Author Topic: Who is this clown Castro?  (Read 1297 times)

Soul Crusher

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Who is this clown Castro?
« on: September 04, 2012, 07:18:09 PM »
What a joke.   

This fool says Romney does not know about business. LOL!!!!

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #1 on: September 04, 2012, 07:25:28 PM »
This idiot looks like the Mexi John Edwards. 

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #2 on: September 04, 2012, 07:28:26 PM »
mother was one of the founders of La Raza.   just nice. 

Roger Bacon

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #3 on: September 04, 2012, 07:40:01 PM »
I've only been watching this for about 20 minutes, but it seems like Price is Right or something.

"We'll give you this, and we'll give you that, and we'll do this for you, and we'll do that for you!!!"

 :-X

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #4 on: September 04, 2012, 07:43:25 PM »
I've only been watching this for about 20 minutes, but it seems like Price is Right or something.

"We'll give you this, and we'll give you that, and we'll do this for you, and we'll do that for you!!!"

 :-X

I see an affair and love child in his future.

Roger Bacon

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #5 on: September 04, 2012, 07:44:08 PM »
Me talking to a known Democrat earlier today...

Me: *sarcastically* "I can't wait till they (politicians) bankrupt us!"

Democrat: *completely serious* "Good, I hope they do.  I'm already bankrupt."

I shit you not!

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #6 on: September 04, 2012, 07:50:56 PM »
Me talking to a known Democrat earlier today...

Me: *sarcastically* "I can't wait till they (politicians) bankrupt us!"

Democrat: *completely serious* "Good, I hope they do.  I'm already bankrupt."

I shit you not!

Not surprising at all.

Roger Bacon

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #7 on: September 04, 2012, 07:55:01 PM »
Not surprising at all.

I'm pissed off about the RNC being a bunch of big government, anti-freedom, corrupt cheaters and all, but I think I'm still going to have to vote for Romney...  :-[

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #8 on: September 04, 2012, 07:57:22 PM »
I'm pissed off about the RNC being a bunch of big government, anti-freedom, corrupt cheaters and all, but I think I'm still going to have to vote for Romney...  :-[

If for nothing else - the melt downs will be great to watch when he loses. 

Roger Bacon

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #9 on: September 04, 2012, 08:03:18 PM »
If for nothing else - the melt downs will be great to watch when he loses.  

That's hilarious, because I've thought of that!!!  ;D

Back when George W. was destroying this country, I didn't think their was anything worse than the people that were defending him.  I was wrong, the Obama supporters are worse.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #10 on: September 04, 2012, 08:20:33 PM »
That's hilarious, because I've thought of that!!!  ;D

Back when George W. was destroying this country, I didn't think their was anything worse than the people that were defending him.  I was wrong, the Obama supporters are worse.

GWB lost me in early 2005 and I never defended him after his first action getting reelected was amnesty.  That was it for me. 

Obama cultists will never leave the loyal servitude to the messiah.

dario73

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #11 on: September 05, 2012, 06:08:49 AM »
Special education did wonders for him.

Vince G, CSN MFT

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #12 on: September 05, 2012, 08:16:18 AM »
What a joke.   

This fool says Romney does not know about business. LOL!!!!


Someone who doesn't talk to an empty chair...
A

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #13 on: September 05, 2012, 08:17:38 AM »

Someone who doesn't talk to an empty chair...

This Castro clown was a joke.   Obvious attempt at dealing w Rubio, which fell flat. 


Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #14 on: September 05, 2012, 08:43:21 AM »
by Charles C. Johnson

4 Sep 2012

 


Mayor Julian Castro of San Antonio, who will be giving the keynote address tonight, is, according to some, the next Obama. But while Obama’s radicalism may have escaped the notice of the DNC in 2004, Castro’s views are bit more transparent.
 
Indeed, he, along with his twin, Joaquin, currently running for Congress, learned their politics on their mother’s knee and in the streets of San Antonio. Their mother, Rosie helped found a radical, anti-white, socialist Chicano party called La Raza Unida (literally “The Race United”) that sought to create a separate country—Aztlan—in the Southwest.
 
Today she helps manage her sons’ political careers, after a storied career of her own as a community activist and a stint as San Antonio Housing Authority ombudsman.
 
Far from denouncing his mother’s controversial politics, Castro sees them as his inspiration. As a student at Stanford Castro penned an essay for Writing for Change: A Community Reader (1994) in which he praised his mother’s accomplishments and cited them as an inspiration for his own future political involvement.
 
“[My mother] sees political activism as an opportunity to change people’s lives for the better. Perhaps that is because of her outspoken nature or because Chicanos in the early 1970s (and, of course, for many years before) had no other option. To make themselves heard Chicanos needed the opportunity that the political system provided. In any event, my mother’s fervor for activism affected the first years of my life, as it touches it today.
 
Castro wrote fondly of those early days and basked in the slogans of the day. “‘Viva La Raza!’ ‘Black and Brown United!’ ‘Accept me for who I am—Chicano.’ These and many other powerful slogans rang in my ears like war cries.” These war cries, Castro believes, advanced the interests of their political community. He sees her rabble-rousing as the cause for Latino successes, not the individual successes of those hard-working men and women who persevered despite some wrinkles in the American meritocracy.
 
[My mother] insisted that things were changing because of political activism, participation in the system. Maria del Rosario Castro has never held a political office. Her name is seldom mentioned in a San Antonio newspaper. However, today, years later, I read the newspapers, and I see that more Valdezes are sitting on school boards, that a greater number of Garcias are now doctors, lawyers, engineers, and, of course, teachers. And I look around me and see a few other brown faces in the crowd at [Stanford]. I also see in me a product of my mother’s diligence and her friends’ hard work. Twenty years ago I would not have been here…. My opportunities are not the gift of the majority; they are the result of a lifetime of struggle and commitment by adetermined minority. My mother is one of these persons. And each year I realize more and more how much easier my life has been made by the toil of past generations. I wonder what form my service will take, since I am expected by those who know my mother to continue the family tradition. [Emphasis Castro’s]
 
****
 
Rosie named her first son, Julian, for his father whom she never married, and her second, who arrived a minute later, for the character in the 1967 Chicano anti-gringo movement poem, “I Am Joaquin.” She is particularly proud that they were born on Mexico’s Independence Day. And she was a fan of the Aztlan aspirations of La Raza Unida. Those aspirations were deeply radical. “As far as we got was simply to take over control in those [Texas] communities where we were the majority,” one of its founders, Jose Angel Gutierrez, told the Toronto paper. “We did think of carving out a geographic territory where we could have our own weight, and our own leverage could then be felt nation-wide.”
 
Removing all doubt, Gutierrez repeated himself often. “What we hoped to do back then was to create a nation within a nation,” he told the Denver Post in 2001. Gutierrez bemoaned the loss of that separatist vision among activists, but predicted that Latinos will “soon take over politically.” (“Brothers in Chicano Movement to Reunite,” Denver Post, August 16, 2001).
 
Gutierrez made clear his hatred for “the gringo” when he led the Mexican-American Youth Organization, the precursor to La Raza Unida. According to the Houston Chronicle, he “was denounced by many elected officials as militant and un-American.” And anti-American he was. “We have got to eliminate the gringo, and what I mean by that is if the worst comes to worst, we have got to kill him,” Gutierrez told a San Antonio audience in 1969. At around that time, Rosie Castro eagerly joined his cause, becoming the first chairwoman of the Bexar County Raza Unida Party. There’s no evidence of her distancing herself from Gutierrez’s comments, even today. Gutierrez even dedicated a chapter in one of his books to Ms. Castro.
 
While apologists for La Raza Unida now claim that the group has been dedicated to the “civil rights of Mexican-Americans and promoting a strong ‘Chicano’ identity,” as Zev Chafets of the New York Times puts it, its brand of populism and socialist radicalism was controversial among Mexican-Americans and Democrats who considered it too extreme. The party pushed racial redistricting, affirmative action, bilingual education, and Chicano studies.
 
One of La Raza’s most powerful leaders, Frank Shaffer-Corona, an at-large member of the Washington, D.C. school board, even visited communist Cuba for a conference on Yankee imperialism and conferred with Marxists in Mexico. He was prone to conspiracy theories, decrying the “pervasive influence of the Central Intelligence Agency on American politics and what he says is a conspiracy of the multinational corporations against all minorities and the people of Latin America,” in the words of the Washington Post. (“His Pitch: Populism, and Very Latino; Shaffer-Corona Unruffled After Trip to Cuba,” Washington Post, August 28, 1978). The radical organization’s second most successful candidate, Texas gubernatorial aspirant Ramsey Muñiz, remains in prison on drug charges. La Raza Unida members periodically call for him to be pardoned, saying without evidence that the corrupt Muñiz is a “political prisoner.”)
 
Carlos Pelayo, another founder of La Raza Unida, clung to communism even after the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, telling a San Diego paper that “the desire of people for social justice will never end.” “If it doesn’t work [the Soviet Union’s] way, it doesn’t mean it doesn’t work,” he said. “So we capitalists have 20 different cereals and Nike shoes. Over there [in the Soviet Union], they have free education, free medical care.” (“Fall of Communism Fails to Deter Local Communists,” San Diego Union Tribune, September 14, 1991)
 
Is Ms. Castro repentant in the slightest over her involvement with La Raza Unida? Not in the least. She sees the rise of her sons’ political fortune as the fulfillment of her promise—some say threat—in 1971 when she lost her bid for San Antonio city council: “We’ll be back.” “When Julian was installed, it was just such an incredible thing to be there because for years we [the Chicano activists and La Raza Unida] had been struggling to be there,” she told Texas Monthly in 2002. “There was so much hurt associated with being on the outside. And I don’t mean personal hurt, but a whole group of people [the activists] being on the outside—the educational, social, political, economic outside.” Now she has not just one, but two men on the inside—her sons.
 
In July of this year, she attended a reunion of the now-defunct party. Its promoters recalled her 1971 bid for the San Antonio city council and announced that her sons were the heirs of the party’s founders and thought. Indeed Irma Mireles, who after Rosie was the second chairwoman of the Bexar County Raza Unida Party, “sees results of the party’s work” in Mayor Julian Castro and her godson, Julian’s brother Joaquin, who is running in the 20th congressional district as a Democrat. Mireles and Ms. Castro continue to use the experience they got running the party to benefit the Castro brothers. Zev Chafets of the New York Times writes of the “barrio machine” that got both elected to office straight out of law school. He was elected to the city council in 2001 and was elected mayor in 2009 and 2011 after narrowly losing his first bid in 2005.
 
One of Julian’s first acts as mayor in 2009 was hanging a 1971 La Raza Unida city council campaign poster, featuring his mother, in his office. While it’s possible that Castro was hanging the poster in deference to his mother, it is unimaginable that a candidate who was the son of one of the leaders of a white supremacist party would be given similar latitude.
 
Far from distancing himself from his mother’s odious views, Castro cites them as an asset, though perhaps one he isn’t always ready to advertise. “She has never held political office, but has always been civically involved,” Castro told Time magazine. “Growing up, I learned to appreciate the value of the democratic process through her love for making a difference in the lives of others.” Chafets of the Times explains just what the Castro boys learned.
 
In their spare time they accompanied their mother to political events and strategy sessions, where they were exposed to her fiery style of radicalism … ; met the key figures in the Chicano political world; became practiced community organizers on political campaigns; and learned to make the system work for them.
 
Julian Castro’s keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention is sure to help grow his profile along with his campaign coffers. But in his decade in public office, he has racked up something that Obama lacked: a paper trail, which might make his political career beyond San Antonio short-lived. He pushed a divisive resolution that opposed Arizona’s immigration law, which two council members (including the first immigrant on the council) called a distraction. He’s pushed for a sales tax-funded expansion of the federal Head Start program, even though the evidence is pretty clear that Head Start doesn’t have much lasting impact. And he’s been a busybody, calling for a cell phone ban in school zones that would include all types of cell phones, even “hands-free” devices.
 
In standing up for affirmative action and bilingual education, the mayor evokes some of the demagogic language of La Raza Unida. “Make no mistake, Mitt Romney would be the most extreme nominee the Republican Party has ever had on immigration,” the national co-chairman of Obama for America breathlessly told reporters on a teleconference call with reporters arranged by the Obama campaign. He’s turned San Antonio into a sanctuary city, meaning its police aren’t allowed to cooperate with federal immigration authorities, and attacked Senator Marco Rubio’s proposed alternative to amnesty for illegal immigrant children as “cotton candy politics.” He considers efforts to restrict illegal immigration to be anti-immigrant and even anti-Hispanic.
 
Mayor Castro calls voter I.D. laws “voter suppression,” repeating the common left-wing canard that Hispanics, who have marginally higher rates of lacking an I.D., won’t be able to cast ballots. The possibility of a smaller Hispanic turnout also has Julian and Joaquin upset because it might delay their paths to statewide office.
 
The choice of the left-wing mayor as keynoter at the party’s convention is perhaps as much psychological warfare as anything else, not only part of a longer-range plan to mess with Texas’s electoral math but also an immediate attempt to remind those ‘racist’ Republicans that the future is here. Until that day comes, National Public Radio can gush that it hopes America will one day look like San Antonio—and the Castro brothers can wait, anxious to do what La Raza Unida’s founder told all young Hispanic men to do in 2003: “get a job, get an education, and go paint the White House brown as soon as you can.”
 
Like Obama, the Castro brothers have been presented as pragmatists and centrists. But those who know them best say it’s a lie. And now Julian is the convention keynote speaker for a party led by a far-left president in many ways similar to himself.


http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/09/04/Julian-Castro-A-Radical-Revealed


dario73

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #15 on: September 05, 2012, 09:29:57 AM »
This Castro clown was a joke.   Obvious attempt at dealing w Rubio, which fell flat.  



A Rubio wannabe.

His speech seemed to a be a rip off of Rubio's.

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #16 on: September 05, 2012, 11:57:13 AM »
The Six Requirements of a Gushing Julian Castro Profile (Barack Obama #2)
 nro ^ | September 4, 2012 8:33 A.M. | Jim Geraghty


Posted on Wednesday, September 05, 2012 2:13:51 PM


If you have any doubt about what Democrats think of their keynote speaker tonight, San Antonio mayor Julian Castro, take a gander at this cover image from the San Antonio Current, one of the alternative weeklies out there:



Beside the C in the style of the Obama logo, in case you can’t read the small print at the bottom, it says, “CASTRO FOR (insert here)”.

When convention organizers announced Castro would be their keynote speaker, I took a look at his record . . . and found little to cheer about in his three years as mayor:


When Democrats announced that San Antonio mayor Julián Castro would deliver the keynote address of the 2012 party convention, the media’s comparisons of the mayor to President Obama intensified: a little-known, charismatic member of a minority group, getting a big opportunity to address his party and the country — perhaps a steppingstone to the highest of offices.

In fact, Castro’s dramatic debut on the national stage seems almost preordained: In May 2010, The New York Times Magazine ran a lengthy profile portraying Castro as “The Post-Hispanic Hispanic Politician,” with explicit comparisons to President Obama and predictions that he will be the first Hispanic president of the United States. NPR notes he’s been called “the great Latino hope.” CNN’s Soledad O’Brien featured Castro in a documentary about Latinos in America. He’s given a TED talk on “The Power of Education: How It Changed My World.”

Castro is indeed a lot like the Barack Obama of 2004: a subject of endless glowing media profiles, touted as the voice of an entire ethnic group, charisma by the bucketful . . . and a short record of quite modest achievements. The vast majority of the discussion about Castro focuses on his enormous potential and what is to come, not on his accomplishments and what he has done.

That is not an accident. Castro was elected by a populace facing serious problems, and in his time in office, the city has made very little measurable progress in addressing those problems.

Today and tomorrow, every morning paper/newsweekly/politico will run their Castro profiles, and almost all of them will include the same five or six things:
1. He’s a rising star.
2. Stanford undergrad! Harvard Law! Swoon!
3. Hispanics are a growing demographic.
4. He’s so young! Obama asked if he was an intern, tee-hee!
5. His complicated heritage (here they’ll soft-pedal his mother).
6. He went up against Charles Barkley to defend his city’s reputation!

But as Representative Bobby Rush asked of congressional candidate Barack Obama, “What’s he done?” It is kind of creepy to see just how many hurrahs and hosannas a politician can generate without actually doing much of anything, particularly on bread-and-butter issues like crime and education. If a Castro defender wants to argue he’s only been in office three years, fine . . . but that just raises the question of why an unaccomplished mayor is giving the keynote address. It’s like watching the Obama playbook from 2004 all over again . . .

UPDATE: For those not familiar with Rosie Castro, the mayor’s mother:


She handles her ‘First Mom’ status with quiet equanimity, pausing to smile and greet all passersby. When I ask her which one of her sons will become President, she smiles mischievously, “You mean which one will become President first?”

And there, dear reader, is one of the savviest politically correct answer of the year. Enjoy!

“I was born in San Antonio and I’ve lived here my whole life. I was an only child, raised by my mother, who emigrated from San Luis Potosí, Mexico when she was 8. Mom died the year Julián and Joaquín graduated from Stanford. I grew up in the neighborhood around Culebra and Zarzamora, near the Little Flower Basilica. I moved a couple of times when the boys were younger but we spent their junior high to high school years living right by St. Mary’s University. They both graduated from Jefferson High.”

“At the time I was growing up, Mexican-American women weren’t typically involved in politics. When I attended Our Lady of the Lake, I had a mentor, Dr. Margaret Kramer, who introduced me to a lot of local politicians. I got involved with the Young Democrats and later became chair of the Bexar County Raza Unida Party for a time. I ran for city council in 1971 with the ‘Committee for Barrio Betterment.’ I didn’t win but I learned a very valuable lesson: I’m a good organizational person. I like working behind the scenes and pulling it together.

From the Times profile of the mayor:


She was born in San Antonio in 1947 to an immigrant mother who didn’t get past fourth grade; she didn’t meet her father till she was 34. To Rosie, the Alamo is a symbol of bad times. “They used to take us there when we were schoolchildren,” she told me. “They told us how glorious that battle was. When I grew up I learned that the ‘heroes’ of the Alamo were a bunch of drunks and crooks and slaveholding imperialists who conquered land that didn’t belong to them. But as a little girl I got the message — we were losers. I can truly say that I hate that place and everything it stands for.”

To Julian Castro’s credit, when your mother hates the Alamo and you are elected mayor of San Antonio twice, you have some serious campaigning skills.




________________________ __________________


I knew instantly last night this guy was a joker and a fake.   

Good call on my part.   

Dos Equis

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #17 on: September 05, 2012, 12:27:20 PM »
Was not impressed.  Lots of style.  Very little substance.  A lot of what I heard was "blah blah blah blah . . . . Barrack Obama!"  [wild applause]

He also misrepresented the jobs number.  Talked about jobs created without mentioning jobs lost. 

Soul Crusher

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Re: Who is this clown Castro?
« Reply #18 on: September 05, 2012, 06:31:01 PM »
Mother of Dem convention star Castro called Alamo defenders 'drunks,' 'crooks'
Foxnews ^ | 9/5/2012
Posted on September 5, 2012 9:30:46 PM EDT by KansasGirl

CHARLOTTE, N.C. –  The young Texas mayor whose keynote speech wowed the Democratic National Convention crowd Wednesday night draws political inspiration from his mother – who is a member of a radical civil rights movement and who reportedly thinks the truth behind the Battle of the Alamo is that Texans swiped Mexico’s land.

Maria del Rosario Castro, the mother of San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, said in 2010 that she grew up being told the battle was “glorious,” only to learn the so-called heroes were really “a bunch of drunks and crooks and slaveholding imperialists who conquered land that didn’t belong to them.”

“But as a little girl I got the message -- we were losers,” she told New York Times Magazine. “I can truly say that I hate that place and everything it stands for.”

(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...