|
join now! |
home page |
applications |
see group details |
LOGIN |
iGrOOps Support |
| You are not logged in. Access is limited. Login or see membership information. • Conservatives Challenge National Review: 'Come Clean on Romney!' | |
|
UndergroundJournal.net (An Open Letter to Limbaugh)
_____________ Sharpen your mind - and support the Underground! Gregg Jackson's authoritative guide for conservatives!
|
22 Conservative leaders challenge
"A magazine that conservatives grew up with has legitimized a charlatan who trashed a constitution. As a (conservative and) an opponent of judicial tyranny, Romney is a fraud." (July 12, 2007) Twenty-two conservative activist leaders have publicly released a letter challenging the conservative magazine National Review's "puff work" for presidential candidate Mitt Romney and implying that the magazine is quietly abandoning the social conservative grassroots and constitutionalism. The letter was sent to National Review on June 1, 1007. The editors refuse even to acknowledge receipt of the letter, which cites information about which they've misled their readers, most strikingly:
John Haskins of the Parents' Rights Coalition notes NR's glaring refusal to face the implications of a devastating article (May, 2004, National Review) by a leading legal scholar, illuminating why fawning, pro-establishment attorneys such as Jay Sekulow, radio lawyer Hugh Hewitt, and (an NR pro-Romney blogger) David French have facilitated Romney's unconstitutional actions:
Haskins also noted revered conservative attorney Phyllis Schlafly's assessment:
"A magazine that conservatives grew up with has legitimized a charlatan who trashed a constitution. As an opponent of judicial tyranny, Romney is a fraud," Haskins said. "Notwithstanding the post-constitutional nihilism of French, no legal training is needed to read English. Constitutions are not for lawyers to lock away from prying eyes, but for laymen as defense against the Frenches, Hewitts and Romneys of the world." NR also very conspicuously failed to report to their readers a detailed, provocative letter forty-four conservative leaders sent Romney disproving his claim that he "enforced the law" by imposing homosexual "marriage" when the Legislature refused to legalize it. Law professors and constitutional attorneys have affirmed the conclusions of the letter, which urged Romney to reverse his illegal orders. Signers included Paul Weyrich, an architect of the Reagan revolution; Robert Knight, a draftsman of the Defense of Marriage Act; Sandy Rios of the Culture Campaign (former president of Concerned Women for America); Phil Lawler, editor of Catholic World News; Phil Likoudis, editor of The Wanderer; and attorney Gary Kreep (United States Justice Foundation). In contrast to National Review's revealing silence about both letters that revealed Romney's violations of the state constitution while imposing homosexual "marriage," Kathryn Jean Lopez, their dedicated Romney cheerleader, trumpeted as newsworthy a pro-Romney letter from eight "conservatives" of widely varying reputations and conflicts of interest, including some who privately admit Romney failed to defend the constitution. William Cotter of pro-life group Operation Rescue Boston noted that many pro-life leaders are deeply troubled by the spinning of Romney as "pro-life." "Romney's pose is merely a states' rights-pro-abortion position opposing a federal amendment protecting babies in the womb," said R. T. Neary, Director of Pro-Life Massachusetts and a former president of Massachusetts Citizens for Life. "Even Romney's sudden states' rights conversion is bogus," said "Robert Paine" (pen name of a prominent attorney and foremost expert on Romney's illegal use of the Goodridge decision). "He still hands a dictatorship to the federal judiciary and opinions like Roe and Goodridge levitate magically above constitutions. Why does NR legitimize this states' rights trick on abortion while Romney claims to back a federal amendment on marriage? If marriage is a federal issue, why not human life? The answer is: Romney's scam collapses under the Massachusetts Constitution," Paine said. "Having illegally imposed sodomy-based "marriage," he's more desperate to portray himself as defending marriage against judges than as pro-life." The provocative letter from 44 conservative leaders to Romney disproved his claim that he "enforced the law" by imposing homosexual "marriage" after the Legislature refused to legalize it. The letter was reported nationally by WorldNetDaily and others. Read the LETTER from 22 Conservative Lawyers and Leaders to National Review WorldNetDaily article on the Letter and National Review's response (7/12/07) |