Jon worked his Ossoff, and still lost!
Oh so close! Surely he had a chance in the general election. The
Democratic Party really could win! For some reason, though, despite Democratic
donations galore into the Peach State, Republicans are peachy-keen to keep
their stronghold on the state government. If the LGBT fascists and other
Democratic dominant forces continue pushing their unsupported agenda unabated,
Atlanta could start tilting pink along with the suburbs (or they could sit back
and let the city go bust.)
1. The Democratic Party is still not able to understand why they are
losing, and losing badly. After eight years of “America for Second Place”
success apology-ism, the American people are bouncing back. They want to Make
America Great Again. The Democratic Party has gone full globalist and full
commie. How can they expect to be a viable political party when they no longer
respect national integrity or state sovereignty?
2. The Democratic Party brand is bad, not just the candidates, and not
just their record over the past eight years. The party wanted to shove public
option/single-payer healthcare onto the entire country, forgetting that these
things called “states” have enough muscle and power on their own to resist
Washington.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker and rising star Congresswoman Mia Love
were right: the political dynamic is easing away from Republican vs. Democrat
(since the Democratic Party is fading away fast), and turning into tensions
between corrupt, inefficient Washington DC and the states, where the action,
reforms, and successes are taking place. The Democratic Party is
anti-constitutional, dedicated to the progressive fantasy of centralizing power
into one place. The country’s very nature, essential make-up is antithetical to
their goals.
3. The Democratic Party and all liberal-allied PACS spent $50
million—this point is a big win for California Trump supporters and Golden
State conservatives in general. This special election was the Democratic
Party’s Gettysburg. They had to win this race, because the media frenzy and
political spin was all pent up and spent on turning this purplish district
(well, actually still kind of red) into a much-needed triumph.
$50 million, and every bit of it came from the blue enclaves (not
Georgia): Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts,
where they have a Republican Governor—even if he’s a RINO—and MassGOP is now
targeting moderate Democrats to turn them into Republicans.
Yet all the left-wing kings and queens, their horses, and their minions
could not put Democratic hopes together again.
Why is The Democratic loss, and the GOP’s win, big for California
Republicans? Our in-house liberal money machine wasted millions and got nothing
for it. That’s money that won’t be attacking Dana Rohrabacher, Steve Knight, or
Darrell Issa. It also signals that in California, Republicans could target a
few seats for some possible 2018 victories, too.
4. The media fails are getting bigger, faster, and stronger. The whole
enclave of obsessed, raving corporate talking heads and their attending cable
network peers were working overtime to flip this Georgia district blue. I
imagine that they brought in the Big Labor and Big Business phalanxes in large
numbers, too. All to no avail. But the liberal media was not only one of the
big losers. The conservative, independent, and alternative media were huge
winners this time.
5. The Trump effect which supposedly endangered incumbents did not have
the long-term lingering negative impacts that the Democratic Party hack-tavists
were hoping for.
This is good news for Republicans going into 2018, and especially for
us Californians. “President Trump” is not a bad word, or the name which cannot
be named in state and local politics anymore. Karen Handel ran a relatively
Trump-free campaign, but signed off on the Obamacare Repeal pledge. Name ID and
connections are not going to matter as much, as long as Republicans focus on
the Trump issues, even if they still avoid Trump the person.
The Karen Handel victory is another shot of optimism for the Republican
Party, not just reviving hopes but ensuring victories for the months to come.
In 1984, Ronald Reagan accomplished a nearly unanimous national victory against
Walter Mondale. Could Trump achieve the same and bring up the Republican Party
ranks in Congress in 2018 and 2020?
The Georgia victory suggests that such outcomes are a growing
possibility, especially as the bi-coastal Democratic Party faces more
infighting, greater discouragement, and an all-out decision to resign itself to
permanent minority status or dissolution in the near future.
Now that’s a future I can Handel!

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