Saturday, June 19, 2010

Gov to be Haley (Randhawa) & Christianity...

jun 18th, 2010

christists are bigots too, esp southern bubbas in the us. 

hindus with this 'vasudhaiva kudumbakam' and 'all religions are equal' business do not realize that even in this post-modern age, the semitic ideologies (including communism) are hate-filled, bigoted imperialistic death-cults. they are not religions. they do not lead to god, or good -- and are purely evil and satanic.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Rajiv


this is v interesting. she is going to be the new governor of south carolina, her parents are practicing sikhs but now kept in the background and no longer projecting herself as the pride of the sikh community. she had to first hide her non-christianity in public life (using the "sameness" nonsense to mask), then blend the two, and now try to convince her suport base that she converted to christianity. this tells a lot about christianity's approach to difference and also about american voters in general.
 
 
 
All Her Life, Nikki Haley Was the Different One
By SHAILA DEWAN and ROBBIE BROWN
BAMBERG, S.C. — Nikki Haley, the favorite to become the first governor of South Carolina who is neither white nor male, has always challenged established norms with her own brand of moxie.

As a girl, her parents — the first Indian immigrants this small, working-class town had ever seen — entered Nikki and her sister in the Little Miss Bamberg pageant. The judges of the contest, one that crowned one black queen and one white queen, were so flummoxed that they simply disqualified Nikki and her sister, Simran — but not before Nikki, about 5, sang "This Land Is Your Land."

Ms. Haley, 38, upended things again last week after a sharp-elbowed primary that included allegations of marital infidelity and pitted her against the lieutenant governor, the attorney general and a congressman. Ms. Haley, a state legislator, received 49 percent of the vote, but faces a June 22 runoff with Representative Gresham Barrett, whom she beat by more than 25 points Tuesday. And this from a campaign that was so underfinanced that it had to sell yard signs at $5 apiece, Ms. Haley said.

Now, she finds herself one of the brightest rising stars in the Republican Party, a Tea Party favorite, a Sarah Palin endorsee and the subject of national attention.

"I love that people think it's a good story, but I don't understand how it's different," she said in an interview Friday, in a voice with a faint watermark of Southern drawl. "I feel like I'm just an accountant and businessperson who wants to be a part of state government."

Ms. Haley — born Nimrata Nikki Randhawa and always called Nikki, which means "little one," by her family — said that growing up in Bamberg was at times tough. Her father wears a turban and, though male Sikhs are not supposed to cut their hair, her brothers' was trimmed after teasing at school grew vicious. "It's survival mode," she said. "You learn to try and show people how you're more alike than you are different."

But her political rise has raised questions about her difference, and she has become more careful about how she presents the religious aspect, in particular, of her life.

In 2004, for instance, she was widely hailed, particularly in news outlets like The Hindustan Times and sikhchic.com, as the first Sikh elected to the South Carolina Legislature and the first Republican Indian-American elected to any state legislature.

"I was born and raised with the Sikh faith, my husband and I were married in the Methodist Church, our children" — Nalin, 8, and Rena, 12 — "have been baptized in the Methodist Church, and currently we attend both," she said.

She did not mention that she and her husband, Michael Haley, wed in two ceremonies, one Sikh and the other at St. Andrew's by-the-Sea, a Methodist church in Hilton Head, where Mr. Haley's parents live.

Back then, though, Ms. Haley seemed comfortable publicly embracing both religions. Nowadays, she talks of having "converted to Christianity" before her wedding in 1996, when she was baptized at St. Andrew's. She has also changed the wording on her Web site under the heading, "Question: Is Nikki a Christian?" from an answer that references "Almighty God" to one that references "Christ."

"I still find these things to be very private," she said about the change. "However, when people question you, you do have to answer to them."

Tim Pearson, her campaign manager, said that the campaign grew more specific in response to questions. "We got a lot of e-mails and whatnot from people saying, 'She's talking about God, but what God?' " he said.

Even her name became an issue in 2004, when a political opponent, a 30-year incumbent who was at the time the longest serving state legislator, pointed out that she was registered to vote as Nimrata Randhawa and not Nikki Haley. (Campaign literature and e-mail messages calling her a Buddhist and a Muslim also circulated, she recalled.) But such nicknames are not unusual: one of Ms. Haley's inspirations and a fellow Indian-American politician, Gov. Piyush Jindal of Louisiana, is better known as Bobby.

From early on, Ms. Haley was involved in her family's clothing business — Exotica International, which sells gowns, suits and jewelry — taking over the bookkeeping at age 13.

Her father, Ajit Randhawa, was a biology professor at Voorhees College in nearby Denmark, S.C.; her mother, Raj, started Exotica as a gift shop.

Before she ran for office, Ms. Haley got an accounting degree at Clemson University, where she met Mr. Haley. She worked for FCR, a waste management and recycling company, and then returned to Exotica as chief financial officer and helped the company grow into a multimillion-dollar business.

Then, hearing that State Representative Larry Koon would be retiring in 2004, she jumped into the race. But Mr. Koon stayed in. At the time, Lexington County, just outside Columbia, was in the throes of transition from a rural community to a suburban, affluent one with many newcomers. The changing voter base may be one reason that the racial and religious attacks against Ms. Haley backfired.

Still, the attacks were so virulent that the state Republican Party condemned Mr. Koon, said Katon Dawson, who was the party chairman at the time.

Ms. Haley called Mr. Dawson to consult. "She asked, 'Is it worth it? You're the chairman of the party. You tell me — is it worth all this?' " he said. He arranged for Jenny Sanford, then the state's first lady, to give her a pep talk. They talked, and Ms. Sanford recalled in an interview that she was impressed. She is now a Haley supporter.

Ms. Haley, dressed for a day of campaigning in a brown silk suit from Exotica, comes across as disciplined and competitive, whether talking about her prowess at video games — "I'm the Wii queen" — or her plans for tax reform, financial disclosure and term limits. She talks as if she already has won.

"I can't wait until January, where people see that we actually get things done the very first year," she said.

Ms. Haley became part of a small cadre of small-government advocates who are ideologically aligned with Gov. Mark Sanford and at odds with the rest of the state's Republican establishment, whom they accuse of abandoning conservative principles. Like Mr. Sanford, she has repeatedly taken her case to the public, sometimes embarrassing legislative leaders and helping her develop a loyal following. And, as with Mr. Sanford, that has led to accusations of grandstanding.

"I'm a fan of the old Nikki Haley," said Harry F. Cato, a Republican representative from Travelers Rest and the House's speaker pro tempore. "The new Nikki Haley became more of a P.R. machine."

But her supporters view her as a fighter. Ms. Haley proved willing to alienate legislative leaders when she went public with a fight to force legislators to conduct roll-call votes, rather than anonymous voice votes, she was removed from a powerful committee of which she was vying to be chairwoman. Both houses of the Legislature eventually passed rules requiring more recorded votes.

Just before the primary for governor, two men came forward saying that they had affairs with her, and a fellow lawmaker called her a "raghead." But the episodes only played into Ms. Haley's underdog narrative.

"The more those guys fight her, the more emboldened she gets," said Ashley Landess, a friend and the president of a policy group that helped push the roll-call issue. "They are making a big mistake in thinking they can threaten her into submission. That won't work."




3 comments:

exosing christianity's true agenda said...

When Indians tout Nikki Haley as some sort of "success" or "model" it makes me cringe. Neither she nor Gunga Jindal is a success. I'm sure that Nikki thought about her political future in college as Gunga did too. She also grudgingly looked at her current husband and probably said, "well, he's not much to look at, but he has something that I can never get from an Indian guy". I also have to believe the stories of marital infidelity. Do you blame her? But look at the guys that she supposedly had affairs with...yuck. Why do these Indian women sell themselves so short? It's sad and pathetic. Think about it - in India, christist politicians act with impunity and bulldoze Hindu temples and openly use their power to convert. In the US Hindus have to be more unassuming and change everything that can be changed, but in the end, you can't change your skin and even that ends up being a "liability". Instead of making our Hindu-ness a strength, we always make it a liability. in a few years, it really won't make any difference if a candidate is Hindu.

exosing christianity's true agenda said...

As san wrote years ago, the right wing in the US supports the left wing in India. The Left Wing in India controls everything because of the nexus between the christists and communists and of couse through their leader, Agent Sonia.

Even if you don't agree with the Left in the US, they are part of the bulwark against the right wing that makes it a requirement for people like Nikki Haley to be christist by injection.

If you want to stop this crap from happening again, you have to understand the true adversary and always remember, "my enemy's enemy is my best friend."

nizhal yoddha said...

pasting comment from user inferno redirected to appropriate post:

In 2008, Madia says he was the only major Indian-American candidate for Congress. Today there are six, including Goyle and Trivedi. Ami Bera in California, Ravi Sangisetty in Louisiana and Reshma Saujani in New York face upcoming primaries, and Surya Yalamanchili won a primary in Ohio.