Sunday, September 6, 2009

A MIGRATING MAINE SNOWE-BIRD

Fax after fax, phone call after phone call, email after email proved hopelessly ignored by many of our elected Republican officials. I am thinking specifically of Arlen Specter (jumped ship, thank goodness), Lamar Alexander, Thad Cochran, Richard Shelby, Kit Bond, John McCain, Lisa Murkowski, Roger Wicker, Susan Collins and especially Olympia Snowe.

These are the proud members of the RINO (Republicans in name only) Club, and should be in our sights to campaign against in the upcoming election. They are a disgrace, and have completely forgotten for whom they work. They consider their opinion far superior to ours, and Obama's speech before the joint sessions of Congress tomorrow is to convince them to vote for him -- not their constituents.

This great piece from PajamasMedia just made me furious:


A Migrating Maine Snowe-Bird
by Andrew Ian Dodge, September 5, 2009

Senator Olympia Snowe of Maine has a reputation for what her supporters call “independent thinking” — which in the past has essentially meant that she only supports her party on matters of procedure in the Senate.

Since Arlen Specter finally switched parties, Snowe has been the leading light of the so-called RINOs (Republicans in Name Only), or, rather, the most infuriating example. What has most irked people of late? Snowe volunteered to head to the White House to ensure that Obama’s socialized medicine proposal continues along its merry way. While commentators on both sides of the aisle have declared the bill rather dead, she is keen to revive it.

This is not the first time Snowe has gone out of her way to be the bugbear of the Republican Party. On Specter, she deemed all Republicans who felt he was in the wrong party constituted the “far right.” She described Club for Growth as “far right.” She has also said:


If the Republican Party fully intends to become a majority party in the future, it must move from the far right back toward the middle.



I am sure that some of her supporters might find it unreasonable to take great exception to her labeling Republicans not in sync with her to be fascist or Nazi, as that is what “far right” is generally understood to mean. It would seem unthinkable that the veteran senator and political operative would not know what her words imply. But then again, this is a person who made it clear she was supporting Sotomayor before all the horse-trading began in the Senate. Snowe was proud to support someone who made statements that would be considered racist in extremis had they come from anyone white.

It’s not just Republicans whom Snowe upsets lately. Those who believe in the First Amendment and internet freedom are worried that she seems to think its entirely reasonable for the president to take control of the internet and limit its access in the case of a national “emergency.” Senator Snowe and a Democratic counterpart pushed this idea, to the consternation of much of the virtual world:
“We must protect our critical infrastructure at all costs — from our water to our electricity, to banking, traffic lights and electronic health records — the list goes on,” Senator Jay Rockefeller said.

Snowe echoed her colleague, saying: “If we fail to take swift action, we, regrettably, risk a cyber-Katrina.”

It would not shock anyone who follows Snowe to find she is keen on introducing a “trigger” to any legislation on health care. These so-called “triggers” would mean that the government could jump into health care and meddle even if a socialist option is not passed by whatever bill comes out of both houses.

Snowe seems to be trying to make herself a darling of the Obama administration, with the fact that her proposals reflect none of the thinking of her party being of no concern to her. Neither, of course, are the millions of American citizens, many from Maine, appalled by the Obama administration’s push to Euro-socialism.

Snowe is a flag-bearer for the Christian Democratic model of right-of-center socialism that pervades Europe. She and her ilk wish to reinvent the American political realm as something far more European than what we once knew.

If she were truly a Republican, she would be pushing to reform laws that prohibit companies from offering cheap health care in all states (such a law exists in Maine). But instead of standing with her party against this onslaught on the private sector, she is looking to work with Obama to come to a solution. We all know where compromise ends up in D.C. — more government involvement in the matters of private citizens. In her quest for this, her party, their principles, and the people can be damned.

Snowe may call it bipartisanship, but in the end it means a consensus towards socialism.