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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    US Kingmakers Triumph No Matter Who Wins

    US Kingmakers Triumph No Matter Who Wins

    By Joel Skousen
    World Affairs Brief
    2-16-8

    While Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul fight on in the race for the Republican nomination, media manipulation has done its job in behalf of John McCain, and it's McCain who will be the Republican standard bearer. In my opinion, forcing John McCain upon the Republicans greatly diminishes the chance of a Republican victory in November. On the Democratic side, Barak Obama continues to rack up victory after victory over Hillary Clinton-to the relief of millions of Americans who dislike Clinton. However, despite this appearance of victory for Obama, the Democratic race is very much unsettled. Even if Obama wins all the remaining primaries, he still ends up only barely ahead of Hillary in delegate counts--owing to the proportional allocation system. Obama is "winning" delegates in each primary, but so is Hillary. That is why the ultimate decision will be in the hands of the Democratic Party "heavies" --those state and national party leaders that control some 400 "super-delegate" votes. A large portion of these leaders are very much part of the insider control system that manipulates each election. This week I'll discuss the potential consequences of a McCain-Obama contest as opposed to a McCain-Clinton race.

    John McCain has a big problem. He is very much distrusted by Republican conservatives. Recent polls at the CPAC conference, where Romney made his speech announcing the suspension of his campaign, indicated that Romney supporters were very frustrated about where to cast their votes. Very few were willing to concede to McCain. Many wanted to vote for Ron Paul but felt he couldn't win. About half were willing to cross over to Huckabee, but that still left many still looking for "someone other than McCain."

    While the media insists on telling the nation that McCain is winning the "moderate" Republican vote, conservatives know that these "moderates" are really liberal Republicans. In the end, Republican insiders are making sure that Republicans who dislike McCain have nowhere else to go. They are counting on the fact that conservatives are used to supporting the lesser of two evils and will "get over" their dislike of McCain.

    Even Mitt Romney has apparently succumbed to pressure to support the party hierarchy by endorsing McCain. If he thinks it will make him any more acceptable to the Republican establishment, he is very much mistaken. All he does by endorsing McCain is corrupt his own constituency. It won't provide him a VP slot either unless he has totally sold out to the other side.

    All of this will figure strongly in the controversy over who the Powers That Be will choose for McCain's running mate. Mike Huckabee wants the VP slot and would be a good choice for securing the evangelical Christian support, which otherwise would not be enthusiastic about McCain. Huckabee will convince them that McCain is a true conservative "just like me." That's not very reassuring given Huckabee's liberal track record as Arkansas governor. Huck's real purpose was to act as a spoiler of the Romney candidacy. Huckabee then stayed in the race to make sure that the anti-McCain votes didn't go to Ron Paul. However, other powerful insiders connected to the Bush/Cheney center of power would like to use the VP slot to promote Jeb Bush, the president's younger brother, into a national spotlight. Other's are very much against another Bush on the ticket, insisting that the Bush legacy is so unpopular that it would create a negative backlash among potential crossover votes from independents.

    Here's how this might play out in the presidential election. While at least 70% of Americans really don't like the war in Iraq, only about 50% of Americans feels strongly enough to let their anti-war feelings determine who they will vote for in November. That's a sizable number. McCain is a lopsided candidate on the war issue, and is often and derisively referred to as "Bush on Steroids" due to his remarks about not minding another "100-years" in Iraq.

    If we see a McCain-Obama contest for the presidency, virtually all the anti-war vote is going to Obama who has campaigned strongly against the war, and who has a somewhat fresh image not tainted by years in the Washington establishment. The image of or promise of change is usually enough to fool millions of voters who naively think that the Democratic Party will really change things. They should have already seen the foolishness of that position from the absolute failure by Democrats to deliver on any of their anti-war claims after gaining majority control.

    While making vigorous verbal protests, Democrats have refused to stop the war, refused to stop the CIA from secret detention and torture, and refused to stop warrantless spying. They have refused to force Bush to seek Congressional authorization to attack Iran, refused to stop deficit spending, collaborated in the continued surveillance of Americans, and granted immunity to telecoms for spying.

    Believe me, nothing will change even if Obama wanted them to-which I doubt. The PTB have more ways of creating military crises that will force his hand than the public can imagine. Obama's new found wealth came from a series of insider financial tips--the same kind of deals that benefitted the Clintons in their early rise to power. Technically, these deals are illegal since they involve insider knowledge, and are only available to people who sign on to the "benevolent" control system which manages this nation.

    Last week, I expressed the opinion that the PTB are giving huge amounts of money and media coverage to Obama in order to weaken Clinton, even though they intend for Hillary to win the nomination in the end. Making Hillary look vulnerable in the primary increases the perception that Hillary isn't a shoe in for the general election. They are counting on the hate-Hillary factor to ensure another Republican win. This is still a probable scenario.

    On the other hand, it will be difficult for the Democratic PTB to hand the nomination to Hillary if Obama continues to win big in Democratic Primaries and has the lead in electoral votes going into the convention. They are certainly capable of doing so, using their control of super-delegates, but such a scenario would certainly boost the rage of anti-war democrats who are supporting Obama. I suspect these could easily defect to an independent candidacy if it came along. They won't vote for McCain under any circumstances.

    If they let Obama win the Demo's nomination, I don't think McCain can beat him in the general election unless there are some damaging media revelations that reveal some serious skeletons in Obama's closet. They could open up his insider financial dealings, but that might expose a system they want to retain. They could reveal his youthful anti-American hostility that he shared with the radical Pastor of his current Church of Christ congregation. There may be other things as well.

    But short of that, or a war with Iran (which would instantly cause a surge in unthinking American patriotism), Obama would win the presidency given the current hostility toward the Republican interventionist agenda. If Obama wins, it would be accompanied by the election of many more Democrats in both the House and Senate, giving them even larger majorities to back their social agenda. In the next four years, I strongly suspect we would see the passage of many bad Democratic laws taking us back to the days of pro-union labor laws, higher taxes, higher regulation, and expensive health and welfare proposals.

    In reaction to this, American conservatives would finally start to fight against government for once, instead of going along with it when led by Republicans. The PTB can give the Demos four years to do their damage and in the end engender enough backlash to finally get the Republicans back into the presidency in 2012. Of course the damage done by the Democratic regime won't be undone by the next Republican. It never is, unless there is an ulterior globalist motive for pushing "free market" reforms (at least for big corporations). If the George Bush presidency was any example, the globalist Republicans will never overturn bad law nor bad presidential directives once they get back into power.

    In short, the PTB can get to their globalist world war either way, no matter who wins. If they run Hillary against McCain, the Republican could win and stay in office right through the next war. If Obama runs, he wins for only four years and the PTB get more socialist legislation than even the globalist Republicans could get away with (although we've yet to see what Bush can't get away with in that regard.)

    AN INDEPENDENT CHALLENGE WITHOUT RON PAUL?

    One thing we have learned from the current primary campaign is just how manipulable the American voter is by a media onslaught for or against various candidates. The slick campaign to eliminate Romney from the campaign, using Huckabee as the spoiler, was very revealing. So was the extreme media bias against Ron Paul. There just aren't enough thinking people among voters to amass any more support for a principled, Constitution-based platform than 5-10%. That doesn't bode well for a third party or independent run. The mainstream media will deny any meaningful news coverage to third parties--unless it's one of "their" third party spoilers like Ross Perot, who collaborated with the PTB in order to get the Clintons installed in the White House. Only in those cases do they get lots of coverage and are allowed into the debates.

    Without substantive media attention, within our "winner-take-all" system, a third party/independent run for the presidency is not capable of winning the election outright--though it can act as a spoiler for one party or the other. However, as I just pointed out, the PTB get their way with either the Democrat or Republican--they just get it done in a different order and slightly different time frame.

    In any case, no third party or independent candidacy is going anywhere unless all the disparate parties and forces agree on supporting a single candidate--and that person is Ron Paul. He is the only candidate capable of attracting partisans across the principled political spectrum of constitutional conservatives, independents and many anti-war Democrats as well. Almost all of the small third parties would be willing to join forces if Ron Paul were the standard bearer. Such a unified coalition has not been possible in the past hundred years. Only Ron Paul is capable of engendering the necessary trust to put together this large a coalition. He says this movement is not about him, but it is, in one significant way: A proper ideology is absolutely essential, but it has to have a human being to be its champion and get elected to office. Ideas don't get elected on their own without a person the people can rally around. No one else has the elected track record of Ron Paul. No one else has his absolute reputation for trust.

    The only problem is that Paul has announced that he will not run as a third party or independent candidate--that he is staying loyal to the Republican party. He has done this not because he really thinks highly of the Republican party (that has betrayed him constantly), but simply because running as a Republican has been the only way in which he has ever won anything. He would never have won his seat in Congress as a libertarian. Only by running as a mainstream candidate do you accrue the number of unthinking voters that is necessary to win. Not only is Ron running for President but he is running concurrently for his seat in Congress as a Republican. So he is not free to switch parties without ceding the Congressional race to the other liberal Republicans who are challenging Paul in the Republican primary in his Texas district.

    The ultimate question for Ron Paul is this: Is staying within the Republican's going to continue to yield any significant benefits in terms of building the movement? It's a tough question. He believes it will. Most of Paul's supporters couldn't care less about Paul staying in the Republican party--which they correctly view as part of the problem. However Ron sincerely believes he can continue to grow the movement staying in the GOP and by retaining his seat in Congress.

    Certainly this year's record run for the Presidency bears that out. Paul never would have got even a fraction of the media and debate time had he not run in the Republican primary. Even though the media purposely denied him equal coverage and equal time in the debates, still his message did get out there--with a lot of help from his supporters. Ron's message failed to catch on in large numbers because too many voters are unthinking, taking their cues from talking heads who dismiss Paul as irrelevant, and too complacent with the status quo to feel the severity of the crisis we face. The PTB are intent on keeping people complacent, and marginalizing those that aren't.

    Has Ron's advantage running with the Republican's run its course? Yes and no. I don't think he will have any more effect back in Congress than before--which was minimal. Admittedly, it has been great to have him there. He has been our watchdog on everything the Congress did wrong. He has been the conscience of the Congress for decades but, like Jiminy Cricket of Pinnochio fame, Congress isn't listening. Ron isn't getting any younger either but he is in good health and could still fight on for many years--at least in Congress--but probably not as president where he is quickly reaching that age limit where few would consider him a viable candidate because of age. That is why many of us felt this election was our last and best chance.

    (End Excerpt)

    World Affairs Brief - Commentary and Insights on a Troubled World.

    Copyright Joel Skousen. Partial quotations with attribution permitted.

    Cite source as Joel Skousen's World Affairs Brief http://www.worldaffairsbrief.com

    http://www.rense.com/general80/king.htm
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    Senior Member loservillelabor's Avatar
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    US Kingmakers Triumph No Matter Who Wins
    This is the way we have to look at this. The kingmakers triumph to some extent no matter who wins, but not to the same extent. We must not overlook the fact that CIR failed two times while the kingmakers trusted the liberal infiltrators of the Republican Party to get it done. The kingmakers best odds of pulling off CIR lie with the other fully socialist party. McCain is the Republican Party spoiler. He's there to throw 2008 just like Bush threw 2006.

    The Republican Party has had two terms of Bush to bring about a key element of the NAU. They need amnesty and open borders. Bush was prepared to pull the trigger on the CIR when 911 trashed all that. He let the whole thing lie while he developed other elements through signing statements, executive orders, legislation and collusion with other governments. Then in spring 2006 China sent Hu in here to get their overpopulated, dependent, consumer continent back on track under threat of pulling a billion dollars a day financing out of here. Bush suddenly fell in love with Mexicans and went on TV to plead their plght. The "spontaneous" demonstrations of Mexico's might set the Senate to war with the House over planned immigration law enforcement. But Bush and the Senate failed to bring CIR in spite of WH arm twisting, a Soros entity ratting out a gay member then blaming and trying to take out Hastert, the entrapment of "easy" Jefferson, and intimidating raids on House offices and computers. Bush failed again in 2007 due to conservative patriots, though somewhat fewer, after Bush "stumping" in fall 2006 still in Congress.

    McCain is just a sacrifice, but we can't let that happen. Let's install him, give him all the opposition in Congress we can, and kick his ass on CIR. That's our only chance!
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