Posted on 04/20/2007 8:45:03 AM PDT by ChicagoConservative27

RE: POLLING POINT
I wonder if they were just waiting for my response.
I couldn’t get to it when they sent it on Monday,
so they sent a reminder this morning.
LOL!!!
This may answer your question...
TMZ--Apr 19th 2007 2:57PM--An enraged Alec Baldwin unleashed a volcanic tirade of threats and insults on his 11-year-old daughter, Ireland, calling her a "thoughtless little pig," and bashing her mother Kim Basinger -- and TMZ has obtained the whole thing unfiltered and raw. And we've learned, a family law judge was so alarmed after hearing the tape, she has temporarily barred Baldwin from having any contact with his child.
Most actors apparently are.
Iraqnophobia - Love it!
Alec Baldwin is too dumb to have a favorite song.
Hey buddy.
I’ve been trying to get hold of navynukemom, at least that’s what I thought her screen name was, but evidently not. I think you folks know who I’m talking about. Any help out there?
(notice the new tag I stole)
What is amazing is that some of the posters where this story Alac Baldwin vile first appeared are defending him!! They question the authenticity of the tape, think Kim Basinger is turning the daughter against the father, say she should not have leaked the take... Some people are so very blinded by famous Hollyweird folk.
Unfortunately, it is already co-opted:
Iraqnophobia (i.RAK.nuh.foh.bee.uh) n. An unusually strong fear of Iraq, especially its ability to manufacture and use biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons.
http://www.wordspy.com/words/Iraqnophobia.asp
Earliest Citation:
Leno also expertly paced his show. He opened with a machine-gun barrage of one-liners, moving quickly from earthquakes, animals, condoms, something he called “ Iraqnophobia,” and the almost instantaneous rise in the price of gasoline as a result of events in the Middle East.
Mark Marymont, “Leno show was long, but didn’t drag,” Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, August 4, 1990
Howdy everybody!
Hey Roc, its navynucmom.
From the article that Fox published:
[...The recording was published by celebrity news site
TMZ.com, which said that the call was placed on April 11...]
So Baldwin is so smart, he doesn’t even know what day
it is. But then he thinks he’s god, so tomorrow can
be any day he wishes it to be. He needs to get off
the drugs.
P.S. It’s a great tagline!
Thank you very much.
I knew someone on this thread could help.
Later all.
Alll:
Have a great day...
Mark R. Levin | National Review | Friday, April 20, 2007 10:08 AM
Attacking Alberto Gonzales is like clubbing a baby seal. He's weak. He was always weak. He was weak when he served as White House counsel. He was weak when he was confirmed by the Senate for attorney general. And he was weak during testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday. Now, before there was Gonzales, there was John Ashcroft. He was always strong. He was strong when he served in the Senate. He was strong when he was confirmed by the Senate for attorney general. And he was strong when he testified before the 9/11 Commission. They said he had to go because he was strong.
Everyone knows what's going on here. The Democrats, who started this, want Gonzales's head on a stake as another supposed example of administration corruption. They want the public to believe that the firing of these eight U.S. attorneys is the equivalent of Watergate. These are the same Democrats who defended Janet Reno to the end despite real malfeasance, including the Elian Gonzales disaster, the WACO massacre, and the deadly expansion of the legal wall between the CIA and FBI. In comparison, Gonzales is Oliver Wendell Holmes. But Republicans have had enough of him. They see him as incapable of defending himself, let alone advancing a conservative agenda. And they hope to replace him with someone more to their liking, which will never happen given this Senate. In the big scheme, none of this matters, and the public could care less. The presidents ratings arent affected by this. This is an inside-the-beltway manufactured scandal.
(By the way, I say this as someone who has never been impressed with Gonzales, Harriet Miers, and so many of the people the president holds close.)
Far more relevant, consequential and disturbing is the behavior of the Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, who by word and action is actively undermining our fighting men and women in Iraq. His legislative efforts to starve our armed forces in the middle of a war are as contemptible as anything Ive witnessed in my 25 years in Washington. And yesterday he made a statement that was so disgraceful and brazen that it could have been uttered by Tokyo Rose during World War II or Jane Fonda during the Vietnam War. The difference, of course, is that Reid is the highest ranking Democrat in the United States Senate.
For those who are so pre-occupied with Gonzales that they may not have heard it, this is what Reid said yesterday: "I believe ... that this war is lost, and this surge is not accomplishing anything, as is shown by the extreme violence in Iraq this week."
So, Reid announces to our brave volunteers that their country is sending them to a lost war. And he announces to our enemy that victory is within their reach just keep up the killing a little longer. During my radio show last night, I received a call from a Gold Star father. He was outraged by Reids comment. He has called before and has become a good friend. But Ive never heard him as angry and frustrated as he was last night.
Rather than join the chorus demanding Gonzales's resignation, let me be the first to demand Reid's resignation. And let's see how many pundits, conservative and otherwise, will join me.
The President is on TV.
They say it there will be a response to Reid’s comment. He’s in Michigan.
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