Mar 14, 2019

Leading Democrat Presidental Candidate Questions Relevance Of US Constitution

But If Elected He Must Swear To Defend And Uphold It 

So, having lost the US Senate race to Ted Cruz, Beto O'Rourk, after claiming it as his "destiny", tells Vanity Fair Magazine, concerning his run for the Presidency, that "I was born to do this"... And casts his frisbee into the Democrat ring with those other ungoverned, adult, juvenile delinquents. Pelosi and Senator Schumer had better keep that bunch of immature, Spring-breakers separated lest they turn on each other and leave the capital grounds looking like Woodstock after the orgy.

Several sources say Beto is the most likely compromise, Democrat candidate since his views are not quite as appallingly ridiculous as
all the others, and, being from Texas, might carry the state against New Yorker, Trump.  So what does Beto believe?  Other than spiritual matters, I think the most important difference in Beto and Trump is their views on our U.S. Constitution. Trump swore to "uphold and defend" it and is doing the best job in years of doing so. Beto, will also swear the same oath and then violate it as did Obama. To me that is the biggest lie ever told by an American.

Obama called it a "flawed document", swore to defend it, but violated it repeatedly without consequences. Will Beto also lie ...
with his hand on the Bible, his fingers crossed, and his heart failing the Constitutional polygraph?

Here is a very young man who is campaigning for the most powerful position in the world and will be more loyal to the world than to our country.  He earned his proper Nom De Guerre as per my comment of "Adult Juvenile Delinquent" when he was running against Cruz. On at least one stop he made his "very presidential" stage entrance on a skate board. But that, of course, is nothing compared to his lack of leadership experience, inability to answer vital questions on world and national problems, past history of zero major accomplishments, and saying he would "tear down all border walls". Unlike the Berlin wall, our walls are not to keep people in but to keep drugs, criminals, disease and human trafficing out. Beto's drunk driving and fleeing the scene of an accident doesn't count as an accomplishment. It would be funny if not so tragic how Democrats seem always to promote the least qualified candidates to the land's highest offices. Establishment Republicans, on the other hand, try to disqualify their most competent candidates in favor of another inbred member of the Republican Establishment family clique. That is what may cost them the next election so vote out the RINOs also. They are only about 6 degrees off of North better than Socialist Democrats. RB

Beto O'Rourk Offers Few Answers 
In Wide Ranging Policy Interview

Former Texas Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke faced across-the-board criticism on Tuesday after an unflattering interview in The Washington Post portrayed him as equivocal and unsure on a variety of substantive policy issues -- and included a comment that seemed to question the modern-day relevance of the U.S. Constitution.
O'Rourke, 46, is widely considered a possible 2020 presidential contender, after falling only a few percentage points shy of dethroning incumbent Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz in the 2018 midterm elections. But his relative lack of experience and expertise has emerged as a central objection to his prospective candidacy.
Speaking in El Paso, Texas, O'Rourke added fuel to those concerns by repeatedly demurring when asked for a direct answer on his positions on everything from visa overstays to whether President Trump should withdraw military forces from Syria.
And at one point in the two-hour chat with The Post's Jenna Johnson, O'Rourke openly wondered whether the U.S. can "still be managed by the same principles that were set down 230-plus years ago" in the Constitution.   (Tell me exactly which part of this nation building, inspired instrument of law and liberty is immoral, inappropriate or inadequate. RB)
The comment drew harsh rebukes on Twitter.
"This may make it difficult to take any future oath of office to 'preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,'" Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., wrote.

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