Friday, March 8, 2013
ANOTHER MUST READ ARTICLE BY PAUL HOLLRAH...MORAL OF THE STORY: REPUBLICANS ARE IMPOTENT...
Paul R. Hollrah March 8, 2013
The Game is Over
by Paul R. Hollrah
Part of what made life in the United States such a joy, and
what made people from almost every corner of the Earth risk life and limb to
come here is that, within our shores, literally anything was possible… or at
least it used to be.
In 1840, as French aristocrat and social philosopher Alexis
de Tocqueville traveled the United States, observing the American experiment in
action, he wrote, “In the United States, as soon as
several inhabitants have taken an opinion or an idea they wish to promote in
society, they seek each other out and unite together once they have made
contact. From that moment, they are no
longer isolated but have become a power seen from afar whose activities serve
as an example and whose words are heeded.”
What de Tocqueville was describing
is what we refer to as political parties.
And so long as the American people had hope that they could take a
shared opinion or idea, promote it, and see it come to fruition, then anything
was possible. It represented what Thomas
Jefferson described in the Declaration of Independence as the “Pursuit of Happiness.” But what if the ability to join together to
promote an opinion or an idea is seriously restricted by law or by the courts,
what then?
In a majority decision by the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in a case argued on
December 13, 2010, Circuit Judge Joseph A. Greenaway, Jr. wrote as follows:
“In 1982, the Republican National Committee (“RNC”) and the
Democratic National Committee (“DNC”) entered into a consent decree (the
“Decree” or (“Consent Decree”), which is national in scope, limiting the RNC’s
ability to engage or assist in voter fraud prevention unless the RNC obtains the
court’s approval in advance…”
Yes, although some may find it hard
to believe, for the past 30 years the Republican Party has been prohibited by
court decree from doing what was necessary to protect itself and the sanctity
of the ballot from the fraudulent practices of the Democratic Party.
According to background provided in the Court decision, the
facts are these:
“During
the 1981 New Jersey gubernatorial election, the RNC allegedly created a voter
challenge list by mailing sample ballots to individuals in precincts with a
high percentage of racial or ethnic minority registered voters and, then,
including individuals whose postcards were returned as undeliverable on a list
of voters to challenge at the polls…”
Yes, this is the same State of New Jersey where Democrats
regularly send operatives to mental hospitals and nursing homes with stacks of
absentee ballots in hand. Undeterred by
hospital staff, they sign up patients and help them to vote a straight
Democratic ticket. One woman from Wilkes
Barre, Pennsylvania, after visiting her sister in a New Jersey Mental Hospital,
expressed shock that her sister had voted, and that she had voted a straight Democratic
absentee ballot. She said, “My God! This is a woman who insists that God tells
her what brand of shampoo to use.”
In Louisiana,
during the 1986 congressional elections, the Republican National Committee allegedly
created a voter challenge list by mailing letters to African American voters
and, then, included individuals whose letters were returned as undeliverable on
a list of voters to challenge. A number
of voters, who apparently did not live at the addresses listed on the voter registration
rolls, brought a suit against the RNC in Louisiana state court. In response to a discovery request, the RNC
produced a memorandum in which its Midwest Political Director stated to its
Southern Political Director that “this program will eliminate at least
60,000-80,000 folks from the rolls… If it’s a close race, which I’m assuming it
is, this could keep the black vote down considerably.”
In 1987, The Republican National Committee was
again before the District Court as a result of the alleged violations in the
1986 congressional elections in Louisiana.
At that point the Court modified the Consent Decree:
“The modification… added a preclearance provision that prohibits the RNC
from assisting or engaging in ballot security activities unless the RNC submits
the program to the Court and to the (Democratic National Committee) with 20
days notice and the Court determines that the program complies with the Consent
Decree and applicable law.”
In 1990, Democrats brought a suit
alleging that the RNC violated the Consent Decree by participating in a North
Carolina Republican Party program. The
DNC alleged that the RNC had violated the Decree by participating in a program
in which postcards were sent to 150,000 residents of predominantly
African-American precincts. The
postcards contained a mere warning that it was a “federal crime to knowingly
give false information about your name, residence, or period of residence to an
election official.”
On November 3, 2008, the RNC submitted a Motion
to Vacate or Modify the Consent decree, suggesting that, since the 1987
modification, the enactment of a number of fraud-friendly laws, including the National
Voter Registration Act of 1993 (the so-called “Motor Voter” law), same-day
registration laws, the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, and the Help
America Vote Act of 2002, increased the risk of voter fraud and decreased the
risk of voter intimidation. An
evidentiary hearing was held on May 5-6, 2009, and on December 1, 2009, the
District Court denied the motion to vacate the Decree.
Lest any of us who have contributed financially
to the Republican Party assume that our money is well-spent, we might be greatly
disabused by what the Court wrote in its findings relative to
the December 2010 filing:
“The RNC asks that our Court vacate a decree that has as its central
purpose preventing the intimidation and suppression of minority voters. When, as here, a party voluntarily enters
into s consent decree not once, but twice, and then waits over a quarter of a century
before filing a motion to vacate or modify the decree, such action gives us
pause. Further, the RNC, with the advice
of counsel, twice chose to limit indefinitely its ability to engage in certain
activities enumerated in the Decree by entering into a decree with no
expiration date.”
It is common knowledge that vote fraud is a way
of life for Democrats, yet the leaders of the Republican Party appear almost
totally oblivious to the implications of the fraud. For example, in 2000, preliminary RNC research uncovered 858 instances of New
York City residents who appeared to double vote in various combinations of eleven
states. Four hundred and two New Yorkers
voted both in New York and in Florida. In
one of the greatest understatements of the century, RNC spokesman Kevin
Sheridan, said, “We suspect there are many, many more.”
The Bush-Cheney victory margin in Florida in
2000 was only 537 votes. Without the
double voting by Democratic “snow birds,” the Bush-Cheney margin would likely
have been several thousand votes. But the
RNC did nothing to bring the perpetrators to justice? It wouldn’t be necessary to put all double voters behind bars. If the RNC were to see to it that only five
or six of them went to jail for six months or a year, that alone would serve as
a major deterrent.
In the State of Ohio, a black woman from the Cincinnati
area, Melowese Richardson, an Obama supporter, has admitted to having voted at
least six times in the 2012 General Election.
The Hamilton County Board of Elections is now investigating Ms.
Richardson’s alleged fraud, along with 18 other cases of Election Day
fraud. If the board finds that fraud was
committed in any of the 19 cases they will be referred for prosecution. Melowese Richardson must go to jail.
As matters now stand, in the absence of a
strong Conservative Party, the Republican Party is mankind’s last best hope for
the future of western civilization. But
the Republican Party is an army without a general. It has no leadership. The only real leadership the party has is to
be found in the state capitals where 31 Republican governors demonstrate every
day what true leadership is all about.
But a few dozen regimental commanders are insufficient to win a war.
Since Ronald Reagan left the White House in
January 1989, we’ve had two Bushes, Bob Dole, and Mitt Romney, four nice guys
who were totally incapable of confronting the ruthlessness of the Democrat
Party. That won’t get the job done and
we cannot nominate another like them.
What Republican “leaders” in Washington
apparently fail to recognize is that they are fast losing the confidence of
rank-and-file Republicans across the country because they simply refuse to do
battle. In my 50 years as a Republican
activist, I have never shied away from a political battle, no matter how difficult
the task or how great the odds against victory. What I want Republican leaders to understand
is that all I have ever asked is the assurance that, if I go to war, I must have
at least a fighting chance to win. But
if I’m asked to participate in a battle in which defeat is guaranteed from the
outset, then I have no interest in the joining the fray. Don’t even ask me.
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