Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Less is Moore?

Judge Roy Moore, the runaway frontrunner for the GOP nomination for the U.S. Senate in Alabama, told Breitbart News exclusively here that he fully supports the Second Amendment and wants to see the U.S. Senate vote immediately on national reciprocity. [More]
Creates quite the dilemma for Fairfax, doesn't it?

There is one glitch:


This was the response a friend of mine got from the campaign:
"E-Verify presents some problems. The burden for protecting our borders should fall to the federal government - not the small businesses that fuel the economy."- Judge Roy Moore
My friend's reply (before the Strange downgrade for this Congress):
Many of my ancestors and friends have sacrificed, suffered, fought, even died for this country.
We're losing the USA. Day by day, right in front of our eyes, invasion-occupation and anchor-baby fast-breeding is progressively overwhelming our voting control of our country. Yet Judge Moore thinks businesses shouldn't be "burdened" by checking with E-verify to ensure they're not hiring invaders.
That kind of business whining is a cover story for not wanting to have any impediment to betraying their country and fellow citizens by hiring invaders with impunity, even with 95 million of us out of work and tens of millions more on "welfare".
Judge Roy Moore's position panders to the "cheap labor" traitors of the "US" Chamber of Commerce and their ilk, who sell out their fellow citizens and therefore don't even deserve to be citizens, let alone demand to be able to hire invaders.
I don't understand why NumbersUSA hasn't given Judge Moore an F on his stated E-verify position instead of leaving the issue ungraded. In any case, I'm retracting my support, especially given that Mo Brooks and Luther Strange both have the top grade. I hope Judge Moore wakes up on this issue and puts it in proper perspective.
If all the holes aren't plugged, support for the Second Amendment now won't matter in a few decades, at least politically.

[Via Mack H]

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

His position on e-verify makes sense if he is approaching it from a deregulation standpoint. It IS the fedgov's job to secure the border, and to make it easier for business to thrive. Also, while I agree that we need to know what we are hiring, it won't make much difference as long as the border remains porous.