Letters to the Editor
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Let's Everybody Take a Breath, then Go Suck their Thumbs for 10 minutes ---- then Shake it Off fer Golly-Sakes ---
Come November the Republican SS Squads will be out in force to pose the very same Q's before the Electorate.
Best thing to do ???? ---- Just beat this Horse to Death 10 times over till it jus' don't Die no 'mo.
the point is --- rev-wright's a Slime-ball ---
so lift dat rock & expose de sunshine on'a it till de disease is blanched-white ---
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Silash
Don't worry, Hillary supporters. We still love you, and we always have, even if you can't stop hating us.
It also must be remembered that, just a few months ago, John McCain's nomination was heralded as the end of the Republican Party itself. During campaigns, political memories are shorter than a tadpole's.
If Hillary so much as shakes Barack's hand at the convention in August, it will seem earth-shattering. Unless, of course, the rift has already been repaired by then. August through September will be absolutely critical media cycles, however, and will require exacting vigilance.
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DCLaw1...
Stuff ears with Garlic bulbs. How can a person remain sane listening to the goofs>
If candidates shaved the eyebrows, and ABC asked why ? The it would be new new<
Baldie? Did I read somewhere that three popes died while between another's loins?
Maybe it's a google?
Pray to Great Danes?
Man or beast? help.
I saw a Great Dane stand on the behind legs.
Dress a dog up in a white robe with red shoes?
Go to do some penance, and eat some peanuts.
What to do to be sent to a kicked-off dog house?
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The Gibson Award
Little people and the foolish expect the mainstream news media to inform the American public about burning issues of the day. The only things that matters to the likes of ABC are ratings and publicly sliming anyone associated with the Democratic Party. Once the network got its 30 pieces of ad dollar silver from the Philadelphia debate, it felt it met its duties to the American public.
In honor of last night's Philadelphia debate, Salon needs to create an annual award to honor the mainstream journalist who's done the best service as an unpaid Republican Party mouthpiece and who displays the most stunning cluelessness about the concerns of ordinary Americans. The award should of course be called The Gibson Award.
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silly. (before I turn off the electricity) Then : I'm gone after this.
I'll visit a four year old and have dinner. It's too late to flee the state, or change the name to 'joey'... So~ dress up in a possum costume? Maybe jump up and down? Act very crazy mad.
Pretend ya a lubrel's angry kangaroo?
It be fun to visit the funeral parlor. Oy!
During a pope eulogy start to trim nails?
Instead of a silver toe nail file? Chainsaw!
No offend anybody. No hurt GOPS mood.
silly. DCLaw1? Last night I asked of you?
None seemed to know if you were there.
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Lcantet
In honor of last night's Philadelphia debate, Salon needs to create an annual award to honor the mainstream journalist who's done the best service as an unpaid Republican Party mouthpiece and who displays the most stunning cluelessness about the concerns of ordinary Americans. The award should of course be called The Gibson Award.
I think this is a very good idea indeed. I think "Hunter" at DailyKos said it perfectly when he called last night's debate historic in the worst possible way. http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2008/4/17/4931/36738/932/497400
A professional associate I know, an elder whom I and many others hold in very high regard, and who has little or no contact with the blogosphere or other progressive/liberal outlets, had precisely the same impression of last night's debate that so many bloggers and others have. He found it downright appalling.
I am talking about a very, very measured and reasonable man. Not an activist. Not a flamethrower. Not a young upstart. A career and family man from Pennsylvania. The "norm" is not to excuse what ABC did last night. The norm is to be violently thrown to the wall by its bald-faced stupidity.
We should take some comfort in that.
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GoodCelery
DCLaw1? Last night I asked of you?
None seemed to know if you were there.
I was there, Mr. Celery. I'm sneaky like that.
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I beg to differ
Yesterday's debate focused on some very important issues, which measure the candidates' ability to empathize with the true concerns of the vast majority of the American people. Obama exacerbated his already shaky reputation in this regard. He continued to arrogantly insist that the American people should be reeducated to shift their concerns to issues that out-of-touch elitists consider to be important (global warming is a good example).
Hillary Clinton came off as the clear winner by contrast to Obama, but she still has miles to go before she catches up to the GOP, which has continually kept its finger on the pulse of the American people since the Gingrich revolution of 1994. [To be sure Reagan originated this focus, but unfortunately took his eye off the ball in the last couple of years of his administration and the disastrous followup by GHW Bush, which unforgivably wasted the opportunities afforded by the collapse of the Soviet Union.]
A prominent example of this relentless focus on empathy with the American public was the current Bush Administration's reaction to 9/11. Instead of some wimpy bombing of a few caves in Afghanistan, they went full tilt against a wide spectrum of terrorist threats in the Middle East. McCain continues in this worthy tradition and consequently will obliterate whichever candidate the Democrats put up.
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nabalz...
Hillary Clinton came off as the clear winner by contrast to Obama, but she still has miles to go before she catches up to the GOP, which has continually kept its finger on the pulse of the American people since the Gingrich revolution of 1994. [To be sure Reagan originated this focus, but unfortunately took his eye off the ball in the last couple of years of his administration and the disastrous followup by GHW Bush, which unforgivably wasted the opportunities afforded by the collapse of the Soviet Union.]
A prominent example of this relentless focus on empathy with the American public was the current Bush Administration's reaction to 9/11. Instead of some wimpy bombing of a few caves in Afghanistan, they went full tilt against a wide spectrum of terrorist threats in the Middle East. McCain continues in this worthy tradition and consequently will obliterate whichever candidate the Democrats put up.
I'm speechless. Your parody is brilliant.
