GOP: Get the lawyers ASSEMBLED

GOP: Get the lawyers ASSEMBLED October 2, 2008

I never thought I would write a header like that. I despise the insertion of lawyers and courts into election processes, but Al Gore did create the precedent, and after reading this, I’m thinking if the GOP has any brains left (and that is debatable) they’ll start assembling an “army of lawyers” for this election day.

And this is why I am fasting, because this election has been co-opted by something dark that has too many tentacles, and too many mindless ant-workers, in too many places. McCain can never beat it back because he – like Bush, I’m sorry to say – is still trying to hold on to what America has always been, instead of dealing with what it has become. And that’s not going to work, this election. If the GOP does not have an army of lawyers ready to challenge state after state, they may as well shut up their shop. I’m not even sure I believe the financial “crisis,” anymore. A week ago I was willing to be convinced. Now? I’m not so sure.

Get this: The Ohio SecState – who has already made one move to discard GOP absentee ballots – is getting in between examiners and polling places. I said in 2004 that voter fraud would be rampant in ’08, and here we see state governments doing all they can to assist in that fraud.

Yeah, that’s enough. Get the damned lawyers. And while you’re at it, find a few people at the Justice Department who would actually be willing to look into illegal campaign contributions accepted by the Obama campaign. Obama, you’ll remember, decided to forego public funding (after promising he’d go that route, as McCain has). Now, there are some very serious questions about foreign monies driving his campaign, and it seems the Justice Department

To be clear: Obama’s not required by law to identify contributions of less than $200. But given that (a) McCain does it voluntarily, (b) The One claims to be all about a new, transparent politics in Washington, and (c) his campaign is famously powered by small donors, it’s a tad curious that most of the names of people who’ve dropped a little north of $222 million on him in small contributions remain known only to him and his campaign.

Especially when some of the ones who have been identified look like this:

In a letter dated June 25, 2008, the FEC asked the Obama campaign to verify a series of $25 donations from a contributor identified as “Will, Good” from Austin, Texas.

Mr. Good Will listed his employer as “Loving” and his profession as “You.”

A Newsmax analysis of the 1.4 million individual contributions in the latest master file for the Obama campaign discovered 1,000 separate entries for Mr. Good Will, most of them for $25.

In total, Mr. Good Will gave $17,375.

Following this and subsequent FEC requests, campaign records show that 330 contributions from Mr. Good Will were credited back to a credit card. But the most recent report, filed on Sept. 20, showed a net cumulative balance of $8,950 — still well over the $4,600 limit.

The fact that the campaign itself is reporting a cumulative balance in excess of the legal limit means they know, or should know, that they’ve got more money on hand than they’re supposed to have. And like McCarthy says, it’s only because “Good Will” was so stupid as to use the same phony identity for all of his donations that he crossed the $200 reporting threshold in the first place. A smart, determined fraudster would have used multiple identities.cannot be stirred to look into it.

There’s more: read on. Yes, it’s sickening. If you’re fasting, this will help destroy your appetite.

Allahpundit:

The Bush administration still DOES have an AG, does it not? Sheesh.

Fraud, fraud, fraud. Unreported in the MSM. Of course.

Hey, when you need to buy your own satellite channel, you need lots of bucks.

Kind of amazing to me that will all of this media help, and his own channel…the guy’s not ahead by 15 points.

According to the Simpsons, all fraud goes one way. Rightward, of course. But even the Simpsons gets it about Ohio. We need to look at Wisconsin and Missouri, too.

If you need more help fasting, here are interesting quotes on the financial “crisis”.


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