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Enough to drive Democrats to drink
Washington Times ^
| 4/06/04
| Wesley Pruden
Posted on 04/05/2004 11:45:09 PM PDT by kattracks
Edited on 07/12/2004 4:14:25 PM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
Teddy Kennedy sounds like a man who needs a stiff drink.
Once the great white hope of the Democrats and having relegated himself to great white whale, Teddy is now the designated doofus for John Kerry, assigned to campaign for him in places where Monsieur Kerry can't, won't or shouldn't go.
(Excerpt) Read more at washtimes.com ...
TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS:
1
posted on
04/05/2004 11:45:09 PM PDT
by
kattracks
To: kattracks
Teddy Kennedy sounds like a man who needs[has had far too many] a stiff drink
2
posted on
04/05/2004 11:49:55 PM PDT
by
GeronL
(Hey, I am on the internet. I have a right (cough, cough) to write stupid things.)
To: All
3
posted on
04/05/2004 11:50:02 PM PDT
by
Support Free Republic
(Freepers post from sun to sun, but a fundraiser bot's work is never done.)
To: GeronL
Teddy had to abandon the mantra of "jobless recovery" in his remarks yesterday and lapsed into warmed-over antiwar jive talk from the Vietnam era. Bingo.
To: JohnHuang2
should we force them to call it a jobful recovery?
5
posted on
04/05/2004 11:58:02 PM PDT
by
GeronL
(Hey, I am on the internet. I have a right (cough, cough) to write stupid things.)
To: kattracks
"This president," he said, "has created the largest credibility gap since ..." [pause] "... since Richard Nixon."
Richard Nixon stated that Alger Hiss was a Soviet spy, while Democrats around him rallied to Hiss's defense. When I think of what "credibility gap" was made apparent by Nixon, that's what comes to my mind first. Democrats know it too, and that's why they will despise him forever. No other reason. Clinton's crimes were of the same nature and a dozen times more egregious than anything Nixon did in Watergate.
Qwinn
6
posted on
04/06/2004 12:07:45 AM PDT
by
Qwinn
To: kattracks
This from a man who left a woman to drown trapped in his car that he ran off the road in a stupor.
7
posted on
04/06/2004 12:11:10 AM PDT
by
ladyinred
(Monthly donors don't have to think! Become one now and veg out!)
To: kattracks
Freshen that up for you, Senator?
8
posted on
04/06/2004 12:13:30 AM PDT
by
bootyist-monk
(<--------------------- Republican Attack Machine)
To: ladyinred
Shameless is his middle name. The man is absolute scum.
To: bootyist-monk
The American taxpayer will never stop paying for my guilt.
10
posted on
04/06/2004 12:27:16 AM PDT
by
Agnes Heep
(Solus cum sola non cogitabuntur orare pater noster)
To: JohnHuang2
See my tagline.
11
posted on
04/06/2004 12:29:51 AM PDT
by
Texasforever
(I can’t kill enough brain cells to become a democrat just by drinking.)
To: kattracks
How many hours did Mary Jo live in absolute terror while this phoney lightweight debated his political career.
12
posted on
04/06/2004 12:30:40 AM PDT
by
tkathy
(nihilism: absolute destructiveness toward the world at large and oneself)
To: kattracks
The Wall Street Journal calls it "the Rodney Dangerfield recovery" because, as Rodney might say, "it don't get no respect." Laugh!
13
posted on
04/06/2004 12:38:54 AM PDT
by
Flyer
( http://talesfromtherail.com/ . . . .The disaster in Houston known as MetroRail)
To: kattracks
I go crazy when I read about all these lets-stamp-out-hunger drives that are sweeping the country. Everywhere I look I see extremely well-fed Americans, and I don't live in the richest area of the country. But even here in my part of the mid-west there are endless food drives and feed-the-hungry programs. I think the do-gooders need to get a life. Their efforts would be more productive doing educate-the-ignorant drives. If there are large pockets of hungry in America through no fault of their own, I'll be one of the first to donate food. But I doubt that there are.
14
posted on
04/06/2004 12:53:01 AM PDT
by
driftless
( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
To: driftless
Those drives tend to pop up whenever there is an election. They could care less about 'hunger.'
15
posted on
04/06/2004 1:03:18 AM PDT
by
piasa
(Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
To: kattracks
To: kattracks
17
posted on
04/06/2004 4:13:44 AM PDT
by
GailA
(Kerry I'm for the death penalty for terrorist, but I'll declare a moratorium on the death penalty)
To: driftless
I think the do-gooders need to get a life. Their efforts would be more productive doing educate-the-ignorant drives. They can't give away what they don't have.
To: GeronL
should we force them to call it a jobful recovery? Better not, Howard Dean will get upset and accuse us of exploiting religion in economic policy... Job being his favorite book of the New Testament and all.
To: bootyist-monk
Time has not been good to this man.
20
posted on
04/06/2004 6:08:27 AM PDT
by
Salman
(Mickey Akbar)
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