Kyle Rogers was a guest on the Larry Fontana Show today in Charlotte, NC on FM radio. This was Kyle’s first hostile radio interview. He has also been interviewed live on the radio in Charleston, Greenville, Memphis, and Chicago, but each time it was with a friendly conservative interviewer.
Kyle Rogers
I was asked to be a guest on the Larry Fontana Show to discuss immigration. However once I was on the air every single question was about black people and black-white race relations. It was a pretty lively discussion and I got out a lot of statistics and facts. On the show I called for candid dialog on race relations in a mature manor free of childish name calling. Larry Fontana responded by calling me a “white supremacist.”
Pro-Amnesty, Pro-Open Borders, Anti-Confederate stances erodes McCain’s support in South Carolina.
From the Pheonix Biz Journal…
A new Mason-Dixon Poll gives Thompson 25 percent of the vote among Republican presidential candidates. Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani is second with 21 percent, Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is next with 11 percent, and McCain is fourth with 7 percent.
McCain performed better in previous South Carolina polls. South Carolina is a key presidential battleground and McCain has visited there numerous times in his White House bid. He also has the backing of U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
It has been reported that you have seen fit to refer to those of us who oppose extensive immigration by third world peoples into the United States, as “bigots.” You did not offer to debate issues fundamental to the very concept of a nation; rather, you chose to asperse the motives of those Americans, who sought such a debate. This suggests that you may be an intellectual coward. It also suggests that you have a strange perception of your duties as a Senator for South Carolina: The State which first declared its independence; which gave us some of the most significant heroes of the Revolution; which later rallied to John C. Calhoun’s articulate defenses of liberty. The State which, in our own times, was politically defined by the long service of the late Strom Thurmond, the man, who more than any other in his era, was responsible for restoring some balance to the Federal Judiciary.
Name calling, of course, is no argument. But then, what argument do you have? Considering the key factors involved in framing an American immigration policy, your position may be seen as the intellectual equivalent to the Emperor’s wonderful “new clothes” in the Hans Christian Andersen classic; the “statesmanship” behind the Kennedy/Bush/Lindsey proposal, a moral equivalent to the “service” of Vidkun Quisling to the Norwegians in 1940! Am I being unfair?
Gov. Sanford signs bill against implementing Federal Real ID act.
Sanford said South Carolina is one of 32 states that have passed or are in the process of passing legislation refusing to participate in the act, which he estimated would cost South Carolina $40 million to implement the first year and $11 million each subsequent year.
He also said the creation of a national ID card would cause long lines at the Department of Motor Vehicles.
“This bill is about simply saying, ‘If you want it, federal government, you can pay for it,’” Sanford said. “From the standpoint of civil liberties, what it really would amount to is a national driver’s license.”
State Sen. Mike Fair, R-Greenville, applauded fellow Upstate lawmakers for taking lead roles in passing the bill.
“This isn’t 1860, but this is a demonstration of how state governments don’t have to secede from the union to say no to the federal government,” he said. “The state did take a strong stand in a very legitimate way.”
Neo-con State SC State Congressman Bob Inglis allegedly called for amnesty behind closed doors, saying it would be “racist” not to reward criminal illegal aliens.
From Robert Novak
At a recent internal debate by the conservative House Republican Study Committee, Rep. Bob Inglis of South Carolina warned that the GOP ran the risk of looking like the racist National Party of South Africa on the immigration issue.
Inglis’ comment was made at a closed-door “retreat” of the Study Committee held at the Heritage Foundation in Washington. The bitter debate reflected the split over immigration in conservative ranks.
Supporters of President Bush’s proposed moderate immigration reforms blamed last year’s defeat of Republican Reps. J.D. Hayworth in Arizona and John Hostettler in Indiana on their immigration hard line. But at the retreat, the response from the majority was that Hayworth and Hostettler were not hard enough.
On April 29th, 2006 the South Carolina CofCC held a rally against the Senate Amnesty Bill in front of Lindsey Graham’s Greenville, SC office. Over 1,000 people attended. Now revulsion to Lindsey Graham has spread from the people to the South Carolina GOP leadership.
From The State, May 20th …
The crowd at South Carolina’s Republican convention cheered Saturday when former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney criticized a new immigration proposal and booed U.S. Sen Lindsey Graham when he defended it.
The immigration compromise between key senators and the White House was in the forefront at the convention as more than 1,000 delegates and Republican activists gathered. Many in the crowd wore stickers with “Senate amnesty bill” crossed out.
As we reported before, Sen. Lindsey “Light in the Loafers” Grahamn accepted an award from the radical Chicano activist group National Council of La Raza. La Raza means “the race” by the way. At the end of this speech, Grahamn calls conservatives “bigots.”
CHARLESTON, S.C. — In a new twist in American race relations, a federal court has ruled that a white teacher in a predominantly African-American school was subjected to a racially hostile workplace.
The case concerned Elizabeth Kandrac, who was routinely verbally abused by black pupils at Brentwood Middle School in North Charleston.
Their slurs make shock jock Don Imus look like a church deacon.
A small group of CofCC members staged an impromptu demonstration against Illegal Immigration across the street from the Koger Center where the FOX News Republican debate was being held. One CofCC member attracted a lot of attention by dressing up like Uncle Sam.
The League of the South was also present, drawing attention to McCain’s attack on the Confederate flag.