Daily Archives: 08/10/11

Dallas Observer Reports On Occupy the Fed Rally


 

Alex Jones: Infowars Host and His Followers Occupy the Dallas Fed Friday

Leslie Minora
Dallas Observer
Saturday, October 8, 2011

Comment: This is a fair article, but the numbers who attended are closer to 400 for the Infowars Occupy the Fed rally and another 100 Occupy Wall Street protesters who joined to demonstrate, so 500 in total. The rally was a huge success – on to Houston tonight!

Friday evening, two groups of protesters, Occupy Dallas and Occupy the Federal Reserve, lined opposite side of N. Pearl Street at Woodall Rodgers in front of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. “We got sold out, Feds got bailed out!” Occupy Dallas protesters shouted in unison on the west side of Pearl. And, all around them, the Occupy the Federal Reserve crowd — consisting of fans and followers of Dallas-born, Austin-based radio-show hostAlex Jones – had their own mantra: “End the Fed, End the Fed!”

It’s tough to say whose crowd was bigger — probably around 200 on both sides. Police said the protesters had been peaceful; only one person’s been arrested since the Occupy Dallas folks began their demonstrating Thursday morning. “They’re well-behaved, so that helps a lot,” said Sergeant Thomas Fry, scanning the crowd.

Jones — the 9/11 truther, a man who recently called the Gates Foundation “obviously a eugenics operation,” the street preacher in Richard Linklater’s A Scanner Darkly and, to a few, a resurrected Bill Hicks — grabbed a megaphone a little after 6 p.m. “A hundred years of these scumbag bankers is a hundred years too long,” he yelled.

“I love you, Alex!” a voice carried over the crowd.

“I love you guys. You’re the only prayer we’ve got,” Jones yelled back.

Full story here.

 

‘Occupy’ Movement Comes to Dallas


A protest that began with a few dozen demonstrators in New York City has grown to thousands in cities across the country, including Dallas.

As the group flooded Wall Street in New York for the 19th-straight day, about 200 people rallied at Occupy Dallas on Thursday.

The demonstrators marched from Pike Park near the American Airlines Center to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas on Pearl Street in downtown Dallas.

“And I know that we’re with our brothers and sisters on Wall Street right now, showing that there’s not just a small group but an entire nation behind them,” one man said to the crowd to cheers.

Occupy Wall Street is described on OccupyWallSt.org as a “leaderless resistance movement with people of many colors, genders and political persuasions. The one thing we all have in common is that we are the 99 percent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1 percent.”

“Everybody’s voices need to be heard, not just the 1 percent,” Jackie Griffith said. “I mean, look at the diverse age group here — so many people, so many people in the middle of the week. People want to be heard.”

The protesters, who were fired up about many national issues, engaged in a peaceful demonstration.

Leaders briefed the rest of the group before getting started and first gathered in the park to establish its main message — that it represents 99 percent of the population, and the wealthy are the 1 percent who have too much power.

Protesters also aired complaints about various issues from the health care system to government bailouts for corporations to unemployment.

“Having these men and women come home who have been overseas, to come home and be unemployed and face homelessness is beyond irresponsible of our government,” Tristan Tucker said.

Participants listed numerous reasons for why they attended.

“I came out here to fight for the people so that way we can end corporate greed,” Amanda Cuenca said.

“We’re hoping to change the whole government system, hopefully tomorrow,” Liomara Diaz said. “You never know; [I’m] staying positive.”

“We’re protesting everything, you know, like them giving everything to the 1 percent, the rich 1 percent,” Andrea Nauman said.

People carried signs as varied as “I work to be poor;” “don’t Tase me bro;” “people before money, love before greed, wake up and see;” “we are under assault by tyranny;” and “99% can’t be wrong.”

Bernard Weinstein, an economist at Southern Methodist University, said he believes the popularity of social media has fueled the turnout.

“This is a movement that doesn’t really have a core, at least not yet,” he said.

But Weinstein said it could mean trouble for the movement if everyone isn’t on the same page.

“Unless there can develop a stronger focus for this movement, I think it will just dissipate,” he said.

Weinstein said it’s possible that a clearer vision could develop now that labor and teachers unions have joined the demonstrations in New York.

The New York group is urging people to “assert your power,” according to the NYC General Assembly’s “Declaration of the Occupation of New York City.”

“Exercise your right to peaceably assemble; occupy public space; create a process to address the problems we face, and generate solutions accessible to everyone,” the group says in its declaration.

 

Ann Barnhardt responds to death threat


                                                          Wow, what a Woman !!
http://colonel6.com/2011/10/03/ann-barnhardt-islamic-sexuality-a-survey-of-evil/

Ann Barnhardt is described as “a livestock and grain commodity broker and marketing consultant, American patriot, traditional Catholic,
And unwitting counter-revolutionary blogger. She can be reached through her business at http://www.barnhardt.biz/.”
She has taken on Islam and they have noticed.
DEATH THREAT:
To:annbarnhardt
I’m going to kill you when I find you. Don’t think I won’t, I know where you and your parents live and I’ll need is one phone-call to kill ya’ll.
———–———————————–
ANN’S RESPONSE:
Re: Watch your back.
Hello mufcadnan123!
You don’t need to “find” me. My address is 9175 Kornbrust Circle, Lone Tree, CO 80124.
Luckily for you, there are daily DIRECT FLIGHTS from Heathrow to Denver . Here’s what you will need to do. After arriving at Denver and passing through customs, you will need to catch the shuttle to the rental car facility. Once in your rental car, take Pena Boulevard to I-225 south. Proceed on I-225 south to I-25 south. Proceed south on I-25 to Lincoln Avenue which is exit 193. Turn right (west) onto Lincoln . Proceed west to the fourth light, and turn left (south) onto Ridgegate Boulevard . Proceed south, through the roundabout to Kornbrust Drive . Turn left onto Kornbrust Drive and then take an immediate right onto Kornbrust Circle . I’m at 9175.
Just do me one favor. PLEASE wear body armor. I have some new ammunition that I want to try out, and frankly, close-quarter body shots without armor would feel almost unsporting from my perspective. That and the fact that I’m probably carrying a good 50 I.Q. Points on you makes it morally incumbent upon me to spot you a tactical advantage.
However, being that you are a miserable, trembling coward, I realize that you probably are incapable of actually following up on any of your threats without losing control of your bowels and crapping your pants while simultaneously sobbing yourself into hyperventilation. So, how about this: why don’t you contact the main mosque here in Denver and see if some of the local musloids here in town would be willing to carry out your attack for you?
After all, this is what your “perfect man” mohamed did (pig excrement be upon him). You see, mohamed, being a miserable coward and a con artist, would send other men into battle to fight on his behalf. Mohamed would stay at the BACK of the pack and let the stupid, ignorant suckers like you that he had conned into his political cult do the actual fighting and dying. Mohamed would then fornicate with the dead men’s wives and children. You should follow mohamed’s example! Here is the contact info for the main mosque here in Denver :
Masjid Abu Bakr
Imam Karim Abu Zaid
2071 South Parker Road
Denver, CO 80231
Phone: 303-696-9800
I’m sure they would be delighted to hear from you. Frankly, I’m terribly disappointed that not a SINGLE musloid here in the United States has made ANY attempt to rape and behead me. But maybe I haven’t made myself clear enough, so let me do that right now.
I will NEVER, EVER, EVER submit to Islam. I will fight Islam with every fiber of my being for as long as I live because Islam is pure satanic evil. If you are really serious about Islam dominating the United States and the world, you are going to have to come through me. You are going to have to kill me. Good luck with that. And understand that if you or some of your musloid boyfriends do actually manage to kill me, The Final Crusade will officially commence five minutes later, and then, despite your genetic mental retardation, you will be made to understand with crystal clarity what the word “defeat” means. Either way, I win, so come and get it.
Deo adjuvante non timendum (with the help of God there is nothing to be afraid of).
Ann Barnhardt

Dr. Boyce: Why Black People Need to Go Occupy Wall Street Too


COLONEL SIXX: I FEEL THE STUPID HANGING AROUND TODAY.  THIS ARTICLE WAS WRITTEN AND PUBLISHED BY DR. BOYCE WATKINS. IF YOU HAVE  A PROBLEM WITH WHAT HE HAS TO SAY, TAKE IT TO HIM.

This week, I plan to head to New York City to join scores of American citizens who’ve decided that Wall Street should be confronted for the financial crimes that have been committed against the American people.

It is an awkward reunion for me as a Finance Professor, since I have hundreds of former students who’ve gone on to make millions as Wall Street employees.  So, perhaps it is because of my intimate understanding of the gospel of Finance that I can also see the dangers of creating a society that has come to believe that making money is the trump card that justifies nearly all sins against humanity…..almost like the doctor who can tell when the patient has become addicted to the drug that was originally designed to heal him.

There are a long list of reasons that all of us should be concerned, disappointed and even angry about what Wall Street has done to our country.  The real wage of the average American worker has remained stagnant, while the gap between the rich and the poor has risen to levels that are unsustainable in nearly any civilized society.  We live under the illogical reality that those who caused the financial crisis by taking unnecessary risks were the first ones to be bailed out by politicians who are enslaved by campaign contributions and lobbying groups.  Labor unions have been undermined throughout the nation, and while the joblessness problems persists, corporations are sitting on trillions in capital that could be used to hire American workers.

I am honored to be an American when I see that thousands of us have simply taken our country back from those who’ve denied their responsibility to properly regulate the power of capitalism in our society.  Free enterprise can be a wonderful thing, but when capitalism is not properly controlled, it can become as deadly as an economic forest fire.

The African American community has every reason to be on the front lines in this battle for our nation’s economic soul.  Black unemployment has skyrocketed to levels that haven’t been seen since Michael Jackson released Thriller.  Nearly half (40%) of all black children are living below the poverty line.   Black wealth has continued to shrink, as the burst of the real estate bubble left many African Americans either homeless or upside down in their mortgages.  Black families have been destroyed by the prison industrial complex, where Wall Street firms earn billions each year from slave labor.  Also, several Wall Street banks deliberately targeted black and brown communities for predatory loans that put grandma out of the house she’d lived in since Malcolm X was alive.

Yes, we have reason to be very, very upset.  It is in part because my grandmother was one of the people who lost her home due to predatory lending that I plan to join my brothers and sisters (of all races) in their decision to occupy Wall Street.  This is our chance to confront the economic bullies who’ve worked to politically castrate nearly every politician in Washington, and also those unpatriotic enough to allow the country to sink into the financial abyss.

I wish I could say that major civil rights organizations would join us in this fight.  But I am reminded of the decision by the NAACP to take millions of dollars from Wells Fargo, a bank accused of predatory lending.  This is not to say that they won’t join the battle, but it does say that biting the hand that feeds you isn’t exactly the key to economic prosperity.   This might be a lesson to all of us that in spite of the fact that we all need money to survive, we must be careful about making ourselves dependent upon a resource that is controlled by the descendants of our historical oppressors.

No matter how you slice it, the Occupy Wall Street movement belongs to the people.   By seizing the moment and putting it all on the line, we have an opportunity to help fulfill the long lost dream of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.  If Dr. King were alive today, he wouldn’t be asking Washington bureaucrats to give him a multi-million dollar monument funded by corporate America.  Instead, he’d be right down on Wall Street with the protesters, demanding justice, freedom and equality for the American people.  In fact, if you look into the eyes of those who’ve become inspired to resurrect the spirit of conscientious activism in America, you can see that Dr. King’s spirit is down on Wall Street right now.

 

Dr. Boyce Watkins is a Finance Professor at Syracuse University and author of the book, “Black American Money:  How Black Power can Thrive in a Capitalist Society.”  To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

@ColonelSixx

Don’t blame the messenger because the message is unpleasant.
Kenneth Starr

 

 

Oakland Raiders Owner Al Davis Dead at 82


OAKLAND, Calif. –  OAKLAND, Calif. — Al Davis, the Hall of Fame owner of the Oakland Raiders known for his rebellious spirit, has died.

The team announced his death at age 82 on Saturday.

It was not immediately clear when and where he died.

It was Davis’ willingness to buck the establishment that helped turn the NFL into THE establishment in sports — the most successful sports league in American history.

Davis was charming, cantankerous and compassionate — a man who when his wife suffered a serious heart attack in the 1970s moved into her hospital room. But he was best known as a rebel, a man who established a team whose silver-and-black colors and pirate logo symbolized his attitude toward authority, both on the field and off.

Davis was one of the most important figures in NFL history. That was most evident during the 1980s when he fought in court — and won — for the right to move his team from Oakland to Los Angeles. Even after he moved them back to the Bay Area in 1995, he went to court, suing for $1.2 billion to establish that he still owned the rights to the L.A. market.

Until the decline of the Raiders into a perennial loser in the first decade of the 21st century he was a winner, the man who as a coach, then owner-general manager-de facto coach, established what he called “the team of the decades” based on another slogan: “commitment to excellence.” And the Raiders were excellent, winning three Super Bowls during the 1970s and 1980s and contending almost every other season — an organization filled with castoffs and troublemakers who turned into trouble for opponents.

Davis, elected in 1992 to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, also was a trailblazer. He hired the first black head coach of the modern era — Art Shell in 1988. He hired the first Latino coach, Tom Flores; and the first woman CEO, Amy Trask. And he was infallibly loyal to his players and officials: to be a Raider was to be a Raider for life.

But it was his rebellious spirit, that willingness to buck the establishment, that helped turn the NFL into THE establishment in sports — the most successful sports league in American history. He was the last commissioner of the American Football league and led it on personnel forays that helped force a merger that turned the expanded NFL into the colossus it remains.

Born in Brockton, Mass., Davis grew up in Brooklyn and graduated from Erasmus Hall High School, a spawning ground in the two decades after World War II for a number of ambitious young people who became renowned in sports, business and entertainment. Davis was perhaps the second most famous after Barbra Streisand.

“We had a reunion in Los Angeles and 500 people showed up, including Bah-bruh,” he once told an interviewer in that combination of southern drawl/Brooklynese that was often parodied among his acquaintances within the league and without.

A graduate of Syracuse University, he became an assistant coach with the Baltimore Colts at age 24; and was an assistant at The Citadel and then Southern California before joining the Los Angeles Chargers of the new AFL in 1960. Only three years later, he was hired by the Raiders and became the youngest general manager-head coach in pro football history with a team he called “the Raid-uhs” in 1963.

He was a good one, 23-16-3 in three seasons with a franchise that had started its life 9-23.
Then he bought into the failing franchise, which played on a high school field adjacent to the Nimitz Freeway in Oakland and became managing general partner, a position he held until his death.

But as the many bright young coaches he hired — from John Madden, Mike Shanahan and Jon Gruden to Lane Kiffin — found out, he remained the coach. He ran everything from the sidelines, often calling down with plays, or sending emissaries to the sidelines to make substitutions.

In 1966, he became commissioner of the AFL.

But even before that, he had begun to break an unwritten truce between the young league and its established rivals, which fought over draft choices but did not go after established players.

And while the NFL’s New York Giants’ signing of Buffalo placekicker Pete Gogolak marked the first break in that rule, it was Davis who began to go after NFL stars — pursuing quarterbacks John Brodie and Roman Gabriel as he tried to establish AFL supremacy.

Davis’ war precipitated first talks of merger, although Davis opposed it. But led by Lamar Hunt of Kansas City, the AFL owners agreed that peace was best. A common draft was established, and the first Super Bowl was played following the 1966 season — Green Bay beat Kansas City, then went on to beat Davis’ Raiders the next season. By 1970, the leagues were fully merged and the league had the basic structure it retains until this day — with the NFL’s Pete Rozelle as commissioner, not Davis, who wanted the job badly.

So he went back to the Raiders, running a team that won Super Bowls after the 1976, 1980 and 1983 seasons — the last one in Los Angeles, where the franchise moved in 1982 after protracted court fights. It was a battling bunch, filled with players such as John Matuszak, Mike Haynes and Lyle Alzado, stars who didn’t fill in elsewhere who combined with homegrown stars — Ken Stabler, another rebellious spirit; Gene Upshaw; Shell, Jack Tatum, Willie Brown and dozens of others.

Davis was never a company man. Not in the way he dressed: jump suits with a Raiders logo: white or black, with the occasional black suit, black shirt and silver tie. Not in the way he wore his hair — even well into his ’70s it was slicked back with a ’50s duck-tail. Not in the way he did business — on his own terms, always on his own terms.

After lengthy lawsuits involving the move to Los Angeles, he went back to Oakland and at one point in the early years of the century was involved in suits in northern and southern California — the one seeking the Los Angeles rights and another suing Oakland for failing to deliver sellouts they promised to get the Raiders back.

But if owners and league executives branded Davis a renegade, friends and former players find him the epitome of loyalty.

When his wife, Carol, had a serious heart attack, he moved into her hospital room and lived there for more than a month. And when he hears that even a distant acquaintance is ill, he’ll offer medical help without worrying about expense.

“Disease is the one thing — boy I tell you, it’s tough to lick,” he said in 2008, talking about the leg ailments that had restricted him to using a walker. “It’s tough to lick those diseases. I don’t know why they can’t.”

A few years earlier, he said: “I can control most things, but I don’t seem to be able to control death. “Everybody seems to be going on me.”

As he aged, his teams declined.

The Raiders got to the Super Bowl after the 2002 season, losing to Tampa Bay. But for a long period after that, they had the worst record in the NFL, at one point with five coaches in six years.

Some of it was Davis’ refusal to stay away from the football operation — he would take a dislike to stars and order them benched.

The most glaring example was Marcus Allen, the most valuable player in the 1984 Super Bowl, the last the Raiders won.

For reasons never made clear, Davis took a dislike to his star running back and ordered him benched for two seasons. He released him after the 1992 season, and Allen went to Kansas City.
Davis’ only comment: “He was a cancer on the team.”

The small incorporated city of Irwindale, 20 miles east of Los Angeles, learned an expensive lesson about dealing with Davis. The city gave the Raiders $10 million to show its good faith in 1988, but environmental issues, financing problems and regional opposition scuttled plans to turn a gravel pit into a $115 million, 65,000-seat stadium. The deposit was nonrefundable, and Irwindale never got a penny back.

When he fired Mike Shanahan in 1988 after 20 games as head coach, he refused to pay him the $300,000 he was owed. When he became coach of the Denver Broncos, Shanahan delighted most in beating the Raiders and Davis. And when Davis fired Lane Kiffin “for cause” in 2008, withholding the rest of his contract, the usually humorless Shanahan remarked:

“I was a little disappointed, to be honest with you. When you take a look at it, I was there 582 days. Lane Kiffin was there 616 days. So, what it really means is that Al Davis liked Lane more than he liked me. I really don’t think it’s fair. I won three more games, yet he got 34 more days of work. That just doesn’t seem right.”

But for most of his life, few people laughed at Al Davis.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2011/10/08/oakland-raiders-owner-al-davis-dead-at-82/#ixzz1aCqh1rce

NYPD: Occupy has caused them to use violence


 

The NYPD has been complaining that the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York have been expensive and caused them to use violence.   Police say that they’ve had to pay $2 million in overtime costs, and were also forced to use peppery spray to control the crowds.

“I think the vast majority of people who protest were peaceful,” said Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly. ”But there’s clearly a core group of self-styled anarchists – that’s what they call themselves – who want to have a confrontation with police.”

Kelly says that there are groups of protesters who’ve tried to charge police barricades, which caused officers to have to respond in force.

“They locked their arms. They counted down – 10, 9, 8, 7, 6. Then they decided to charge the police. That is going to be met with some physical force,” Kelly said.

So far, the Occupy Wall Street Movement has spread to over 150 cities nation-wide.  Also, the protesters claim that it was the police who provoked the violence.  A YouTube Video was posted of an officer claiming that he couldn’t wait to beat up the protesters.

“My little nightstick’s gonna get a workout tonight,” the officer said to one of his colleagues.

The video is supplemented by another shot of an officer going through a crowd seeming to wave his baton at everyone in sight.

“Police officers have a right to use force and to defend themselves when they are being charged by a group trying to overwhelm them,” said NYPD chief spokesman Paul Browne.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg says that while protesters have a right to act, they don’t have the right to challenge the police.

“There just is a standard of conduct which is a line you cannot cross,” he said. ”Our Police Department conducted themselves the way that they should. Every cop? I don’t know. There will always be somebody that has some piece of footage,” Bloomberg said.

@ColonelSixx

Every normal man must be tempted,at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
H. L. Mencken

War protesters find their way to White House


COLONEL SIXX:  OCCUPY WALL STREET IS MOVING ON!

Taiwan Sun
Saturday 8th October, 2011  

  •  Anti-war activists converge on White House
  •  Demand immediate withdrawal of troops
  •  Dual protest also targets Wall Street

Hundreds of anti-war protesters have rallied at the gates of the White House in Washington DC.With anger in all forms now spreading across the country, hundreds of anti-war protesters turned up at the White House on Friday to chant slogans against the decade-long involvement in Afghanistan.

Firmly denouncing the war, they carried signs demanding the immediate withdrawal of US and other NATO forces from Afghanistan.

The protesters also yelled out angry demands to Wall Street bankers, echoing the Occupy Wall Street movement which originated in New York.

The White House protesters said they wanted an end to war as it had led to the deterioration of the US economy.

They also blamed President Barack Obama for not dealing more firmly with Wall Street following the 2008 financial crisis and other political figures for favouring corporate America in preference to the country’s middle and working classes.

On Thursday President Obama told a news conference he understood the public’s frustrations over the nation’s financial system and rule-breaking Wall Street bankers.

There have been many protests against America’s financial industry over the past weeks with momentum building across the US.

Occupy Wall Street marches and sit-ins have now been seen in most of the major states.

“Mormonism is not Christianity,considered a cult”:Perry adviser


8 October 2011

http://colonel6.com/2011/10/04/colonel-sixxs-sure-fire-way-to-beat-rick-perry/

The divisiveness that is the lifeblood of many evangelical Christians made another appearance in American politics yesterday.

Dallas evangelical pastor Robert Jeffress introduced Rick Perry at the Values Voters Summit in Washington, D.C., and shortly afterwards told reporters, “Rick Perry’s a Christian. He’s an evangelical Christian, a follower of Jesus Christ.  Mitt Romney’s a good moral person, but he’s not a Christian. Mormonism is not Christianity. It has always been considered a cult by the mainstream of Christianity.

This provides Rick Perry with his Reverend Wright moment – i.e., does Perry continue to associate with an intolerant, controversial supporter or does he cut the supporter loose?  Obama initially stood by Wright (“I could no more disavow Reverend Wright than I could disavow my own grandmother.”), but when Wright declined to tone down his comments, Obama and Wright eventually became estranged.  I guess Wright wasn’t quite as close to Obama as the grandmother who raised him.

Perry’s situation is every bit as precarious, and his campaign’s handling of the brouhaha has been first-rate – Perry’s camp immediately said that it disagreed with Jeffress’s accusation (“The governor does not believe Mormonism is a cult.”) and that the summit organizers, not Perry, had selected Jeffress for the introduction.

But defusing the situation won’t be that simple because the summit organizers have refused to provide cover to the Perry campaign.  According to an article in the NY Times, Tony Perkins was a leading summit organizer and he said, “Pastor Jeffress was suggested as a possible introductory speaker because he serves as pastor of one of the largest churches in Texas.  We sent the request to the Perry campaign which then signed off on the request.”  Thus, the matter will not fade until Perry disavows the guy.

Perry clearly would prefer for this issue to remain out of the public radar because that would enable him to reap the votes of thousands, if not millions of intolerant evangelical Christians.  As Pastor Jeffress acknowledged about Romney’s Mormonism:

  • I think it is going to be a major factor among evangelical voters.  The thing is, they won’t be honest and tell you that it is going to be a major factor. Most people don’t want to admit — even evangelical Christians — that they have a problem with Mormonism. They think it is bigoted to say so. But what voters say to a pollster sometimes is different than what they do when they go into the privacy of a voting booth.”

But because the issue is on the radar, there are two countervailing developments:

  1. Some evangelical Christians will recognize their bigotry and then do the right thing – i.e., vote for Romney.
  2. Some moderate Republicans will vote for Romney because they will sympathize with the person being subjected to bigotry.

Notice that two highly-charged words are a part of this discussion – cult and bigotry.  By characterizing Mormonism as a cult, the evangelical Christians are coming across as bigots.   That is the last thing that Rick Perry wants to be associated with.

@ColonelSixx

Rick Perry for President My Ass

Colonel Sixx’s Sure Fire Way to beat Rick Perry


http://colonel6.com/2011/10/04/fresh-racism-problems-for-rick-perry/

I have always thought that being a strategist and tactician were essential to any endeavour.  I figured it out as a young baseball player in west Texas.  I took lessons from those that were not necessarily popular or liked.  They just had to be good. Once I figured out that it is what is NOT seen  that often makes the difference between a winner and loser,  I went to work on developement of my game.  Now, I was not the best baseball player in the state, county, or even in town.  But I was the most feared because all that “it does not matter if you win or lose, it’s how you play the game” bullshit did not resonate with me.

Ty Cobb

Conlon’s famous picture of Cobb stealing third base during the 1909 season.

Ty Cobb was known throughout the game of baseball playing world as a no holds barred fierce competitor.

When the “Georgia Peach,” Ty Cobb, sharpened his spikes, it appears he intended to leave his calling card of sharp spikes on tattered trouser legs of defending 2nd or 3rd sackers.

I wore the sharpest spikes in my league.  There are plenty of old boys that can tell you about it.  The strategy was to strike fear in anyone playing any base except first.  The tactic was to cut my opponents leg off when sliding into base. Strike fear and hit hard.

You have to make Rick Perry fear you. Like Debra Medina did in the last election primary.   She scared the hell out of him. He pulled a dirty trick using Glenn Beck to get her off his tail.  But she kept him up at night when her numbers got  better than U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison’s.  Medina was the Tea Party pick.  She was not even supposed to be in the game.  She had the fear part down, but was not hitting hard.

When came to putting fear into someone and hitting them hard, there has never been one better than H.R. “Bob” Halderman.  He was Nixon’s chief of staff and one mean “shut your mouth”.  You take one half Cobb, one half Halderman, and  about $70-200 million dollars. Let your creation do the hard-hitting and you go commence to beat the bodily fluid out of Perry.  Here is how.

THE QUICK VERSION

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/20/rick-perry-sex-scandal/

Put Perry’s rumored appetite for sex right out front.  Line up a bunch of people that he has supposedly had sex with(women and at least one man). Fear.  Put some good ads using interviews like Alex Jones’s above to hit hard.  People don’t like politicians that are promiscuous.  If you hang a woman around his neck,  you got the female vote.  If it is a man, you get the male vote too.

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/12/14-reasons-why-rick-perry-would-be-a-really-really-bad-president/

Come up with a list of things.  Have a focus group and have them pick the top 14 things they don’t like about Perry.   Gear 14 different commercials to play in different parts of the nation on a rotating basis.

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/11/texas-governor-rick-perry-killed-cameron-todd-willingham/

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/11/texas-governor-rick-perry-killed-cameron-todd-willingham/

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/13/rick-perry-is-a-fraud-and-an-accomplice-to-murder/

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/11/will-rick-perry-get-away-with-murder/

http://www.colonel6.om/tie-perry-to racist-actions-or-supporters.html

http://www.colonel6.com/let-his-supporter-and-endorsers-do-it.html

You can get on Highway 180 heading west out of Mineral Wells, Texas and pull over when you see the first farmer on his tractor.  Ask him ” Do you think Perry let that boy get executed knowing he was innocent”. You don’t need to name the man.  When the farmer turns the tractor off, you got a vote.

Read the above and you will see that this is an issue that Perry can’t run away from.  You can’t let a Romney use this because he does not know how. Give this to Bachman or Paul. You pick up votes from liberals that don’t like the death penalty and conservatives  that believe that it is not o.k. to kill someone for something they did not do.  With the cover-up that Perry has put on this, you get votes from all over.

Since this is the quick version,  I am going to close with the hammer.

http://colonel6.com/2011/08/14/rick-perry-hurt-little-girls/

Perry took money from a big pharmaceutical company, Merck. No sooner than the bills were folded in his back pocket,  he tried to dictate that all girls in Texas take a vaccine made by Merck.  A version of Perrycare if you will.

Gov Rick Perry knowingly lied and told Texas families that he had the power to force their 11-year-old girls to take a vaccine that was killing people in the test trials. Perry was Merck’s ace in the hole,now he will be their man in the White House if they have their way.

Daddy’s don’t like men that put their little girls in a target scope.  Mom’s don’t like Dad’s that are mad about his “princess”.  Young women of voting age don’t like to be told what to do. Men that date or marry those women don’t want to sleep on the couch.  Or worse.

Now you got the whole damn family.  The grandparents, parents, Sissy, Bubba Jr., and everybody else with a sense of fairness.

That will do it.  Works every time and I got references.