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EE_
7th November 2012, 09:18 AM
We need a revolution more then ever.
Remember these names...maybe some will stand up for the Ron Paul movement.
The movement must live.

The Ron Paul Revolution Moves to Congress
Wednesday, 07 November 2012 08:59
Written by Thomas R. Eddlem font size decrease font size increase font size Print

Libertarian-leaning Republican Congressman Ron Paul lost his bid for the Republican presidential nomination this year, but a number of his acolytes ran for Congress as Republicans and won November 6. Is Congress the real location of the growing “Ron Paul revolution”?

After a candidate loses an election, it's rare that the candidate's movement continues as a “revolution.” Nobody talks about a John McCain revolution, and even a day after the Mitt Romney defeat for president, nobody's talking about a Mitt Romney movement that will continue after his candidacy. But Representative Ron Paul, a 12-term Texas congressman who is retiring in January, always said his campaign was about ideas instead of personalities. In making endorsements for the U.S. House of Representatives, the former obstetrician played the role of king-maker, winning an astonishing eight of 11 House endorsements:

1. Justin Amash, a Michigan freshman congressman (3rd District), was reelected 58-39 percent over Democratic nominee Steve Pestka, who poured more than $1 million of his own into the campaign. Amash aligned most closely to Rep. Paul's ideas and ideals over the past two years, and the 32-year-old congressman may hold the mantle as the titular head of the Ron Paul movement in Congress.

2. MIT-trained scientist Thomas Massie easily won Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District race 62-35 percent, and had strong support from Kentucky's Senator Rand Paul after emerging from the GOP primary where he fought off several establishment favorites. Massie won the open seat primary with major support from the Liberty For All SuperPac.

3. Retired high-school teacher and reindeer farmer Kerry Bentivolio won 51-44 percent in Michigan 11th Congressional District race, after some major primary intervention from Ron Paul-backed SuperPacs, including Liberty For All SuperPac. Bentivolio had already won election to finish the term of Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, who resigned earlier this year, so Bentivolio will have an edge over incoming freshman toward placement in committees with his seniority.

4. Former Congressman Steve Stockman will return to Congress from the Texas 36th Congressional District, after easily besting Democratic nominee Max Martin by a 71-26 percent margin. Stockman was a Ron Paul ally during his two years in Congress 1995-1997, and is best known for being a strong advocate of the Second Amendment.

5. Businessman Randy Weber won the race to replace Ron Paul in Texas' 14th Congressional District, defeating Democratic nominee Nick Lampson 53-45 percent.

6. Veterinarian Ted Yoho will represent Florida's 3rd Congressional District after defeating the Democratic nominee Jacques Gaillot in the general election by 65-32 percent. Yoho defeated longtime incumbent Republican Congressman Cliff Stearns in the GOP primary this past summer.

7. Congressman David Schweikert of Arizona's 6th District won reelection 62-33 percent. Schweikert served on the House Money and Banking Subcommittee with Rep. Paul, where he became a key ally in seeking an audit of the Federal Reserve.

8. Congressman Walter Jones easily won reelection to North Carolina's 3rd District, 63-37 percent over his Democratic opponent. Rep. Jones had become a key ally with Paul in opposition to the Iraq War and in favor of defending civil liberties in the so-called “war on terror.”

Some Ron Paul-endorsed candidates did lose their U.S. House elections, however. Longtime incumbent Congressman Roscoe Bartlett of Maryland's 6th District lost 59-38 percent, a victim of redistricting. Freshman Congressman Joe Walsh of Illinois' 8th District lost 55-45 percent to disabled veteran Tammy Duckworth, in a race that garnered some national attention. And scientist Dr. Art Robinson — publisher of the free-market Access to Energy newsletter — lost an expensive race in Oregon's 4th Congressional District, 59-39 percent, to replace longtime incumbent Peter DeFazio in a district that leans Democratic.

Senate Losses

While the news was nearly all good for the “Ron Paul Revolution” in the House, few U.S. Senate candidates favored by Rep. Paul were able to replicate the Kentucky success that Ron Paul's son, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, enjoyed in the Tea Party fervor of 2010. Of the candidates Ron Paul endorsed for the U.S. Senate, only Tea Party favorite Ted Cruz of Texas won his U.S. Senate race, 57-40 percent, over Democratic nominee Paul Sadler.

Minnesota: U.S. Senate candidate Kurt Bills lost 65-35 to incumbent liberal Amy Klobuchar. Representative Connie Mack lost an uphill race against incumbent moderate Democrat Bill Nelson by a 55-42 percent margin.

Missouri: Representative Todd Akin also lost an insurgent Missouri U.S. Senate race (55-39 percent) against incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill.

Rhode Island: Barry Hinkley lost 61-39 to incumbent Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse.

Delaware: Kevin Wade fell 66-29 to longtime incumbent Thomas Carper.

(In the Montana Senate race against incumbent Jon Tester, Ron Paul-endorsed Denny Rehberg is behind in the vote count, 49-45 percent, even though CNN has yet to call the race.)

The Senate slaughterhouse of Ron Paul endorsed candidates was part of a tough night for the Republican Party Senate candidates overall, which lost several other U.S. Senate seats: Massachusetts U.S. Senator Scott Brown was defeated for reelection by Elizabeth Warren 54-46 percent. Tea Party favorite Richard Mourdock lost the open race to replace Indiana Republican Senator Richard Lugar to Rep. Joe Donnelly, 50-44 percent. And the GOP lost the Maine senate seat being vacated by the retiring Olympia Snowe to independent former Governor Angus King, who is expected to caucus with Senate Democrats.

EE_
7th November 2012, 09:19 AM
GOP in Deep Trouble, Ron Paul Looking Good
Posted by Ryan W. McMaken on November 7, 2012 01:35 AM

Romney lost today to a guy who is overseeing a horrible economy, prosecuting unpopular wars, and who can barely string 5 words together without a teleprompter. This was the best the Republican Party can do. Not only are the Republicans evil, they're evil and contemptible losers, which is far worse.

The biggest losers tonight are of course people who value peace and freedom, but we would have also lost if Romney won. The GOP is right up there in the loser category, however. The GOP lost seats in the Senate, and did little to improve its position in the House. It has served up two ridiculously bad nominees in a row, claiming "electability" and then going down in flames.

Rand Paul certainly came out of this looking very bad as well. He fell in line behind the party masters, banking on some advantage to be gained through an endorsement of Romney. He ended up just looking politically unsavvy and unprincipled. There is little to be gained either, from playing ball with a Party that as inept as the GOP at this point.

It's not beyond the realm of possibility that the GOP may actually show sign of disintegration in the next several years. The GOP has ceased to present any sort of actual alternative, and worse yet, it can't run a winning candidate. Once that happens, the coalition that makes up your political party will begin to fall apart.

The Ron Paul movement is a big winner here. The GOP told the libertarians in the party to get lost, and the GOP paid for it. Interestingly, both Iowa and Nevada, where Ron Paul supporters gained control of the state party, both went to Obama after the Romney campaign actively fought to disenfranchise Ron Paul supporters. I guess the GOP got what it wanted there.

There is exactly one movement that offers any real opposition to the status quo, and it ain't the conservative movement, which is on life support and entering a permanent vegetative state. Ron Paul's libertarian movement, brimming with well-educated young people, is the only thing left standing. The GOP operatives who predicted a big victory tonight just look pathetic.

On foreign policy, if it proves to be true that Obama is truly reluctant to engage in the mass murder of Iranians, that may be a victory there all by itself. Time well tell on that one.

And finally, when the economy enters a deep recession in a couple of years (or sooner), it will be good that Obama will be in office. You all know how it would have gone otherwise: After a couple of years of Romney misrule, the media will decide that Romney was the candidate of "free markets." Then, mired in a depression, our wise overlords will declare that "we tried that free market thing, and look what happened."

Down1
7th November 2012, 09:33 AM
Scott Brown was useless and has zero in common with RP.
Bye Cosmo Boy !

JohnQPublic
7th November 2012, 10:28 AM
The time may be ripe for a third party. Has not happened successfully in a long, long time, but there is a glimmer of a possibility now. Either that or the Repubicrat party gets completely revamped.

Down1
7th November 2012, 10:41 AM
Purging all the toxic Zio-con garbage would help the Republicans greatly.
It's clear war with Iran wasn't as high on the peoples agenda as it was with Mittens.

mamboni
7th November 2012, 10:45 AM
GOP is dead. There will be no revolution. Focus on home defense and self-preservation. We are slip-sliding into a nationwide guerilla war: [urban, suburban and rural] preppers versus [Obama's army] urban zombie horde. I kid you not. This election did not change the coming disintegration of the economy and finanical system. When the SNAP cards and welfare checks start bouncing, the parasites will go mad and on a rampage. They will not blame Obama for his broken promises. They will blame you for having more than they do.

EE_
7th November 2012, 11:00 AM
GOP is dead. There will be no revolution. Focus on home defense and self-preservation. We are slip-sliding into a nationwide guerilla war: urban preppers versus [Obama's army] urban zombie horde. I kid you not. This election did not change the coming disintegration of the economy and finanical system. When the SNAP cards and welfare checks start bouncing, the parasites will go mad and on a rampage. They will not blame Obama for his broken promises. They will blame you for having more than they do.

Stop it, you're scaring the kids!
http://www.megrosoff.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/286100Portrait-of-Baby-Crying-Posters.jpg

mick silver
7th November 2012, 11:03 AM
most here will not understand a fucking word you just said mamboni let alone get what about to come all of are ways . sorry but it had to be said

Horn
7th November 2012, 11:12 AM
Mitt's views on China probably didn't sit well with Jew traders.

After all if they stop financing U.S. debt, you'd get no more kung-fu movies digitized on the rainbow bridge, and freemen could not be converted into slaves coming to theaters near you.

And it is all a stage.

Uncle Salty
7th November 2012, 11:12 AM
GOP is dead. There will be no revolution. Focus on home defense and self-preservation. We are slip-sliding into a nationwide guerilla war: urban preppers versus [Obama's army] urban zombie horde. I kid you not. This election did not change the coming disintegration of the economy and finanical system. When the SNAP cards and welfare checks start bouncing, the parasites will go mad and on a rampage. They will not blame Obama for his broken promises. They will blame you for having more than they do.

The way they keep kicking the can down the road and with their ability to keep printing, I doubt were are going to get to that place very soon.

How disappointing.

mamboni
7th November 2012, 11:13 AM
Stop it, you're scaring the kids!
http://www.megrosoff.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/286100Portrait-of-Baby-Crying-Posters.jpg

Here, you poor thing: suck on this.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_EGjV0X3si9k/SGpkyQLGdLI/AAAAAAAABXM/6Y073FHpBok/s400/obamacandy.jpg

Rubberchicken
7th November 2012, 11:29 AM
I'm thinking about getting a .22 and a couple of silver dimes. Is this a good time or wait until I get my tax refund check?

Horn
7th November 2012, 11:36 AM
I'm thinking about getting a .22 and a couple of silver dimes. Is this a good time or wait until I get my tax refund check?

Rimfire is hard to reload with silver, and you need silver for vampires.

Maybe you could just paint it on the original load, but I'm not sure if its enough to do the trick...

mick silver
7th November 2012, 11:36 AM
silver dime , i was thinking of getting me one of those silver penny . dam you much be rich

Rubberchicken
7th November 2012, 11:40 AM
help me. get now or wait?

MNeagle
7th November 2012, 11:45 AM
get while the gettin's good...

who knows when they'll be no more gettin?

mick silver
7th November 2012, 11:47 AM
hell wait no need spending what little paper you have left the goverment will look out for you

Horn
7th November 2012, 12:45 PM
Yes, 31.88 is low enough, anything lower would be revolting.

gunDriller
7th November 2012, 01:11 PM
GOP is dead.


by suicide.

they had a truly independent man, who happened to be Republican, who would have won. like Lincoln, perhaps.

though obviously Ron Paul was a little more "tail between his legs" - at the end - than i would have guessed. i came to the RP game late, thought he had some genuine back-bone there for a while.


according to one of the Rand Paul insiders at the Y in San Diego, Rand is very much like his Dad. says Rand "plays the game" (kisses Zio-butt) because he know it's what he needs to do to get into the White House.

but i don't know the guy (at the Y) well enough to know if what he is saying has any truth.

mamboni
7th November 2012, 06:06 PM
most here will not understand a fucking word you just said mamboni let alone get what about to come all of are ways . sorry but it had to be said

C'mon Mick. People here get it. It's why they are here. The GSUS forum members are miles ahead of the crowd. And that advantage could be the difference between life and death in the coming days.

mamboni
7th November 2012, 06:08 PM
The way they keep kicking the can down the road and with their ability to keep printing, I doubt were are going to get to that place very soon.

How disappointing.

Don't be so sure that the market doesn't make a margin call on the US bond market any time now. A run on the treasuires will start in a flash and be over within an hour.

DMac
7th November 2012, 06:59 PM
Don't be so sure that the market doesn't make a margin call on the US bond market any time now. A run on the treasuires will start in a flash and be over within an hour.

And we all wake up in the morning after with a dollar worth 20% less or worse.

I honestly think something like this is heading our way, by sometime 2014.

Golden
7th November 2012, 07:09 PM
Don't be so sure that the market doesn't make a margin call on the US bond market any time now. A run on the treasuries will start in a flash and be over within an hour.

A hour??? A massive over estimation in my humble opinion.
Why, without cherished delusions what would the majority have to rely upon?

A true revoluton is a 360 degree turn that ends where you started. Who wants that? :)

General of Darkness
7th November 2012, 07:09 PM
Two things are going to happen, Jack and Shit, and Jack left town.

mamboni
7th November 2012, 07:15 PM
A hour??? A massive over estimation in my humble opinion.
Why, without cherished delusions what would the majority have to rely upon?

A true revoluton is a 360 degree turn that ends where you started. Who wants that? :)

A millisecond?

TheNocturnalEgyptian
7th November 2012, 07:31 PM
http://i1.kym-cdn.com/entries/icons/original/000/008/273/doom%20paul%201.png

http://i.imgur.com/9jEiL.jpg


http://i4.ytimg.com/vi/CLDrn0Mwo0w/hqdefault.jpg