Re: Elections 2012: Congressional and Gubernatorial
Deal. And you ask your pal Whoopi.
How about you ask your buddy Akin?
Deal. And you ask your pal Whoopi.
How about you ask your buddy Akin?
At what point does the Republican brain trust tell it's caucus to SHUT THE **** UP about rape and everything else that could possibly turn into another flap over women?
And at what point does the Republican brain trust simply tell their politicians they aren't allowed to talk to the media period?
Seriously. This is why I'm voting Democrat this election cycle. It's time to teach the Republicans a hard, hard lesson.
The Boston Globe endorsed a Republican for a House race. That puts them one ahead of the Washington Post.
At what point does the Republican brain trust tell it's caucus to SHUT THE **** UP about rape and everything else that could possibly turn into another flap over women?
My theory - in states like Indiana, that line of thought is basically a given among identified "conservative" voters. Therefore, "whatever" is the attitude when it comes to the state elections, as the GOP tries to quickly sweep it under the rug before the national media latches onto it. Unfortunately for them, Akin has the media super-tuned to right-wing derp this year.
Well, right. But at some point, the people who hold the true power in the GOP have to be thinking to themselves, "This BS is going to cost us the presidency if it keeps up. It needs to end NOW."
The Tea Party has been winning primaries with guys that were quite frankly, out on the edge before 2008. It's not that surprising that these guys are continuing to say the things that they were saying back then now that they're in a general election. Mourdock and Akin were both the most extreme of the options in the primary which at the same time took two seats that should have been safe republican and made them less so.
The Tea Party has been winning primaries with guys that were quite frankly, out on the edge before 2008. It's not that surprising that these guys are continuing to say the things that they were saying back then now that they're in a general election. Mourdock and Akin were both the most extreme of the options in the primary which at the same time took two seats that should have been safe republican and made them less so.
Well, right. But at some point, the people who hold the true power in the GOP have to be thinking to themselves, "This BS is going to cost us the presidency if it keeps up. It needs to end NOW."
It never ends... a lovely sentiment from Richard Mourdock saying pregnancies from rape are gods will.
Living in Mass I don't run into too many hard core social conservatives, but do righties really believe, as in the voters not the pols, that rape victims should be forced to have their attackers' child? To me that's just barbaric and Talibanesque.
ericredaxe, I'm also somebody who the Republican Party has left. That being said, I don't know anything else about Richard Mourdock; but looking only at his statement:
1) Someone saying "I have wrestled with this, but I've come to accept that life comes from God" is not saying God wants rape to happen, which his Mourdock's challenger accused him of thinking. It makes a good headline; and everybody's forwarding it all over the place; but that actual position is not indefensible.
OK, just one item of food for thought, for you blood-lusters. Then I'll go away. If the mother didn't tell anyone she had been raped, but it was discovered when the child was five or ten years old that they were a product of a rape, would he or she (the child) still deserve a death sentence without trial for the crime of being so conceived? How would you recommend the killing be carried out? Knives? Poison? Hanging?
Just asking.
Does anyone think it might be more appropriate to punish the rapist?