Category Archives: 2012 GOP Primary

The ONLY Way to know Ron Paul “Absolutely” Won’t Run Third Party.

Ron Paul supporters are dedicated to their candidate.  Most will not vote for another candidate, regardless.  They are as principled as the candidate himself, vowing not to hold their noses when they vote.  They would rather abstain, than to vote for the “status quo” be it a Republican or Democrat.

Knowing this, we can draw a few conclusions if Ron Paul DOES NOT win the GOP nomination.

  1. His supporters will convince him to run third-party, and they will vote for him, or
  2. Paul will not run third-party, and a large portion of his supporters either vote for another third-party candidate, or vote for no one.

Most arm-chair pundits conclude that if Paul runs third-party, it will hand the general election to Obama.  While this is not a given, he will most definitely be labeled a spoiler should this happen.  But what most Republicans don’t understand is that the “spoiler threat” does not deter “hard-core” Ron Paul’s supporters.  They will vote for him regardless, and campaign for him with all of their might in hopes of winning.

So if Paul runs third-party, the only way the GOP can assure themselves a win over Obama, is to vote for Ron Paul in the general election.

However, before we even get to that point, it must be understood, that if Ron Paul does not get the GOP nomination, and does NOT run third-party, a large percentage of his supporters will not vote for the GOP nominee.  It’s unlikely that Paul will endorse those he has called the “status quo”.  He is a man of principle, after all.

So, while it may “burn you up” that Ron Paul’s supporters are so dedicated, it really leaves the GOP with one option to cruise to a win over Barack Obama.  That is to nominate Ron Paul as the GOP nominee.

If you would like to read more about this phenomenon, check out this article.

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Barack Obama, Politics, Ron Paul, Texas

You Like Ron Paul… Except for His Foreign Policy ?

In a long-form video released by Veterans for Ron Paul 2012, a grassroots  organization operating on Facebook and elsewhere, American militarism and  foreign policy in the Middle East is explored in depth.

Read more and view the video here.

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Politics, Ron Paul, Texas

Is Ron Paul a Racist?

Austin NAACP President Nelson Linder, who has known Ron Paul for 20 years, unequivocally dismissed charges that the Congressman was a racist in light of recent smear attempts, and said the reason for him being attacked was that he was a threat to the establishment.

Read the entire story here.

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Politics, Ron Paul, Texas

Only About a Month Left to Register to Vote in the Primaries in Six States

State(s) Primary Date Type Registration Deadline Days Left
South Carolina 01/21/12 Modified Primary 12/22/11 17
Nevada 02/04/12 Closed Caucus 12/30/11 25
Iowa 01/03/12 Open Caucus 01/03/12 29
New Hampshire 01/10/12 Closed Primary 01/03/12 29
Florida 01/31/12 Closed Primary 01/03/12 29
Colorado 02/07/12 Closed Caucus 01/09/12 35

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Politics, Uncategorized

Answer 9 Questions to determine your GOP presidential candidate

Unsure who to vote for in the 2012 GOP Primary Election?

Find Your True Love!

A quiz to match you to your perfect sweetheart GOP presidential candidate

http://reason.com/quiz/GOP2011/match

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Gary Johnson, Herman Cain, Jon Huntsman, Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Politics, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul

Top Presidential Campaign Donors through the Third Quarter 2011

A comparison of top Presidential Campaign donors is very revealing.

Actually, many may not be surprised to see Obama receiving large contributions from academia, and Rick Perry getting donations from energy companies.  But what about Mitt Romney and his Wall Street connections?

But the most revealing, is perhaps the top 3 donors for Ron Paul.  Congressman Paul wants an end to the wars, but yet he gets more money from the armed services than any other candidate!  That’s a pretty clear message.

As they say, “follow the money”.

Source: OpenSecrets.org

Top Five Presidential Campaign Donors by Candidate

Barack
Obama
Mitt
Romney
Microsoft Corp $170,323 Goldman Sachs $354,700
Comcast Corp $116,155 Credit Suisse Group $195,250
Harvard University $94,225 Morgan Stanley $185,800
Google Inc $90,166 HIG Capital $176,500
University of California $83,679 Barclays $155,250
Rick
Perry
Ron
Paul
Ryan LLC $197,800 US Air Force $23,437
Murray Energy $66,803 US Army $23,053
USAA $51,500 US Navy $16,973
Contran Corp $50,000 Mason Capital Management $14,000
Ernst & Young $45,300 Microsoft Corp $13,398
Michele
Bachmann
Herman
Cain
Carbun Concepts $15,600 Wausau Homes $9,800
College Loan Corp $12,400 Wells Fargo $8,300
Hubbard Broadcasting $10,750 Houston Texans $7,400
Fagen Inc $10,000 Cold Spring Granite $6,000
Empire Office Inc $10,000 Cinco Natural Gas $5,200
Jon
Huntsman
Newt
Gingrich
Fertitta Entertainment $32,000 Rock-Tenn Co $25,000
Ultimate Fighting Championship $26,500 Poet LLC $17,000
Station Casinos $26,000 First Fiscal Fund $15,000
Crow Holdings $20,000 American Fruits &
Flavors
$10,000
Fresenius Medical Care $17,400 State Mutual Insurance $10,000
Rick
Santorum
Gary
Johnson
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of South Carolina $15,500 Tower Energy Group $10,000
Universal Health Services $14,750 Ryan LLC $5,000
Kimber Manufacturing $12,300 Corriente Advisors $5,000
Achristavest $10,000 Welcom Products $5,000
El
Dorado Holdings
$10,000 Zyvex Corp $2,500

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Barack Obama, Herman Cain, Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul

Which GOP Candidate do you trust with our economy?

The U.S. economy is in shambles.  The 2012 Presidential election may be the most important in our lifetime.  The GOP primary election cycle will be even more important.

Mitt Romney has the financial institutions on his side.  Wall Street and the big banks hold much of the blame for our dire economic situation, a result of their malinvestment, and influence on Congress and government agencies.  Their influence in a Romney administration would be a continuation of the status quo, driving our economy to an eventual complete collapse.

Herman Cain served on the board of the Kansas City Federal Reserve and does not think that a full audit of the Fed is necessary.  He was clueless about the housing bubble and the financial meltdown.  His proposed 999 plan would establish another avenue of federal taxation by adding a federal consumption tax on top of the income tax.  He says the rates would be lower, but when has the government ever been able to keep its hands off of potential additional funding?  We can’t gamble our futures on whether this man can choose wise advisors, and Congress to hold down the tax rates. Herman Cain needs to be able to understand that the Federal Reserve has devalued the dollar, and that this has been happening since it’s inception, and will continue until it is ended.

Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry, and Michele Bachmann have all recognized the problems the Federal Reserve has caused.  None, however; spoke openly against the policies of the Federal Reserve until long after Ron Paul began his crusade to obtain a full audit of the private banking cartel.

Ron Paul serves on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Joint Economic Committee, and the House Committee on Financial Services, and is Chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology, where he has been an outspoken critic of current American foreign and monetary policy.

Congressman Ron Paul is not a slick talking career politician.  He is a medical doctor by trade who became outraged in the 1970’s when President Nixon took the dollar off of the gold standard.  This action motivated him to run for Congress to affect change.  He is a man of vision, he has impeccable family values, he supports the Constitution, and is a man of peace.

Recent polls show that Ron Paul is competitive in a head-to-head matchup with President Obama.  He can win.  He must win, if America is to prosper.

Read about Ron Paul and his stances on the issues of the economy, the Federal Reserve, taxes, and more at his campaign web site.

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Herman Cain, Mitt Romney, Politics, Ron Paul

Herman Cain uses Liberals’ tactics to suppress the truth

It seems Herman Cain is using tactics typically employed by liberals to suppress the truth.  I know this may be shocking to some, but hear me out.

This first became apparent to me after the October 11, 2011 GOP Primary debate sponsored by Bloomberg and the Washington Post with his comments regarding the Federal Reserve.  I immediately knew he was at the very least misrepresenting past comments he had made.  However, only later did I realize he was very calculating in his responses.

Watch the following video clip of the debate and then I will comment further.

While Cain did not use the term “ignorant” in reference to those who wish to see a full audit of the Federal Reserve, he did say the following.

 “I think a lot of people are calling for this audit of the Federal Reserve because they don’t know enough about it.”

Webster’s definition of ignorant is as follows.

1 a:destitute of knowledge or education <an ignorant society>; also: lacking knowledge or comprehension of the thing specified <parents ignorant of modern mathematics> b: resulting from or showing lack of knowledge or intelligence
Herman Cain is at the very least being disingenuous.
Cain went on to say,
“We don’t need to waste money with another commission or an audit that’s not necessary; because folks, we’ve got a lot of other problems we’ve got to worry about.”
I would say that is being “rather critical” of those who would like to see an audit of the Fed, and of Ron Paul in particular.
Now there is no doubt that Herman Cain could see this confrontation coming.  Ron Paul’s supporters are extremely active and have approached Cain on numerous occasions to ask him about his past as a director of the Federal Reserve Board of Kansas City.  In fact, Cain recently made reference to this in his book, “This is Herman  Cain,” and specifically blamed the Paul Campaign as if it was a coordinated effort, as recently reported in the Daily Caller.  Cain claims Paul’s campaign “sends one of its ‘Paulites’ everywhere I show up.”

“I get the same stupid question at almost every one of these events,” Cain  writes, “I know it’s a deliberate strategy. How can a person randomly show up at  a hundred events and ask the same stupid question to try to nail me on the  Federal Reserve? It’s really becoming annoying more than anything else.”

And if this wasn’t enough, Herman Cain, in an appearance on The Jay Leno Show, called Ron Paul a “grumpy old man”.

Ok, so now back to Liberal tactics.  A while back I printed a listing of “Twenty-Five Ways To Suppress Truth: The Rules of Disinformation” by H. Michael Sweeney.  After the debate I suspected that Cain might have been using one or two of these tactics himself, so I went back to review the list.

I could immediately see that it could easily be argued that Herman Cain used at least 8 of the 25 tactics in his dealings with Ron Paul over the Federal Reserve!  Specifically, I found the following:

(Rules have been summarized in some cases.)

Rule #3: Avoid discussing issues by describing all charges, regardless of venue or evidence, as mere rumors and wild accusations.  Herman Cain: “You’ve gotta be careful of the stuff you get off the Internet.”

Rule #4: Find or create a seeming element of your opponent’s argument which you can easily knock down to make yourself look good and the opponent look bad.  Herman Cain: “You have misquoted me,” he said. “I did not call any of your people  ignorant. I don’t know where that came from,” he said.  Cain went on to say that he didn’t agree with the recent actions of the Federal Reserve, and that he did not object to an audit — it just wasn’t his “top priority — 9-9-9.”

Rule #5: Sidetrack opponents with name calling and ridicule.  Herman Cain: calling Ron Paul a “grumpy old man”, and his supporters as  ‘Paulites’ who ask “stupid questions”.

Rule #8: Invoke authority.  Claim for yourself or associate yourself with authority and present your argument with enough “jargon” and “minutiae” to illustrate you are the “one who knows”, and simply say it isn’t so without discussing issues or demonstrating concretely why or citing sources.  Herman Cain: “the Federal Reserve already has so many audits it’s ridiculous”, and “I think a lot of people are calling for this audit of the Federal Reserve because they don’t know enough about it,” Cain said at the time. “There’s no hidden secrets going on in the Federal Reserve to my knowledge.” He added that “we don’t need to waste money … with an audit that’s not necessary.”

Rule #9: Play dumb.  No matter what evidence or logical argument is offered, avoid discussing issues and deny they have any credibility, make any sense, provide any proof, contain or make a point, have logic, or support a conclusion.  Mix well for maximum effect.  Herman Cain:  “You have misquoted me.  I did not call any of your people  ignorant. I don’t know where that came from,” he said. “You’ve gotta be careful of the stuff you get off the Internet.”

Rule #17:  Change the subject.  Usually in connection with one of the other ploys listed here, find a way to side-track the discussion with abrasive or controversial comments in hopes of turning attention to a new, more manageable topic.  Herman Cain: said he didn’t agree with the recent actions of the Federal Reserve, and that he did not object to an audit — it just wasn’t his “top priority — 9-9-9.”

Rule #18: Emotionalize, Antagonize, and Goad Opponents.  Herman Cain: calling Ron Paul a “grumpy old man”.

Rule #19: Ignore proof presented.  To completely avoid discussing issues may require you to categorically deny and be critical of media or books as valid sources.  Herman Cain: “You’ve gotta be careful of the stuff you get off the Internet.”

Really Herman?  Even when it’s your own voice? 

Americans, do you really trust this guy?

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Herman Cain, Politics, Ron Paul

Rick Perry’s campaign may be sidetracked by the Trans-Texas Corridor

By KENDRA MARR

Rick Perry’s small-government record has yet another blot.

It’s called the Trans-Texas Corridor.

The governor’s 2012 rivals have latched onto his executive  order mandating the HPV vaccine and his advocacy for in-state tuition for  illegal immigrants, while little has been said about his unrealized  1,200-foot-wide toll road project that would have swallowed more than 500,000  acres of Texas farmland and wildlife habitats. But as the focus of debates  increasingly turn toward President Barack Obama’s jobs agenda — a plan calling  for a heavy dose of infrastructure investment — that may change.

“Pay to play, cronyism — all those charges can be found right here in the  Trans-Texas Corridor,” said Terri Hall, founder and director of Texans United  for Reform and Freedom, a group that fought the project. “We had a Texas-sized  uprising.”

In 2002, Perry unveiled his $175 billion blueprint for Texas transportation,  calling for 4,000 miles of new toll roads, high-speed rail lines and pipelines “as big as Texas and as ambitious as our people.” Not unlike Obama, Perry  envisioned a government role in cultivating private-sector investment in  infrastructure.

But awarding new toll development to a Spanish company stoked nativist fears — and questions about a revolving door to the governor’s office. His massive  land grab through eminent domain, the practice of government seizing private  property for public use, incurred the wrath of farmers, environmentalists and  members of his own party.

Nearly 10 years later, Perry signed the death certificate for his brainchild,  scrubbing all references of the corridor project from state statutes during the  most recent Texas legislative session.

“I supported the ban of ever making a taxpayer-paid road a toll road. You  cannot do that in the state of Texas,” he said in an August interview with Des Moines-based WHO Radio,  stressing that tolling alternatives are raising taxes, asking Washington for  money or waiting for the “asphalt fairy.”

Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan said the failed initiative ultimately fostered  conversations about how to fund road projects without increased taxes or relying  on the Federal Highway Trust Fund.

“We would describe it as one starting a very important, robust public debate  and discussion of financing and developing transportation infrastructure,” he  said. “While the corridor concept is dead, the debate has resulted in more  transportation funding options and high-priority projects going forward with  some private financing and strong state and local cooperation.”

Tolling and public-private partnerships have helped the state’s  infrastructure keep up with the big influx of people moving to the state,  Sullivan said, adding that the debate had evolved in such a “positive way,” the  governor “could agree with the legislature that the corridor was no longer the  right approach for the state.”

It’s clear that Texas needs to do something about its crumbling and aging  transportation network. The state added 4 million people over the past decade,  and its population explosion isn’t expected to slow down. Nearly half of the  state’s major highways are congested, and one-third of its major roads are in  poor or mediocre condition, according to the American Society of Civil  Engineers.

At the same time, the state has borrowed heavily to fund its road projects  since 2003 and will owe $17.3 billion by the end of next year.

Perry’s Trans-Texas Corridor proposal — launched during his first  gubernatorial campaign — would have run from the Mexico border to Oklahoma. It  was the answer to the challenges of a growing state that was expecting increased  international traffic under the North American Free Trade Agreement. Perry  envisioned separate lanes for cars and trucks, as well as a rail system. The  project was also slated to carry water pipes and utility lines. It was the “largest engineering project ever proposed for Texas,” according to one  transportation department report, promising to reduce congestion, cut pollution,  improve safety and speed up trade routes.

Given the state’s budget difficulties, Perry’s financing schemes included  public and private money, including some toll roads.

Republicans took control of the state Legislature in 2003, pushing the  Trans-Texas Corridor project through both chambers as part of an omnibus  transportation bill. But evidently, few lawmakers knew what the bill  contained.

When the state Transportation Department began holding public meetings about  the project in early 2004, voters were fuming at the possibility that private  corporations — particularly foreign ones — might exercise eminent domain to  build massive amounts of infrastructure for profit.

“His plan was meant to be bold, get one’s imagination working, and it turned  out to look scary to people,” said Matt Dellinger, author of “Interstate 69,” which details the fight over the Trans-Texas Corridor.

County toll authorities in Dallas and Houston complained the state was  forcing them into contracts with private companies, while voters began calling  their legislators to repeal the law. David and Linda Stall, a Republican couple  from Fayetteville, Texas, formed a group called CorridorWatch.org, which held  meetings across the state about the details of the plan and whipped up  outrage.

Environmental groups objected to the wildlife being lost, and farmers turned  on the former state agriculture commissioner, calling it an abuse of eminent  domain.

“It would have claimed a lot of farm and ranch ground — some of  the best in farm and ranch country in the entire state,” said Jim Sartwelle,  director of public policy for the Texas Farm Bureau.

Perry’s decision to award development rights to a Spanish company, Cintra,  only tapped into anxieties about immigration, free trade and border security.  Conspiracy theorists dubbed it the “NAFTA Superhighway” and protested the  alleged plot to dissolve the nation’s borders.

And voters cried foul when it came out that one of Perry’s top aides, Dan  Shelley, worked for Cintra until three months before the company was selected  for the state road project. When Shelley left the governor’s office, he signed a  lucrative lobbying contract with Cintra.

But the Perry administration held its ground. Texas Transportation  Commissioner Ric Williamson, one of Perry’s closest advisers and friends,  frequently intoned, “There is no road fairy.”

“We either build toll roads, slow roads or no roads,” Perry said in 2007.

Ultimately, the uproar forced state officials to scale back the proposal. In  2007, the Legislature dealt a blow to the main tenant of the corridor by placing  a moratorium on public-private toll partnerships. In 2009, Perry’s  Transportation Department officially killed it off with a “no build” recommendation on the corridor’s first segment, which was being handled by  Cintra.

It was one of the most controversial issues of Perry’s gubernatorial career — yet he emerged from the fight relatively unscathed.

During his 2006 reelection, there wasn’t a strong Republican challenger to  bring up the Trans-Texas Corridor. Perry, who continued to support the corridor,  won the four-way general election with 39 percent of the vote.

During his 2010 gubernatorial fight, Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison  aired a biting attack ad accusing Perry of tolling roads for the benefit of  foreign companies. Hutchison lost, and while the Democratic nominee,  then-Houston Mayor Bill White, also ran an attack ad on the project, Perry won  easily.

By the recent midterm election, the issue was too old to cause much damage.  Yet tea party activists were still vocally hesitant at what they viewed as the  government’s big private-land grab.

Will it damage Perry’s national ambitions?

“Rick Perry talks a good game about getting government out of your life, but  if there’s any utility at all for him to put government in your life, you’ve got  government in your life,” said Leland Beatty, who worked for Perry’s agriculture  predecessor Jim Hightower.

Hall fumes that some public-private partnerships are still alive and well in  Texas — even if the corridor project is dead. “There are all these sweetheart  deals for all his corporate cronies,” she said.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/65031_Page2.html#ixzz1Zuxk3Llw

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Politics, Rick Perry

Rick Perry and his cronies

, San Antonio Transportation Policy Examiner

With the pay-to-play Solyndra scandal rocking the White House, presidential  hopeful Rick Perry is embroiled in a mountain of crony capitalism  controversy all his own. During the September 12 GOP presidential debate, Michelle Bachmann exposed the money trail behind Perry’s Executive Order  mandating all 6th grade girls in Texas receive the Gardasil HPV vaccine made by  the drug company, Merck, the employer of Perry’s former Chief of Staff, Mike  Toomey, at the time. Merck funneled money to Perry, initially $5,000, but  eventually adding up to the tidy sum of closer to $400,000, sparking outrage across Texas and now the  nation.

Toomey’s just the tip of the ice berg.

A recent bill pushed through the Texas Legislature benefited the company  Waste Control Specialists, owned by #2 donor to Gov. Rick Perry, Harold  Simmons.  Just days after the bill was signed into law, Mr. Simmons  wrote a $100,000 check to Americans for Rick Perry, the super PAC supporting  Gov. Perry’s candidacy for president notes Debra Medina of We Texans.

Janet Ahmad, President of Homeowners for Better Building, pointed to  similar problems in the construction industry.  Top Rick Perry donor, Bob Perry, paid nearly $8 million in campaign contributions and sought  and received his own regulatory agency called the Texas Residential Construction  Commission in 2003.  Gov. Perry appointed industry-connected people to that  agency, including Perry Homes VP, corporate counsel John Krugh. “The  resulting agency was so anti-consumer and so counter-productive that the Texas  Legislature later decided to abolish it,” Ahmad concludes.

Texas for Sale

Then there’s Perry’s penchant for selling off Texas infrastructure to the  highest bidder, particularly to the employer of his former staffer Dan  Shelley, a Spanish company, Cintra. Shelley worked as a ‘consultant’ for  Cintra (in 2004), became Perry’s liaison to the legislature during the time that  Cintra was awarded the development rights to the $7 billion dollar Trans Texas  Corridor (in 2005), then went back to work as a lobbyist for Cintra (in 2006).  He and has daughter reportedly earned between $50,000-$100,000 on lobbying for Cintra that year.

Two key bills that just passed the Texas Legislature and signed into law by  Perry further illustrate the crony capitalism and pattern of governance in the  Perry Administration, both of which will benefit Cintra, in particular.

SB 1420 makes 15 Texas roads eligible for public private partnerships (P3s)  that sell- off Texas sovereign land/public roads to private entities in 50 year  monopolies. P3s involve public money for private profits (including gas taxes  and other public subsidies), contain non-compete clauses that penalize or  prohibit the expansion of surrounding free routes, and put the power to tax in  the hands of private corporations that result in toll rates as high as 75 cents  per mile ($13/day or like adding $15 to every gallon of gas you buy).  It’s selling off Texas to the highest bidder, which is the MOST expensive,  anti-taxpayer method of funding infrastructure.

Four road projects under SB 1420 have already been awarded to Cintra. In  fact, every single P3 for roads in Texas has gone to Cintra: SH 130 (segments 5 & 6) and I-635 and the North Tarrant Express (comprised of multiple  projects, primarily on I-820) in Dallas/Ft.Worth. All have been heavily  subsidized with gas taxes and other public money (see pages 2 & 3), yet Cintra walks away with a sweetheart  deal and guaranteed profits. Despite Cintra’s shaky financial situation (its debt rating just got lowered  due to fears of the Cintra-controlled Indiana Toll Road going into default),  Perry’s highway department continues to press ahead with these extremely  controversial and unpopular privatization projects.

Perry’s connection to Cintra explains why he endorsed Rudy Giuliani in  the last presidential election. At the time, Giuliani’s law firm, Bracewell & Giuliani, was the legal firm representing Cintra in its bid to takeover SH 121 (which eventually unraveled) in the Dallas  area. Giuliani’s investment firm was purchased by an Australian firm, Macquarie,  another global player in P3s at the same time his law firm was advising Cintra  on the SH 121 deal. While many social conservatives were baffled by Perry’s  backing of Giuliani, it was no surprise to those following the Trans Texas Corridor and  Perry’s push to privatize Texas freeways.

Balfour Beatty enters the scene

Perry likes to brag ‘Texas is Open for Business’ and here’s what that means  to property rights and taxpayers. The second key public private partnership  bill, SB 1048, Perry signed into law will mean Katie-Bar-the-Door on selling off  virtually everything not nailed down. The bill was written by lobbyist Brett Findley on behalf of another infrastructure firm,  British company Balfour Beatty, and it will allow all public buildings,  nursing homes, hospitals, schools, ports, mass transit projects, ports,  telecommunications, etc. to be sold-off to corporations using P3s. Unlike the 50  year cap on road P3s, SB 1048 gives no limit on the length of time a P3s can  last or whether such broad authority expires.

Two particularly anti-taxpayer provisions in SB 1048 are the fact taxpayers  secure the private entity’s debt (2267.061 (f)) and that it authorizes public  subsidies for private profits by raiding taxpayers’ money through loans from the  State Infrastructure Bank.

Michelle Malkin called P3s corporate welfare. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are P3s and  required massive taxpayer bailouts. P3s socialize the losses and privatize the  profits. These contracts also eliminate competitive bidding and grant  government-sanctioned monopolies (with guaranteed profits) to the  well-connected.

Public interest not protected, kept secret

These contracts can be negotiated in SECRET, without financial disclosures  (like financing, the structure of the ‘user fees’ or lease payments, viability  studies, public subsidies, or whether or not it contains non-compete clauses or  other gotcha provisions). There is no meaningful public access to P3s before  they’re signed, and the few guidelines created simply exist to advise  governmental entities outside the public purview.

Eminent domain for private gain


P3s represent eminent domain for private gain — the source of much of the  backlash to the Trans Texas Corridor, where P3s were the financing mechanism  that granted these private entities the control of not just the facility, but  the right of way/surrounding property where private companies make a killing on  concessions. A plurality of Texans don’t like the idea of foreign ownership of  our public infrastructure and they dislike eminent domain for private gain even  more.

Of course, it started with the Trans Texas Corridor, known at the federal level as high  priority corridors, corridors of the future, or the NAFTA superhighways. Just in  Texas, it was to be a 4,000 mile multi-modal network of toll roads, rail lines,  power transmission lines, pipelines, telecommunications lines and more. It was  going to be financed, operated, and controlled by a foreign company, Cintra,  granted massive swaths of land 1,200 feet (4 football fields) wide taken  forcibly through eminent domain.

Called the biggest land grab in Texas history, it was going to gobble up  580,000 acres of private Texas land (the first corridor alone was to displace 1  million Texans) and hand it over to well-connected global players using PPPs,  who would gain exclusive rights to determine the route and what hotels,  restaurants, and gas stations were along the corridor in a government-sanctioned  monopoly for a half century. It was the worst case of eminent domain for private  gain ever conceived.

Property rights shredded
The Trans Texas Corridor, and P3s in general,  represent an imminent threat to private property rights. While lawmakers  repealed the Trans Texas Corridor from state statute only months ago due to the  public backlash, the corridor lives on through these P3s.

Continue reading on Examiner.com Perry & his cronies: The Shelley-Cintra-Giuliani connection – San Antonio Transportation Policy | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/transportation-policy-in-san-antonio/perry-his-cronies-the-shelley-cintra-giuliani-connection#ixzz1YgNIsDOA

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Michele Bachmann, Politics, Rick Perry, Texas