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Kicking Rick ( Perry ). Mainstream media and Democrats fear the Texas governor, so they smear him
Pittsburgh Post Gazette ^ | Sept 4, 2011 | Jack Kelly

Posted on 09/03/2011 10:00:12 PM PDT by Clairity

GOP consultant Mark McKinnon says that the editor of a major newspaper told him, "We plan to declare war on Rick Perry and do all in our power to crush him."

Mr. McKinnon was outraged. "No pretense of integrity, professionalism or of unbiased news gathering," he wrote in Investors' Business Daily.

But I doubt he was surprised. This is what the "mainstream" media did to Sarah Palin in 2008, and what likely is in store for anyone Republicans nominate.

But liberals will go after the Texas governor with special venom because he is anti- intellectual, prays in public, takes the Constitution seriously and sometimes carries a handgun, Walter Shapiro wrote in The New Republic.

"It's almost as if Perry's political persona was constructed by bundling together all the fears and phantoms in the left-wing anxiety closet." he said.

(Excerpt) Read more at post-gazette.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: elections; perry; perry2012; perryrecord; rickperry; texas
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To: caww; volunbeer

http://thepatriotstrumpet.com/2011/08/31/governor-perry-ii-teach-texas-school-children-islam%E2%80%94not-christianity/

GOVERNOR PERRY II: TEACH TEXAS SCHOOL CHILDREN ISLAM—NOT CHRISTIANITY
Posted on August 31, 2011 by Richard Johnson
You learned, August 30, here we have the San Antonio Independent School Web presentation on pdf and Power Point.The indispensable Pamela Geller posted the entire curriculum (Muslim Histories and Culture Project) yesterday at Atlas shrugs.

She wrote, “I was moved by the Texas parents who wrote to thank me for exposing this dangerous whitewash. Imagine an in-depth study of Islamic history void of the jihadi wars, land appropriations, cultural annihilations, gender apartheid, enslavements, ethnic cleansing and misogyny. I urge rational and reasoned thinkers to study the curriculum for themselves. The Perry posse would prefer you did not. I ask that you do. Here is the evidence.

“The religion that the Prophet Muhammad preached provided his followers an ethical and moral vision for leading a life of righteousness.” Perry/Khan curriculum.

In one of my first posts on the controversial Aga Khan/Perry school curriculum on Islam for Texas public schools, I published the links (URLs) to the Muslim Histories and Cultures Program (MHC). The MHC page said proudly: “In April 2004, the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and UT-Austin finalized a grant proposal that created the partnership that became known as the Muslim Histories and Cultures Program (MHC)…. Governor Perry was instrumental in getting this program off the ground.”

Soon after I posted about it, the links went dead. It was curious that the multiple pages of all nine lessons plus adjunct powerpoints and lesson plans were all taken offline. Subsequently, I found the Google cached pages and posted those links of the curriculum material. Now those links have also been removed. The cache is gone. Why are they hiding this?

Before everything disappears, I am posting the text and the screenshots of all nine lessons of this proselytizing whitewash of Islam. We are handicapping our children by whitewashing the jihadic doctrine and the threat it presents to the West. This is the actual curriculum, not any one single teacher’s lesson plan (which is what other misinformed blogs are using, claiming it is the actual official curriculum, in an attempt to exonerate Perry of this dastardly action).

Further, why is this even being taught in the public schools? There is no intense, extensive Jewish curriculum or Hindu curriculum or Christian curriculum. Further, these religions are not slaughtering Americans and non-believers in the hundreds of thousands, so why color it pretty?

Rick Perry’s partner in this Islamic education program is the Aga Khan. The Aga Khan Development Network signed three agreements with the Syrian Government, and “between 2003 and 2008,” the Aga Khan’s group “spent $40 million to develop business in Syria.” Syria has been listed by the State Department as among the State Sponsors of Terrorism since December 29, 1979, and for years has allowed the jihad terror groups Hamas and Hezbollah to operate with impunity out of Damascus.

Another Aga Khan organization, the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development, is one of the owners of the Bank al-Habib in Pakistan. In 2007, Daniel Pearl’s widow Mariane sued that bank, charging that it had funded al-Qaeda and was involved in killing Daniel Pearl. Those charges have never been answered.

SPIEGEL Interview with Aga Khan: Spiegel: So, what are the root causes of terrorism?

Aga Khan: Unsolved political conflicts, frustration and, above all, ignorance. Nothing that was born out of a theological conflict.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,442180,00.html

SPIEGEL: That means the West should deal with the radical Islamist Hamas as well?

Aga Khan: You have to work with whoever the population has elected as long as they are willing to respect what I call cosmopolitan ethics.

Aga Khan Senior: How the Eton-educated wartime Aga Khan offered ’30,000 armed Arabs’ to help Hitler – but still evaded treason trial

I was moved by the Texas parents who wrote to thank me for exposing this dangerous whitewash. Imagine an in-depth study of Islamic history void of the jihadi wars, land appropriations, cultural annihilations, gender apartheid, enslavements, ethnic cleansing and misogyny. I urge rational and reasoned thinkers to study the curriculum for themselves. The Perry posse would prefer you did not. I ask that you do. Here is the evidence.

Muslim Histories and Culture Project

What is the Muslim Histories and Culture Project (MHCP)?

The Muslim Histories and Cultures Project was born out of discussions between His Highness The Aga Khan and Texas Governor Rick Perry during the Summer 2002, when The Aga Khan was in Houston for the dedication of a new Ismaili Center. Both His Highness and Governor Perry agreed on the need for Texans to have a greater understanding of Islamic culture, and subsequently brought UT-Austin President Larry Faulkner into the discussions. Located in the state capital, Faulkner’s campus is well positioned to accomplish these goals. A series of meetings followed, with the project ultimately finding a home in UT-Austin’s College of Liberal Arts, under the guidance of Dean Richard W. Lariviere, in association with UT Liberal Arts (UT-LA), the college’s teacher preparation program.

In April 2004, the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and UT-Austin finalized a grant proposal that created the partnership that became known as the Muslim Histories and Cultures Program (MHC). Much has happened since the inception of the partnership. Creation and implementation of a model was of prime importance. MHC recruited and directly trained 80 teachers affecting approximately 15,150 students of World History and World Geography in ten key Texas districts during the two sessions conducted in 2005 and 2006. The purpose is two-fold 1) to fulfill Governor Rick Perry’s desire to better educate Texasteachers on Muslim topics and 2) to train teachers to use a cultural lens approach to understanding other cultures. Governor Perry was instrumental in getting this program off the ground.

Here are some of the elements of the program that show it to be a whitewash of Islam:

Session One

The main reading is from Carl Ernst’s Following Muhammad, the first three chapters. This book whitewashes Muhammad, saying that he “was, by all accounts, a charismatic person known for his integrity” (p. 85). Muhammad’s exhortations to make war against unbelievers, his multiple marriages and child marriage, and other negative aspects of his biography are explained away or ignored entirely.

The curriculum directs participants to “consider Carl Ernst’s statement, ‘It is safe to say that no religion has such a negative image in Western eyes as Islam.’” Then it asks them: “Why is this so? How have political and economic relationships between the Middle East and Western Europe and the United States impacted perceptions of Islam, in the past and the present? How have they impacted perceptions of the ‘West’ among Muslims?” Note that participants are guided to see the “negative image” of Islam as the result of “political and economic relationships between the Middle East and Western Europe and the United States.” No hint is given of the possibility that Islam might have a “negative image” in the West because of jihad conquests, institutionalized oppression of women and non-Muslims, and the like.

The curriculum quotes Edward Said, who ascribed all critical discussion of Islamic jihad and Islamic supremacism to racism and neo-colonialism, as warning that one should speak of “Islams rather than Islam,” and warns that in dealing with Islam “one has entered an astoundingly complicated world.” This invocation of Islam’s complexity is frequently used to discourage those who point to the Qur’an’s violent passages and Muhammad’s exhortations to warfare as evidence of Islam’s bellicose intentions. Yet Islamic jihadists routinely refer to this material with no hesitation based on Islam’s “complexity.”

Session Two

Readings for the session entitled “Muhammad through History” include Celebrating Muhammad: Images of the Prophet in Popular Muslim Poetry and The Miraculous Journey of Mahomet. It notes, correctly, that “for millions of Muslims around the world, the Prophet Muhammad has become the paradigm, or role model, who is worthy of being emulated.” However, there is no hint whatsoever of how Muhammad, as a model to be emulated, has inspired jihad warriors and terrorists.

The common Islamic apologetic claim that Islam inspired all the greatest achievements of Western Judeo-Christian civilization appears in the assertion that “there is strong evidence to suggest that Muslim poetic accounts of the mi’raj, reaching Europe through the Arab courts in medieval Spain, inspired the Italian writer Dante to compose his famous work, The Divine Comedy.” No mention is made of how Dante placed Muhammad in hell as a false prophet.

Session Three

This session on the Qur’an makes no mention whatsoever of the elements of the Qur’an that exhort Muslims to hate unbelievers and make war against them (98:6; 48:29; 47:4; 2:191; 4:89; 9:5; 9:29: 9:123; etc.) The text used is Michael Sells’s Approaching the Qur’an: The Early Revelations, which doesn’t even include the sections of the Qur’an that most directly and emphatically call for violence against non-Muslims.

The curriculum makes sure to point out that “believers point to this very perfection of the text as the proof of the prophethood of Muhammad,” and that “for many, the notion that the Qur’an is inimitable, that is, no human could possibly have produced anything so perfect, proves that it had to be God who revealed this message to Muhammad.” But it makes no mention of the text’s designation of non-believers as “the most vile of created beings” (98:6), the warlike passages noted above; its call to beat disobedient women (4:34) and the like.

Session Four

This second session on the Qur’an tells participants to “discuss the role of the Qur’an in providing direction for an ethical life.” Here again, no mention is made of the ways in which Islamic jihadists use the Qur’an’s teachings to justify violence against and the subjugation of unbelievers.

The curriculum lists eight central themes of the Qur’an. Although there are well over 100 Qur’an verses exhorting believers to jihad warfare, jihad does not make the list.

Session Five

This session on the Sunni/Shi’ite split and other sects in Islam fails to mention one salient point: Islamic law calls for the execution of heretics and apostates; this law has been the foundation for an extraordinary amount of bloodshed between adherents of various Muslim sects throughout history and today.

Session Six

This session dismisses as a “misconception” the idea that “Islam forbids music and representational art.” It does not explain why so many Muslims, including the Taliban who destroyed the Bamiyan Buddhas, came to hold this “misconception.”

Session Seven

Participants are asked, “What conditions in Baghdad encouraged such a vast array of discoveries and inventions?” But the readings give no hint of the fact that Jews and Christians in Baghdad actually accounted for the great majority of these inventions. See here for a full explanation.

Participants are also asked: “Why was there such an abundance of inventions and discoveries attributed to Muslims in Medieval times but not today?” This question guides students toward a discussion of the trumped-up and manipulative modern concept of “Islamophobia.”

The curriculum states: “The religion that the Prophet Muhammad preached provided his followers an ethical and moral vision for leading a life of righteousness.” Again, no mention is made of Muhammad’s exhortations to hate and violence, his child marriage (which many Muslims consider exemplary behavior and imitate it), and the like.

The curriculum states: “Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians, who were subjects of new Arab rulers, could maintain their religious practices provided they paid jizya, a tax in tribute in lieu of military service.” It gives no hint of the institutionalized discrimination and humiliation that this dhimmi status involved.

The curriculum quotes Maria Rosa Menocal, the modern scholar most responsible for the myth of a tolerant, pluralistic Muslim Spain. It also discusses this tolerant Muslim Spain as a fact. In reality, however, Jews and Christians had a humiliating second-class status in Muslim Spain. When one Muslim ruler appointed a Jew as a local governor in Granada in 1066, the Muslims rioted and murdered four thousand Jews. The curriculum doesn’t mention any of that.

Session Eight

The readings for this session again include Carl Ernst’s Following Muhammad, as well as John Esposito’s The Straight Path. Both are highly apologetic, one-sided works that give the reader little idea why Muslims would wage jihad or commit violence in the name of Islam. No works of other perspectives are included.

The curriculum blames the restriction of rights of Muslim women on European colonialism, ignoring the many Islamic texts and teachings that restrict women’s rights.

Session Nine

The participants are again directed to read Carl Ernst and John Esposito, as well as another modern-day non-Muslim Islamic apologist, Charles Kurzman. No works of differing perspectives are presented


141 posted on 09/04/2011 12:58:01 PM PDT by MestaMachine (Bovina Sancta!)
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To: caww; volunbeer

http://www.saisd.net/admin/curric/sstudies/mhcp/mhcproject.html
(This link hasbeen scrubbed)
San Antonio Independent School District

What is the Muslim Histories and Culture Project (MHCP)?
The Muslim Histories and Cultures Project was born out of discussions between His Highness The Aga Khan and Texas Governor Rick Perry during the Summer 2002, when The Aga Khan was in Houston for the dedication of a new Ismaili Center. Both His Highness and Governor Perry agreed on the need for Texans to have a greater understanding of Islamic culture, and subsequently brought UT-Austin President Larry Faulkner into the discussions. Located in the state capital, Faulkner’s campus is well positioned to accomplish these goals. A series of meetings followed, with the project ultimately finding a home in UT-Austin’s College of Liberal Arts, under the guidance of Dean Richard W. Lariviere, in association with UT Liberal Arts (UT-LA), the college’s teacher preparation program.

In April 2004, the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) and UT-Austin finalized a grant proposal that created the partnership that became known as the Muslim Histories and Cultures Program (MHC). Much has happened since the inception of the partnership. Creation and implementation of a model was of prime importance. MHC recruited and directly trained 80 teachers affecting approximately 15,150 students of World History and World Geography in ten key Texas districts during the two sessions conducted in 2005 and 2006. The purpose is two-fold 1) to fulfill Governor Rick Perry’s desire to better educate Texas teachers on Muslim topics and 2) to train teachers to use a cultural lens approach to understanding other cultures. Governor Perry was instrumental in getting this program off the ground.

The curriculum for this project was developed at Harvard University and modified at the University of Texas at Austin.

The responsibilities of the participants are:

~to attend the 10 seminars and complete the assigned readings.
~to attend the January, April, and June meetings in Austin.
~to create lessons concerning Islamic topics with a “cultural lens” approach tied to their grade level to share with other teachers.

http://www.ismaili.net/html/modules.php?op=modload&name=phpBB2&file=viewtopic&t=953&sid=cf49d9fe174ed907d103d9f26b5e55af
(this link sstill works)
09:01 PM CDT on Tuesday, June 14, 2005
By LINDA STEWART BALL / The Dallas Morning News

PLANO – The Ismaili Muslim community announced Tuesday that it is building a $6.5 million worship and community center in Plano, where it has found a warm welcome.

Gov. Rick Perry flew in to lay the first ceremonial brick for the center’s foundation. It was a symbolic gesture since the site for the new center will be a few miles northeast of the Gleneagles Country Club in Plano, where the foundation ceremony was held.

The governor, who is friends with the Ismaili Muslims’ spiritual leader, His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan, said he was honored to participate.

“Our culture is enriched and our society strengthened by a diverse mixture of traditions, heritages and faiths,” Mr. Perry said. “While differences may exist on the surface, there is a common hope for the future that dwells in the heart of every Texan.”

The Ismaili Jamatkhana and Center is a house of worship for Ismailis and a gathering place for youths. The proposed 30,000-square-foot Plano facility will be the first one in Collin County and one of **five** Jamatkhanas in North Texas.
snip
The complex eschews the domes typically found atop Islamic mosques in favor of a more contemporary structure with gardens, a prayer hall, social space, and administrative and education wings.

Ismailis belong to the Shia tradition of Islam, which is a sect of the Shiite group. As such, they believe in one God and consider the Quran the holy text through which God’s words were revealed to the prophet Muhammad. They believe that Muhammad was the last of God’s messengers to mankind.


142 posted on 09/04/2011 1:04:19 PM PDT by MestaMachine (Bovina Sancta!)
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To: volunbeer

They are cowards.


143 posted on 09/04/2011 2:12:59 PM PDT by Grunthor (Did she announce yet? No? Whatever.)
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To: Grunthor
>> Read post 92. Pay attention to the bold font. Education is FUN! <<

Oh, how cute. A link to a CNN news story claiming Al Gore was a "centrist" in 1988. CNN also thinks Diane Feinstein is a "centrist" in the Democrat Party, not surprising since her 8% ACU rating is exactly the same as Gore's was 20 years ago.

Let's see, should I believe the "educational" material from CNN, or Gore's OWN speeches at the time running as a lefty and attacking Dick Gephardt for compromsing with the GOP and his 0% rating from right-to-life?

Well, Grunthor, unfortunately for you, I'm going to go with what I see with my own eyes and ears, not the B.S. that CNN publishes. I didn't believe them then when claimed Joe LIEberman was a "centrist" either, given his 95% liberal record. Nor did I buy the mainstream media propangada that Mark Kirk is a "social moderate" when he has a 100% rating from NARAL. Too bad some freepers drink the kool-aid the mainstream provides.

144 posted on 09/04/2011 2:41:52 PM PDT by BillyBoy (Impeach Obama? Yes We Can!)
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To: BillyBoy

“was a “centrist” in 1988. CNN also thinks Diane Feinstein is a “centrist”

Key words, was and is. It’s almost like they mean’t something.


145 posted on 09/04/2011 2:54:36 PM PDT by Grunthor (Did she announce yet? No? Whatever.)
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To: Clairity
[Your cited article] Liberals often say Republicans are stupid, but they really believe it with regard to Gov. Perry. For liberals, credentials and holding fashionable opinions are more important markers of intelligence than knowledge or accomplishment.

"Liberals revere high SAT scores," Mr. Shapiro wrote.

This is a perfect skewer, and dead on-target. We should hear it more often in the public arena.

James Fallows tried, judged, and hanged "credentialism" aned its claims and theories in a landmark essay in a middlebrow magazine (can't remember for sure whether it was The New Republic or The Atlantic Monthly, think it was the latter) some 20 years ago, but apparently nobody listened -- because they were already fully invested in the credentialist career trajectory. Peggy Noonan and David Brooks are two examples he cites; David Gergen was the current example back then, working in the White House but already, no doubt, planning a career among the commentariat as his next phase, following in the footsteps of Richard Goodwin and Jody Powell.

146 posted on 09/04/2011 4:05:45 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: comebacknewt
There are positions he has taken that I don't like either, but the slanderers on here (and they are easy to spot), are not helping the conservative cause at all.

1. Which posters are "slandering" Perry as opposed to pointing out his numerous deficiencies as a conservative standard-bearer? We're talking about the difference between "slander" and criticism here.

2. Why should they be easy to spot, if they're laying on obvious criticisms that are obviously valid about an obviously flawed candidate? All the candidates have warts -- it's just a matter of looking them over to find where the warts are. Do you have a good way to discern motive in a critic? Obviously you do, since you say slanderers are "easy to spot."

147 posted on 09/04/2011 4:11:32 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: TexasFreeper2009
I have determined that most of these “Palin” supporters are anything but, they are rabid Ron Paul supporters pretending to be Palin supporters to drive a wedge between the two camps

As per my last to the other poster ...... names, please.

Don't Bogart that crystal ball. Tell us what you think.

148 posted on 09/04/2011 4:18:57 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: Tempest

Rick Perry is more conservative than your state of Commufornia, or is it Homofornia? I suppose you would rather have Obama?


149 posted on 09/04/2011 4:19:56 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861 (Surrender means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy.)
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To: Tempest

Rick Perry is more conservative than your state of Commufornia, or is it Homofornia? I suppose you would rather have Obama?


150 posted on 09/04/2011 4:20:06 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861 (Surrender means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy.)
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To: MestaMachine
Is the Richard Johnson in your long post re Rick Perry and the teaching of Islam, Islamism, and the history of same in Texas, the same as the Richard J.V. Johnson who was the longtime publisher of the Houston Chronicle (and a known power-player in Houston politics)?
151 posted on 09/04/2011 4:23:27 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: lentulusgracchus

Hey old friend....Perry is far from perfect, but he is the lesser of “Two Weevils” and far more likely to be elected than anyone else on the field at this moment....


152 posted on 09/04/2011 4:23:35 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861 (Surrender means that the history of this heroic struggle will be written by the enemy.)
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To: Grunthor
I can think of two of these sad people right away that do not debate, they just attack people in the most childish and disgusting way possible. I won’t name names but I bet they show up on every Perry thread today spitting their impotent venom.

Oh, come on. Names, please. Don't hide behind noblesse oblige because we're Americans and short on both noblesse and oblige, by historical choice.

Spit it out. Who's a liar?

153 posted on 09/04/2011 4:27:33 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: TexConfederate1861
Yeah, as I was pointing out to someone on another thread, he has a lot of positions I'd be normally pretty happy with (although he did it again today, opposing a "fence", meaning strong imigration controls, in a speech somewhere); but the problem with Rick Perry is that he's mortgaged to the eyeballs to the Open Borders Lobby. Whatever they want, he follows along.

I found and linked a 2008 press release from low-wage, illegal-immigrant-hiring Tyson Foods praising Rick Perry for, guess what, writing a letter on their behalf to the Bush Administration opposing federal support for ethanol programs, because they were raising the cost of Tyson's chicken feed. A solid example of Rick Perry providing political services to Tyson et al. that the public don't receive.

Considering that open immigration is very likely the ball game sometime in the near/intermediate future (I was just watching on Houston PBS a "Latino" </cant> triumphalist program about how they're the Future of America) -- not only control of Texas, but of the whole country politically as they help the Dems swing into Permanent Ruling Class status and found a minoritarian, oppressive People's Republic on the ruins of our patrimony.

154 posted on 09/04/2011 4:38:25 PM PDT by lentulusgracchus (Concealed carry is a pro-life position.)
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To: TexConfederate1861

Really last time I checked Ricardo Perry enacted the Dream act 10 years before California and California enacted protections against abuse of eminent domain while Ricardo was enacting abuses of eminent domain.

Pretty ‘progressive’ of Perry it seems.


155 posted on 09/04/2011 4:43:03 PM PDT by Tempest (I will be the one to say I you so.)
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To: TheRake

I wish the worthless RINOs would go away too.


156 posted on 09/04/2011 4:52:25 PM PDT by Tempest (I will be the one to say I you so.)
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To: Clara Lou

Please, just because I don’t tolerate the cheap Perry infomercials and I like to point out the facts of his record is know reason for you to feign a indignant attitude.


157 posted on 09/04/2011 6:00:15 PM PDT by Tempest (I will be the one to say I you so.)
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To: Grunthor

Indeed. CNN proves that they consistently lie whether they’re discussing present-day politicians or past records of politicians. Al Gore WAS NOT a centrist when he voted liberal over 90% of the time, and Diane Feinstine IS NOT a centrist now when she votes liberal over 90% of the time. Of course, according to the media, there’s no such thing as a far-left politician. There is only far right-wing, right-wing, and “moderate”.


158 posted on 09/04/2011 6:53:48 PM PDT by BillyBoy (Impeach Obama? Yes We Can!)
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To: lentulusgracchus

Not that I am aware of. It wouldn’t seem to me that he would be taking up this particular cudgel.


159 posted on 09/04/2011 7:16:31 PM PDT by MestaMachine (Bovina Sancta!)
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To: MestaMachine; lentulusgracchus

Placemark to read and FYI for LG.


160 posted on 09/04/2011 8:28:42 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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