UPDATE: Huntsman out, endorses Romney

By Dean Schabner
Jan 15, 2012 9:35pm

Huntsman to Drop Out of GOP Race

Jon Huntsman will drop out of the Republican presidential race  on Monday, a campaign spokesman told ABC News.

Huntsman spokesman Tim Miller said the former ambassador to China was “proud of the race that he ran” but “did not want to stand in the way” of rival Mitt Romney, the current front-runner for the nomination.

Huntsman plans to endorse Romney at an 11 a.m. press conference Monday in Myrtle Beach.

http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/01/huntsman-to-drop-out-of-gop-race/

Ron Paul’s big endorsement

That sucks, I thought it would be a National endorsement.  I live in South Carolina and I’ve never heard of this guy but apparently he is the top Tea Party Senator here.  I gotta get out more.

Senator Tom Davis endorses Ron Paul

Posted: Jan 15, 2012 6:16 PM EST Updated: Jan 15, 2012 6:36 PM EST

MYRTLE BEACH, SC (WMBF) SC Senator Tom Davis has announced his endorsement of Ron Paul, a candidate he feels can beat Barack Obama while staying true to Republican Party principles.

During a press conference in Myrtle Beach Sunday night, Davis announced his endorsement of candidate Ron Paul, saying Dr. Paul has fought a lonely battle in Washington against croney capitalism.

Davis commented that his endorsement is about the ideals that Ron Paul stands for.

Taking to the podium after receiving his endorsement, Paul told the crowd that showed up at the Pallisades Ballroom in Myrtle Beach Sunday that, “We will do well next Saturday.”

Paul added that current administration is bad, but bad ideas have been happening for the past thirty years.

Paul said he’d like to cut the budget $1,000,000,000 in his first year in office, and bring the troops home. He added we shouldn’t go to war unless Congress declares it, and the United States should stop being world police.

WMBF News Reporter Will Whitson is at the press conference and will bring more details as they become available.

http://www.wmbfnews.com/story/16525115/senator-tom-davis-endorses-ron-paul

Requirement to show photo ID is racist

Clyburn is a racist idiot.

According to the new law, South Carolina has available free photo ID’s, if you can get off your butt to get a voter registration card, why not a free photo ID?  Many of these people who do not currently have a Drivers License have lost it due to criminal activity, i.e. DUI and don’t choose to get a photo ID card.  

I’m in South Carolina and I have always had to show a photo ID.  Can I scream discrimination if I’m required to show an ID when others aren’t? 

In flap over S. Carolina law, old tensions and a campaign issue

By Andy Sullivan | Reuters

COLUMBIA, South Carolina (Reuters) – The state that fired the first shot in the Civil War is once again battling the U.S. government in a racially charged conflict that is drawing heated rhetoric from Republican presidential candidates.

South Carolina is in a standoff with Democratic President Barack Obama’s administration over a new state law that would require residents to produce a photo ID before they could vote. Federal officials say it could disproportionately keep black voters away from the polls.

For South Carolina’s Republican leaders – and Republican presidential candidates seeking support in the state’s primary on January 21 – the Justice Department’s move is the latest in a series of intrusions into state business by Washington.

Republican candidates are waving the banner of states’ rights as they tout their small-government credentials.

“Each of our states are under assault right now by this administration,” Texas Governor Rick Perry said Saturday at a candidates’ forum in Charleston. “We may be under assault – South Carolina, they’re actually at war with you.”

Such declarations might make for smart politics in a state that has a suspicion of Washington woven into its DNA, but they risk stirring up the race-baiting that has been an ugly feature of South Carolina politics in the past.

The rallying cry of states’ rights was used to defend slavery before the Civil War and racial segregation during the post-World War Two battles over civil rights.

Recently, South Carolina Republicans have argued that the federal government is interfering in their plans for education, healthcare, labor law, immigration policy and voting.

In South Carolina, Perry hasn’t been the only Republican presidential candidate to inject controversial imagery into discussions of states’ rights and bloated federal programs.

Former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich has called Obama a “food stamp president” and suggested that low-income children should clean their schools to learn the value of work and replace unionized janitors.

And former Senator Rick Santorum said last week the coming election would be the most important since 1860, the year before the Civil War began. He has since changed the date to 1980, when conservative icon Ronald Reagan was elected president.

Candidates from a party looking to increase its share of minority voters and who are vying to take on Obama, the United States’ first African-American president, should tread more carefully on racial issues, analysts and others say.

U.S. Representative Jim Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat and the highest-ranking African American in Congress, says some candidates have been using coded phrases to play up racial tension.

“What we hear more and more today is people picking up what I call 21st-century words and phrases to transmit the same thoughts that went into the political procedure years ago,” Clyburn told Reuters.

“That’s the stuff of which dangerous activity is built.”

‘THIS ISN’T THE ’60s ANYMORE’

Bashing the federal government is good politics in South Carolina, but any attempt to play on racial tension is likely to backfire, said Clemson University professor J. David Woodard.

“This isn’t the ’60s anymore; things have changed dramatically,” said Woodard, who also is a Republican consultant. “That would blow up in your face right away if you did that.”

With reporters from around the world crisscrossing South Carolina this week, injecting race into political discussions risks dredging up stereotypes of an Old South that faded away before most of residents here were born, Woodard and others here say.

Increasing urbanization and the arrival of international businesses such as BMW and Michelin have ushered in a new era of tolerance, many residents say.

Republicans proudly point to their Indian-American governor, Nikki Haley, and an African-American congressman, Tim Scott, as evidence that prejudice is largely a thing of the past.

Even so, South Carolina’s electorate remains sharply split along racial lines. In the 2008 presidential election, 73 percent of whites here voted for Republican John McCain, while 96 percent of blacks voted for Obama.

And the old attitudes haven’t disappeared entirely.

“I hate to say it, but ever since the schools integrated (in the 1960s), it went downhill,” unemployed paralegal Vicki Cotterman said at a campaign stop for Perry in Walterboro on Thursday. “The white boys try to be like some of the black thugs – they go around with their pants down to their knees. It’s disrespectful.”

Insurance agent Patti McBride said she believed Obama, a practicing Christian, actually is a Muslim because he has an unusual first name.

“Our country was founded on Christianity, and now we have a Muslim with a Muslim name as the president, for God’s sakes,” McBride said.

IN CONSTANT CONFLICT

South Carolina has been in almost constant conflict with Washington since Obama took office.

The state has joined several others in a legal challenge to Obama’s healthcare law. South Carolina officials have rejected $144 million in federal money for public schools on the grounds that it represents an intrusion into state affairs.

State officials also vigorously fought the National Labor Relations Board, which challenged Boeing Co.’s decision to shift 1,000 jobs into South Carolina from Washington state, where laws are more friendly to labor unions.

“I had no idea that the hardest part about being the governor of South Carolina would be the federal government,” Haley said Wednesday at a rally for Mitt Romney, the front-runner in the race for the Republican presidential nomination.

Before it stepped into the voter ID case, the U.S. Justice Department sued to block a new South Carolina law that would require law officers to check suspects’ immigration status.

The voter ID conflict stems from a new state law that would require voters to show photo identification at the polls. Federal officials and South Carolina Democrats who oppose the law say it could disenfranchise up to one-third of black and other minority voters.

On Monday, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder is expected to address the conflict at a rally in Columbia marking Martin Luther King Day, the national holiday recognizing the civil rights leader who was assassinated in 1968.

Holder, like Obama, is black. The visit is widely viewed as a way for Obama’s administration to steal some of the spotlight from the Republican primary and remind voters of the policy differences between Democrats and Republicans.

South Carolina is one of six Republican-led states that tightened their laws last year to require a photo ID, a measure conservatives say will deter fraud.

Two other Republican-led states have similar laws in place, while 23 other states require voters to produce some form of identification.

South Carolina, like other largely southern states with a history of racial discrimination, must get pre-approval from the U.S. government before implementing new voting laws.

About 200,000 registered voters in South Carolina do not have a driver’s license or other state-issued ID, according to the state election commission.

Various nationwide studies have indicated that African Americans, Latinos, the elderly, people with disabilities and students are less likely to have a photo ID than other voting groups, in part because of the expense involved in obtaining one.

The Justice Department blocked the law on December 23 on the grounds that it would disproportionately affect minority voters. Republican presidential candidates call it another example of Obama’s overly intrusive government.

“If the only people who vote in elections are law-abiding, hardworking citizens who are deeply committed to America, the left wing of the Democratic Party will cease to exist,” Gingrich said on Friday at a campaign stop in Duncan, South Carolina.

Clyburn, a veteran of the desegregation battles of the 1960s, sees it as an attempt to return to an earlier era when blacks were kept from the polls.

“All of that’s designed to tamp down voter involvement,” Clyburn said. “They can cloak it any way they want to cloak it.”

http://news.yahoo.com/flap-over-carolina-law-old-tensions-campaign-issue-142226960.html

Ron Paul Wins Texas Presidential Straw Poll

Ron Paul Wins Texas Presidential Straw Poll

12-term Congressman from the Lone Star State bests rivals in Tea Party-organized survey

LAKE JACKSON, Texas – 2012 Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul defeated his rivals for the GOP nomination in a straw poll conducted by tea party groups in his home state.

The ‘Saddle Up Texas Straw Poll’ featured in-person paper-ballot voting in Houston as well as a text-in vote.

Paul took first place with 27.9 percent of the 707 in-person paper votes tallied, besting his GOP competitors – including incumbent Texas Governor Rick Perry, who placed fourth earning just 19.4 percent.  Newt Gingrich with 23.8 percent, Rick Santorum with 21.2 percent, Mitt Romney with 6.6 percent, and Jon Huntsman with 1.1 percent came in second, third, fifth, and sixth place, respectively.

Paul easily won the majority of the more than 3,300 text-in votes with more than 54 percent of votes cast.

“This straw poll was a tea party event.  Its result is further evidence of the tea party and conservatives nationwide coalescing behind one candidate, Ron Paul, as the one true challenger and conservative alternative to Mitt Romney,” said Ron Paul 2012 National Campaign Chairman Jesse Benton.  “Ron Paul is the only candidate who can defeat Obama by energizing Republicans, tea partiers, independents, and disaffected Democrats.”

Complete results for both voting methods follows.

In-person voting results

Ron Paul 27.9%
Newt Gingrich 23.8%
Rick Santorum 21.2%
Rick Perry 19.4%
Mitt Romney 6.6%
Jon Huntsman 1.1%

Text-in voting results

Ron Paul 54.4%
Rick Santorum 15.6%
Rick Perry 13.3%
Newt Gingrich 11.9%
Mitt Romney 4.2%
Jon Huntsman 0.5%

For a news story on the straw poll results, please click here.

 

Ron Paul to Receive Game-Changing Endorsement at Event in South Carolina

Sarah Palin????  Jim DeMint????

January 15, 2012

Ron Paul to Receive Game-Changing Endorsement at Event in South Carolina

Gets consequential support in run-up to the Palmetto State’s January 21st presidential primary

COLUMBIA, SC – 2012 Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul will receive a consequential endorsement related to the South Carolina primary at a special event in Myrtle Beach.

The event will take place on Sunday, January 15th at 6:00 p.m. at the Palisades Conference Center.

Event details are as follows.  Time is Eastern.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

6:00 p.m.
Palisades Conference Center*
10000 Beach Club Drive
Myrtle Beach, SC 29572-5304

[*Next to Hilton Myrtle Beach Conference Center and Resort]

Doors open to the public at 5:20 p.m.  Media set up any time after 4:00 p.m.

Free parking is located in the garage across the street.

http://www.ronpaul2012.com/

Twinkies a thing of the past? Not necessarily!

Make your own Twinkies

Do you love the taste of the classic Twinkie but don’t want a sugar-high that leaves you as jittery as an addict going through rehab?  I have been experimenting with alternative Twinkie recipes long before Hostess filed for Chapter 11.  While it’s notTwi clear if the Twinkie will go by the wayside of the Dodo bird, it’s time for a Twinkie re-do for the 21st Century.  But it’s not easy capturing the time-honored taste of the classic vanilla sponge cake snack.  There’s nothing like that first taste of sweetness that sends shock waves through your teeth and harkens the days of your childhood.  In this recipe, the voltage of super sweetness is cutdown, while retaining the treat’s guilty-pleasure payoff.  The secret to combating that chalky vanilla sponge filled with preservatives: add some instant coffee and almond extract to the cake, mixed with some toasted chopped nuts or a liquor.

Ingredients

Cake

  • 3 eggs
  • 2 1/2 Cup sugar
  • 1 1/2 Cup milk
  • 1 1/2 Cup vegetable oil
  • 1/2 Teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 Teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 Teaspoon salt
  • 2 1/2 Cup flour
  • 1/2 Teaspoon instant coffee
  • 1 Teaspoon almond extract

Cream

  • 2 Cup cold heavy cream
  • 1/2 Cup powdered sugar
  • 1 vanilla bean or 1 teaspoon extract

Preparation

Cake Step 1:

Wisk the eggs, sugar, milk, oil and vanilla together. In a separate bowl combine all the dry ingredients. A little at a time add the dry to the wet until smooth.

Cake Step 2:

Bake in the mold of your choice at 350 degrees until golden brown and is done in the middle when tested.

Cake Step 3:

When the cakes come out of the oven sprinkle a little sugar on the raw or sugar on top and for a little crunch.

Cake Variations

For fun variations to take this Twinkie to the next level try adding lemon or orange zest to the cake batter before baking or almond extract and some chopped nuts.

Cream Step 1:

Combine in a bowl and wisk until stiff.

Cream Step 2:

Inject into the cake using a baster.