Judicial Nominations, the Ultimate Presidential Legacy

Nena

Member
Joined
Jan 23, 2008
Messages
15
Guys,

If we face reality then we're dealing with the possibility of any one of these three big-government presidential candidates come next year... Who will it be?

I will tell you that the one thing that Paul and McCain agree on is judges. Please remember that whoever is voted into office will have the opportunity to nominate many federal judges for a lifetime appointment in federal court. The alternative to the kinds of judges that Paul and McCain would AGREE on are the kinds of judges that gave us affirmative action, unconstitutionally decided Roe v. Wade, hate crimes, and more. We need conservative judges who do not legislate from the bench, but instead read the constitution and examine the laws and the cases not from a moral standpoint, but from a judicial standpoint neutrality in defense of the U.S. Constitution and the laws put into place by Congress. It is not up to judges to make the laws, period! The judicial branch is crucial to the functions of the federal government and maintaining the republic, and if you realize the importance of the president in the role of judicial appointments, you can support Ron Paul and Ron Paul Republican congressional candidates and still vote for John McCain as the better of two evils in the general election!
 
Since Ron Paul and John McCain disagree on everything else, what makes you think they would agree on Supreme Court justices? I would be very surprised to see Paul vote for any nominee proposed by McCain.
 
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?pageId=45733

As Buchanan points out here, McCain voted for Ginsburg and Breyer, and collaborated with Democrats to stop conservative judges.

They do NOT agree on judges. In fact, I think that of all the Republican candidates that ran, McCain is the furthest from Ron Paul.

I'm tired of both the McCain and Obama talk. They are absolutely terrible candidates that would lead this country into the dump, albeit in different ways. We need to start getting serious and coalesce around another option.
 
Back
Top