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Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Texas Governor Rick Perry's Indictment The Work Of Soros-Funded Minions

George Soros speaks at an IMF/World Bank meeting in Washington on Sept. 24, 2011. AP
George Soros speaks at an IMF/World Bank meeting in Washington on Sept. 24, 2011. AP View Enlarged Image













Politics: Now that the indictment of Texas Gov. Rick Perry is coming up as the mother of all nothingburgers, and even Democrats are steering clear, it's time to look at those behind this scam: George Soros-funded front groups.
Friday's news erupted with a Texas-sized gusher of political mud — Gov. Perry indicted on two felony counts of corruption and abuse of office! And it was all over his decision to defund a "public integrity office" run by a convicted drunk whose failure to resign left an office unable to straighten itself out.
With the news breaking late at week's end, the governor's efforts to defend his actions found relatively few immediate listeners. But as facts came out about the utter meritlessness of the case, it turned out to be just a game:
Drape corruption charges around the neck of a successful governor and, however false, let them dangle there until the case gets dismissed, as it surely will. And the aim? To derail his plans to run for president.
It's a trick so old and practiced by the group that brought the complaint to the district attorney last year, Texans For Public Justice, that it took all of a minute to find the sordid template on a Google search.



According to Washington Post's Marc Thiessen, the group pulled this on another Texas governor, George W. Bush, as he prepared to run for higher office in 2000, and then on Perry in 2011.
Contrary to its goo-goo protestations, the group "is a left-wing attack group that seems to issue scathing 'crony capitalism' attacks on Texas conservatives just as they prepare to run for national office," Thiessen concluded.
Such a group has to be motivated by bitterness. The success of the Lone Star State, after all, is due in large part to conservative policies carried out contrary to liberal wishes by competent, no-nonsense leaders such as Perry.
So under those circumstances, it's no surprise such a group would attempt to knock out Perry by legal means, given its inability to win at the ballot box.
Which brings us to the darker forces behind this effort: people who believe America is in need of "de-nazification," that U.S. citizenship is a "convenience" not an allegiance and that one-world government is better than U.S. democracy.
Enter George Soros, who holds all those views and whose non-government organizations are behind the funding of Texans for Public Justice via his Open Society Institute, the Sunlight Foundation and indirectly through other groups that hand cash out to causes they believe in.
They've given Texans for Public Justice at least $200,000 to masquerade as a public-spirited, good-government group instead of the pack of partisan hacks that it is.
Perry says the out-of-control nature of the indictment is a clarion call to reform lawless government agencies. He's right. And it wouldn't hurt to start looking at the moneybag forces manipulating these agencies like puppetmasters.

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