URGENT: Help us fight Obamacare this Tuesday


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Andrew Hemingway, Chairman" <chair@rlcnh.org>
Date: September 19, 2011 9:14:40 AM EDT
To: "Andrew" <akreins@gmail.com>
Subject: URGENT: Help us fight Obamacare this Tuesday
Reply-To: "Andrew Hemingway, Chairman" <chair@rlcnh.org>

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The RLCNH Report

WE NEED YOU
to attend the public hearing for HR13
this Tuesday, Sept. 20
1:00PM in LOB Room 203

This is essential to dismantling Obamacare!

In January, the New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled "unconstitutional"
the House bill that would require the Attorney General to join
the lawsuit challenging Obamacare.

By denying the people's representatives the power to instruct officials, the Supreme Court has undermined the authority of the people—which is exactly opposite the intent of our state constitution!

Speaker O'Brien and a handful of the most liberty oriented representatives in the House have filed a resolution to repudiate the Supreme Court's decision and urge the Senate to take up the original bill that was tabled (to instruct the Attorney General to join the lawsuit against Obamacare).

We need the committee room filled with people who read the
New Hampshire Constitution and know what it means.
Please do whatever you can to attend!

Public hearing for HR13
  Tuesday, Sept. 20
1:00PM in LOB Room 203

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Found this interesting link on the Drudge Report:

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Where is the Leadership?

Printed in the Union Leader on 08/04/2011

A “debt deal” has been reached!  The United States of America has been rescued from the throws of financial disaster because our heroic federal delegation has stepped up to the plate and in the words of our own Congressman Bass “made the tough decisions.” Or have they?  The truth of the matter, the real hard truth, is that they have not.  The debt ceiling has been raised again, and judging from the pattern of the last twenty years we will be in the midst of the very same debate and financial debacle not too far into the future.  No disaster has been averted it has merely been postponed. 

Let me pose the question that we all quietly keep pondering.  If this deal is really a landmark in government cuts and the “republicans won severe cuts in agency budgets over the next 10 years” as the Washington Post surmises then why does the overall budget get bigger every year?  The answer is simple.  We lost.  Our trusted elected officials once again have lied to us.  The federal government did not cut spending.  They are playing a rhetorical game. 

Let me explain.  What everyone is bragging about, as a win is actually a loss, a massive skunky loss.  The federal government concocted and passed a deal which will slow the rate at which government grows. As Chairman of the Bristol Budget Committee , the town where I am from, we have implemented a zero-based budget process for each fiscal year, the federal government functions on the premise of regular increases to spending.  In other words, where agency officials should start from zero and build out what the year’s budget needs will be from staplers to personnel the federal government just adds another 10, 15, 20% to the previous year’s budget.  This is how government grows.  And grow it has, landing us in the current financial crisis. 

With this concept in mind, we can now understand what the great and heroic leaders of today have done.  Rather than increasing the yearly budgets at whatever regular rate has been instituted for a particular agency, they decreased it, and call it a cut.  A CUT!  The federal delegation has literally tried to sell the American people on the idea that a slower rate in the growth of government is a “cut in spending.”  Make no mistake, it is not a cut.  No amount of political posturing can make it a cut. 

Where is the leadership?  Why do the people who represent us think they can sell us on this?  A message was delivered to Washington this past November, and somehow, our representatives have failed to hear us.  We cannot stand for rhetorical games, our children’s future depends on it.  We cannot afford to pass our irresponsibility on to the next generation.  Our nation is caught up in a cycle of generational curses that can only be broken by the voter.  We must educate and activate our peers into understanding and acting on our convictions, on our failures.  We must hold people accountable for their complacency to the problems that face our nation.  We can no longer sit for the lies.  We can no longer wait to see what happens.  If our representatives refuse to hear us they must be replaced. 

There was no deal.  We lost.  We cannot afford to lose again.

We Need more Freshmen Republicans

The debt-ceiling debate isn't just a budgetary concern. This debate represents a philosophical conflict about the size and scope of government.

The American people cannot be reminded enough that their government currently owes $14 trillion, and the budget deficit for this year alone is $1.5 trillion. The accumulated debt is both a moral and financial problem that must be addressed head-on 

The Democrats are so enthralled by big government that when they look at the budget deficit, they see a lack of revenue. They crave ever more government programs that require always higher taxation. Republicans try to play nice far too often, resulting in false promises like those during Reagan’s presidency. The tax increases always come, but the spending reductions rarely see the light of day. 

In this debate, Democrats understand the stakes, which is why they refuse to make any structural changes to entitlement programs and simply demagogue the issue. Their aim is to force Republicans to compromise on their principles by making them sign off on a plan that would raise taxes during poor economic times. This has a twofold effect: it makes Republicans complicit in any negative economic consequences and it paints them as disingenuous to their constituents.

The desires of the statists must be met with equally vigorous force.

Fortunately, there are 87 House Republican freshmen who are showing the rest of the party the way. They are behaving in a way that few establishment politicians understand. They are actually adhering to principle and faithfully keeping their campaign promises. The freshmen must have missed the memo explaining how it is okay to say one thing and do another, as many of their senior colleagues know only too well. Astonishingly, it appears the freshmen Republicans believe that the next generation is more important than their next election. They are showing the kind of political leadership this country so desperately needs.

At the same time that the freshmen Republicans show their colleagues what it actually means to be a Republican again, several of the old guard Republicans are far more interested in political strategy than doing the right thing for the country. After all, they're the ones who helped get us into this mess to begin with.

Our very own Charlie Bass oversaw the massive spending increases under Bush, and has continued in his passivity and utter lack of seriousness as the debt crisis continues to drag on. Unlike the 87 House Republican freshmen, he has taken the easy road and backed Boehner’s ill-conceived compromise giveaway. Once the bill reaches the Senate, Harry Reid is sure to amend it, adding all sorts of tax increases making the Republicans look foolish once again.

Before we go the way of Greece, Americans ought to take the necessary steps to bring this nation back from the brink. We need leaders with the courage to stand up and do what’s right, in spite of the vicious opposition from the Democrats. This fight will not be quick and it will not be easy. That is why it is essential that principled conservatives hold the line and actively push back against the ever-growing federal behemoth.

As Americans, there are many things we can do to bring the federal government back to its constitutional limits and pay down the debt. A good place to start would be to retire Rep. Bass.

New Hampshire tea partiers look to Iowa model for 2012

New Hampshire tea partiers want to flex some muscle in the presidential race — and they're looking to their Iowa conservative brethren as the role model for how to do it.

With tea party groups in Iowa already exercising big sway over the early days of the GOP nominating contest, groups in more moderate New Hampshire are now working with Iowa Rep. Steve King to plan a major event with presidential candidates in early June.

 

New Hampshire Liberty Caucus Chairman Andrew Hemingway told POLITICO Tuesday that his tea party group is coordinating with others to replicate the conservative cattle call King just held in Des Moines — an event that drew Haley Barbour, Newt Gingrich Michele Bachmann and other presidential hopefuls.

The event, Hemingway said, is aimed at making sure tea party conservatives have a voice in the upcoming first-in-the-nation presidential primary — and setting the stage in the early summer would allow tea party groups to coordinate a convention in the late summer, Hemingway said.

It's likely the only way that the splintered groups could make a substantial difference in an open primary that allows independents to vote for a Republican presidential nominee.

"We think it could really make a difference here in New Hampshire," Hemingway said of the convention.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0311/52189.html

It's the personal liberty stupid!

After the Republicans’ 2008 election wipeout, some conservative pundits and elected Republicans argued that there was no constituency for limited government. Republicans, we were told, had to give up on the notion that the public was averse to an ever larger and more intrusive government. That was then.

Now, as Matt Welch of Reason magazine points out, fear of big government is all the rage — and is cause for rage. He writes:

This isn’t about liberal or conservative, Democrat or Republican. A majority oppose Obama’s policies because they fly in the face of this country’s bedrock values of personal liberty and limited government. Robbing Peter to pay Goldman Sachs does violence to that fundamentally American ethos.

And increasingly, Obama administration policy does violence to European values, as well. The continent has for the last two decades been systematically disengaging national governments from domestic industries. Top officials from Sweden, of all places, complained about Washington’s auto bailout, tersely announcing that “the Swedish state is not prepared to own car factories.”

And while conservatives find it hard to believe that voters didn’t see this coming from the most liberal man in the U.S. Senate, Welch correctly concludes, “Americans didn’t vote for big government last November. They voted for a guy who looked like he could keep his cool in the heat of battle. If Obama wants to regain that cool, he needs to rein in the power-grabbers in Washington.”

But that goes for Republicans as well. The pressure to find some middle ground on cap and trade, ObamaCare, financial regulation, and an uber-consumer protection agency will become intense. But the Republicans would be foolish to provide cover for and assist Democrats in pursuit of a goal — more government — which is at odds with the wishes of a majority of Americans, including those critical independent voters. And oh yes, it’s never a good idea to vote in ways contrary to your party’s stated core message.

In some sense Obama has been invaluable to libertarians and conservatives. It is one thing to rail against excessive discretionary spending but it is quite another to have the public see how ominous a force (not to mention how expensive) government can be when it seeks to regulate and control the most intimate decisions about one’s family finances and personal health. Who would have thought Obama would have created such a consensus in favor of keeping government’s mitts off private insurance companies, doctor-patient interactions, and end-of-life care?

It therefore would behoove Republicans to return to some first principles and explain that their opposition to Obama-ism goes beyond the eye-popping debt and the implications for future economic growth. It is about personal freedom. With this in mind the platform for Republicans struggling to avoid the tag of “do-nothingism” practically writes itself.

In place of ObamaCare, Republicans offer tax credits for individually purchased insurance, market competition (including the right to buy insurance across state lines), and legal reform. In place of cash for clunkers and government-run car companies, Republicans offer car company stock divestiture. In lieu of spending the remainder of the non-stimulus plan monies, Republicans urge tax reform, including reduction of corporate taxes and payroll tax relief, and restoration of funds for a real shovel-ready program: the F-22.

The contrast between the parties is especially great for young voters who were swayed to vote for the hip, young guy over the grumpy senior citizen in 2008. It turns out the hip guy wants to force them to buy health insurance, load debt and an enormous future tax burden on their backs, and raise energy prices. It’s not very 21st century. As Michael Barone observed after ticking off the list of statist policies at the core of the Obama agenda, “The larger point is this: You want policies that will enable you to choose your future. Obama backs policies that would let centralized authorities choose much of your future for you. Is this the hope and change you want?”

And finally, Republicans would be well to make the case that larger government not only means less personal freedom but more corruption, influence peddling, and “rent seeking” as interest groups and industries inevitably must seek to sway government representatives and bureaucrats who would hold enormous power over their economic destiny. It is not just that Nancy Pelosi faces a slew of ethics inquiries that have snared her closest allies. It is that by crafting legislation, most clearly cap-and-trade and ObamaCare, which would supplant millions and millions of private-sector decisions with government edicts, the opportunities for mischief making grow exponentially.

So perhaps the American people are ready for “change” — once again and faster than most imagined. End big government power grabs, restore personal liberty, defend free markets, empower young people, and remove the temptation for corruption. Thanks to Obama we now know what the alternative looks like — and it’s not a pretty sight. If the Republicans can seize on the unique opportunity (never let an overreaching president go to waste?) they may find the sojourn in the political wilderness much shorter than they feared.

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/its-the-personal-liberty-stupid/

I was on the radio..check it out!

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