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  1. #1
    Veteran DarrinS's Avatar
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    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...s_opinion_main



    In January I was rebuked by some readers for predicting that the GOP would lose, and for saying it deserved to lose, too.

    "It doesn't matter that Americans are generally eager to send Mr. Obama packing," I wrote. "All they need is to be reasonably sure that the alternative won't be another fiasco. But they can't be reasonably sure, so it's going to be four more years of the disappointment you already know."

    I quote these lines less to boast about my prescience than to establish some credibility for what I'm about to say.

    Fellow conservatives, please stop obsessing about what other adults might be doing in their bedrooms, so long as it's lawful and consensual and doesn't impinge in some obvious way on you. This obsession is socially uncouth, politically counterproductive and, too often, unwittingly revealing.

    Also, if gay people wish to lead conventionally bourgeois lives by getting married, that may be lunacy on their part but it's a credit to our values. Channeling passions that cannot be repressed toward socially productive ends is the genius of the American way. The alternative is the tapped foot and the wide stance.

    Also, please tone down the abortion extremism. Supporting so-called partial-birth abortions, as too many liberals do, is abortion extremism. But so is opposing abortion in cases of rape and incest, to say nothing of the life of the mother. Democrats did better with a president who wanted abortion to be "safe, legal and rare"; Republicans would have done better by adopting former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels's call for a "truce" on social issues.

    By the way, what's so awful about Spanish? It's a fine European language with an outstanding literary tradition—Cervantes, Borges, Paz, Vargas Llosa—and it would do you no harm to learn it. Bilingualism is an intellectual virtue, not a deviant sexual practice.

    Which reminds me: Can we, as the GOP base, demand an IQ exam as well as a test of basic knowledge from our congressional and presidential candidates? This is not a flippant suggestion: There were at least five Senate seats in this election cycle that might have been occupied by a Republican come January had not the invincible stupidity of the candidate stood in the way.

    On the subject of idiocy, can someone explain where's the political gold in demonizing Latin American immigrants? California's Prop 187, passed in 1994, helped destroy the GOP in a once-reliable state. Yet Republicans have been trying to replicate that fiasco on a national scale ever since.

    If the argument is that illegal immigrants are overtaxing the welfare state, then that's an argument for paring back the welfare state, not deporting 12 million people. If the argument is that these immigrants "steal" jobs, then that's an argument by someone who either doesn't understand the free market or aspires for his children to become busboys and chambermaids.

    And if the argument is that these immigrants don't share our values, then religiosity, hard work, personal stoicism and the sense of family obligation expressed through billions of dollars in remittances aren't American values.

    Here's another suggestion: Running for president should be undertaken only by those with a reasonable chance of winning a general election. It should not be seen as an opportunity to redeem a political reputation or audition for a gig on Fox News. Mitt Romney won the nomination for the simple reason that every other contender was utterly beyond the pale of national acceptability, except Michele Bachmann.

    Just kidding.

    Though conservatives put themselves through the paces of trying to like Mr. Romney, he was never a natural standard bearer for the GOP. He was, instead, a consensus politician in the mold of Jerry Ford and George H.W. Bush; a technocrat who loved to "wallow in data"; a plutocrat with a fatal touch of class guilt. His campaign was a study in missed opportunities, punctuated by 90 brilliant minutes in Denver. Like a certain Massachusetts governor who preceded him, he staked his presidential claims on "competence." But Americans want inspiration from their presidents.

    Mr. Romney was never likely to deliver on that score. And though I have my anxieties about the president's next term, I also have a hunch the GOP dodged a bullet with Mr. Romney's loss.

    It dodged a bullet because a Romney victory would have obscured deeper trends in American politics the GOP must take into account. A Romney administration would also have been politically cautious and ideologically defensive in a way that rarely serves the party well.

    Finally, the GOP dodged ownership of the second great recession, which will inevitably hit when the Federal Reserve can no longer float the economy in pools of free money. When that happens, Barack Obama won't have George W. Bush to kick around.

    So get a grip, Republicans: Our republican experiment in self-government didn't die last week. But a useful message has been sent to a party that spent too much of the past four years listening intently to echoes of itself. Change the channel for a little while.


    Can't say I disagree with any of this.

  2. #2
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    "the GOP dodged ownership of the second great recession"

    which one is that?

    the one to be caused by govt austerity if Barry allows all or most of Repug's budget cutting?

    "
    Change the channel for a little while."

    won't happen. The more the the Repugs blind themselves their ideological fantasies, the more desperately they are bound and committed to them, like any ideological/religious fanatics. As dubya said, "you Repug folks are either blindly ideological with us or you're against us (and we will purge you)"


    Last edited by boutons_deux; 11-13-2012 at 01:00 PM.

  3. #3
    U Have Bad Understanding Sportcamper's Avatar
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    Some of us are concerned that “The Takers” now outnumber “The Givers”…

  4. #4
    on instagram, str8 flexin DUNCANownsKOBE's Avatar
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    Finally, the GOP dodged ownership of the second great recession, which will inevitably hit when the Federal Reserve can no longer float the economy in pools of free money. When that happens, Barack Obama won't have George W. Bush to kick around.
    Republicans should really work not showing how excited they are about another recession hitting the country to make Obama look bad.

  5. #5
    Cogito Ergo Sum LnGrrrR's Avatar
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    Some of us are concerned that “The Takers” now outnumber “The Givers”…
    Those people are collectively known as "The Idiots."

  6. #6
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    "Some of us are concerned that “The Takers” now outnumber “The Givers”…"

    there will always be more Randian moochers than than adored 1%ers. And the more wealth the 1% sucks up, the more moochers there will be.





  7. #7
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    Key West man writes ‘F*ck Obama’ on will and then kills himself


    http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/11/1...=Google+Reader

  8. #8
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    how sad. amuses you, no doubt.

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    Wisconsin Lawmakers Seek To Arrest Officials Who Implement Obamacare

    Rep. Chris Kapenga (R-Delafield) is one of the nine from Wisconsin who told the Campaign for Liberty he would back legislation to declare Obamacare illegal and allow police to arrest federal officials who take steps to implement it in Wisconsin. He said he believes the health care law is uncons utional, despite the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that it passes cons utional muster.
    “Just because Obama was re-elected does not mean he’s above the cons ution,” Kapenga said.

    http://thinkprogress.org/health/2012...est-obamacare/

    Like the Bible-thumpers, the Cons ution is whatever the they want to make it out to be. Direct continuous, legal revelation from the spirits of Cons utions composers. All as silly as "Christian" pastors claiming they know they heart of God (iow: "God needs LOTS of money!").







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    how sad. amuses you, no doubt.
    yep, hilarious. Put this guy up for the Darwin Award.

  11. #11
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    Romney Co-Chair: Outcome Of Wisconsin Election Would ‘Absolutely’ Have Been Different With Voter ID

    HOST: Do you think photo ID would have made any difference in the outcome of this election?


    DARLING: Absolutely, I think so. We’re looking at all different kinds of precincts and all sorts of same-day registrations and I know people will go “oh, we don’t have fraud and abuse in our elections,” but what can’t we have voter ID when the majority of the people in Wisconsin wanted it. We passed it. The governor signed it. Why should one judge in Dane County be able to hold it up?

    http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/show...60#post6193760

    "Why should one judge in Dane County be able to hold it up?"


    All that WI Dem voter fraud put Bishop Gecko back in his McMasions.




  12. #12
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    Holy !



    Mitt Romney: Obama Won With 'Gifts' To Blacks, Hispanics, Young Voters

    "The president's campaign, if you will, focused on giving targeted groups a big gift," Romney said in a call to donors on Wednesday. "He made a big effort on small things."
    Romney said his campaign, in contrast, had been about "big issues for the whole country."

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...=Daily%20Brief

    Bishop Gecko, "if you will", Wall St, corps and 1% gave mostly heavily to you because they knew you'd "gift" them $Ts in tax expenditures, etc, while "broadening the base base" to the 99%.

    You're one stupid . Your money can't buy you enough brains and honesty.

    Just ing go away.

  13. #13
    Veteran DarrinS's Avatar
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    Holy !



    Mitt Romney: Obama Won With 'Gifts' To Blacks, Hispanics, Young Voters

    "The president's campaign, if you will, focused on giving targeted groups a big gift," Romney said in a call to donors on Wednesday. "He made a big effort on small things."
    Romney said his campaign, in contrast, had been about "big issues for the whole country."

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...=Daily%20Brief

    Bishop Gecko, "if you will", Wall St, corps and 1% gave mostly heavily to you because they knew you'd "gift" them $Ts in tax expenditures, etc, while "broadening the base base" to the 99%.

    You're one stupid . Your money can't buy you enough brains and honesty.

    Just ing go away.

    http://articles.marke ch.com/2012...administration






    The stock market loves President Barack Obama. With all its cheating heart, and all its mercenary soul.

    More than that, actually — it adores him. The love story of Wall Street and Obama is a bromance like no other, a man-crush for the ages.


    Despite his threats to soak the wealthy for more taxes, despite Fed Chairman’s attack on savers, despite even his threat to kill special treatment for dividends, ins utional investors have thrown themselves at Obama’s feet as they have not done in the first term of any president in the past century.

    You could look it up. The S&P 500 has gained 76% since his inauguration in January 2009, while the Nasdaq 100 is up 128%.




    Compare that to the S&P 500’s 13% decline and the Nasdaq 100’s 45% wipeout in the first term of his predecessor, George W. Bush; or the mere 25% gain in the first term of conservative icon Ronald Reagan; or even the 60% gain in the halcyon early 1990s in the first term of Bill Clinton.

    The staggering advance of the market is probably one of Obama’s greatest accomplishments, and yet, in a rich irony, political sensitivities prevent him from bragging about it.

    The beauty part is that this was not a coincidence, beginner’s luck or a historical fluke.


    The administration and the Federal Reserve run by his appointed chairman, Ben Bernanke, have systematically stuffed big banks’ pockets with cash in an unending rescue effort, slashed interest rates to the lowest levels of the past 300 years, diverted senior citizens’ savings to revive the moribund residential construction industry and showered drug makers and insurers with fresh sources of revenue from his health care overhaul.

    Little wonder then that Wall Street cannot bear the idea of parting ways with the Obama administration, and thus in the past two months has thrown a tantrum to protest the surprising advancement of challenger Mitt Romney in the polls.

    Now that the president has won a second term, you can expect most of the sectors that have benefited from the present administration to keep on rolling. Here are some top prospects.

    Health care

    The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the President’s health care initiative, set out new mandates, subsidies and credits to employers and individuals to increase Americans’ access to health care. Upon its passage in March 2010, investors began boosting the shares of drug makers, insurance providers and hospitals because they all suddenly had a lot more paying customers, courtesy of the government and taxpayers.

    Shares of Pfizer (US:PFE), for example, had fallen 50% during the eight years of the Bush Administration, January 2001 to January 2009. In contrast, its shares are up 70% during the Obama Administration, almost in a straight line. Sixty-four percent of the gains in the maker of Viagra, Zoloft and Lipitor have come since ACA passed.

  14. #14
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    Wall St gave something like 10:1 BishopGecko:Barry (at least that was what the non-dark money looked like, probably much higher ratio if the secret, dark money could be known)

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    NRA-supported nearly all lost. The media has noted it, so:

    NRA Lashes Out At "Dim Journalists" For Shattering Electoral Powerhouse Myth

    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2012/11...atterin/191377

    RM has a great show on how little the right wing contributors got back on the campaign investments

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/

  16. #16
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Holy !



    Mitt Romney: Obama Won With 'Gifts' To Blacks, Hispanics, Young Voters

    "The president's campaign, if you will, focused on giving targeted groups a big gift," Romney said in a call to donors on Wednesday. "He made a big effort on small things."
    Romney said his campaign, in contrast, had been about "big issues for the whole country."

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...=Daily%20Brief

  17. #17
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    BishopGecko's fantasy bull has LOTS of company

    Do Conservative Pundits Ever Have To Be Right?

    Conservative hand-wringing in the wake of President Obama's victory continues unabated, with both voters and strategists venting their frustration about the GOP's loss, while condemning the conservative media for leading followers to believe a GOP victory was imminent. (A landslide!)




    Instead of being honest down the homestretch, conservative pundits on Fox News and at places like the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post fed Republicans a steady diet of falsehoods and Pollyannaish analysis that ran counter to the clear polling data about the state of the race.

    Some Republican leaders are now promoting wholesale changes. Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal urged Republicans to "stop being the party of stupid" and to reject the anti-intellectualism that has often defined the political movement. "We've also had enough of this dumbed-down conservatism," he told Politico.

    But "dumbed-down conservatism" is what drives the GOP Noise Machine. It's what Fox, Rush Limbaugh and other conservative media have been pushing for years and posting healthy profits in the process. If there's going to be widespread change within the conservative movement it's going to have to include the right-wing media. And for that to happen, accountability has to be finally introduced into the equation.

    Currently it's a foreign notion among many commentators who boast dubious track records of being chronically incorrect. Early indications are that most conservative pundits won't face recriminations from within the GOP Noise Machine for getting everything wrong about the campaign. But will consumers finally revolt?

    Note that last week CNBC's Larry Kudlow welcomed Romney loyalist Jennifer Rubin from the Washington Post onto his program two nights after Romney lost decisively. On the show there was no discussion about how all of Rubin's horse race insights had been monumentally wrong.

    Kudlow politely declined to ask Rubin about her suggestion that Romney might win nearly all the battleground states. (He won just one, North Carolina.) And he also didn't discuss the revelation that Rubin had misled readers in real time about the status of the campaign. The conservative CNBC host, among those who erroneously predicted a Romney blowout, politely demurred and accountability was ignored.

    For weeks, if not months, Rubin's readers were led to believe the Obama campaign was crumbling and the in bent was making one foolish move after another. After Obama won an electoral landslide, Rubin wasn't asked about her dreadfully erroneous spin. Neither was Kudlow's other guest, James Pethokoukis, a blogger from the American Enterprise Ins ute who forecast Romney would win 301 electoral votes. (Romney won 206.)

    Between the three of them, Kudlow, Rubin and Pethokoukis could not have been more wrong about the election; an election they allegedly studied intently all year long. And none of the three bothered to acknowledge their failings on CNBC that night.
    The Weekly Standard's Jay Cost was another full-time campaign watcher who obsessively assured readers that Obama's chances were dim. Casting a critical eye towards polling, Cost presented his "interpretation" of what was happening in the campaign:
    There was no way voter turnout among Democrats and Republicans would look the same as it did in 2008.

    It did
    .

    Cost's explanation last week then, for why he got everything wrong about Obama vs. Romney? Answer: The Obama campaign "played to its base with a level of intensity rarely seen in the modern era." (Whatever that means.) And Cost was surprised that it worked.

    Here's the real punch line, though, and here's why the conservative media have dug themselves such a deep, insular hole: Two days after Cost got everything wrong about the campaign, James Taranto at the Wall Street Journal linked to Cost's post-election column and urged people to read Cost's deep insights about the campaign. (Surprise! Taranto loved Cost's piece about how the Romney defeat did not represent a serious set back for the GOP.)

    So Cost's penalty for completely misjudging the election was to be touted as a sharp thinker by the Wall Street Journal. The point being, within the GOP media bubble there's no price for having been consistently wrong about the campaign. There's no shame in announcing all the polls are wrong (biased!), and that Romney was surging to an easy win, even though both claims were pure fantasy.

    That no-harm/no-foul rule also extends to the mainstream media. Five days after Romney's defeat, Face the Nation invited Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan to pontificate about the campaign. It was an interesting choice considering Noonan had botched the election, insisting the day before the vote that Romney was marching to victory over the "small and lost" Obama campaign.

    Uninterested in polling data, Noonan sensed Romney's looming victory because "all the vibrations" were right. Plus, she saw more Romney/Ryan yard signs while out traveling in Florida.

    I realize Noonan is not a data-miner and her writing style is more impressionistic. But she works for the largest newspaper in America and her (erroneous) election-eve analysis came down to "vibrations" and lawn signs? That's just embarrassing.
    Noonan appears to be in no danger of having her reputation dinged by the media, though. What about angry conservative media consumers? Will they penalize any of the sites and pundits who emphatically misled readers, listeners and viewers about the state of the race?

    Historically, there's little evidence of right-wing media outlets losing their audience in the wake of getting stories wrong, even getting them spectacularly wrong. There seems to be an almost tacit understanding among conservative news consumers that the GOP Noise Machine tells them what they want to hear about how crooked and un-American Democrats are. And that even if the stories don't hold up to scrutiny, consumers remain loyal.

    But last week's election results seemed especially traumatic for Republican voters, so it's possible there could be fall out.

    The Daily Beast's Michael Tomasky highlighted this angry comment posted by a dedicated RedState reader [emphasis added]:

    The simple fact is that in the run-up to this election, we were fed a steady diet of lies, from all our "loyal" sources. We need to hold not only the Romney campaign accountable, but also the conservative press (specifically the Murdoch press - Fox was the worst of the bunch), and the establishment talking heads like Karl Rove and Peggy Noonan. We need to get clear about something: these people are selling us a product. They have been taking our money and telling us bedtime stories. We complain about the MSM, but can we honestly say that the conservative press has been more honest?

    Writing a scathing critique of the right-wing media's debacle, The Atlantic's Conor Friedersdorf noted that in covering the election, the biggest news story of the year, "the conservative media just got its ass handed to it by the mainstream media."

    Indeed it did. And unless people start demanding some much-needed accountability from the GOP Noise Machine, the conservative drubbings will continue.



    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2012/11...e-right/191374

  18. #18
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    Ignoring History, Fox's Hannity Claims Voter Fraud in Philly Precincts Where No One Voted For Romney

    "Is it possible the Governor Romney didn't appeal to a single voter -- not one -- in these places?" Democratic strategist Mo Elleithee explained to Hannity that Romney, George W. Bush, and John Kerry all had won precincts where their opponents won zero votes. Nevertheless, Hannity insisted that the possibility of this happening is "zero," adding, "I don't believe it. I think this is voter fraud."


    • About 94 percent of the 633 people who live in that division are black. Seven white residents were counted in the 2010 census.


    • In the entire 28th Ward, Romney received only 34 votes to Obama's 5,920.


    • Although voter registration lists, which often contain outdated information, show 12 Republicans live in the ward's 3rd division, The Inquirer was unable to find any of them by calling or visiting their homes.


    • Four of the registered Republicans no longer lived there; four others didn't answer their doors. City Board of Elections registration data say a registered Republican used to live at 25th and York Streets, but none of the neighbors across the street
    • Friday knew him.


    • The ward's 15th division, which also cast no votes for Romney, also cast no votes for McCain in 2008. Thirteen other Philadelphia precincts also cast no votes for the Republican in both 2008 and 2012.


    • Nationally, 93 percent of African-Americans voted for Obama, according to exit polls, so it's not surprising that the president did even better than that in some areas.


    Finally, the article commented that "in 2008, McCain got zero votes in 57 Philadelphia voting divisions." Thus, it is not surprising that Romney saw a similar result.

    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2012/11...er-frau/191370

    Don't disturb Fox assholes' paranoid fantasies with facts.

  19. #19
    Cogito Ergo Sum LnGrrrR's Avatar
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    I love how Peggy Noonan can pretty much say, "Ok, here are all the things I was wrong about..." and then continue knowing nothing will come of it. Hilarious. I wish I could do that at my job. "Ok boss, I know I said this wouldn't take down the four-star's comm, but I was wrong about that. Let's move on."

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    5 Ways the Right-Wing Is Taking Crazy to New Heights


    1. Restaurant owner imposes nonsense “Obamacare surcharge,” threatens to reduce employees’ hours.


    John Metz, the guy who owns the Hurricane Grill & Wings chain and is a franchisee of dozens of Denny’s and Dairy Queen restaurants, has said he will reduce employees’ hours and pass a 5 percent surcharge onto his customers because Obama was re-elected. His specific argument is that he has to take these steps because of how much Obamacare will cost his businesses.

    Get a load of this (via the Huffington Post [5]):

    "If I leave the prices the same, but say on the menu that there is a 5 percent surcharge for Obamacare, customers have two choices. They can either pay it and tip 15 or 20 percent, or if they really feel so inclined, they can reduce the amount of tip they give to the server, who is the primary beneficiary of Obamacare," Metz told The Huffington Post. "Although it may sound terrible that I'm doing this, it's the only alternative. I've got to pass the cost on to the consumer."

    It sounds terrible, because it is terrible, Mr. Metz. Metz isn’t the first business owner to threaten workers’ stability or increase costs for consumers in the name of Obama’s re-election. As Forbes’s Caleb Melby points out [6], Papa John’s CEO John Schnatter has threatened to increase prices on his pizzas by 10 to 14 cents per pie, though if he “were to fairly reflect the increased cost of doing business onset by Obamacare” the price increase would be “[r]oughly 3.4 to 4.6 cents a pie.” Not only are these business owners exaggerating how much Obamacare would cost to make a political point – they also assume that customers wouldn’t be willing to pay an extra 4 cents to ensure that the person making their meal has health insurance. And that is pretty sad.

    2. Georgia state senators hold four-hour briefing on Obama “mind-control technique” conspiracy.


    We’ve all heard our fair share of Obama conspiracy theories, but this one is noteworthy in that it comes from inside the Georgia state Capitol. Mother Jones reports [7] that majority leader Chip Rogers convened state legislators in mid-October to listen to a four-hour presentation given by tea party activist Field Searcy.

    About 23 minutes into the briefing, Searcy explained how President Obama, aided by liberal organizations like the Center for American Progress and business groups like local chambers of commerce, are secretly using mind-control techniques to push their plan for forcible relocation on the gullible public:

    They do that by a process known as the Delphi technique. The Delphi technique was developed by the Rand Corporation during the Cold War as a mind-control technique. It's also known as "consensive process." But basically the goal of the Delphi technique is to lead a targeted group of people to a pre-determined outcome while keeping the illusion of being open to public input.

    Uh, right. Read more about the conspiracy and watch a video of Searcy’s presentation here [7].

    3. Montana state representative asks to be paid in gold and silver because he fears the collapse of U.S. currency.


    This one comes to us via the Billings Gazette [8]:

    A legislator from Columbia Falls is asking the state to pay him in gold and silver coins because he is skeptical about the future of the dollar.

    Republican Rep. Jerry O'Neil justified his request in his letter to Montana Legislative Services this week by saying a clause in the U.S. Cons ution says no state shall "make anything but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts."

    O'Neil writes that he thinks the high national debt makes it possible that the bottom will fall out from under the U.S. dollar.

    O'Neil says he does not know how Legislative Services will respond.

    I have a few guesses about how they’ll respond.

    4. Conservative columnist goes full racist: “Maybe minorities' values need changing.”


    There were too many racist dog whistles to count during this election season. But this column [9] by right-winger Dennis Prager isn’t a dog whistle so much as it’s a blow horn. A big, sad, loud blow horn trumpeting a pathetic resistance to accept that women’s and minorities’ priorities are legitimate.

    The headline (“Maybe Minorities' Values Need Changing”) and lines like “there is no debate over whether the minorities' (and single women's) values are correct or whether the values of the white males are correct” tell you pretty much everything you need to know about Prager and his ideas.

    Oddly enough though, AlterNet readers will probably find a few things to agree with in the piece:

    The Democratic Party, and the left generally, have done a magnificent job in identifying conservative values as white male values.

    Right, because they are. (Thanks for the compliment!)

    5. Convicted con man whines about how “difficult” the next four years will be.


    Here are a few choice lines from Conrad Black’s whiny missive for the National Review [10]:

    “In the last 40 years, as many as 20 million unskilled peasants have illegally entered the U.S.”

    “This president could not run on his record and just smeared his opponent as a rich asset-stripper, and frightened women voters with fatuous red herrings about ‘reproductive rights.’”

    “For the first time, a coalition of pigmentational minorities and government employees and other benefit recipients outvoted the bulk of the traditional white majority. If this is the template for America’s electoral future, strains unimaginable since the Civil War will result.”

    Those are some strong moral judgments coming from a man convicted of defrauding shareholders of $6.1 million.

    http://www.alternet.org/print/news-a...zy-new-heights

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    Boutons, just start a new thread like your VRWC one. man.

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    johnsmith!

    get a grip, man!

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    Focus On The Family Claims Marriage Equality Passed Because Voters Are ‘Unchurched’

    In addition to the financial mismatch, those states are also among the most unchurched in the nation—reflecting a discrepancy in the way voters there regard marriage compared to other areas of the country.


    “This debate does not end here, but it’s unfortunate that a majority of our state has concluded that the ins ution of marriage exists solely to ratify the emotional connection of adults,” said Joseph Backholm, executive director of the Family Policy Ins ute of Washington. “As is always the case when adults decide they’re the most important people in the world, it’s the kids that will lose.”

    http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/1...re-unchurched/

    Ah yes, the lying, slandering, slimy, sociopathic Repugs as the party of Christ!



  24. #24
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    Another Right-wing intellectual leader and thought-dictator sounds off.

    Beck: Obama's Re-Election is the 'Worst Choice in the History of Our Planet'

    http://www.rightwingwatch.org/conten...ory-our-planet


  25. #25
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    I feel safer knowing that Right Wing Watch is aggregating my "news" for me.

    http://www.rightwingwatch.org/conten...ory-our-planet

    fify

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