Tuesday, April 26, 2016

TRAITOR JOHN KASICH, LIKE RYAN, MCCONNELL, AND THE LONG GONE 'CRY BABY' BOEHNER IS AN OBAMA LAP DOG WHO BELIEVES IN GLOBALISM, OPEN BORDERS!!



By Jonathan E.P. Moore


TRAITOR JOHN KASICH, LIKE RYAN, MCCONNELL, AND THE LONG GONE 'CRY BABY' BOEHNER IS AN OBAMA LAP DOG WHO BELIEVES IN GLOBALISM, OPEN BORDERS!!

I think it's time for Ohioans to realize that Kasich is not who you think he is, and should wake up and consider, with his immigration stance, whether or not he is looking to make Ohio the 2nd Sanctuary State in the country!!  
I'm tired of hearing about having to win Ohio to be President. John Kasich has been sabotaging the Conservative Party by ideology and actions, which is why we have had to suffer the last 4 years of Obama and his divisive tactics to destroy America from within!!

KASICH, A GOOD INSIDER SOLDIER FOR THE LEFT, WHO IS HIDING IN THE PC WEEDS OF THE RIGHT, AND OFF THE RADAR 'INTENTIONALLY' OF THE 'PAID TO REPORT' MEDIA!!
YOU WILL NOW SEE WHY TRUMP DOESN'T NEED ENDORCEMENTS, AND WHY A MEANINGLESS, 'PAID TO REPORT' MEDIA STORY OF HAVING KASICH NOT SUPPORTING TRUMP, DOESN'T REALLY MATTER  MUCH TO THE AWARE, AND AWAKE AMERICAN PEOPLE!!
KAISICH has quietly amassed a string of bizarre, peculiar, and extreme statements on immigration that places him to the furthest leftward reaches of not just the Republican President field, but the Democratic Presidential field as well. (SEE BELOW AND LEARN)




KASICH ALLOWED 45,000 SOMALI REFUGEES INTO OHIO, 91% ON WEFARE, AND NOW THAT I LIVE IN OHIO I HAVE BEEN TOLD BY MANY ACCOUNTS HOW, WHEN THEY VOTED EARLY IN 2012, THAT THEY WITNESSED BUS LOADS OF SOMALIAN REFUGEES BEING BUSSED INTO VOTE! THEY NOTICED THAT WERE NOT ASKED FOR ID, AND WHEN THEY CHALLENGED WHAT THEY WERE WITNESSING, THEY WERE TOLD TO MIND THEIR OWN BUSINESS!!


The Market Daily News reported on those 100 precincts in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, that on election day gave Romney zero votes, and Obama got 99 percent. “In more than 50 different precincts, Romney received two votes or less,” the report said. “One would think that such improbable results would get the attention of somebody out there.”


The Columbus Dispatch estimated that more than 20 percent of registered Ohio voters aren’t eligible. “In two counties, the number of registered voters actually exceeds the voting-age population,” the report said. And, it said, in 31 other counties, registrations are above 90 percent of the population, “a rate regarded as unrealistic by most voting experts.”

YOU HAVE TO WONDER HOW OBAMA WON THE SWING STATE OF OHIO WITHOUT THE HELP OF JOHN KASICH, AND NOW YOU MIGHT HAVE TO WONDER HOW KASICH WON HIS ONLY STATE IN THE PRIMARY, HIS OWN,  AND ALSO OHIO!!

OHIO IS ONE OF THE 11 STATES WITH HIGHER WELFARE RECIPIENTS THAN EMPLOYED POPULATION!


JOHN KASICH TOOK $202,700 FROM GEORGE SOROS!

JOHN KASICH BETRAYS CONSERVATIVES, LIES ABOUT “BLOCKING OBAMACARE” IN OHIO!! (2012)

Ohio’s Republican Governor John Kasich has reneged on his campaign pledge to “block ObamaCare” from being established in Ohio. And he has done it a way that would make Barack Obama proud—by lying through his teeth.


Contrary to Nancy Pelosi’s claims, passing ObamaCare has not enabled most Americans to know what’s in it. But one thing has become clear to those who have studied this signature, power-play legislation of the left— courageous Republican governors can kill it.


‘HELPED WALL STREET PREDATOR LEHMAN BROTHERS DESTROY THE WORLD ECONOMY!!’

Voted for NAFTA, but unions and consumer-advocacy groups say Nafta has had negative effects in Mexico and the United States. They say that resulting outsourcing and lower wages have hurt the United States’ domestic economy and that Mexico’s rural industries have destabilized.
Public Citizen, a nonprofit advocacy group with offices in Washington and Austin, cites United States Department of Labor data to support what it says is a negative impact on the American work force because of rising imports or off shoring production.
In Texas alone, Public Citizen said, there have been almost 2,500 companies whose workers or union affiliates have filed petitions with the department for training or temporary assistance under its Trade Adjustment Assistance program.
Critics of Nafta say it has resulted in a loss of United States manufacturing and shipping jobs and in less production oversight. They say Nafta has also displaced Mexican agricultural workers into other sectors or forced them to immigrate illegally to the United States.
Kasich is often described as one of the most moderate presidential contenders in his party – a Republican who works with the other side to achieve bipartisan policy victories. To a certain extent, these accolades are deserved, although they exaggerate the governor’s record of legislative success.
More than other Republican candidates, the governor has taken controversial positions on a number of public policies that remain deeply unpopular within his party. For example, Kasich supported legislative reforms to fix Ohio’s underperforming charter schools, has been an outspoken advocate of the Common Core education standards and aggressively defends his decision to expand Medicaid in Ohio under the Affordable Care Act.

Despite their unpopularity among the grassroots, however, many of these issues have enjoyed strong support from other Republican elites, who deserve some of the credit (or blame depending on your perspective) for these achievements. Ohio’s Medicaid extension offers a useful example.
When Kasich announced that Ohio would participate in the expansion, the decision attracted a great deal of (often behind-the-scenes) support from other top Republican officials and major campaign contributors. Ohio’s Chamber of Commerce endorsed the move. Just days before a pivotal state commission was set to consider the proposal, the Republican speaker of Ohio’s House of Representatives reshuffled several appointments on the commission to ensure that Kasich would get the sufficient number of “yes” votes.
For issues lacking similar support among his party’s leaders, the governor has had much less luck – even though Republicans have enjoyed huge supermajorities in Ohio’s state legislature during his entire tenure. Last spring, for example, the legislature rejected the governor’s proposal to increase cigarette and fracking taxes to pay for an income tax cut. They also voted down a Kasich-backed overhaul of Ohio education funding that sought to redirect state aid to poor school districts.
In many cases, when the governor and the legislature have agreed, they have adopted policies that put them well to the right of the average Ohio (and national) voter.
Since Kasich took office, for example, the state has adopted many new abortion regulations that have reduced the number of abortion providers in the state by more than half.These regulations have had their intended effect of limiting access, reducing the number of abortions to historic lows.
One of Kasich’s first policy priorities upon taking office in 2011 – an overhaul of Ohio’s public sector union laws – proved so unpopular among not only Democrats but also many Republicans that many observers at the time predicted he would be a one-term governor. Fortunately, an improving economy and embarrassingly scandal-prone opponent proved these predictions wrong, helping Kasich win reelection by a large margin.


Kasich keeps bragging on the job growth in Ohio lately, but being a new resident of Columbus, Ohio, and coming here from New Jersey to be closer to my kids and grand kids, and having people I know who can't find work, and store after store having 'Help Wanted' signs in every store you go into, you have to wonder about the B.S. that spews out of John Kasich's mouth!!  
OHIO is one of the 11 States with Higher Welfare Recipients than Employed Population
The following listing of states has more residents that receive welfare versus an employed population.
1. California

2. New Mexico


3. Hawaii


4. Mississippi


5. Alabama


6. South Carolina


7. Illinois


8. Kentucky


9. OHIO


10. New York


11. Maine
Ohio Gov. John Kasich is campaigning for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination by touting “successes” in his state, including his education record. But a look at that record offers a somewhat different picture than the one he paints. In fact, some see a real education mess created by the Kasich administration since he took office in 2011.
Issues confronting public education in Ohio include:
*a scandal-ridden charter school sector
 *budget cuts for traditional public schools at the same time as increased funding for charter schools and school vouchers
 *controversial state takeovers of “failing” schools
 *a questionable teacher evaluation system that uses as one factor the standardized test scores of students, against the recommendation of assessment experts
 *the botched administration of the Common Core test known as PARCC (which the state later dropped).
OHIO WELFARE BENEFITS EQUATE TO $12.60 PER HOUR!!
How many people do you know working retail, fast food restaurants, or any other hourly paid wages who can’t get the 30 hours to get benefits, and can’t make enough money to pay their bills because of Obamacare’s mandate??
A little-known section in the Obamacare health reform law defines “full-time” work as averaging only 30 hours per week, a definition that will affect some employers who utilize part-time workers to trim the cost of complying with the Obamacare rule that says businesses with 50 or more workers must provide health insurance or pay a fine.





Below are just some of Kasich’s most bizarre and radical statements on immigration, which have flown under the radar.
1) “God Bless” Illegal Immigrants
Illegal immigrants are a “critical part of our society,” John Kasich told the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce last October. “For those that are here that have been law abiding, God bless them,” Kasich said—arguing that illegals “should have a path to legalization.”
2) “I couldn’t imagine” enforcing our current immigration laws: “That is not… the kind of values that we believe in.”
On the GOP debate stage in February, Kasich told millions of American voters that enforcing the nation’s immigration laws is not “the kind of values that we believe in.”
“I couldn’t even imagine how we would even begin to think about taking a mom or a dad out of a house when they have not committed a crime since they’ve been here, leaving their children in the house,” Kasich said. “That is not, in my opinion, the kind of values that we believe in.”
3) Kasich likened deporting the illegal population to Japanese internment camps
“To think that that we’re just going to put people on buses and ship them to the border—look at our World War II experience where we quarantined Japanese—I mean it’s a dark stain on America’s history,” Kasich said in November.
“We shouldn’t even think about it,” Kasich said of the “nutty” idea:
“I don’t know many people that believe we should deport 11 million people—just because people shout loud doesn’t mean they’re a majority. I think most Republicans would agree that you can’t deport 11 million people. We shouldn’t even think about it. What are you going to do? Break their families up?”
4) Illegal immigrants “are some of the hardest-working, God-fearing, family-oriented people you can ever meet.”
As Newsmax reported in August, when a New Hampshire town-hall attendee asked Kasich about illegal immigration and the burden illegal immigrants place upon the nation, Kasich dismissed the voter’s concern.
“A lot of these people who are here are some of the hardest-working, God-fearing, family-oriented people you can ever meet,” Kasich said referring to illegal immigrants. “These are people who are contributing significantly.”
Kasich made no mention of the fact that 87 percent of illegal immigrant households with children in 2012 were on welfare, according to a 2015 report based on Census Bureau data.
Kasich similarly made no mention of last year’s report from the liberal Migration Policy Institute which found that there are nearly one million illegal aliens in the United States with criminal convictions (820,000). This figure was not an estimation of total crimes committed by illegal immigrants—which would be a much higher number—but only those illegal aliens successfully identified, arrested, tried, and convicted.
5) Allowing ICE officers to do their jobs is not “humane”
Kasich told CBS last year that he does not support deporting the illegal population: “I don’t think it’s right; I don’t think it’s humane.”
Kasich also compared illegal immigration to cutting in line at a Taylor Swift concert: “I don’t favor citizenship [for illegals] because as I tell my daughters, you don’t jump the line to go to a Taylor Swift concert, you just don’t do it,” Kasich said.
However, Kasich has made clear that he is open to giving illegal immigrants citizenship. Moreover, a report from Columbus Dispatch suggests that Kasich favors green cards for illegal immigrants, which is the main pathway to citizenship.
6) America can’t deport illegal immigrants because they are “made in the image of the Lord”
In June, the Columbus Dispatch reported on a meeting that took place between John Kasich and an illegal immigrant and her son. After their meeting, Kasich said: “They’re just good people. They’re made in the image of the Lord, and you know, there’s a big element of compassion connected to how we treat people who are trying to find a way to a better life.”
If being “made in the image of the Lord” provides an exemption to America’s immigration law, then that would mean that all of the world’s seven billion people would be free to violate America’s immigration laws.
7) Kasich has called for implementing an open borders-style policy where workers can come and go as they please.
In July, Kasich told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that we need to “have a guest worker program so people can come in, work, and then leave. Our program is too narrow now.”
Kasich claim that the nation’s guest worker program, which admits an unprecedented number of foreign workers into the country, is “too narrow” is astonishing—and places him squarely in the tiny minority of the Republican electorate, only seven percent of whom want to increase immigration.
Moreover, Kasich’s call for a guest worker program that will allow workers to come and go as they please represents the central pillar of the open borders philosophy. Under this global one-world theory, any willing employer should be able to hire any willing worker regardless of the country in which they reside—thus removing any right that American workers be entitled to get American jobs. This is similar to the policy European countries have within the European Union—namely, people are entitled to move freely from one country to another. Kasich is essentially laying out how the same legal structure could be adopted for the United States and all the foreign countries of the world.
8) Kasich would enact amnesty within his first 100 days.
In last Thursday’s CNN debate, Kasich told voters that he would enact the largest amnesty in U.S. history within his first 100 days in office. “For the 11 and a half million who are here, then in my view if they have not committed a crime since they’ve been here, they get a path to legalization. Not to citizenship. I believe that program can pass the Congress in the first 100 days,” Kasich said.
9) America shouldn’t address ending birthright citizenship because it’s “dividing people”
Kasich has made clear that he does not want to discuss birthright citizenship as an issue. While Kasich previously supported ending birthright citizenship, he has since reversed his position—meaning he now supports giving citizenship to all children of illegal immigrants, or of tourists and guest-workers, who are born on U.S. soil.
“I don’t believe it should be a fundamental part of this whole thing because I think it remains dividing to people, to be honest with you,” Kasich said trying to take the issue off the table. “Let these people who are born here be citizens and that’s the end of it. I don’t want to dwell on it.”
“If you are born here, you’re a citizen. Period. End of story,” Kasich told the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce last October.
10) Illegal immigrants should be allowed to stay because “they’re here”
“With the 12 million—they’re here,” Kasich said explaining why he supports a path to legalization. “If they have been law-abiding, then I believe they should have a path to legalization… look, they have become a very important part of our society.”


When PBS’ Gwen Ifill pressed Kasich on how his position on the issue “rubs a lot of Republicans the wrong way,” Kasich said: “Well, what do you think we’re going to do? Go chasing them down? And put these big lights on top of cars? And go into neighborhoods hunting them down? That’s not—that’s not what America is.”
Kasich again repeated his talking point likening illegally entering the United States and residing here in violation of U.S. immigration law, to cutting in line at a Taylor Swift concert: “Look, nobody likes that they broke the law, they ditched the line. I have told my kids, as much as you love Taylor Swift, you don’t ditch the line to get into a concert.”

COMING FROM THE EAST COAST, AND WORKING IN MANHATTAN, YOU HAVE TO KNOW THAT THIS IS WHAT GAVE ME THE HEADS UP ON KASICH'S GENUINE CREDIBILITY AND TRUTHFULNESS!!!




‘WHO KNEW? BUT AREN’T YOU GLAD I TOOK THE TIME TO CHECK HIM OUT ‘WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING!’

                                  Jonathan E P Moore ‘While You Were Sleeping’

THE NEXT ‘While You Were Sleeping’



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