Posted on 02/04/2013 7:48:27 PM PST by South40
Texas Gov. Rick Perry is continuing his effort to lure businesses away from San Diego by taking to the airwaves.
Fueled by the November passage of Proposition 30, which raised sales and some income taxes, Perry has voiced an ad that will run on six radio stations in the state - including KCQB 1170 in San Diego - inviting people to go east.
(Excerpt) Read more at utsandiego.com ...
lol! Get prepared for parte dos! La Raza Rick is.
Read your post 32 again, I was asking you what your plan is since you dismissed politics.
Blech. We need to remove that mumbling imbecile from the Governor’s office. Ted Cruz is the future of Texas, not this blow-dried Jimmuh Carter/Al Gore RINO.
Tea Party conservatives will support Tea Party candidates. Question the motives of those who do not.
That’s KCBQ. not KCQB.
I used to listen to that station when I was a kid (when there was rock on the AM band.)
San Diegone.
You are correct. Most San Diegans would know that. It just slipped by me.
Rock on the AM band was common when I was a kid. I think I started listening to FM at about age 14 (1971). Now all I listen to is AM again and talk radio. Funny how people and things change.
..just as soon as we can Governor...
Some of us Texans believe we’ve already filled our quota of Californians. All they’ll do is bring their liberalism with them. They can stay there.
You need to talk to your governor; he seems to want more Californians there.
Welcome back to Autumn 2011. ;)
We can hope.
I understand Perry’s wanting the businesses, but how to filter out the dumbass kalifornicators who will try their best to liberalize wherever they land. Hopefully a large number will keep looking down their noses at us cowboy rednecks and stay with Gov. Moonbeam.
Your spelling would improve if you kept both hands on the keyboard.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.