Traitor from South Carolina

by YankeeJim | July 30, 2011 at 05:16 am
154 views | 2 Recommendations | 11 comments

Videos

Loading videos...

Photos

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.”


 

Advertisement
recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
YankeeJim

This should not be the source of American leadership.

1
The 1

America seems to have lost it's way..Thats why these extreme views are becoming the norm..

2
Karen Hatter
The tick-tock of the debt-ceiling debate is too long for this space, but the bottom line is that the Tea Party got too full of itself with help from certain characters whose names you’ll want to remember when things go south. 


They include, among others, media personalities who need no further recognition; a handful of media-created “leaders,” including Tea Party Nation founder Judson Phillips and Tea Party Patriots co-founders Jenny Beth Martin and Mark Meckler (both Phillips and Martin declared bankruptcy, yet they’re advising Tea Party Republicans on debt?); a handful of outside groups that love to hurl ad hominems such as “elite” and “inside the Beltway” when talking about people like Boehner when they are, in fact, the elite (FreedomWorksHeritage ActionClub for GrowthNational Taxpayers Union,Americans for Prosperity); and elected leaders such as Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, head of the Republican Study Committee, and South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, who grandstand and make political assertions and promises that are sheer fantasy.

0
YankeeJim

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.

1
Don Morgan

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.

0
YankeeJim

Frist, I will acknowledge a recent turn of events:

"

South Carolina gubernatorial election, 2010From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaSouth Carolina Gubernatorial, 2010


2006 ←
November 2, 2010
→ 2014


 NomineeNikki HaleyVincent SheheenPartyRepublicanDemocraticPopular vote690,525[1]630,535Percentage51.447.0

Results by county


Governor before election

Mark Sanford
Republican

Elected Governor

Nikki Haley
Republican

Elections in South Carolina[show] Federal offices[show] State offices[show]State elections

This box: view · talk · edit

The 2010 South Carolina gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2010. Incumbent Republican Governor Mark Sanford was term limited and unable to seek re-election. Primary elections took place on June 8, 2010 and a runoff election, as was necessary on the Republican side, was held two weeks later on June 22. This was the first open gubernatorial election in South Carolina since 1994.

The Republican candidate Nikki Haley defeated the Democratic candidate Vincent Sheheen, in the general election."

0
YankeeJim

Check the flag. I checked my facts. I gave to you a recommend for keeping me honest.

1
nanute

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

1
YankeeJim
"South Carolina– The Most Racist State?

We all know that South Carolina has a dismal history when it comes to how it’s treated African-Americans, but few are aware just how racist South Carolina’s history really is.

There are few places in America that have treated Native Americans as brutally. South Carolinians were the largest slave traders of Native Americans in the Americas. The peaceful Cherokee were either enslaved, driven out of the state, or murdered.

South Carolina became the wealthiest of the thirteen colonies because of the African slave trade. Charleston Harbor was the main entry point for bringing slaves into the country. No other colony relied on slaves more, and soon blacks outnumbered whites. By 1760 Charleston was the richest town in America. Despite its wealth, residents lived in constant fear of slave revolts and resorted to draconian measures to keep their slaves in submission.

After the Stono Rebellion occurred in 1740, one of the deadliest slave revolts in the nation’s history, South Carolina reacted with the slave codes. Because the rebellion was led by educated blacks, laws were put into place that prohibited blacks from meeting and mandated that their children wouldn’t be allowed schooling. In the Twentieth Century, South Carolina would have the largest percentage of its people in America who couldn’t read or write, mainly due to its determination to keep blacks uneducated.

The Scottish Rite was created in direct response to the successful slave revolution in Haiti. Its original location is at Shepherd’s Tavern in Charleston. The Scottish Rite led the anti-Catholic, anti-immigration Americanism movement that revived the KKK. They became enormously powerful. In 1928 for example, 59 United States Senators and 317 members of the House of Representatives were 33 degree members of the Scottish Rite. Later, the exclusive club fought against integration and the Civil Rights movement.

The first Baptist church in the South was formed in Charleston, South Carolina. Southern Baptists supported slavery and believed that biblical scripture supported it. It wasn’t until recently, that the church moved away from this position.

On April 12th, 1861 cadets from The Citadel fired the first shots against the United States at Ft. Sumter, South Carolina. That was when South Carolina became the first state to commit treason and leave the nation due to its absolute support of slavery.

Walk through Charleston and you’ll run into the Confederate Museum run by the Daughters of the Confederacy. It’s disturbing how many Confederate memorials there are, but since the Confederate flag flies over the state’s capital, it is not really surprising.

You’ll also see people flying a blue flag with a crescent moon and a Palmetto tree on it. That’s the flag for the Palmetto Republic. People who fly it are calling for the independence of South Carolina.

Organizations like The League of the South call for the independence of the old South, along with the repeal of affirmative action, attacks on immigration, the revitalization of Anglo-Celtic culture, and the return to a white Christian state.

There’s no doubt why Bush went to the race card in 2000 and the Clinton’s did this year. It’s a mistake, however, to think that Americans are racist because of a few voters in South Carolina. Obama won’t get white voters in South Carolina for obvious reasons, but that doesn’t mean the rest of the country feels the same way.
It is difficult to imagine a state with a worse record on how they’ve treated their fellow human beings than South Carolina. To think that the South Carolina primary is one of the big ones that determine our president is hard to believe.

Aaron Dahl"

1
YankeeJim

Don Morgan, the solution is for you to recall the traitors that you sent to office from South Carolina.

2
The 1

Easy YJ, lets be 'politically correct'..lol

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

NowPublic on Facebook

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Karen Hatter
First Flagged at 8:56 AM, Jul 30, 2011 by Karen Hatter
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (2)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from