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 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | Update on the Conference: We have confirmed some more of the details on the ACP's first National Leadership Conference to be held September 16th - 19th. Some of you have already gotten involved in Local and State Development, but whether you have or haven't we have limited availability overall and from each State, so if you're ready to get involved, please GO TO OUR INFO PAGE AND REGISTER. Agenda(updated often)HERE. NEW Speaker page... This conference is for Registered Members, so please JOIN HERE. | |  |  |  | Conservative Leadership Recognition Dinner--FRIDAY NIGHT, September 17th
|  | Featured Speaker--Doc Thompson
The highlight of the Friday evening dinner (open to non-members) is our Conservative Leadership Recognition, featuring Marconi Award recipient and talk show host Doc Thompson. There will be other special guests and awards will be given for Conservative Leader of the Year and Conservative Thinker of the Year. Register for the Friday Evening Dinner HERE. 2010 Conservative Leadership NOMINEES Conservative Leader of the Year (The Conservative Leader of the Year Award is not an endorsement of any campaign...it is based on actions this year, and emphasizes that actions speaks louder than words) - Gov. Mitch Daniels, Indiana
- U.S. Senator Jim Demint, South Carolina
- Gov. Chris Christie, New Jersey
- Gov. Jan Brewer, Arizona
- U.S. Representative Michele Bachmann, Minnesota
- Lt. Col. Allen West, Candidate for Congress, Florida
- Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, Virginia
- Gov. Bobby Jindal, Louisiana
Conservative Thinker of the Year - Glenn Beck--Radio and TV Talk Show Host, Author
- Angelo Codevilla--Author, Professor
- Walter E Williams--Economist
- Ellis Washington--Author, Professor
- Andrew Wilcow--Radio Talk Show Host
- Mike Church--Radio Talk Show Host
The nominations have to be approved by a Board member but we're taking more submissions: just email:
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with "Conservative Leadership Awards" in the subject heading...deadline for submissions is August 11th, 2010, and we'll be narrowing it down to the top five in both categories.

Conference Speakers

Major General Jerry Curry
Jerry R. Curry is a statesman, a courageous soldier, a diplomat, and a government leader. Curry is a man of great intelligence, integrity, honesty, and proven character. He is a person who has taken a stand for his country and devoted his life in its service. He is a person who has lived out in practice what others just seem to talk about. Jerry was born into humble beginnings--the son of a steel worker--and like most Americans has worked hard to better himself. He recognizes that only through the unique opportunities offered by this nation was he able to succeed. He enlisted in the U.S. Army as a Private during the Korean War and rose to the rank of a two star Major General--an uncommon achievement and a near impossibility for a soldier of mixed European, African and Native American ancestry. To find out about Jerry, go to his "GenerallySpeaking" blog at generallyspeaking.curryforamerica.com. Also find some of his published work on Human Events. 
Leslie Carbone
Leslie Carbone served as the director of Family Tax Policy at the Family Research Council, chief of staff to the late assemblyman Gil Ferguson of California, and a speechwriter for former U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao. Her writing has been published in the Weekly Standard, the American Enterprise, the San Francisco Chronicle, and numerous other magazines and journals. She has lectured at more than 100 college campuses and has been interviewed on more than 250 radio shows. She lives in Fairfax, VA. You can buy her book, Slaying Leviathan, the Moral Case for Tax Reform on Amazon MORE SPEAKERS TBA... |  | |  |  | | |  |  |  |  |  | | Copyright 2008-2010 All Rights Reserved. American Conservative Party | |  | | |
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Written by Edward
Spears
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Saturday, 10 July 2010 01:55 |
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Over the past year or so, it seems that the Conservative movement is experiencing a resurgence. The Tea Party movement and the thousands, if not millions, who have been drawn to it, are at the heart of this reawakening to our Constitution and the conservative principles our nation was founded upon. Many who have been politically apathetic or complacent are now charged for action, ready to roll back the tide of liberalism and government run amok. The Republican Party has rushed to capture this uprising and to capitalize politically on the conservative groundswell. On the surface the GOP would seem to have the rightful claim on these renewed patriots and the principles they espouse, but careful scrutiny reveals a different story. While there may be plenty of conservative smoke in Republican circles, there’s not a whole lot that passes for fire. The GOP has for the last several years undergone an internal wrestling match for the soul of the party. Some party leaders, urged on by the media and political elites, wanted to take a more centrist approach and de-emphasize or eliminate what they considered to be the conservative fringe of the party. As recently as the days following Obama’s election, there were many around the party saying that the age of conservatism and its patron saint, Regan was through. Now, with the onslaught of the Tea Party movement, those pronouncements have been silenced, and Republicans are doing what they always do in an election cycle: run to the Right. Further damaging the GOP’s claims on conservatism is their record as a governing party. We must remember that our country didn’t arrive at this dire juncture over night. The growth of government and the resulting limits on individual liberty happened on the Republican watch too. It is the height of hypocrisy for those Republicans who traded in pork and spent like drunken sailors to now condemn the Democrats for their tax-and-spend policies. We’re only a generation removed from the Regan presidency and less than 20 years from the watershed Congressional elections of 1994, and yet there is little left to show for those efforts. Indeed, there wasn’t all that much to show from the outset. Where are the term limits? Where are the Federal agencies and departments that have been shuttered? Where is the return of power to individual states? They simply are not there. Most were never even attempted. In truth, the Republican Party’s claim to conservatism is largely due to the continuing move to the Left by the Democrats, the media, and most of popular culture. The Democrats have become so radical in their policies, that it’s quite easy for Republicans to seem conservative by comparison. Why else would proponents of gun ownership, being pro-life, and reducing government be called the Far Right? The media and their Democrat cohorts have succeeded in setting the terms of the debate much further left than we even give them credit for. This paradigm shift has actually played into the GOP’s hands rather nicely. Republicans don’t have to shrink government; they can merely slow the pace of growth, and are hailed as heroes of fiscal austerity. There’s no need to enact real tax reform when they can make modest cuts and create new tax loopholes for their big business donors and seem like the champions of the free market. They can quote the Founding Fathers and beat their chests on the stump, but when they get back to Washington or the state capitol, they practically dislocate their shoulders trying to reach across the aisle. In essence, the Republicans can take the political path of least resistance, plowing the squishy center ground and let the off-the-chain liberals in the Democrat party make them look incredible by comparison. That’s not what I’d call leadership, and it sure isn’t what I’d call Conservative. |
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 14 July 2010 16:19 |
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Written by Butch
Porter
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Tuesday, 06 July 2010 03:05 |
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Powerline Blog posts this every year on the 4th, and it is spot on on why Conservatism is right and Progressivism is not progressive: About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.
For the entire text of Calvin Coolidge's speech on our nation's 125th Anniversary, click here. |
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 06 July 2010 20:32 |
Please follow the link and read the WHOLE THING... 
...enjoy the Holiday and give thanks to God and to those that have fought and died to defend our freedoms for 234 years. |
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