Try not to throw baseless lies and accusations around, please.
He's a farmer too. We need more of them in congress.
Do we need more bankers, auto-executives, and other various corporate welfare dependents in Congress too?
Try not to throw baseless lies and accusations around, please.
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http://farm.ewg.org/persondetail.php?custnumber=007991785
Tim Huelskamp received payments totaling $258 from 1995 through 2009
Hardly a "corporate welfare dependent." I'm sure, if you were really worried about it, he'd give the $258 back.![]()
Wanting to use government to define life and how people are allowed to relate with one another is pretty authoritarian. While Ron Paul acknowledges that abortion is a violent act against a child, he's particularly against government taking upon itself the role of suggesting what makes a person alive. And he's certainly not for the government telling people whether they are allowed to marry. This is why he always makes the point that politicians lead the country astray by asking the wrong questions. Instead of arguing over "this vs. that", they ought to be asking themselves whether they have the authority to decide this or that.
Not saying anything one way or another about Huelskamp, since I haven't familiarized myself with him. But I just wanted to make that point that "pro-life" and "anti-gay marriage" still have authoritarianism rooted in them.
But anyway....what's the consensus on this guy? Do we consider it a victory for us if he wins in November?
I don't know anything about Hueskamp or his position on farm bailouts. But do people really see his being a farmer as some kind of a plus? If so, why?
Since I haven't been able to determine, even after two separate inquiries of his campaign, what his foreign policy entails, I have hope that he may at least lean toward non-interventionism. Saying that publicly in Kansas' 1st district would potentially be political suicide, especially in a six-candidate primary with very little to separate their platforms. To give you an idea, the guy who finished third was the favorite until he hinted that it would be best if Obama would just release his original birth certificate so the issue could be put to bed.
Good to know. I'll keep him in mind for my November candidates thread. It sounds like we need to add him as "one of our guys," if for no other reason than to keep tabs on him once he's elected.![]()
The law's backers complain that Six caved too easily and didn't provide evidence about pornography's "secondary negative effects" such as lower property values, increased drug trafficking and general blight. "The porn industry has deep, deep, deep pockets," says state senator Tim Huelskamp, who believes there is a link between pornography and fantasy-driven criminal behavior. "Justice shouldn't have a price. What is the cost of one additional rape of a child, the cost of another young woman being a victim? Kansas families deserve an opportunity to drive freely down the highway without this kind of advertising."
You are either saying that (A) All farmers are "corporate welfare dependents," or (B) That Huelskamp himself is one. Which is why I posted what I posted. Your question was a rhetorical attack on Huelskamp predicated on one of the two lies.
State Sen. Tim Huelskamp, a Fowler conservative who endorsed Huckabee, said McCain wasn't "trustworthy" on issues such as taxes, immigration and campaign finance. Then, Huelskamp noted, McCain picked Palin.
"For most of us, this was the biggest political decision of his life, and I think he got this right," Huelskamp said. "She has just energized the party."
Sigh. I am starting to get sick of these so-called "Liberty" candidates when almost all of them believe the federal government should define marriage as one man/one woman, and seem to skip over the crucial issue of ending the war on drugs.
Tim won't get my support. Sorry guys.
That wasn't what I meant. My question was a rhetorical attack on the quote that I included in my post which claimed that we need more farmers in Congress. That was farmers in the plural, not just any particular farmer who happens to be good, but more farmers in general. Most banks don't get much in the way of bailouts either. But I'd consider it strange to see someone say we need more bankers in Congress.
Huelskamp may well be great, but not because he's a farmer.
Also, incidentally, for what it's worth, I don't really care what kinds of welfare any given person running for office may have benefited from as an individual. Given the opportunity, I wouldn't turn down a check from the government myself and have no qualms about having taken advantage of things the government has provided me that I believe it shouldn't have been allowed to. I'm really only concerned about how a legislator will vote on those things.
State Sen. Tim Huelskamp spoke on behalf of Huckabee. He told the crowd that 24 hours previously, he didn’t know which candidate he would be voting for. Then he met Huckabee in Topeka during one of the former governor’s four campaign stops in the state on Friday. He said the opportunity to look someone in the eye told him a lot about his character.
“When you look at Gov. Huckabee’s record as an executive, and unlike any of the other candidates, he’s actually had to lead a government,” Huelskamp said. “And incidentally, don’t forget, that was a government that was run previously by cronies of the Clinton family. And he spent years cleaning that up. Seventeen elected officials after he took (the office of) governor were indicted or put in jail.”