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  1. #251
    bandwagoner fans suck ducks's Avatar
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    boutons is worried about perry in ten pages he must have posted 40 times

  2. #252
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    72 Percent Disagree With Perry That Social Security Is A ‘Monstrous Lie’

    new CNN poll shows that 72 percent of Americans think Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s (R) characterization of Social Security as a “monstrous lie” is “not accurate.” That view is even held by 69 percent of Republicans, 67 percent of conservatives, and 59 percent of Tea Party supporters. Social Security has quickly emerged as a key issue of the GOP presidential primary, with the other candidates attacking Perry for his opposition to it at last night’s debate.


    http://thinkprogress.org/politics/20...monstrous-lie/

    ===========

    Jimmy Ricky as disastrous, destructive Pres would definitely us Human-Americans miss dubya terribly, but Corporate-Americans would be thrilled.

  3. #253
    俺はまんこが大好きなんだよ baseline bum's Avatar
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  4. #254
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    s Beware!

    Rick Perry, a Lousy Amigo

    Perry signed into law a voter ID act, which is likely to disenfranchise poor and minority voters. He approved a redistricting plan that undermines the voting strength of Latinos. His top priority in the last legislative session was pushing a failed "sanctuary cities" bill, aimed at making life harder for undo ented immigrants. San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro called Perry's recent record "easily the most anti-Latino agenda in more than a generation, without shame."

    So what changed? Perry's ambitions. Now that he's seeking national office, he's throwing Latinos under the bus to gain support from the Tea Party and far-right conservatives. And things look even worse when we review the results of his 11-year tenure as governor.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raul-a...comm_ref=false

  5. #255
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    Perry’s 235 Executions Cost Texas Taxpayers Over $700 Million

    Self-described fiscal conservative Gov. Rick Perry (R-TX) apparently doesn’t mind spending extravagantly when it comes to putting people to death in the state of Texas. Nona Willis Aronowitz reports in Good that in Texas, a death penalty case costs taxpayers an average of $3 million, or “about three times the cost of imprisoning someone in a single cell at the highest security level for 40 years.” That translates to over $700 million for the 235 executions Perry has overseen as governor. That’s not including the exorbitant cost of maintaining 310 inmates on death row — Texas will spend $15.5 million on those prisoners this year alone.

    http://thinkprogress.org/justice/201...r-700-million/

    =========

    Of course, that $700M is pocketed by somebody, not "lost".

  6. #256
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    How to Create More Jobs By Lowering Wages: Texas and America

    Posted: 9/14/11 08:51 AM ET

    Perry and Romney can duke it out over who created the most jobs, but governors have as much influence over job growth in their states as roosters do over sunrises.

    States don't have their own monetary policies so they can't lower interest rates to spur job growth. They can't spur demand through fiscal policies because state budgets are small, and 49 out of 50 are barred by their cons utions from running deficits.

    States can cut corporate taxes and regulations, and dole out corporate welfare, in efforts to improve the states' "business climate." But studies show these strategies have little or no effect on where companies locate. Location decisions are driven by much larger factors -- where customers are, transportation links, and energy costs.

    If governors try hard enough, though, they can create lots of lousy jobs. They can drive out unions, attract low-wage immigrants, and turn a blind eye to businesses that fail to protect worker health and safety.

    Rick Perry seems to have done exactly this. While Texas leads the nation in job growth, a majority of Texas's workforce is paid hourly wages rather than salaries. And the median hourly wage there was $11.20, compared to the national median of $12.50 an hour.


    Texas has also been specializing in minimum-wage jobs. From 2007 to 2010, the number of minimum wage workers there rose from 221,000 to 550,000 -- that's an increase of nearly 150 percent. And 9.5 percent of Texas workers earn the minimum wage or below -- compared to about 6 percent for the rest of the nation, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The state also has the highest percentage of workers without health insurance. Texas schools rank 44th in the nation in per-pupil spending.

    The Perry model of creating more jobs through low wages seems to be catching on around America.

    According to a report out today from the Commerce Department, the median income of U.S. households fell 2.3 percent last year -- to the lowest level in fifteen years (adjusted for inflation). That's the third straight year of declining household incomes. Part of this is loss of jobs. Part is loss of earnings.

    More and more Americans are retaining their jobs by settling for lower wages and benefits, or going without cost-of-living increases. Or they've lost a higher-paying job and have taken one that pays less. Or they've joined the great army of contingent workers, self-employed "consultants," temps, and contract workers -- without healthcare benefits, without pensions, without job security, without decent wages.

    It's no great feat to create lots of lousy jobs. A few years ago Michele Bachmann remarked that if the minimum wage were repealed "we could potentially virtually wipe out unemployment completely because we would be able to offer jobs at whatever level."

    I keep on hearing conservative economists say Americans have priced themselves out of the global high-tech labor market. That's baloney. The productivity of American workers continues to soar. The problem is fewer and fewer Americans are sharing the gains. The ratio of corporate profits to wages is the highest it's been since before the Great Depression.

    Besides, how can lower incomes possibly be an answer to America's economic problem? Lower incomes mean less overall demand for goods and services -- which translates into even fewer jobs and even lower wages.

    In short, the Perry (and Bachmann) model of job growth condemns Americans to lower and lower living standards. That's nothing to crow about.


    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert...comm_ref=false

    ========

    Jimmy Ricky as father of a "Texas Miracle" is one big fat lie (well, he is a Repug). There's no father and no miracle.

    TX was quite immune to the housing bubble because TX has fairly strong (GOVERNMENTAL!!) lending regulations.

  7. #257
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    After Claiming Government ‘Doesn’t Create Any Jobs,’ Perry Brags: ‘I Helped Create A Million Jobs’

    [President Obama] has failed to create jobs by relying on bigger government. I’ve helped create a million jobs during my tenure as Governor of the state of Texas.

    http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...-million-jobs/

  8. #258
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    Perry Engages in Ridiculous "Red Scare" Politics

    TIME: Now that you've been in the race for while, do you feel pressure to temper some of your rhetoric, like calling the Obama administration socialist?

    PERRY: No, I still believe they are socialist. Their policies prove that almost daily. Look, when all the answers emanate from Washington D.C., one size fits all, whether it's education policy or whether it's healthcare policy, that is, on its face, socialism.

    I realize that the Texas governor's intellectual capacities are, shall we say, limited, but his comments here are strikingly dumb.

    As a substantive matter, the Obama administration isn't pushing top-down, one-size-fits-all policies in education or health care -- Perry seems to have just made that up -- but even if we put that aside, the more significant problem is that the GOP's presidential frontrunner has no idea what "socialism" is.

    http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews...e%22_politics/

    ========

    Jimmy Ricky is proving himself dumberer and dumberer ever ytime he opens his talking-point, unoriginal, programmed mouth.

  9. #259
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    "Rick Perry of Texas: Rick Perry is qualified to be President in the same way that Olive Garden is qualified to be Italy"


    In Rare Public Statement, God Tells Pat Robertson to Shut the Up



    http://www.borowitzreport.com/

  10. #260
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    How bad is poverty in Rick Perry's Texas?

    Texas governor Rick Perry is running for the Republican nomination on his economic record. But what is the state's record on poverty?


    Texas governor Rick Perry is running for the Republican nomination on his economic record. But what is the state's record on poverty?

    They're coming to Texas because they know there's still a land of freedom in America, freedom from over-taxation, freedom from over-litigation and freedom from over-regulation, and its called Texas. We need to do the same thing for America

    half a million Texans earn at or below the typical national minimum wage of $7.25 per hour - that's around one in ten of all hourly-paid workers in the state. And that proportion is higher than the US average.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datab...ges-cppp/print

  11. #261
    uups stups! Cant_Be_Faded's Avatar
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    siap:


  12. #262
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    Now that just.. .....aint' right.

  13. #263
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    Texas unemployment inches closer to the national average..

    Rick Perry’s Texas Hits Highest Unemployment Percentage In 24 Years
    Ryan J. Reilly September 16, 2011, 4:00 PM


    While Rick Perry has been touting his record of creating jobs in Texas as a key reason he’d make a great president, it turns out employment numbers aren’t so peachy in his homestate either.

    NBC’s Michael Isikoff reports that the Texas unemployment rate “increased to 8.5% in August — the highest level in more than 24 years and more than twice the rate when Perry took office in December 2000.

    That’s still below the 9.1 percent average nationwide. But remember how the latest national figures showed zero job growth? Well Perry’s Texas lost territory, shedding 1,300 in August. The private sector added 8,100 jobs, but the public sector lost 9,400.

    “Texas is not immune to the effects of the national recession,” Ray Sullivan, Perry’s chief spokesman, told NBC. “Yet Texas continues to outperform the rest of the country and is still home to roughly 40% of the net new jobs created nationwide since June 2009.”
    Talking Point Memo

    Probably because Perry is so busy campaigning he has no time to create another million jobs....

  14. #264
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    Pulling over rick Perry


  15. #265
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    Pulling over rick Perry

    So why is this anything? Looks like something anyone would try.

    Also, why is 22 seconds clipped out?

  16. #266
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    Taxing The Poor In Texas

    w Yglesias on Aug 15, 2011 at 3:16 pm

    Incidentally, you might be thinking about Rick Perry’s complaint that poor people and retirees don’t pay enough in taxes and wonder how Texas is doing on that score. Unfortunately, the Ins ute on Taxation and Economic Policy data on Texas tax structure (PDF) doesn’t let me look at retirees. We can, however, see that among the non-elderly, Governor Perry has done a great job of soaking the poor:



    http://thinkprogress.org/yglesias/20...poor-in-texas/

  17. #267
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    Rick Perry Rewrites His Own History Again, Claims He Never Considered Secession

    Last night, in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Perry showed similar disregard for the truth in claiming that he never suggested Texas might secede from the union:

    HANNITY: Some people said, well, you used the term once “secession.” That’s not anything—is that something you believe?

    PERRY: No, and I never used that term, at all.

    HANNITY: Then why was it reported so heavily?

    PERRY: I have no idea to be real honest with you, because it was never a really factual piece of reporting. It was shouted out by an individual at an event—at a Tea Party, actually—and I said “listen, America is a great country. We have no reason why we would ever dissolve this union.”

    Perry is technically correct that he never uttered the word “secession,” but he did say that “when we came into the nation in 1845, we were a republic, we were a stand-alone nation. And one of the deals was, we can leave anytime we want. So we’re kind of thinking about that again.”

    http://thinkprogress.org/justice/201...-on-secession/

    ====

    cheerleader Jimmy Ricky will be backing off and lying about his thoroughly debunked TX miracle and bubba-suckering utterances from his asshole.

  18. #268
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    Rick Perry Rewrites His Own History Again, Claims He Never Considered Secession

    Last night, in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Perry showed similar disregard for the truth in claiming that he never suggested Texas might secede from the union:

    HANNITY: Some people said, well, you used the term once “secession.” That’s not anything—is that something you believe?

    PERRY: No, and I never used that term, at all.

    HANNITY: Then why was it reported so heavily?

    PERRY: I have no idea to be real honest with you, because it was never a really factual piece of reporting. It was shouted out by an individual at an event—at a Tea Party, actually—and I said “listen, America is a great country. We have no reason why we would ever dissolve this union.”

    Perry is technically correct that he never uttered the word “secession,” but he did say that “when we came into the nation in 1845, we were a republic, we were a stand-alone nation. And one of the deals was, we can leave anytime we want. So we’re kind of thinking about that again.”

    http://thinkprogress.org/justice/201...-on-secession/

    ====

    cheerleader Jimmy Ricky will be backing off and lying about his thoroughly debunked TX miracle and bubba-suckering utterances from his asshole.
    He won't back off from his Tx miracle because that is the basis of his candidacy. But I am genuinely surprised that he backed off the secession business because it was so widely reported at the time.

    I don't think the other candidates will use it against him though, because although they want to take him down a peg, this sort of thing would really guarantee that if he DOES get the nomination (which I think a lot of them believe he will)...this could REALLY kill him in the general election. I don't think they want to risk that.

    Though again, Romney just might. This is Romney's last shot.

  19. #269
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    Do entary exposes ugly truths of capital punishment in Perry’s Texas

    In the years that followed, the Texas Forensic Science Commission would attempt to review the case, only to see several of their members dismissed by Perry and replaced with his political allies.

    One of those allies, John Bradley, the district attorney for Williamson County, was adamant that the commission should not discuss whether the science of fire investigation had changed between 1992 and 2004. He succeeded in effectively shutting down the commission's investigation into the Willingham case, heading off a scandal for Perry in the midst of a pitched re-election battle.

    Bradley, however, caused so much of an outcry by commission members that even Texas Republicans couldn't stomach it, and he was not confirmed by the Texas Senate to continue as chair of the commission. Nevertheless, he appears to have done his job, and earlier this month Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott (R) prohibited the commission from investigating any case prior to Sept. 2005, ending once and for all the official inquiry into the Willingham case.

    http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/09/2...e+Raw+Story%29

  20. #270
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    Perry lies again about Texas Gardasil scandal, claims woman he met after signing executive order lobbied him to pass it



    During the recent Republican presidential debate in Orlando, Fla., Perry tried once again to defend his infamous Gardasil blunder, this time by telling the heart-tugging story of a woman he met and got to know who had cervical cancer. He told the audience and viewers Thursday night that the reason he signed the executive order was because the woman lobbied him to do so.

    "I got lobbied on this issue," said a calm and composed Perry. "I got lobbied by a 31 year old young lady who had stage-four cervical cancer. I spent a lot of time with her. She came by my office. She talked to me about this program. I readily admitted we should have had an opt-in (for the mandate) but I don't know what part of opt out most parents don't get. The fact is I was on the side of life and I will always be on the side of life as a governor and as president of the United States."


    A charming and sweet story, really -- except for the fact that it is not true. According to ABC News, Perry signed the vaccine executive order before he met the young woman, not after, as he claims. The woman did, according to reports, lobby in favor of upholding the executive order after it had been signed (which the legislature eventually overturned), but she did not play a role in Perry's original signing of it.

    Unlike the petty issues that typically bog down the presidential campaigning process, Perry's Gardasil scandal is gravely serious and needs to be exposed. After all, the vaccine that he pushed is implicated in causing thousands of serious and permanent injuries, and potentially hundreds of known deaths, which is a far cry from his empty rhetoric about "being on the side of life" (http://truthaboutgardasil.org/).

    http://www.naturalnews.com/033671_Ri..._Gardasil.html



    He's too stupid and unreflective, but Jimmy Ricky ought to have black, sinking feeling about his chances to get the nomination, let alone the White House.


    Poll: Perry Wins Texas but Not Convincingly

    A new Public Policy Polling survey shows that 45 percent of Texans approve of the job Perry is doing as governor, while 48 percent don't approve of his work in Texas.

    "Rick Perry still isn’t particularly popular in his home state of Texas,”

    http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/politics/...130236283.html


    =========

    I guess if the votes of all the wealthies and Corporate-Texans who helped and were helped by Jimmy Ricky were each worth 1M Human-Texans vote, Jimmy Ricky would win TX by a landslide.

  21. #271
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    Rick Perry Is Officially Blowing It

    The key here is that the Republicans who influence mass opinion in the party seem to be noticing this, and speaking out.


    The GOP base had strong, deep reservations about Mitt Romney, the only other heavy-hitter in the race, so if Perry could satisfy their thirst for purity while demonstrating competence as a candidate and campaigner, he'd be well-positioned to unify the party and run away with the nomination.

    But he is failing at both tasks. His performance in last night's debate and thescathing response it has stirred from conservative opinion-shapers offers a vivid illustration of what's going wrong for Perry.

    It turns out, though, that Perry has his share of potentially disqualifying ideological baggage too. In a previous debate, his decision as governor to mandate an HPV vaccine for teenage girls led several of the no-shot conservative candidates (led by Michele Bachmann) to pile on, decrying this supposed violation of parental rights and endorsement of teenage sexual activity. The fringe candidates may not have helped themselves much, but they did succeed in seeding doubts about Perry among the religious conservatives who account for a big chunk of the GOP base.

    In last night's debate, a different Perry vulnerability attracted more attention: his support for allowing the children of illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition rates at Texas colleges and universities. When the question came up, Perry was defiant: "[I]f you say that we should not educate children who come into our state for no other reason than they've been brought there by no fault of their own, I don't think you have a heart." This led to another pile-on, with Rick Santorum calling Perry "soft" on immigration and Romney claiming that the tuition break was a magnet for illegal immigrants. Perry's posture may be smart politics back in Texas, where Hispanic voters make up a considerable share of the electorate, but when it comes to the national GOP's Tea Party base, it's a serious sin.

    By itself, the fact that Perry has vulnerabilities on his right is not necessarily a campaign-killer, especially given the history of Romney, his main opponent. But a much bigger problem is also coming into focus: Perry is a terrible debater who is slow on his feet and has some basic policy blind spots -- and it's starting to rattle Republican opinion leaders.

    as has been his custom, he seemed far less focused and energetic as the night wore on. But Romney was sharp and on-point the whole time. He offered his own share of incoherent nonsense -- see, for instance, his response when Perry mentioned that a new edition of Romney's book had scrubbed a reference to making the Massachusetts healthcare plan a national model -- he knew how to sell it. Unlike Perry, Romney was confident and polished, feigning confusion over why anyone would challenge his conservative credentials and insisting he'd been a model of consistency.

    This has got to be a scary combination for Perry. There are already polls showing that he'd fare markedly worse against Barack Obama than Romney.

    http://www.alternet.org/news/152515/...it?page=entire



    http://www.alternet.org/news/152515/...paign=alternet

  22. #272
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    What TXans' low taxes AREN'T paying for:

    Texas plans for water needs, but slow to implement

    Texas is well-prepared to meet the water needs of its rapidly expanding population - even when Mother Nature lays down a harsh and lengthy drought.

    The price tag on the plan: $53 billion. State money allocated: $1.4 billion.

    http://m.miamiherald.com/mh/db_42940...tguid=vzPm0tbb

    Just like declining/peak oil is a huge windfall for oilcos, scarce water will be a huge windfall for for-profit water companies. No surprise that VRWC world-wide is aggressively buying municipal water companies.

    Jimmy Ricky and his Repugs know how to take care of his contributing businessmen. Sucker Human-Texans with low taxes, then let Corporate-Texans suck them dry.

    Kiss your thirsty, drought-intolerant St Augustine "nah nah, nah nah nah nah, good-bye"

    Water in TX:

    http://texas.sierraclub.org/press/factssupply3.pdf
    Last edited by boutons_deux; 09-25-2011 at 10:51 AM.

  23. #273
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    Perry Praised No Child Left Behind Under Bush, Now Claims He Was A Vocal Opponent

    And I was also vocal against No Child Left Behind. It gets back to the federal government has no business telling the states how to educate our children.

    Perry may think now that the federal government “has no business” in education, but in 2002, he was very happy to do business with the U.S. Department of Education, applauding No Child Left Behind and bragging about the funds Texas would receive under the law:

    “Texas was a model for President Bush’s No Child Left Behind legislation, and we continue to lead the nation in innovative solutions to improve our schools,” Perry said. “The U.S. Department of Education’s stamp of approval means we can move forward with our plan to improve early childhood education, dropout prevention, teaching excellence, science education and our schools’ use of technology.” [...]

    On Jan. 8, Bush signed the No Child Left Behind Act, which authorizes federal education appropriations and increases the emphasis on accountability. Texas is set to receive $2.3 billion for K-12 education under the act, an increase of $397 million over the state’s current appropriation.

    http://readersupportednews.org/off-s...million-people

    ==============

    These Repugs asshole have no shame, will tell any lie, anybody to get power and wealth.

  24. #274
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    Texas Doctor On Perrycare: ‘This Kind Of Thing Happens In Somalia’

    Dr. Katherine Yudeh King, a pediatrician at Ben Taub General Hospital, which serves a large uninsured population, said one of her patients, a 15-month-old boy, died from dehydration due to diarrhea because his family brought him to the hospital too late, assuming they could not afford care.

    “This is the type of thing that happens in Somalia and other developing nations, not something that should happen in Houston,’’ said King, one of the founding members of Doctors for Change, a group that advocates for universal health care in Harris County.

    nine other indicators of the state’s dilapidated health care system:

    1) Texas has the highest rate of uninsured people in the country – 24.6 percent – and the number of uninsured that has grown by 35 percent during Governor Rick Perry’s 11-year tenure.

    2) Overall health care quality for Texas is poorer than in every other state, especially when it comes to preventive, acute, and chronic care, as well as care for diabetes.

    3) Texas places 39th among the states in the percentage of adults over 50 who receive recommended screenings such as mammograms and colonoscopies.

    4) A fifth of Texas’ pregnant women receive no prenatal care in their first trimester.

    5) 16.8 percent of children are uninsured, more than all but one other state, and only half of Texas children have a medical provider who knows them and coordinates their care. More than a third of them have not received recommended medical and preventive care within the year, and immunization rates are low as well.

    6) Texas also ranks last in the country in the percent of children who receive needed mental health care.

    7) The state cut two-thirds of the funding for women’s health clinics and underfunded Medicaid by almost $4 billion, in addition to cutting hospital reimbursements.

    8) Perry vetoed a bill in 2001 that would have expanded Medicaid services and added cancer screenings such as Pap smears to women’s health services. In 2003, Texas tightened the eligibility requirements for the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and as a result, 237,000 children were kicked off its rolls, said Garnet Coleman, a Democratic state representative from Houston who has served in the Texas Legislature for 20 years and is a member of the House Public Health Committee.

    http://thinkprogress.org/health/2011...ns-in-somalia/

  25. #275
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    So Boutons...

    You want the government to protect people from their own ignorance?

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