RecoveringYuppy
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2006
- Messages
- 14,185
That Newt just became old enough to run for president.[voice=scared little English girl]
Mostly.
[/voice]
That Newt just became old enough to run for president.[voice=scared little English girl]
Mostly.
[/voice]
The Iowa Republican party is moving its caucus night vote counting operation to an undisclosed location because of planned "Occupy Iowa Caucus" protests.
State GOP chair Matt Strawn was critical of the protests and said it's ironic that the Occupy movement is focusing on the Iowa caucuses.
"There's really no more grassroots process in American politics than the Iowa caucuses," Strawn said in an interview. "So it's a little puzzling why they'd choose to disrupt that process."
Strawn said the party is coordinating with local law enforcement to ensure smooth operations next Tuesday at the 1,774 precincts around the state.
"We're taking additional safeguards when it comes to the counting and tabulating and reporting of the caucus night results to make sure they're done in a timely and accurate fashion," he said.
In past years the counting took place at Republican Party headquarters, Strawn said. On Tuesday, it will happen at a secret location that will be known to the campaigns, which will have representatives on hand to view the vote count.
Strawn wasn't specific about caucus night concerns, but a handful of protesters were arrested on Wednesday trying to enter the Des Moines campaign headquarters of Mitt Romney.
Occupy activists from around the country have convened in Iowa to join local activists in an effort to draw attention to economic and political inequities.
Arthur Sanders, professor of politics at Drake University in Des Moines, said they area already succeeding by that measure.
"They see an opportunity to draw attention to what they think is important, which is a very different agenda than the Republican candidates have," he said. "They'll get the attention they want."
I get a much stronger international exposure in Canada than I did in the US. Many of my friends have relatives or close contacts in Europe or Asia or the Middle East or elsehwhere. It is via these folks that I get a sense that people in other advanced countries are watching the US and can't decide whether what they're seeing is authentic insanity or not.
There have been times in election cycles (now and in 2007-08) when I have been treated like a man with a psychotic family, merely because I come from the United States, and maybe people thought I brought a little of that mental sickness across the border with me. No one has ever been rude about it, but some have politely made inquiry whether I was a rational person, or whether I was reflective of the lunacy they saw on television. A few have avoided making any comments about US politics out of concern for causing offense. When I first came to Canada, I encountered many Canadians who despised President George W. Bush (and I have YET to find a single Canadian who thinks highly of him), but were reluctant to mention their distaste for the man out of concern that I might have been one of his supporters.
Anyway, I submit that maintaining the national image is important. Trashing the national image to "win" the presidency strikes me as block-headed. In human beings, a quality of maturity is self-awareness and an understanding of what impressions you may be creating in others. When candidates do not care how the rest of the world perceives them or their causes, they show an immaturity that everyone else in the world can recognize at once, and it stains the entire nation.
Could the "she" not be the explanation? After all for many Christians (look at the RCC for an example) the idea of a female leader is an anathema?
Yeah, that was my guess too. Although fifth might be more accurate after Bachman, Perry, Cain and Gingrich. Santorum peaked at a better time than the others though. Now some of the cable channels are scrambling to find out who this guy is.
I keep hearing about the dollars spent (on media ads in Iowa) per vote won, and Santorum was the big winner of that measure.
Perry ought to go back to his old job
I guess you could say that santorum was all over Romney last night.
Although Romney won, he didn't exactly clean up. He'll have santorum right on his you-know-what right up to the end.
Well no one expected him to wipe the floor with Santorum.
Well, all they need to do is google 'Santorum', and...
I know Santorum did not win, but does anyone know if Santorum covered the spread?
Daredelvis
A Santorum backfire?
Duck and cover!
No, Mitt's magic underwear contained it.
No one was expecting Santorum to move from the bottom so quickly.
No one was expecting Santorum to move from the bottom so quickly.
No one was expecting Santorum to move from the bottom so quickly.
I may be an atheist, but I have said it before, and I will say it again. God bless Dan Savage.
I don't think he really has. He's still in the cellar in national polls.
Actually, the job I was referring to was as a lackey in "the private sector"; Rick Perry driving a jalopy for a bunch of rich hayseeds, for example, would be a pretty good move for all concerned.Actually, I hope he doesn't get his old job back, what with his complicity in putting to death an innocent man and his efforts to quash that fact.
Does anyone know if this happened before at the Iowa GOP caucus - counting the votes in secret?
Actually, the job I was referring to was as a lackey in "the private sector"; Rick Perry driving a jalopy for a bunch of rich hayseeds, for example, would be a pretty good move for all concerned.
I don't know if it happened before, but do you know if there were election observers present?
I have a feeling Romney's VP pick will be someone not in this field. I don't know who. I'm certain it won't be Palin.
I don't know if it happened before, but do you know if there were election observers present?