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Euphonious Polemic
Guest
I nominate post #761 as today's Stupid Republican (idea) of the day.
Well, yeah. Of course, I'd rather the government didn't subisdize and award lucrative contracts to companies that are trying to cover up crimes and screw over their employees, but that's just me.The people voting against it are simply people who see no need to get the government involved when rape is already illegal. Anyone who is raped can bring charges and have their case heard in court. And if a company interferes or attempts to prevent it for whatever reason, they can be sued.
Demented DeMint said:They [Iranian immigrants] understand socialism. They understand tyrants. But none of us have ever had it here. We don
Does this count as an idea? South Carolina Governor takes a hike.
He's gone 4 days before he thinks to tell anybody he was planning to leave. He didn't even tell his wife. Previous stories indicated he was a little miffed at being court ordered to accept stimulus money and having all of his signed bills vetoed. Could this be a part of the GOP's new strategy of Taking Their Ball and Going Home?
Arne Olav Brundtland wrote a humorous memoir about being married to Norway's first (and so far only) female prime minister. He was expected to accompany his wife on official business from time to time, and found that his hosts had often never dealt with a man in his position before and were doing their best to wing it.We shouldn't have a first lady. Was Dennis Thatcher Britain's first anything?
... black man is dark meat? Soylent Possum is made out of chicken!"If opossum is the other dark meat, what is the original dark meat he is referring to?" Hensley said. "It is not only thoughtless, but outrageous."
The affair started a year ago when Bush was in the White House and Sanford was being considered as a running mate for McCain. Of course, it's President Obama's fault!![]()
Is this the Republican default since 9/11? Just keep everybody scared all the time, because frightened people can be persuaded to vote against their own self interests?
And yet, maybe there is hope.It gets worse - check the results of the poll next to the article.
What an embarrassment. I am so glad I'm not an Arlington resident. I would be ashamed of this gibbering dipstick.
Of course he has freedom of speech and he should be encouraged to use it, how else will the rest of use figure out what a tool he is.
To hell with Wiseman and his unAmerican, unChristian, and stupid remarks. He ain't shit anyway, just some mayor, of someplace I don't give a damn about.When we stop doing the I hate you - and my god is better than your god dance - this world will be a much better - and peaceful - place.
Nope. 'Death panels' was a mischaracterization that actually referred to bureaucratic decisions to disallow lifesaving treatment due to cost considerations. Do you think the government wouldn't do something like that? I know of a woman who had a stroke and was completly paralyzed on the left side of her body. She applied for Social Security disability benefits. After six months of waiting for a decision, she was denied because the government deemed that she was still capable of doing "some kind of work."Of course you're right. I assume you felt the same way about Palin and her "death panels" bullshit. Right?
Your cites? Yes, I did. Allow me to quote from the second one the following:I take it you didn't read the cites.
That's what I was going to ask about. Why should an unelected, unofficial participant in government be subject to more stringent public reporting rules than the vice president? So, what are the requirements about policy groups that elected office-holders take part in?I disagree. At least not is she is forging public policy. But, hell, I think that Cheney's energy policy meetings should have been public too.
Much as I hate to throw cold water on such a tempting prospect, I remember both Barry Goldwater and Richard Nixon. In each case the "pundints" declared the GOP to be RIP, and in each case it bounced back in a few years.Republicans, the next Whigs!
I bet Sanford knows how to say this in Spanish...You people don't even know how deep this thing goes.
Strange, I speak spanish and we always called it a tilde ...
You keep quoting this Safire column as though it's meaningful. Starr found no evidence that any of this occurred. Moreover, there was nothing damaging to the Clintons in any of those files anyway, so there was no motive to move them.I knew a woman once whose philosophy, if caught red-handed at something she shouldn't be doing, was to deny, deny, deny...under the belief that blatant and continued denials whould eventually cause the accuser to doubt what they'd seen with their own eyes.
That won't work with me.
To wit, from William Safire in the New York Times: [bolding mine]
(1) Foster's body is discovered July 20. White House aides, unobserved, are in and out of his office that night and next day. His possession of the Whitewater file is kept secret. (2) On Thursday, July 22, White House Counsel Bernard Nussbaum, with intimidated cops nearby, gives Foster's box of Whitewater files to Ms. Williams (not, as was long said, to the Clintons' lawyer). (3) After talking to Hillary Clinton, Ms. Williams locks the files in a closet in the third-floor family quarters of the White House, to which she had the only key. (4) Not until Tuesday, July 27, are the Whitewater files retrieved by the lawyer, then Robert Barnett.
So, a) Foster had files regarding Whitewater that had been kept secret. b) a box of Whitewater files was given to Williams. c) After consulting with Hillary Clinton, Williams, who had the only key, locked the box in a closet in the White House living quarters. d) The files were finally turned over to Barnett on July 27, a week after Foster's suicide.
Now a box of Whitewater files may be construed as nothing but thin air to you, but to me it's a box of Whitewater files.