Saturday, May 12, 2018

GOOD FOR THE CALIFORNIA GOP

    The Republican Party of California held it's annual convention last weekend. One of the top races is choosing a candidate to challenge incumbent Democrat Diane Feinstein for US Senate this year. But the Republican candidate leading the polls was not in attendance. Why? Because the Party leadership barred him from participating. 

     Patrick Little is not a Conservative. He is a Right-Wing extremist running as a Republican as cover for his far-out views. 

     Little is 33 years old, another Red Pill radicalized during military service for Obama's Pentagon. He works as an IT engineer: a profession filled with the Far-Right (Andrew Anglin used to boast that 1/3 of his donations were from Silicon Valley). Little's campaign slogan is "Liberate the US from the Jewish Oligarchy." Little favors a quota system against hiring Jews and is a Holocaust denier. 

     The polls show Little's support at 18% which is troubling enough, but especially so since it puts him ahead with a plurality in a crowded field of candidates. Then, the California GOP took a step---rare for politicians---of acting on principle and disavowing support for Little.

      "Mr. Little has never been an active member of our party." GOP spokesman Matt Fleming told The Los Angeles Times, "But in the strongest terms possible, we condemn anti-Semitism and any other form of religious bigotry."

      Little responded by calling the State GOP a bunch of 'Zionist stooges'. Red Pill and Alt-RINO blogs predictably exploded with outrage. And just as predictably, the Media outside of Southern California swept the story under the rug.

      But this action was significant. Conservatism is a policy of principle, and the California Republicans acted on principle. The William F. Buckley approach is the correct one: if we can't win without candidates as bad as the Left, then we don't deserve to win at all. A Feinstein victory can't hurt our cause as badly as a Little victory can. 

       However, there is no reason to concede to Feinstein. California has a number of exceptional candidates for Senate. It's a matter of unifying behind one of these and defeating Little in the primary. Then it's on to defeating Feinstein who currently has only a 39% poll rating. That's about Hillary Clinton's numbers in the 2016 presidential race. 

      Let's put California back in play for our side. If you're active in GOP politics, get behind a candidate who can knock out Little first and Feinstein second. It's doable and the California GOP deserves our support.


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