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Rudy is Right
Hannity listeners have voted, and an overwhelming number of you (95%)
believe that Rudy Giuliani is right when he questions Obama's love of
America. You can still have your say here!
We are living in unbelievable times.
We are witnessing the rise of a group whose evil seems to know no limit.
ISIS is beheading people, murdering them in mass, burning them alive,
selling girls into slavery, harvesting organs and terrorizing the world
with its international threats of violence. The latest news today is
that ISIS has abducted 90 Christians from a village in Syria.
Yet we have a president of the United States who won't even acknowledge
the very root of their motivation: radical Islam. We have a president
who, when once asked his opinion of jihad, tried to color over the
question with musings of the beauty of the Islamic religion and excusing
jihad as having a lot of different meanings.
So we have a president who is wishy-washy on calling out radical Islamic
extremism, which is bad enough. But this falls into a series of things
throughout Obama's candidacy and presidency that can't be ignored.
They are things which make someone, like Rudy and many of you, question
his love for America compared to his willingness to apologize for it.
Would someone who loved America hang out in the pews of Jeremiah
Wright's church and listen to him yell "G-d damn America" the Sunday
after 9/11? This is a man who was supposed to be "like family" to the
Obama's. |
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Is This The Fundamental Change We Were Promised?
What can be said for certain is that Barack Obama certainly doesn't go
out of his way to sell America's greatness. He is not an ambassador for
all the good that we do and the values we uphold.
Perhaps that is because he is seeking to change those values. After
all, this is the man who wanted to "fundamentally transform" America.
As nervous as we can be about his background, his previous associations
and his decisions, he reminded a group just the other day that he still
has two years as president and that's a long period of time. He's
right; It is a long period of time to continue his fundamental
transformation of America. That's a long time to continue to act
lawlessly, implement executive actions, stretch the separation of powers
and push the limits of his presidency beyond the bounds of our
Constitution in a way that could be irrevocable.
What about his record levels of debt, which has now virtually doubled
under his presidency. That was "irresponsible" and "unpatriotic"
according to Obama when Bush was president. What word would he use to
describe his own outrageous spending? If Bush was unpatriotic at the
time, what does that make Obama?
The media is now eager to grill every Republican on Giuliani's comments,
making it a litmus test of sorts and greasing the wheels for 2016
Democratic campaign ads and "gotcha" debate questions.
But when was the last time the mainstream media asked Democratic
candidates to comment on something controversial Obama said, like his
comments on "white folks' greed," for example? Or how about their
complete unwillingness to really dig into Obama's background,
particularly when he was a candidate?
I took a lot of flak for digging into Obama's background as far back as
2007, so you could say that we were ahead of the curve in recognizing
that Obama's roots would one day shape his policies in a way that could
be potentially troublesome for America. Now that America is being
challenged in big way, Obama's reaction is understandable (if you know
all of this) but deeply worrisome. |
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