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stamplaw January 26th 05 06:10 PM

WEIRD AL'S HATE RADIO
 
Some people like Fords and some people like Chevys. I hear hate and
venom when I listen to Rush, O'Reilly, Coulter and Ingraham. I guess
you deem those folks patriots. I don't.

The news this morning suggests the new bill for the war is up to $300
billion. Great. Any guess on what the final price tag will be? I'm not
talking about the vet benefits that will be paid out over the next 75
years, just for the immediate future. Isn't it starting to look like we
are going to have 150,000 Americans caught in the middle of a civil
war? This has the possibility of being the worst foreign policy
mistake in US history.

Winning an election does not include a grant of sainthood.

If Bush and company had told the American people "We are going to spend
a trillion dollars and have 5000 American deaths and another 25,000
wounded. What we will end up with is an Islamic Republic closely allied
with Iran." Would he have won the election?

I believe there is permenate injury being done to the country. Blame it
on Clinton.

Al Franken is not all that weird. The American people may get weird as
this scenario unfolds.



Art Clemons January 26th 05 06:10 PM

wrote:

In fact, most Republican voters are poor people in the Bible Belt who
give far more to charity than those who live in liberal states like
Massachusetts, Connecticut or New York.Conservatives in Mormon,=A0=A0Ut=

ah
are the kindest, most generous (and polite) people I have ever seen
anywhere.
They tithe to the Church, which provides a huge safteynet for both
Mormons and nonMormons around the globe.


I'm not going to argue politics with you over Al Franken but and it's a
key "but", donating money to a church for operation of a church is
reported more by the poor in "red" states than in "blue" states for tax
purposes. It's not actually clear that poor folks in either set of
states actually donate more for religious use, just that reporting
makes one seem more generous than the other. I note that "blue" states
do have more in the way of per capita income and that too seems to
correlate with less obvious religious giving by the wealthier.


[email protected] January 27th 05 04:57 AM

I hear people comparing Rush Limbauigh and George W. Bush to the Nazis
all the time and it sickens me, since this administration has been the
most pro-minority Administration in over 100 years since
Reconstruction.
An African American woman has been nominated for Secretary of State.
A Jewish American has been nominated or Secretray of Homeland Security.
A Hispanic American has been selected at Attorney General.
I suppose the description of Al Franken as the Democrat's Goebbels was
less than gracious, but his lack of respect for opposing opinions is
fascistic. If Al Franken was our President, opposition figures would
face IRS audits, wiretapping, and would probably have other serious
problems . the man hates. I still suspect Clinton,as a jealous
husband, had something to do with the untimely demise of Vince Foster.
And you should read 'It Didn't Start With Watergate " By Victor Lasky.
But the description of the terrorists as Islamofascists is sound based
on their desire to install a clerical and totalitarian regime that
would be intolerant of other faiths...
Your folks do not know how fortunate itb is that John Kerry and Al
Gore never came to power in the face of Al Qaeda.



Art Clemons January 27th 05 06:12 PM

wrote:

I hear people comparing Rush Limbauigh and George W. Bush to the Nazis
all the time and it sickens me, since this administration has been the
most pro-minority Administration in over 100 years since
Reconstruction.


Aren't you taking a rather provincial view of Bush and let's say
African-Americans. African-Americans in general don't seem to view
Bush or Limbaugh as someone with whom they agree and quite frankly
that's a good point of view. Bush does have some African-American
support but sadly most of it seems more interested in what money and
power it can gather ala Armstrong Williams or even the Reverend Lusk,
or sadly homophobia as a motivation.

Since you've already made up your mind that nothing Bush can do is
trending towards fascism, I won't ask just what else government able to
grab an individual and hold that individual without court proceedings
for three years is an indication of?

An African American woman has been nominated for Secretary of State.
A Jewish American has been nominated or Secretray of Homeland
Security. A Hispanic American has been selected at Attorney General.


What of these nominations, should the nomination of single individuals
really prove anything? How many African-Americans agree with
Condoleeza Rice? Aren't there issues with the Atty General nominee
that should worry most thinking folk like claiming that the Geneva
Conventions don't apply at the whim of the President (hint, the Geneva
protocols also cover folks who are not in uniform)


Christopher C. Stacy January 28th 05 06:42 AM

Art Clemons writes:
African-Americans in general don't seem to view
Bush or Limbaugh as someone with whom they agree


Didn't they just now vote for him, against Kerry, in record numbers?
(Oh, I forgot! It was all a fix. The past two elections were a fraud.
Bush was never legitimately elected.)


Christopher C. Stacy January 28th 05 06:42 AM

The most amusing thing I find in all this discussion
is the idea that most Republicans, or most people who
voted for George Bush, listen to Rush Limbaugh.


Kimba W. Lion January 28th 05 06:42 AM

Poor choice of words for your subject line. The name "Weird Al" belongs to
a completely different (and much funnier, and much more respectable)
entertainer.

(Yankovic, just in case I need to be perfectly clear.)





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[email protected] January 28th 05 05:41 PM

First, i am no racist. That's absurd, defamatory and ignorant.
Second, I am not a Republican automoton. I disagree with much of the
Patriot Act, the GOP position on stem cell research and I am strongly
in favor of gay marriage.
I am not a scholar of the Geneval Convention,.but I understand the"
ticking bomb "theory of torture and I think some light persuasion or
psych pressure on people who know about a vast terrorist network just
might save the lievs of innocent people.
As for the appointment of minorities to the Cabinet, the mere fact that
other minority group embers do not agree with them is irrelevant to the
fact that the GOP, whatever its flaws, is breakling new ground by
including representatives of these groups. that is to Bush's credit.
Finally, Mr. Huseein is being tried as a human rights criminal. His
emoval from office was morally justified even if our government had
some erroneous intelligence about WMD's. I can'rt see blaming Bush Rice
etc. for the mistakes of the
British intelliegcne that supplied the data.



Art Clemons January 29th 05 06:49 PM

wrote:

As for the appointment of minorities to the Cabinet, the mere fact
that other minority group embers do not agree with them is irrelevant
to the fact that the GOP, whatever its flaws, is breakling new ground
by including representatives of these groups. that is to Bush's
credit.


Bush isn't doing any more than Clinton did in absolute numbers. Sure
Bush has the first African-American female Secretary of State and the
likely first Mexican-American Atty General but that proves little, the
real question would be how representative of said groups his nominees
are or how most of said groups view Bush. For that matter, Bush's FCC
chairman has been a disaster for the likely future of broadcasting and
for that matter on other telecommunications issues too and his policies
to a great extent actually have lead to fewer minority broadcasters
than when he first became either an FCC commissioner or chairman.
There is this little thing called results and on that, so far a bunch
of duds has been what's occurred from my perspective and apparently
that of most "minority" voters.


Art Clemons January 29th 05 06:49 PM

Christopher C. Stacy wrote:

Didn't they just now vote for him, against Kerry, in record numbers?
(Oh, I forgot!**It*was*all*a*fix.**The*past*two*elections *were*a
fraud. Bush was never legitimately elected.)


I missed something somehow. African-Americans did not in general vote
for Bush even in the states where Bush got the most African-American
votes. Most of the African-American community seems to view Bush as a
horrendous mistake. Since you quoted me referring to
African-Americans, somehow you're trying for a non-sequitur that just
won't fly. Your point?



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