tagged w/ Steele
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Just posting this as some advice for anyone who is currently being threatened by John Steele. John just moved to Miami, and(personal opinion) I have a feeling the former family man is running around spending his time and money on hookers and cocaine. Just my opinion, don't take it seriously or John might sue me. Anyway to the important point, a couple months ago I posted an article that showed a letter from Mr. Steele's office. The letter had dates on it that were off by several years, and also included several obvious factual errors. Even got TechDirt to plug the story(http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110408/03285313826/mass-infringement-lawyer-never-mind-facts-just-pay-up.shtml) The recipient of that letter said no to settling over 8 months ago. John's team decided the best plan of action was to keep changing his deadline and keep pretending like the recipient is not responding. John and his entire team are a bunch of cowards, liars, and absolute douchebags that should be disbarred. Again, just my opinion. But since I am a fair person, I will be e-mailing this to him(he has a Current account) to request an official explanation as to why he keeps engaging in such unethical behavior. Hopefully he responds, unless he is busy snorting coke off a hooker's assJust posting this as some advice for anyone who is currently being threatened by John... more
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Ron Paul Praises Embattled RNC Chief Michael Steele For ‘Leadership’ On Afghanistan
07- 4- 2010
Sam Stein
stein@huffingtonpost.com
The Sunday shows on this July Fourth weekend were littered with conservative figures wringing their hands over the latest, confounding comments from RNC Chairman Michael Steele, who recently called Afghanistan an un-winnable war of Obama’s choosing.
(VIDEOS) Rep. Ron Paul: RNC Chairman Michael Steele is Right, “Afghanistan is Obama’s War”…Now Bring Them Home!...http://ctpatriot1970.wordpress.com/2010/07/05/video-rep-ron-paul-rnc-chairman-michael-steele-is-right-afghanistan-is-obamas-war-now-end-it/
But with neoconservatives Bill Kristol and Dan Senor as well as Senators John McCain (R-Ariz.), Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), and Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) all, to one extent or another, taking Steele to the mat, at least one member of the GOP was praising his boldness and clarity.Ron Paul Praises Embattled RNC Chief Michael Steele For ‘Leadership’ On... more
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Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele on Friday fired RNC finance director Rob Bickhart and deputy finance director Debbie LeHardy, both of whom were tied to embarrassing payments made by the party committee.
Bickhart will be replaced by Mary Heitman, a former finance director for the Republican Governors Association. In a statement, obtained by POLITICO, Steele said Heitman's "depth of experience in both the private sector and political field will be a tremendous asset to the RNC."
The departures are the latest in a broad shake-up of the committee since POLITICO disclosed in February a breach between Steele and major Republican donors over the committee's spending on private jets, limousines and other expenses. Their anger was only exacerbated by the disclosure that the RNC – under Bickhart’s authority - had reimbursed a donor for taking a group to Voyeur, a bondage-themed club in West Hollywood.
In the immediate aftermath of the visit, first reported by The Daily Caller, the young aide who directed the RNC’s Young Eagles program for young donors and put in the reimbursement, was fired. Since then, Steele has also replaced his chief of staff, his spokesman, and parted ways with a media consultant who had worked with him in his 2006 Senate race in Maryland.
But Steele's decision to force out a low-level aide rather than Bickhart continued to grate on donors and RNC committee members. Randy Pullen, the RNC treasurer, initiated an audit of the party books that found "no material weaknesses in accounting controls" but several "significant deficiencies."
Specifically, Pullen concluded that Bickhart may never have reviewed the night club reimbursement paperwork — and someone else may have put his signature on the it to authorize the payment. In addition, Pullen noted that the Pennsylvania political consulting firm that Bickhart owns, eCapitol Direct, was on track to collect more than $250,000 for RNC fundraising work that lacked adequate performance standards. "This contract should be cancelled," Pullen wrote.
Beyond the payments to his firm, Bickhart was receiving an annual salary of $196,000, and he was allowed to split his time between the RNC headquarters and his suburban Philadelphia offices, which RNC sources have said resulted in spotty supervision and leadership in the finance department.
Bickhart also had come under fire recently for a fundraising presentation disclosed by POLITICO that outlined the RNC’s plans to capitalize on “fear” of President Barack Obama and that featured images depicting Obama as the Joker from "Batman."
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0510/36944.html#ixzz0nJZlfKGMRepublican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele on Friday fired RNC finance... more
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Thursday, February 25, 2010
Porn star Riley Steele was in studio today. Gary fell in love with her. “Most beautiful woman you’ve ever seen in porn,” he said.
Everyone thought she was good looking enough to be a real model. Free Trial to RileySteele.com…http://ctpatriot1970.wordpress.com/2010/02/26/porn-star-riley-steele-tracy-morgan-on-howard-stern-free-trial-to-rileysteele-com/
But Howard thinks she’s perfect for porn. “It’s smart,” he insisted, “She’s going to be the top porn girl.”
And Riley was destined for porn. She started masturbating in preschool during nap time.
“You’re naturally sexually curious,” Howard told her, “You were in training.”Thursday, February 25, 2010
Porn star Riley Steele was in studio today. Gary fell... more
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Steele physically turns his back on a woman who asks why people like her mother should die from cancer, simply because they cannot afford medication.
This "health care" debate has nothing to do with health care. It is a culture war between racists and liberals, between authoritarians and progressives, between human rights and corporate fascism, between the past and the future, between those who believe the earth is a litter box and those who believe it has been given to us in sacred trust, between liars and honest people, and between elitists and populists.
In the 1960s this conflict eventually led to blood in the streets, and it is headed that way again. No bully was ever placated by logic and rational discussion. No predator was suddenly overcome by compassion enough to spare the prey. No thugs ever self-reformed. And the current crop of neo-con propagandists will not rest until they have prodded the left into defending itself. They are masochistic, narcissistic sociopaths who recognize only pain.Steele physically turns his back on a woman who asks why people like her mother should... more
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Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele is urging the party faithful to follow his own “unpredictable” footsteps.
Speaking at a Republican fundraiser in Maryland Tuesday night, Steele said the GOP needs to emulate him and be “unconventional, unpredictable…to do from time to time the unexpected,” according to the Baltimore Sun.
Steele has been criticized by some in the party for a variety of missteps since assuming the GOP chairmanship. In just two months as RNC head, Steele has gotten into a tussle with conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh, threatened moderate GOP senators and called abortion an “individual choice,” loaded language that angered social conservatives.
Steele acknowledged Tuesday that he has managed to “tick off” some within the party, but brushed off that criticism.
“Someone told me this whole chairmanship thing would be a cakewalk,” he joked.Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele is urging the party faithful to... more
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Tuesday’s special election in New York’s 20th Congressional District was closely watched, and rightly so. The election represented the first opportunity for voters to give Democrats a progress report on President Barack Obama’s economic recovery policies and, judging by the results, voters don’t like the “change,” let alone the taxing, spending and borrowing, that’s coming from Washington.
Make no mistake — we believe Jim Tedisco will win once all the absentee and military ballots are counted. And let’s be clear, this is not a recount.
At least 4 percent of the votes have yet to be counted in the first place. Tedisco’s victory will be a credible repudiation of the spending spree that Obama and Congress have been on since January. Even the executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee acknowledged over the weekend that the race was “a referendum on the Economic Recovery Act and Barack Obama’s policies.”
Well, the DCCC is right — this likely Republican victory is a referendum on the president. Democrats sent mailers out to voters linking their candidate to the president, and the Obama campaign team used its much-vaunted e-mail list to rally its troops in support of Scott Murphy. Obama himself made a high-profile endorsement of Murphy in the closing days of the race, Vice President Joe Biden cut a radio ad and a robocall for Murphy, and the Democratic Party ran an ad in the closing days featuring the president himself.
Well, the voters have spoken, and while the results are still pending, Republicans are confident that the final vote tallies will show those voters have rejected the president’s approach. This will be true even in this Democratic-leaning district that candidate Obama carried in the presidential election and the previous Democratic candidate for Congress carried with more than 60 percent of the vote.
Look at it this way: Does any student of politics think that this race would have been competitive if it had been held last November? Answer — no. The ground has shifted, and is shifting, as the voters become increasingly worried about Obamanomics.
And who can blame them?
As the Democratic Party’s candidate for president, Obama pledged he would be a responsible steward of the taxpayers’ money, saying, “I want to go line by line through every item in the federal budget and eliminate programs that don’t work and make sure that those that do work, work better and cheaper.”
That was then. Today, a mere two months into his administration, Obama and congressional Democrats have demonstrated that their only solution to the current economic crisis is to spend, tax and borrow. The Democrats’ reckless approach will leave our children and grandchildren with a staggering national debt owed to China and oil-rich countries in the Middle East.Tuesday’s special election in New York’s 20th Congressional District was... more
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Former president George W. Bush's Republicans, groping their way from their November elections rout, need a "hip-hop" makeover to court younger voters, the party's chief said in an interview. "We need to uptick our image with everyone, including one-armed midgets," Michael Steele, elected in late January as the first black chairman of the Republican National Committee, told the Washington Times.
Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele’s series of gaffes turned into something more serious Thursday, as leaders of a pillar of the GOP—the anti-abortion movement—shifted into open revolt over comments in an interview with the men’s magazine GQ.
Steele called abortion an “individual choice” and opposed a constitutional ban on abortion in the Feb. 24 interview, which appeared online Wednesday night. He echoed the language of the abortion rights movement and appeared to contradict his own heated assertions during his campaign for chairman that he is a committed soldier in the anti-abortion movement.
While he issued a statement Thursday affirming his opposition to abortion and his support for a constitutional amendment banning it, the damage appeared to be done as leading social conservatives publicly attacked the embattled chairman.
“Comments attributed to Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele are very troubling, and despite his clarification today the party stands to lose many of its members and a great deal of its support in the trenches of grass-roots politics,” former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-Ark.) said in a posting on his blog. “For Chairman Steele to even infer that taking a life is totally left up to the individual is not only a reversal of Republican policy and principle, but it's a violation of the most basic of human rights — the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, a conservative rival who ultimately backed Steele's bid for chairman, also lambasted him in a written statement.
“Chairman Steele needs to reread the Bible, the U.S. Constitution and the 2008 GOP Platform,” said Blackwell. “He then needs to get to work or get out of the way.”
The flap also added to worries generated by a series of earlier, less policy-oriented statements, ranging from insulting radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh to offering “slum love” to Indian-American Gov. Bobby Jindal (R-La.).
“Are you saying you think women have the right to choose abortion?” GQ’s Lisa DePaulo asked in the interview in his office.
“Yeah. I mean, again, I think that’s an individual choice,” he said, according to GQ’s transcript, which he did not dispute.
“You do?” he was asked.
“Yeah. Absolutely,” he said.
In his statement Thursday, issued through the RNC press office, Steele said, “I am pro-life, always have been, always will be.”
“I tried to present why I am pro-life while recognizing that my mother had a ‘choice’ before deciding to put me up for adoption,” he said, explaining his comments. “But the Republican Party is and will continue to be the party of life. I support our platform and its call for a Human Life Amendment.”
Huckabee said he spoke to Steele Thursday and appreciated the chairman’s “set[ting] the record straight.”Former president George W. Bush's Republicans, groping their way from their... more
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Conservative author John Fund had one message for the Republican luminaries assembled last week in a downtown Washington hotel room to choose a new party chairman.
"You can either be doers or continue to be a doormat. I think you should be doers," he told the audience sternly as he lectured them over a buffet lunch.
It seems the crowd listened. When the Republican National Committee members then voted for a new leader on Friday evening they unexpectedly picked African-American Michael Steele, the first black person ever to hold the post. Steele, a former deputy governor from Maryland known for criticising George W Bush, will now give Republicans a high-profile black public face. At a stroke the Republican party seems to have joined the new America of President Barack Obama. "It's time for something completely different," Steele declared after he won.
"You will get another opportunity to present your case to the vote," Fund told his audience. "Memories will fade. Your name brand can be restored." The question is whether that brand will be best represented by men like Limbaugh or by those like Steele.Conservative author John Fund had one message for the Republican luminaries assembled... more
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