Posted on 01/16/2006 8:15:35 AM PST by ken5050
He's BAAAAACK! Yup, Prince Alberta, newly relocated to the liberal mecca of San Francisco ensconsed in his new multi-million $$ condo, working in the venture capital field (all bad things when he was running for the WH) will today crawl out from under his rock to deliver himself of a major address about the "evils of executive power"
Well, you know my theory: if I, sitting down here in North Carolina at a computer, know it, there's absolutely no excuse for them not to know it.
My only conclusion is that they are feining ignorance to bash Bush.
Yes...and what was SO FUNNY was...the lady that announced Bob Barr's speech went over and sat next to Gore...and they both turned in their seats to look up at the hugh screen that Barr's image was supposed to be on...
and they just sat there..and sat there...for at least 5 minutes..then people in the audience started shouting things (inaudible)...and the audience started laughing...
Pretty soon...some guy went to the microphone and said they lost their connection to Barr..and stumbled through an introduction of Gore...
I was just so....goofy!!!
Did you ever see how many votes Larry Klayman got in Florida? I've looked in vain.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1551726/posts
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1552709/posts
A more fully fleshed-out piece (better links, but lefty analysis) is at ...
http://www.livejournal.com/users/mparent7777/5448252.html
And what did they call what they were doing, other than binding the president's hands?
Malloy and Rhodes are the WORST...because they not only cuss a lot...but, I have noticed that they will not hesitate to make things up...just to throw them out to the audience...and get a hugh reaction...
They have been begging for impeachment for a LONG time...
Oh, thanks; that's when I still had a houseful of company and I missed that.
Smart move on Bush's part, if you ask me.
I remember it as though it was yesterday. I only wish that it were yesterday and maybe there would still be time to do something about what your husband, Bill Clinton, did to me. There was a political rally for Mr. Clinton's bid for governor of Arkansas. I had obligated myself to be at this rally prior to my being assaulted by your husband in April, 1978. I had made up my mind to make an appearance and then leave as soon as the two of you arrived. This was a big mistake, but I was still in a state of shock and denial. You had questioned the gentleman who drove you and Mr. Clinton from the airport. You asked him about me and if I would be at the gathering. Do you remember? You told the driver, "Bill has talked so much about Juanita", and that you were so anxious to meet me. Well, you wasted no time. As soon as you entered the room, you came directly to me and grabbed my hand. Do you remember how you thanked me, saying "we want to thank you for everything that you do for Bill". At that point, I was pretty shaken and started to walk off. Remember how you kept a tight grip on my hand and drew closer to me? You repeated your statement, but this time with a coldness and look that I have seen many times on television in the last eight years. You said, "Everything you do for Bill". You then released your grip and I said nothing and left the gathering. What did you mean, Hillary? Were you referring to my keeping quiet about the assault I had suffered at the hands of your husband only two weeks before? Were you warning me to continue to keep quiet? We both know the answer to that question. Yes, I can answer Brit Hume's question. You are the same Hillary that you were twenty years ago. You are cold, calculating and self-serving. You cannot tolerate the thought that you will soon be without the power you have wielded for the last eight years. Your effort to stay in power will be at the expense of the state of New York. I only hope the voters of New York will wake up in time and realize that Hillary Clinton is not an honorable or an honest person.
DO YOU REMEMBER?
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Oh, their line is that the bill "restores the reputation of the United States" damaged near beyond repair by Abu Grabib. Image being more important then extracting information from terrorists to prevent our citizens or troops from being killed. Besides, according to McCain torture doesn't work anyway...except he admitted it did in his own book.
Political losers often seem to lose their bearings, sometimes for a long time, and some even retire from the political scene. Richard M. Nixon went into exile for several years after his brutal defeats in the early 1960s. Michael S. Dukakis (Remember? He ran for president in 1988.), Al Gore and perhaps John F. Kerry all seem to have had trouble regaining their bearings after their losses.
So it was most refreshing last week to see Loop favorites Alan Keyes, brutally trounced by Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for the Senate in November, and Judicial Watch founder Larry Klayman, whose vote count barely registered in the GOP Senate primary in Florida in August, back in the news again, getting some fine media exposure in -- what else? --the Terri Schiavo case.
Keyes, the momentary Illinoisan and perpetual loser -- races for the Senate in Maryland in 1988 and 1992, and then for the GOP presidential nomination in 1996 and 2000 -- got hammered by 40 points.
Klayman, who gained fame pursuing and exposing Bill Clinton, left his $805,000-a-year job as head of the nonprofit Judicial Watch and moved to Florida for the run.
(By the way, Klayman's salary for 2003 is substantially more than nonprofit think tank heads make, according to Congressional Quarterly. Heritage Foundation's Edwin J. Feulner Jr. earns more than $500,000, as does Christopher C. DeMuth at the American Enterprise Institute. Aspen Institute's Walter Isaacson, Brookings Institution's Strobe Talbott, the Urban Institute's Robert D. Reischauer and Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Jessica T. Mathews are all paid in the low $300s.)
Klayman waged a long and spirited campaign to be the GOP's candidate and came in second-lowest of eight contenders, with about 1 percent of the vote in the primary -- just over 13,000 votes. Might seem a bit low, but it was nearly triple the vote for realtor Billy Kogut, a former liquor store owner and city councilman in Wallington, N.J., who moved to Florida in 1996.
On the other hand, Klayman received 7,500 fewer votes than a Vero Beach entrepreneur who did not campaign and dropped out of the race about a month before the primary.
Funny how some of "our" people's talking points are merging with some of "their" people's talking points.
LOL!!! DANG! I MISSED THAT!
ARG!
THANKS so much for filling me in!!!
YOU ROCK!
Thanks. LOL I'm sure glad I never contributed one thin dime to that salary.
"'Al has a way of looking at you like his eyes are kind of burning,' said Nashville Tennessean reporter John Warnecke.You would get that when you mentioned his dad'. Asked in a 1987 interview about relations between father and son, Tipper Gore said:'You remember Oedipus? She quickly added that she was kidding, sort of. 'You had a very powerful father - a hero to many people - and a son coming to maturity and learning to find his own dignity.'" Inventing Al Gore by Bill Turque, p. 30 |
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Based on what??? (legitimate what -- not imaginary what)
But Bush only had evil powers not Gore Approved powers...sheesh can't you keep up ith all the different powers?!? LOL!!!
But Bush only had evil powers not Gore Approved powers...sheesh can't you keep up with all the different powers?!? LOL!!!
New Democratic Party slogan: Feel the Hate.
Straight-jackets will be a good investment if 'rats don't get what they want in '06 and '08. Same in Canada. If the liberals do loose control its going to be fruit loop time.
:-)
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