You would think I had donned a white robe and hood based on the reactions of my black friends. One even went so far as to say that Obama’s blackness was reason enough for me and other blacks to vote for him. I shot back that when I ran against a long-time white incumbent for a state Senate seat in 2006, she and other blacks voted against me in droves so racial solidarity apparently only works one way.
I went on to evoke the old Zora Neale Hurston quote, “my skinfolk ain’t necessarily my kinfolk,” a phrase used often as a pejorative against blacks who don’t toe the party line. In this case, I used it to shine the light on the naked hypocrisy of blacks who want unquestioned loyalty to Obama because he’s black but call Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele, the first black chairman of the GOP, a “house Negro.”

The bigger issue is this: They’re making the race issue trite. No one wants to hear about it anymore, because they’re using it in contexts that are just laughable. The way they talk, you’d think that what happened at conservative rallies across the country was equivalent to a Klan meeting. So far, I have not seen a burning cross or white hood. Sorry to burst your bubble, leftists.

The truth? There have been black and hispanic speakers at every Tea Party event I’ve gone to, and every single one has managed to survive the racist mobs! 9/12 included several black speakers, a hispanic speaker… hip hop music as well as country. Are there more white people? Sure. There is no doubt a racial divide. This is only enhanced by encouraging racial memes, not diminished.

So what happens when racist events actually occur? They get swept under the rug because people are so tired of hearing about it. I am called a racist on a daily basis. It has no effect on me anymore. Headlines with the racist accusations don’t even get a click at this point.

Get a freaking grip, Maureen Down and Jimmy Carter. The current opposition has nothing to do with the fact that he’s black. It has everything to do with him being a tax and spend liberal that I disagree with on every level. The color of his skin does not impact his policies or his leadership, and those are what we are taking issue with. Keep beating a dead horse to your own peril.

Setting the record straight: My diabolical "misinformation campaign"

I hadn’t planned on responding to the entire Tea Party attendance controversy, but since Media Matters is using information I was responsible for to smear Michelle Malkin, I figured I’d set the story straight.

Estimates for the 9/12 march ranged from the “tens of thousands” all the way up to two million. Yes, two million.

While I was attending the rally, I asked a police office how big the crowd was. He said they were estimating it was at 1.2 million people. When I asked a Park service employee, that person told me they thought that around 1.5 million were attending. Perhaps they had some basis for those numbers or perhaps they were just making wild estimates. Either way, after FreedomWorks misquoted ABC’s report on stage, that number was mangled and passed along to me at 2 million. That seemed to be in line with the previous estimates I’d heard at the rally. Had I been at my computer, I would have double checked the estimate and learned that ABC never put out that number. But, since I wasn’t, I tweeted it out on my 22,000 follower Twitter account and it was picked up all over the place.

We still don’t really know how many people were the 9/12 rally. The DC fire department put the number at between 60,000 and 70,000 people. However, other credible estimates put the number 800,000 plus.

Had Media Matters asked me, I’d have been happy to tell them that I didn’t just make the number up for fun. However, they just ran with an unconfirmed story — just like I did — and, also like I did, they got important parts of it wrong. A mistaken tweeted estimate has now been turned into a “2 million protester lie” and that story is now being thrown around the left side of the blogosphere like mine was thrown around the right.

Bottom line: I tweeted a mistaken estimate instead of writing an entire misleading story about it. I corrected the record instead of trying to claim that a mere mistaken crowd estimate was part of some sort of diabolical “misinformation campaign.” I’ve been wrong before and I will be wrong again. There’s a difference between an error and a lie – figure it out, Media Matters.

Girls, we beat them to the punch.

Aunt B from the Nashville Scene caught wind of the Smart Girl Summit, occurring in Nashville this week. And she’s not happy about it.

You’ve got the women who were so certain that, if we just sat tight and did our part in the Democratic party long enough, that we would be rewarded with a woman president, and who really did leave in a snit when they felt the promised Clinton nomination was stolen from them.

You’ve got a Democratic party here who is, at best, somewhat apathetic towards the needs of women and who have pretty successfully made “women” and “urban” synonyms.

And, god bless ‘em, you’ve got a crop of conservative women politicians who saw and see openings that they’re willing to take.

We’re willing to take them, and the American people were willing to put us in there. The success of Smart Girl Politics over the past 8 months or so has done nothing but solidify the fact that there are a LOT of conservative women out there. Women who don’t buy the liberal lie that the left will take them under their wing and make all the injustices of past generations right through affirmative action and equal rights amendments and “pro-choice” legislation.

And there are more of us than they thought.

You want to see determined and ambitious women taking political and leadership roles.

And here they are.

Ha ha ha ha.

And they’re Republicans.

Ouch.

All that to say, I’m proud of what we’re doing. We’re making progress. I’m so excited for the Smart Girl Summit in Nashville this weekend. Maybe we should invite Aunt B to join us?