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Liars, Lying Liars, and Harry Reid
Special to FreeRepublic ^ | 5 February 2005 | John Armor (Congressman Billybob)

Posted on 02/03/2005 6:06:36 PM PST by Congressman Billybob

I’ve never before used a long quote from anyone who has, in Dave Barry’s words, the IQ of a kumquat. But there are exceptions to every rule.

The following appeared on an exceptionally paranoid website known as the Democratic Underground. See for yourselves that this quote is typical of DU.

"The Iraq vote is making me sick this morning

"All the media keeps talking about is how happy the Iraqis are, how high turnout was, and how ‘freedom’ has spread to Iraq. I had to turn off CNN because they kept focusing on the so-called ‘voters’ and barely mentioned the resistance movements at all. Where are the freedom fighters today? Are their voices silenced because some American puppets cast a few ballots?

“I can't believe the Iraqis are buying into this ‘democracy’ bullsh*t. They have to know that the Americans don't want them to have power, because they know that Bush is in this for the oil, and now that he finally has it he's not going to let it go. This election is a charade. The fact is that the Iraqis have suffered during the past two years more than any people on earth at the hands of the American gestapo. Maybe they're afraid and felt they had to vote. That's the only way I can explain it to myself.

“OR... maybe they're smiling because they're using the Americans own game to defeat them. They're voting in candidates who they know will widen the resistance, take the fight to the streets, and finally drive the occupying forces out of their country. Perhaps they're smiling because--right under the American's noses--they're planting the seeds of a bigger and more effective resistance movement....

“... if the Iraq vote is seen as a success that spread ‘freedom’--the world is screwed. Bush's inaugural speech left little doubt that he has other countries on his list to spread ‘freedom’ to. They will be his next targets, and the world will burn because of it.

“Let's hope the resistance got voted in, or if not, they only increase the fight and take down those who betrayed their country today by voting in this fraud election.”

The scary part is that there are maybe a few million Americans who are just this ignorant about American ideas about government. There are hints of this aggressive ignorance in comments by Senator Ted Kennedy before the Iraqi vote. And in the comments made by Senator John Kerry the day AFTER that extraordinary vote.

Have these people never read Aristotle, John Locke, Montesquieu, Thomas Jefferson, or Abraham Lincoln? Dictatorships are the most common government in history and are still a majority of the United Nations. But do these Democrats really think human beings prefer to live under dictatorships, rather than have elections and a free press?

The political future of the human race does not lie in dictatorships, religious or secular. Neither does the future of transportation lie in better horses. Nor the future of communications lie in words printed on paper. Add your own examples, ad nauseam.

While we’re talking about boneheaded foolishness, let’s look at Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid. In his Democrat rebuttal to the President’s State of the Union, he talked about the “one trillion dollars in additional debt” for the “initial costs” of the Bush plan to save Social Security.

Now, the President’s plan will include the sale of US bonds to make up for the changeover, when younger workers choose to put a some retirement contributions into private accounts, rather than into the Social Security. But is this “additional debt”?

The citizens are already alive, who will eventually receive Social Security. The law which defines their benefits are already on the books. Based on anticipated life spans, it adds up to at least $10 billion dollars. That unfunded liability IS THERE, TODAY.

So the bonds for the changeover do not represent “new” debt. Even Harry Reid is not dumb enough to miss this point. So I conclude that he, and others peddling the “new debt” claim, are bald-faced liars.

While we’re taking about Harry Reid’s lies, add this. Today, he claims that allowing younger workers to put some of their money into private accounts will “destroy” the system. But on Fox News Sunday, on 14 February, 1999, Reid said “Most of us have no problem with taking a small amount of the social security proceeds and putting them into the private sector.”

Either Harry (“My father was a hard-rock miner in Search Light”) Reid was lying then, or he is lying now. He should pick one and explain the other.

About the Author: John Armor is a First Amendment attorney and author who lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. CongressmanBillybob@earthlink.net


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: aristotle; davebarry; demresponse; dictatorships; du; harryreid; iraqivote; reid; resistencefighters; socialsecurity; sotu
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: Congressman Billybob

I think Harry Reid may soon be joining Tom Daschle on the has beens list.


22 posted on 02/03/2005 7:15:03 PM PST by The Great RJ
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To: brightlights

We ahve to remember our COngress Critters who have brought this all about. I think we need to remove these Professional Eletist from Congress and go back to our beginnigs and put in the Common Man and Women in the Congress. They were goos in the beginning and would probably be even better now. At least they would have "COMMON" Sense!


23 posted on 02/03/2005 7:19:09 PM PST by 26lemoncharlie (Sit nomen Dómini benedíctum,Ex hoc nunc, et usque in sæculum! per ómnia saecula saeculórum)
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To: Congressman Billybob
This was what Rep Charles Rangle said at a forum in Cranston,RI. in 1998.

ANNOUNCER: Thank you, Representative Sanford. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Representative Charles Rangel from New York.

(applause)

REPRESENTATIVE RANGEL: Thank you. Mr. Vice President, my distinguished partners in the Congress, this great audience that we have on this exciting moment, this morning in Rhode Island. Mo Udall, a former member of the Congress had to wrap up a debate in the House of Representatives not too long ago, and because people had argued all day and all night, he said that everything that had to be said about the subject matter had already been said. And we paused with great relief until he concluded, "but not everybody has said it."

Well, on the question of Social Security, you bet your life not everybody has said it.

(applause)

It's a very sensitive subject, and we are here because it is an emotional subject that Americans have to understand, and Americans have to be heard as to what they got, and what they are willing to risk to get something else. You may not know how much you have invested in the Social Security system over your lives, but there is one thing that you do know-that every month, of every year, or everyone's lifetime-that you can depend, that you're going to get that Social Security check.

(applause)

And while it is true that the economy has so improved, that you may think that you're entitled to a better deal- and you may be right-you also have to remember that people in your family, your parents and your grandparents, they were promised that check and that check also was in the mail and they could depend on the fact that it was there for them.

If we're going to discuss this, what a better time to do it. When the President of the United States, and the Vice President, and the administration has given us this economic opportunity-and for us in politics, the political cover to fix the roof while the sun is shining.

(applause)

Which means what? It means that the back room of the Ways and Means Committee, or the rooms in the House and the Senate will not be making the decisions. You will be making decisions as this debate is heard throughout the United States, as the Concord Coalition and AARP provides this forum for you to better to understand the issues-but more importantly, to direct your members of Congress to do what you think is in the best interest of the program for the people of these United States. So what do we have to do? We have to make certain that those of us who drink from the well don't poison it for the generation that follows.

(applause)

We have to make certain that the dependency that those who retire today, or that check for a basic income where two-thirds of retired Americans depend on it-that we don't change that. We have to make certain that those that survive-the widows, the children, those that have been sick and disabled-that we don't change the rules of the game for them. And we also have to make certain for our younger people who are investing in the system, that they be assured that when the time comes for them to retire, or when the time comes for them to receive the benefits, that the United States government will be there for them, as has been for us and for our parents, and for our grandparents.

(applause)

Now, I'm in a unique position, because my district is one half of the borough of Manhattan. One-half of it is low-income, moderate-income, hardworking people-and the other half of it is the financial district of New York. Everybody in the upper half of my congressional district wished they could take advantage of the boom and this robust economy, but they never had the chance to have the money to take the risk, to take advantage of this great economy. Now that we are reviewing the system, there are some people who said that reliance and government bonds, and the boom of people that will be taking a benefit, will cause us now to reform the system.

And I think that this is what this debate is involved. Because nobody is prepared to embrace a system that is broken-until we make a commitment that we're going to fix it. Now comes the real question, the political question, the sensitive question: "How do we fix it?" I would suggest this, for those who would want to go to the private sector, to privatize, and to make certain that you have your own individual private savings account: God bless them, as long as they're able to say, that you're not going to lose one nickel of benefits as a result of you being involved in this.

(applause)

And if indeed, the way it used to be with people that used to sell Wall Street, they would say that, "this is not an offer, this is not an invitation for you to buy, we're not asking you to invest-if we were to do this, we would have an obligation to tell you what the risk is all about." And that's what this debate is, if you want to shoot craps understand that you could win-or you could lose.

(applause)

The greatest thing-the greatest thing in my district about this debate, because they all are really private-investment type people, is that they think that they're going to go into the market with someone else's money. And if that was possible, I would be with them too. But when they understand the money that's going to be invested will be taken away from your account-whether you know what it is or not-then the question is how do you pay for it. And I suggest to you, if it means that we're going to repair the system by increasing taxes-and especially the regressive payroll taxes-that's a rough option.

If it means that we're going to reduce the benefit for those people, when we know now that two-thirds of retired people rely on that, that would be a rough option.

If it means that we're going to the goal post back, and make it longer before you're entitled-being 68 years old I don't even understand that logic-if all of America is now saying, retire earlier. And if it means, of course, that I have to take some risk as to whether or not my check is going to be in the mail as I used to know it, I want to hear more about the privatization.

And so that is why these debates are so important, so that when the Congress makes a decision that you would know that it's not just going to be a prospectus that is given to you to take advantage of the robust economy. That when we fix the roof, we fix it together, and all of you know that we haven't taken anything away as we attempted to improve the system as we know it.

(applause)

ANNOUNCER: Thank you Representative Rangel. Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in a hand of applause for the Vice President and our Congressional presenters.

Back in 1998 Rep Rangle was willing to admit that the system needed to be fixed.Now he does`nt

24 posted on 02/03/2005 7:22:42 PM PST by carlr
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To: Congressman Billybob
The scary part is that there are maybe a few million Americans who are just this ignorant

No, the really scary part is that 50 million of my so-called "fellow Americans" voted for that traitorous scum sKerry, almost elected him President of my country, by virtue of shear ignorance and/or leftist propaganda.

What scares me more is that they might actually accomplish their goal the next time.

Keep up the fight, people like you give us hope.

p.s.

If you want to get really depressed, read (or re-read) "Sins of the Father" by Ronald Kessler, the story of Joseph P. Kennedy (I got halfway through it last night and couldn't bring myself to go to work and face my liberal clients today).

It's not that I don't know that such depraved beings as the Kennedy clan exist, it's the thought that my neighboors are so ignorant as to blindly revere them AND keep re-electing them.

Drat! My blood is boiling just thinking about it.

I need to go for brisk walk in the freezing rain. And have a weeks ration of grog.

25 posted on 02/03/2005 7:33:33 PM PST by benjaminjjones
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To: Congressman Billybob

Isn't the title a bit redundant?


26 posted on 02/03/2005 7:34:42 PM PST by Brilliant
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To: Congressman Billybob

You really got a put a barf alert. I mean I almost barfed. These people are exponentially sicker than I thought which puts them pretty close to infinte sickness.


27 posted on 02/03/2005 7:36:14 PM PST by Tribune7
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To: AlienCrossfirePlayer
I only read a little of the article. I'm wondering if some medicine exists that could ease these DUer's symptoms.

Hot lead through the brain pan......or is that too mean?

28 posted on 02/03/2005 7:59:39 PM PST by processing please hold (Islam and Christianity do not mix ----9-11 taught us that)
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To: 26lemoncharlie
The SS System has grown into nothing more than a SLUSH FUND for the DUMMO'S.

Grown? It started with LBJ.

29 posted on 02/03/2005 8:07:52 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: Brilliant
Yes, the title is deliberately redundant. I'm also poking a finger in Al Franken's eye, since he has it coming. LOL.

John
30 posted on 02/03/2005 8:08:44 PM PST by Congressman Billybob (Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.)
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To: Congressman Billybob
The citizens are already alive, who will eventually receive Social Security. The law which defines their benefits are already on the books. Based on anticipated life spans, it adds up to at least $10 billion dollars. That unfunded liability IS THERE, TODAY.

I certainly agree with your premise, but I believe the liability to which you refer is $10 Trillion, not $10 Billion.

31 posted on 02/03/2005 8:20:06 PM PST by doc11355
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To: Congressman Billybob

"Have these people never read Aristotle, John Locke, Montesquieu, Thomas Jefferson, or Abraham Lincoln? Dictatorships are the most common government in history and are still a majority of the United Nations. But do these Democrats really think human beings prefer to live under dictatorships, rather than have elections and a free press?"

These people LOVE dictatorships...where have YOU been for the last 100 years? They don't read things about freedom because they think that people really DO love being held captive instead of living free. I think these people suffer from a brain disconnect at birth and cannot see good, but adore evil. They seem to love the real-life macabre.


32 posted on 02/03/2005 11:30:21 PM PST by Shery (S. H. in APOland)
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To: Congressman Billybob

Bump!!!!


33 posted on 02/03/2005 11:34:31 PM PST by Howlin (It's a great day to be an American -- and a Bush Republican!!!!)
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To: Congressman Billybob
If the logical segue from DU to Harry Reid remains that simple, it will be a tough two to four years for the Blue State Boys.
34 posted on 02/04/2005 3:42:16 AM PST by .cnI redruM (The Khmer Rouge never captured anybody's doll. - Jonah Goldberg)
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To: doc11355
Thank you.

Yep, you're right; it is $10 trillion, not billion. I always post my columns on FR before they are published. When I make a bone-headed mistake, I can count on someone to correct me, before my columns are published on www.ChronWatch.com, or get printed in the papers.

John / Billybob
35 posted on 02/04/2005 4:40:21 AM PST by Congressman Billybob (uoi)
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To: The Great RJ

I think it's mandatory that Harry Reid join Daschle in retirement. Along with Barbara Boxer and Nancy Pelosi. It is a target-rich environment, so we need to prioritize. I submit the top priority should be Reid, chiefly because he is so stupid and really unsightly - then Boxer, then Pelosi. We got Daschle, let's keep on truckin'.


36 posted on 02/04/2005 5:45:52 AM PST by astounded (We don't need no stinkin' rules of engagement...)
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To: Congressman Billybob
What strikes me most is the admiration for terrorist thugs, who don't spend their day thinking lofty thoughts of 'freeing' their countrymen (in the off-chance that they are even from Iraq), but rather in devising ways to kill people in a naked grab for power.

These people are not the 'resistance'. They are raving psychopaths who think only of mayhem and death.

37 posted on 02/04/2005 6:21:00 AM PST by CaptRon (Pedecaris alive or Raisuli dead)
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To: Congressman Billybob
Have these people never read Aristotle, John Locke, Montesquieu, Thomas Jefferson, or Abraham Lincoln?

Perhaps, but they prefer Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Che, and Fidel.

38 posted on 02/04/2005 6:25:08 AM PST by Pete'sWife (Dirt is for racing... asphalt is for getting there.)
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To: Congressman Billybob
Thanks for posting the article.

While we’re taking about Harry Reid’s lies, add this. Today, he claims that allowing younger workers to put some of their money into private accounts will “destroy” the system. But on Fox News Sunday, on 14 February, 1999, Reid said

Yes. Destroy the system. You know, the one where the polits have this huge slush fund that they use to pay for needed expenses in their states, because most of the normally allocated money went to pork projects. Don't want the public noticing how much they have been 'borrowing'.

“Most of us have no problem with taking a small amount of the social security proceeds and putting them into the private sector.”

Yeah, no problem taking some small amount out of the SS funds, and putting them in the private sector (of his pocket).

See, he wasn't lying.

39 posted on 02/04/2005 6:32:39 AM PST by UCANSEE2 (sH)
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To: Shery

DEVO said it.

Freedom of choice is what we got.

Freedom from choice is what we want.


40 posted on 02/04/2005 6:34:59 AM PST by UCANSEE2 (sH)
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