Bloggers React to Fred’s Economy Video

Posted on December 3rd, 2008
By Michael in Commentaries, Video

Fred’s video discussing the economy and bailout dollars dropped by air over America has generated some chatter online. Thought I’d share some of the reax.

Jim Geraghty from the National Review Online:

Thinking about Fred Thompson’s economic message from earlier today, I’m a little worried that not many political figures have echoed his diagnosis of a national “borrowing, spending and consuming binge” in recent years. People look at a recession as a dip from “normal,” and our concept of “normal” was probably wildly skewed in recent years…

So we’re left with competing stimulus packages, and Thompson describes the plan to distribute money by dropping it from a plane being dismissed because of concerns about some people having larger rakes than others. The various stimulus packages sound only marginally less silly; basically, they’re all variations of either borrowing or printing more money and putting it in the hands of people and hoping they spend it in a way that spurs economic growth.

Ed Morrissey at HotAir wirtes:

Fred Thompson gives us a dose of common sense about the economy and the government action to rescue it. It’s a masterpiece of sarcasm and wit, and almost impossible to excerpt. Like most Fred! videos, it’s an instant classic.

Matt Lewis at Townhall says, “Gotta love Fred’s common-sense commentaries!”

The video (embedded below) is available on our Blip.tv channel as well as our YouTube Channel.

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Time To Look Ahead

Posted on November 18th, 2008
By Fred Thompson in Commentaries

I’m sure after this two-year campaign everyone would like to take a deep breath and put aside politics for a while. The holiday season approaches. It is time for all of us to give thanks for the many blessings we have been given.

But our gratitude for life and liberty should also serve as a reminder that what we were working so hard to achieve these past few years still very much hangs in the balance. And it is up to each of us to continue that fight. Our participation as citizens of the United States does not end once we’ve pulled the lever in the voting booth. That ballot is just the beginning.

We are now living in a nation controlled by a Democratic Party committed to cutting the budget for our national defense, raising taxes and nibbling around the edges of our personal freedoms in the hopes none of us notices. Democrats will do it through regulation in the executive branch, legislation in Congress and rulings from the judiciary.

This activity will be taking place during a time when we know that somewhere in the world our worst enemies either have, or are trying to get their hands on, the most dangerous weapons known to man. Small rogue nations are developing nuclear weapons to threaten us and our allies. Some large nations are engaged in massive military buildups, while others seek to take advantage of our weakened financial condition to wage a kind of economic warfare that is only now possible because of our global economy. And all the while the greatest economic threat of our lifetime and our children’s lifetime—the bankrupting of our entitlements systems—will be ignored.

It’s not a pretty picture, is it?

But if the time I spent traveling around America the past 18 months has given me anything, it is hope. And it if has confirmed anything for me, it is this: America remains the greatest country in the history of the world, and our citizens who care about our nation’s founding values—freedom, free markets, respect for life and the rule of law—will not stop defending these values as much as some of our fellow citizens and leaders might wish they would.

The Democrats and their P.R. machine known as the “mainstream media” liked to talk about 2008 as an election about “change.” Well, let me tell you, by their nature, every election is about “change.” In fact, responsible change is the essence of conservatism. We must change in order to preserve what is best about our country. We have always been able to accommodate constructive change without turning our back on our first principles.

But now, we should admit that we didn’t do a good enough job of holding our elected officials accountable over the past few years when spending got out of control, and we seemed to lose sight of the policies grounded in our first principles. It’s going to be a high price we pay, but we must not lose sight of what we must be doing now: fighting for conservative change we want today—and tomorrow.

We are going to have to use every tool we have—grassroots organizations, think tanks, magazines, talk radio, the Internet—while building new institutions to blunt the efforts of a left-wing establishment that appears willing to use uncertainty to impose an agenda that would never see the light of day in normal times.

The challenge will be to fight the Democratic instinct to let government meet every need and solve every problem and to divide our nation by class and race, while also laying the groundwork for the kind of historic mid-term election we achieved in 1994.

We gained those victories with a focus on innovative, free-market, pro-freedom, policy solutions to issues like welfare reform, promising to cut spending and balance the budget, and recruiting a host of talented, young (and perhaps not-so-young) men and women willing to step into the arena and run for office.

We have the formula—a conservative formula—that has worked before and will surely work again. It is grounded in our first principles. It’s time we moved past the recriminations and seven stages of grief. It’s time to look ahead, to stay united and to defend the values that we know must endure if our nation is to do the same.

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NewsMax Interview with Fred Thompson

Posted on November 3rd, 2008
By Michael in McCain-Palin, Candidates

Fred spoke with NewsMax TV about the closing poll numbers, the election tomorrow, and McCain’s reasons to be optimistic.

Take a look

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Fred’s Appearance on Meet the Press

Posted on November 2nd, 2008
By Michael in McCain-Palin, Candidates

If you missed Fred on Meet the Press this morning, check out the video below.

Thompson describes McCain as “a guy who has spent his entire life demonstrating courage, honor, dedication, duty - putting his country first. Obama, on the other hand is, “the most inexperienced, and least qualified, from a national security standpoint of any Democratic candidate I have seen in my lifetime.

The choice on Tuesday is pretty clear, and Fred made a very strong closing argument today. Be sure to watch.

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Fred Thompson Calls On Behalf Of Jeff Beaty

Posted on October 29th, 2008
By Michael in Updates

Jeremy Jacobs at PolitickerMA.com reports on a robo-call Fred has recorded on behalf of Senate Challenger Jeff Beaty.

The 30-second call features Thompson, the Tennessee Republican who ran for president this year, touting Beatty’s experience and judgment as the reasons why Massachusetts voters should elect him to replace U.S. Sen. John Kerry this year.

“Hello friend, this is Sen. Fred Thompson calling to ask you to please vote for Jeff Beatty for United States senator to replace John Kerry,” Thompson says. “Jeff is an American hero who served in the Delta Force and the FBI. He’s a former teamster and small businessman with the kind of common sense we need. Jeff won’t coddle special interests; he’s a leader who will protect your family your jobs and your country. Please vote for Jeff Beatty Nov. 4.”

Use the link below to take a listen.

Fred Thompson Jeff Beatty robo-call.mp3

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Fred Is On The Air For Bill Russell

Posted on October 28th, 2008
By Michael in Updates

Fred Thompson News is running a post today with a link to Fred’s new ad in support of Bill Russell. Russell is challenging Jon Murtha in Pennsylvania’s 12th Congressional District.

You can listen to the ad using the player embedded below.

 
icon for podpress  Bill Russell For Congress [1:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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An Election Message From Fred

Posted on October 24th, 2008
By Michael in Candidates, Audio, Video, Announcements

Fred has recorded the following special election message.  We’ve also created an audio version of the message available below the video.   If you’re interested in embedding the video on your own site, I’ve included the embed tag after the jump.

 
icon for podpress  Election Address - Long [12:25m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

(more…)

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Qualified

Posted on September 30th, 2008
By Fred Thompson in Education, Commentaries

When John McCain selected Governor Sarah Palin, as his running mate, the Democrats and their far-left constituency let out a primal scream that could be heard from sea to shining sea. How dare he choose someone that they and their pals in the media had not had a chance to vet (i.e. libel, slander, and otherwise and otherwise eviscerate). Ah, but it was not too late. These seekers of “a new kind of politics” poured torrents of malicious abuse upon her and her family.

Plane loads of scandal mongers, lawyers and other truth seekers became more numerous in Alaska than the polar bear, as they rallied local Democrats and disgruntled Republicans to their cause.

Here was a woman who chose to have children and a career. Aging Washington socialites weighed in with newly discovered sensitivity for mothers with careers outside the home. Here was a woman who became upset because her ex-brother-in-law had tasered her nephew and threatened her father. The Democrats and their friends had to save the country from a woman like this.

Governor Palin’s every comment was scrutinized by the media and judged against what Jefferson or Lincoln might have said. Never mind that her counterpart, the 30-year-Washington-veteran Joe Biden, apparently is unaware that America relies upon coal for a lot of it’s electricity or that he recently referred to a top level U.S. official’s visit to Iran that never happened. That’s just Joe being Joe – protected by the sheer number of his gaffes and the fact that he is Barack Obama’s running mate.

For a while there it seems the fact that so many uninformed yahoos (average people) love her was going to drive the main stream media nuts. They had a hard time grasping the fact that people like her because she is precisely the kind of politician that everyone has been saying they’ve wanted: Independent, not a captive of the Beltway including a Congress with a 9% approval rating, who will take on hacks of either party; who has the tenacity to win and the courage to fight for the long-term benefit of those she represents.

Apparently what no one counted on was that a politician like this would actually show up on the national scene. The media was caught by surprise. The media doesn’t like surprises.

Naturally, there was a backlash to the treatment of Governor Palin and cooler-headed critics have largely concentrated on what they claim is her lack of qualifications. Of course much of the criticism of her qualifications reveals the application of the same old double standard. Less accomplished governors in times past have been considered to be perfectly “well-qualified” as VP picks.

However, it is a legitimate issue and should be taken seriously. I especially take seriously the criticism of people such as New York Times columnist David Brooks who I consider to be an insightful analyst of the political scene.

He recently wrote that governance is hard. It requires acquired skills. Most of all it requires prudence. What is prudence? Among other things, it is the ability to absorb information and discern the essential current of events – the things that go together and the things that will never go together. It is the ability to engage in complex deliberations and to understand which arguments have the most weight. How is prudence acquired? Through experience. Experience allows a leader to judge what is important and what is not. He added, “Sarah Palin has many virtues. If you wanted someone to destroy a corrupt establishment, she’d be your woman. But the constructive act of governance is another matter.”

One can hardly disagree with the desirability of our leaders having the qualities that Brooks describes (putting aside the question of how many of our leaders who are not Sarah Palin have demonstrated these qualities). But there are other important qualifications, such as will, courage, and determination. Frankly, an infusion of these qualities into our body politic is desperately needed – not just to raise hell with the establishment, but to speak the hard truth about unpleasant choices facing our country. To push for choices that will, in the long term, benefit our country, our children and our grandchildren. In other words, things which “prudent” leaders are all too often reluctant to do.

For many years we have failed to address looming problems that will prove catastrophic to our nation. It’s not because we are bereft of leaders with great experience. And it is not because they do not understand the “essential current of events.” They know these things all too well. It is because they do not have the political courage to do anything about it.

Recently, a Washington Post editorial pointed out that even before the recent financial crisis on Wall Street, the Government Accountability Office issued a report declaring the federal government on an “unsustainable long term fiscal path.” This was primarily due to the projected cost of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, brought on by an aging population. We will be spending $41 trillion dollars more on these entitlements in the next 75 years than we will receive in payroll taxes and premiums, although the crunch will actually begin much sooner than that. And we already owe Japan and China about $500 billion each.

David Walker, the former Comptroller General of the United States calls this problem much larger than the recent financial rescue plan. In fact he calls it the “super sub-prime crisis.” Which bring me to the current sub-prime crisis.

Wall Street and Washington were full of people who were “qualified and experienced” in the field of finance. Sen. Barack Obama, for one, has a great deal of experience in the housing field. So do many of his closest advisers. I would have traded some of that experience for a few more leaders with less experience and more courage to buck the establishment and tell the truth about what was happening.

This brings me back to Governor Sarah Palin, and why I say that courage and political will are at the very top of the “qualification” requirements for today’s leaders. So the question is, how does Sarah Palin compare on that score with Biden and Obama, for that matter? Very well, I’d say.

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