The 2012 campaign continues
And if you don't believe me, just check out this video from the Obama front group "Organizing for America":
You'll notice about 2/3 of the way through that Mitch Stewart solicits e-mail addresses - again, a clever way to build up and expand the database originally started way back in Howard Dean's abortive 2004 Presidential campaign and enhanced with Obama's 2008 run.
Then again there's nothing wrong with activism and involvement; it just needs to have a push from the correct direction. It's interesting that Stewart blames "special interests" for standing in Obama's way when it's the special interests who have the most to gain from Obama's agenda - that is if you consider Big Labor, supporters of a rewarmed HillaryCare, the teachers' unions, radical environmentalists, and corporations who have gained from the massive government involvement in their affairs and are now rent-seeking as special interests - most right-thinking Americans who inhabit the producer class do believe those groups are special interests.
President Obama submitted the largest budget in American history with the largest projected deficit in American history at a time when the government is actually being run via continuing resolutions because the current budget is still being ironed out. Something about that just doesn't make sense, particularly when it's his party running Congress.
Seven weeks into an Obama presidency it almost appears that he's already running the country in perpetual campaign mode much as President Clinton did during the first four years of his run. (The second term was more damage control mode thanks to the Monica Lewinsky scandal and accompanying impeachment drive. In Obama's case the scandals seem to be falling amongst his underlings, though.)
It goes without saying that little of Obama's agenda can be stopped in the House of Representatives and given the tendency of a small group of Senate RINO's to place what they consider political expediency above principle it's not likely that body will be much of a speedbump either.
But the one thing both House and Senate are afraid of is a large-scale backlash from constituents - witness the firestorm conservatives caused on immigration or the Harriet Miers Supreme Court nomination.
I'm considering this video an effort to short-circuit the prospect of a conservative grassroots rebellion by isolating those on the left who would be most likely to be active and sending out their competing propaganda to a list of activists all their own, one backed by much of the mainstream media. This is particularly true in our Congressional district, where a freshman Democrat who barely won election (and flip-flopped on the stimulus bill) will most likely face a strongly conservative challenger next year.
So I bring this video to your attention even though it's from a source that would normally not attract my notice as much. It proves a point that we on the right need to stay on our toes and not let the intraparty squabbles such as Limbaugh vs. Steele or Limbaugh vs. Newt distract us from the main goal of squelching the socialist Obamanation agenda.