thereeee bacccck and look who adorns the picture.
Going into immigration reform, supporters knew that the biggest obstacle to passage would be on the right and planned their entire strategy around minimizing the inevitable backlash. Now as conservative voices grow louder in opposition to the newly released Senate bill, their plan is being put to the test.On Wednesday, Tea Party Patriots’ co-founder Jenny Beth Martin penned an op-ed on Breitbart.comdecrying the immigration bill as “Obamacare Redux.” Her objections were primarily process based — the bill was too long and shouldn’t have been negotiated by a small group of senators.“This is not about amnesty,” she wrote. “It is not about illegals. It is about how government has gone off the rails. Just like Obamacare that was negotiated behind closed doors, any legislation cooked up in a secretive gang-like attitude among D.C. politicians is not the kind of system the forefathers had in mind.”
everything she just accused this admin of is what they hav done and are doind and will continue to do while blaming it on the Pres.
the T-Per's ar still far beyond reality and ifyou let them this time you won't see a country taken back you will see the smoldering remains of what was until 2010.
Grassroots conservative, who were important players in the 2010 Republican takeover of the House, have kept relatively quiet about the bill so far. Martin even praised Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) last month for his speech supporting far-reaching immigration reform, saying they were “aligned” on the issue.But that was before the actual 844-page bill dropped, providing an easy target for new attacks on the right. And Paul, for his part, has sounded amuch more hesitant note on immigration reform since the Boston Marathon bombing.In addition to Martin’s post, the National Review’s cover this week features the headline “Rubio’s Folly” along with an op-ed by Mark Krikorian of the restrictionist Center for Immigration Studies. Jim DeMint, a former Rubio ally, recently took over as president of the Heritage Foundation and has made clear the group will work to rebut reports that immigration reform will reduce the deficit and spur economic growth.
no change just more party of stupid and instructional stupidity ah hell the dumbasses are at it again