Quote from Arnie:
Thanks for making my point. I guess a corollary would be for the GOP to run some anti John Birch Society ads since they aren't afraid of them either.![]()
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Considering this is the "Summer of Recovery", I quess we can consider the Dems spending millions on a corporate backed group that the majority of Americans oppose, a form of "simulus". Makes as much sense.
Quote from hermit:
Makes sense when this corporate backed group is just a Republican party rebrand to distance themselves from the Bush summer of economic meltdown.

Quote from hermit:
Makes sense when this corporate backed group is just a Republican party rebrand to distance themselves from the Bush summer of economic meltdown.
Quote from Arnie:
So its not a Fox News creation? The Republicans are backing a party that opposes some GOP incumbents? Yea, that makes perfect sence. And the Dems are scared shitless of a party created by Fox News, backed by corporations, a party opposed by the majority of Americans. So they are going to spend millions trying to destroy a party that seems to be a Godsend, after all they are all crazy racists and homophobes. Yea, that makes perfect sence.![]()
Quote from hermit:
Makes sense when this corporate backed group is just a Republican party rebrand to distance themselves from the Bush summer of economic meltdown.
Democrats are undercutting their campaign message by condemning Republican economic policies while calling for the extension of Bush-era tax cuts.
âItâs hard to say the Republican economic policies were bad, [and] then continue them,â Paul Begala, Democratic strategist and former advisor to President Clinton, told The Hill. âThat is a bit of a mixed message.â â¦.
[T]hereâs growing momentum within the party to extend cuts on those with higher incomes too given the stubborn recession. Moodyâs Analytics economist Mark Zandi, who has advised Democrats on the economy, this week said congressional leaders should extend all of the tax cuts to reduce the risk of a double-dip recession.
Even extending only the tax cuts for the middle class undercuts the Democratic argument a bit, said Democratic strategist Douglas Schoen, by making it difficult for liberal leaders to say Bushâs tax policies had a toxic affect on the economy.
âIf the whole campaign is based on blasting Bush, and Bush for giving away too much to the rich, itâs pretty hard to say that Bush was right [about the middle-class tax cuts],â Schoen said.