"I would first like to commend you for making health care a national priority"
Wow. And Conservatives like this guy?
And again, it's worth noting that the ACA has far more in common with the GOP health care proposal introduced in 1993 then it does with Clinton's health care plan.
As far as probable 2012 contenders associated with the Tea Party are concerned, he (Herman Cain) is fairly representative in the foreign policy positions he takes. That doesnt rule out valuable contributions to the debate from Gary Johnson or Ron Paul, who can also claim connections with some Tea Party activists. The lack of alternatives may help give the foreign policy and national security arguments put forward by Johnson and/or Paul that much more attention. Nonetheless, virtually every other likely 2012 candidate largely shares Cains views on foreign policy, military spending, and the national security state. If several of them are closely associated with Tea Party activists, surely one of the best favors we can do for those activists is to emphasize that many of the politicians and spokesmen they have been cheering hold views on the role of government overseas that is incompatible with the desire to reduce the size, scope, and power of the government. Part of challenging Tea Party activists to think about the fiscal and political costs of perpetual war and empire has to involve pointing out that their would-be leaders lack credibility as fiscal conservatives and defenders of constitutional liberty.
"I would first like to commend you for making health care a national priority"
Wow. And Conservatives like this guy?
The key word missing in the Hermanator's statement is GOVERNMENT, genius. Nobody's against health care, the majority are against GOVERNMENT health care.