NP Rank:
Traitor from South Carolina
Traitor from South Carolina
Not lost on me, the fact that Tea Party leader Senator Jim DeMint is from South Carolina. South Carolina has a terrible history in these United States. It was the place where first shots were fired in the Civil War. It is a place known for racism and bigotry.
“South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley isn't retreating from her decision to keep the Confederate flag atop the north end of the Statehouse in Columbia despite complaints from the NAACP, whose president this week said the ethnic minority governor is a "contradiction" for allowing the flag to fly.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/...ate-flag/#ixzz1Tcc49LkZ”
It remains backward and backwoods in thinking.
“South Carolina senator is tea party’s maestro on reducing government by halting deficits
By Associated Press, Updated: Saturday, July 30, 4:25 AM
WASHINGTON — He calls himself Sen. Tea Party.
That almost says it all about Sen. Jim DeMint’s role on the nation’s political scene in these nervous days of debt limit warfare and pre-election posturing.
But unlike the fractious movement as a whole, DeMint is specific and focused on what change, exactly, he wants: passage — not just a vote — of a balanced-budget amendment to the Constitution. Without it, he says, no consideration should be given to raising the nation’s borrowing limit. Even, he says, if the country runs out of money for paying all its bills after Aug. 2.
The larger problem for DeMint is the government’s $14.3 trillion debt, the equivalent of $46,580 for every man, woman and child in the U.S.
“That is the threat, not a debt ceiling, but the debt,” the South Carolina senator told a tea party audience this week at a Capitol Hill rally.
DeMint’s preference for conservative principles over compromise — and his success last year getting tea partyers nominated over some GOP party favorites in last year’s elections — have vexed Republican leaders. Some in the GOP complained that while DeMint’s activities may have won like-minded conservatives several seats in Congress, they also enabled Democrats to keep some vulnerable seats and maintain their majority.”
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YankeeJim
Arlington, Virginia, United States





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
at 06:16 on July 30th, 2011
This should not be the source of American leadership.
at 07:36 on July 30th, 2011
America seems to have lost it's way..Thats why these extreme views are becoming the norm..
at 09:19 on July 30th, 2011
Source: washingtonpost.com
at 10:22 on July 30th, 2011
At near 100 degrees today, I had to take a walk in the woods. It is a good thing I have medication to keep my blood pressure under control because our national circumstance is making me sick.
at 10:45 on July 30th, 2011
Your article says that the flag flies over the sate house, it does not. Research your facts better. Tell me where in the world is there no place with racism or bigotry. Research your own state history and you might be surprised. Why not do an article on why the post Lincoln Democrats tried to repeal the Emancipation Proclamation. Your article was bigoted attempt to to incite hatred and had no value or offered any answers.
at 12:03 on July 30th, 2011
Frist, I will acknowledge a recent turn of events:
at 12:13 on July 30th, 2011
Check the flag. I checked my facts. I gave to you a recommend for keeping me honest.
at 12:19 on July 30th, 2011
I think it says the flag flies over the north end of the state house. Does it? Or is it on the capitol lawn as noted here: Inflammatory remarks by state senator Arthur Ravenel made national headlines in Jan. 2000 when he defended the flying of the Southern Cross, referring to the NAACP as the "the National Association of Retarded People." He then apologized to "retarded people" for associating them with the NAACP. At the time of the the February Republican presidential primary, party differences on the issue were thrown in sharp relief: the Republican contenders declined to take a stand except to say that the issue was a state matter; the Democrats were outspokenly against the flag remaining.
On April 12, 2000, the South Carolina state senate finally passed a bill to remove the flag by a majority of 36-7. The bill specified that a more traditional version of the battle flag (square shaped as opposed to the rectangular flag now flying above the statehouse) would be flown in front of the Capitol next to a monument honoring fallen Confederate soldiers. The bill then went to the House, where it encountered some difficulty. But on May 18, 2000, after the bill was modified to ensure that the height of the flag's new pole would be 30 feet, it was passed by a majority of 66 to 43, and Governor Jim Hodges signed the bill five days later. On July 1, the flag was removed from the South Carolina statehouse.
The bill has not appeased everyone, however: the NAACP has not called off its boycott because they feel that the flag's new position on the Capitol lawn is still too prominent.
Read more: Confederate Flag Comes Down in South Carolina — Infoplease.com http://www.infoplease.com/spot/confederate4.html#ixzz1TceF4b9K
at 12:07 on July 30th, 2011
at 12:16 on July 30th, 2011
Don Morgan, the solution is for you to recall the traitors that you sent to office from South Carolina.
at 13:43 on July 30th, 2011
Easy YJ, lets be 'politically correct'..lol