About Me

Name: Arik
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Donkey Dung 2-26-09

So much stupidity, so little time.
 
I'd like to start off with a quote that I actually like very much. Ann Coulter appears to be almost as enthralled with Obama's Black Presidential Firsts as I am, which is to say, not at all.  All we here is, "First Black President To Give Address A Joint Session Of Congress," "First Black President To Sit In The Oval Office," "First Black President To Use The Toilet On Air Force One,' etc.  In fact, she devotes this week's column to the phenomenon, her best work in months. In the middle of her rant, she throws out what has to be the line of the year (so far):
 
"But as long as the nation is obsessed with historic milestones, is no one going to remark on what a great country it is where a mentally retarded woman can become speaker of the house?"
 
That is a beautiful thing.
 
Now, on to the idiocy.  Here's one from everybody's favorite Senator, Up-Chuck Schumer:
 
"Our Republican colleagues try to act like they're cheering for the quarterback but then nitpick his play calling. President Obama and his agenda are one and the same. You can't separate the man from the agenda. Unfortunately, many of our Republican colleagues are mired in the past. … They still think the only thing you do during this time of economic crisis is to shrink government. They're outdated and they're out of touch. But we, under Sen. Reid's leadership, are going to continue to reach out to them."
Let's get this clear, Chuckie:  Republicans are rooting for the COUNTRY, not your Dear Leader.  Cheering for the quarterback?  That's like the Arizona Cardinals joining the Ben Roethlisburger Fan Club. Ain't gonna happen.  You can't separate the man from the agenda?  Ok, then since his agenda sucks butt, I guess I have to say that Obama sucks butt, too. And speaking of sucking, he added this:
 
"He gave people confidence in the future that we could overcome our problems together and work our way out of this. This speech excited me. And talking about education and health care and energy – the big three – that we have to improve … he just hit it out of the park."
 
Wipe your chin, Charlie.
 
Here's the aptly named Dick Durbin, Senator from Swillinois, with a quote that will likely melt a few icebergs somewhere:
 
"Section 307(b) of the communications act requires that the FCC ensure license ownership be spread among diverse communities.  It's there already.  I don't think this is socialistic, communistic, or unconstitutional.  It's in the law.  So to say we're going to promote what the law already says is hardly a denial of basic constitutional freedoms.  Second, the communications act requires the FCC eliminate market entry barriers for small businesses to increase the diversity of media voices.  That's Section 257.  So to argue that what I'm putting in here is a dramatic change of the law, is going to somehow muzzle Rush Limbaugh, it's not the case.  What we're suggesting is that it is best that we follow the guidelines already in the law to promote and encourage diversity in media ownership."
 
This is a whole lot of carbon footprint to say something simple: "We want to pass a law to do what there is already a law to do."  He says, "It's in there already," and "It's in the law."  This leaves me with one question: Why do it?  Are you in the habit of reduntantly repeating yourself over and over again in a repetetive refrain?  Okay, that's two question, but the democRats won't know that. Math is not their strong point. Just look at the porkulus bill.  A Teachable Moment: When a democRat says, "It's not the case," that usually means "It's true, and How!"
 
On to the Porkulus Package. Here's Botox Nancy:
 
"..no pork, no earmarks...in the recovery package."
 
Cut to Piglosi's Goebbels, Steny Hoyer, being interviewed by Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski on PMSNBC:
 
Joe Scarborough said, "Somebody said that the House, this $410 billion omnibus spending bill, has 9,000 earmarks.  That's insane.  What's wrong with these people?  Are there really 9,000 earmarks in that bill?"

Brzezinski:  Tell me that's not true!

Hoyer: Well, not -- I -- I -- I think that's two-and-a-half times what -- about -- about 4,000 earmarks, for all the members, and for 435 districts around the country.

Brzezinski:  That's kind of a lot, isn't it?

Hoyer:  It is a lot, but it's -- it's -- it's --

Brzezinski:  That's...

Hoyer:  But it's been very substantially reduced, uh, cut in half over the last two years.
 
I'm reminded of a line from "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade:"  Indy: "Sallah, I said no camels, that's three camels, can't you count?"  Making my point, once again about democRats no having much skill in the math department.  I have to admit, It's been at least a decade since I've believed a single word that comes from pretty much any democRats mouth, but you would think that they would at least get their lies coordinated.  Come on, guys, this is the Big Leagues: You just booted a soft roller to short. You can't do that in the Majors and expect to stay there. Of course, the analysis between Major League Baseball and Congress is flawed at best, as to play pro baseball, you have to have actual skills.  And I don't like the comparison, because it calls to mind Barney Frank in a jock strap, and I don't think any of us want to go there.
 
And speaking of Banking Queen Barney:
 
"I don't think we found any Republican minds today.  They shut their minds down.  They're so afraid of being yelled at by Limbaugh and Hannity they won't even clap for Obama even when they agree with him."
 
Of course they shut their minds down, and it didn't have anything to do with Hannity and Limbaugh.  Sometimes you hear something that is just so outrageously ignorant that your brain hurts, and you have to stop listening before it explodes.  For a Republican, this is pretty much every time Obama opens his trap.  Agree with him? What's to agree with? What ain't lies is crap, so what's to agrees with. When he says something Republicans MIGHT agree with, they know he's lying, and at this point, we're all pretty well sick of fawning over tired bromides and inane platitudes, which is pretty much the entire content of pretty much everything Obama says. 
 
And to top off this weeks exercise in doltishness, one of BJ Clintion's old chiefs of staff, John Podesta, has this to say:
 
"I think we're going to see more activism to create a fair market and a fair playing field that is really now global in nature, to align their own regulatory schemes so that there can be global growth and fair growth across the globe so that middle classes can rise across the planet."
 
Boy, yeah, that's just what we need, more activism.  What is it with democRats and the word "fair?" Evrything is "Fair this," and "Fair That," and "It isn't fair."  Who's the judge of what's fair?  I think it would be fair to make all members of Congress eat broken glass for breakfast, but I don't think they would agree. And global?  There you have the democRat plan in a nutshell: "We want to make everyone equal, not only in spirit, but in wealth and in influence.  Except us. Someone has to lead."  And how is this going to work? You can't get people in this country to decide on Coke or Pepsi, and they're going to be global arbiters of "fairness?"  What are they going to do, make some magic "Fairness Dust," and have Barney Frank the Fairness Fairy sprinkle it on people around the world, magically putting them into a 3-bedroom, 2 1/2-bath house?  Don't worry, Dear Leader will provide.  We all sew how well it worked in the Soviet Union, and Korea, and, Cambodia, and, well, everywhere else it's been tried.
 
There is an old proverb that goes, “Give a man a fish; you have fed him for today.  Teach a man to fish; and you have fed him for a lifetime. ” The democRats not only apparently don't want to teach anyone to fish, given the state of the largely democRat run public schools, especially in the bigger cities, but, looking at their tax-paying and charity-giving habits, the fish they want to dole out belongs largely to someone else, most likely the people who actually produce something, or perform some valuable service. 
 
Ah, hell, I've had all I can takes, I can't takes no more.  I'll be back with more soon. They never seem to stop putting out the fertilizer.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (8) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Mind Reader

Looks like I am not alone in the realization that my now regular posts on stupid democRat quotes is aptly titled.  Here's a cartoon that says essentially the same thing:
 
Cartoons By Michael Ramirez
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (21) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

My Recovery Story, Part 5

It appears that you didn't get my last message.  You went to Arizona and talked about another seventy-five billion dollars to be spent, (I call it the "Rehabilitate Barney Frank's Reputation Spending Spree"), and the market tanked again.  Seriously, guys, my investments can't take much more of your "help." 
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (4) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Donkey Dung 2-19-09

Let's get right into it.
 
Leading off, we have Janet Reno Redux, Attorney General Eric Holder, who opens his yap and says:
 
"Though this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot, in things racial we have always been and I believe continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards...we, as average Americans, simply do not talk enough with each other about race."
 
Pretty strong words from the first Affirmative Action Attorney General, serving under the first Affirmative Action President. The reason most of us don't talk about race is because You People never SHUT UP about it.  And by You People, I mean, of  course, the Dum-o-cRats. We had Obam-uh telling us that race would be used against him, which it was, in much the same way that the New York Times espouses conservativism, which is to say, not at all, except, of course, by BJ Clinton, another dum-o-cRat.  The press talked about him, his looks and his race in a manner you'd see in a bad Jackie Collins novel, or is that redundant?
 
Obama says we're predjudiced, Murtha says we're racists, Holder says we're cowards.  Methinks this is not that Post-Racial America the media have been blathering on about.  Instead, we have a hyper-racial society where everything is perceived as a slight.  Witness Al Sharpton and his band of fools, who apparently have no jobs to go to, as they seem to pop up everytime he gets in a dither about something.  Their latest protest is over a New York Post cartoon referencing the recent shooting of a chimp in Connecticut:
 
021809 nypost cartoon
 
Now, as we all know, the chimp MUST represent Obama, because black people are ALWAYS monkeys, aren't they?  Lord knows Bush was never portrayed as a chimp. Yeah, right.  Leave aside the fact that Pelosi was the primary perpetrator of the last pork bill, and that Obama most likely hasn't even bothered to read the thing.  My personal view was that the cartoonist was saying that the chimp was smarter than the author of the stimulus bill, which, looking at the current democRat leadership, isn't that much of a stretch.  Nope, it's got to be Obama.   Because this is AmeriKKKa.
 
I finally figured out why it is so hard for liberals and conservatives to agree on anything: We use different words to describe things.  You know, the British use "Torch" for "Flashlight," "Spanner" for "Wrench,"  "Lorry" for "Truck," and so on.  Well, check out this quote from Nancy the Red's spawn, Aspiring Documentarian Alexandra Pelosi:
 
"For me, it wasn't so much the Muslim thing, it was the socialist thing. Respectfully, I wanted to say to them, I live on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. I am on the winning side of capitalism. I work for HBO, corporate America. The Man has been good to me. You, on the other hand, are driving a truck that says, ‘Obama is a socialist idiot,’ and you're in a much lower tax bracket than most of the people in Manhattan that are voting for Obama.” 
 
When I read this, it became obvious to me, it's almost as if we are using different languages. She says; "Capitalism," where in the same situation, most of us would say "Nepotism."  I mean, come on, does she seriously believe that people are more interested in what she has to say than out of whose crotch she slithered?  Here in the flyover states, we generally judge success on our achievements, rather than who are parents are, unless, of course, our last name happens to be "Daley." 
 
And seriously, when you consider the average apartment in Manhattan costs about the same as the GDP of, say, Wyoming (and that's before you pay for a parking place), the standard of living is only slightly better than a cardboard box in Cleveland.  Of course they're in a higher tax bracket, living in New York is pretty much a tax bracket unto itself.  And here in the hinterlands, we have the added benefit that we will most likely never have to meet Alexandra Pelosi and pretend we find her fascinating.  We also produce more than just odes to our own sparkling wit and scintillating intellect, except in Detroit, where the only apparent product is emigrants. 
 
She also lets loose with this gem:
 
"I think that the blogs have poisoned the political atmosphere in such a way that I never saw this kind of anger and hatred in 2000."
 
Here, I think she's talking about US: apparently she believes that the Huffington Post and DailyKos are just full of righteous indignation.  The reviews of her documentary about Angry Right Wingers are pretty lousy (Pelousy?), and HBO will probably have all of three or four actual viewers for the airing, which means pretty much one thing: it's a shoo-in for an Emmy.
 
The Obamessiah on the new mortgage bailout:
 
"In the end, all of us are paying a price for this home mortgage crisis, and all of us will pay an even steeper price if we allow this crisis to deepen."
 
Yeah, like 75 billion to delay the inevitable. In typical democRat fashion, the plan is to throw money at the problem, without any real logic or planning.  Putting these guys in charge of a financial crisis is a lot like putting Larry Flynt in charge of the Fresham Women's Dorm: It can only end badly.
 
Here's the follow-up Tax Cheat Geithner:
 
"This is necessary policy, it is smart economics and it is just and fair."
 
Not really, Tim-meh.  What would be just and fair would be for Barney Frank and all of his dimbulb compatriots to be frog marched out of the offices in Washington, and into their cells at Leavenworth.  Necessary policy?  Good economics?  Only if you want to foster poverty and dependence.  Oh, wait, you DO want to foster poverty and dependence.  Silly me. 
 
And now, for today's grand finale, from Obama's own campaign website:
 
"Wasteful Spending is Out of Control: The current administration has abused its power by handing out contracts without competition to its politically connected friends and supporters. These abuses cost taxpayers billions of dollars each year."
 
This could have been written today, by a Republican strategist, for the candidate (whoever he or she might be), in 2012.  Although, I wish we were talking about billions of dollars in wasteful spending, instead of the trillions we are actually spending.  This is the best part of the whole sad, shameful, darkly comedic debacle:  In the next presidential election, we can campaign on "Hope and Change," "Transparency in Government," and all of Obama's other slogans.  He's obviously not using them anymore.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (4) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

My Recovery Story, Part 4

Here's another one (Man, is this fun!):
 
I don't think it's much of a secret that I used to drink way too much, but I went to meetings, and haven't had an alcoholic drink in almost three-and-a-third years.  I went to a lot of meetings.  They help.  And that's my recovery story.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

My Recovery Story, Part 3

Here's another installment:
 
I hear there is going to be a bunch of money for people who don't want to pay their mortgages.  How long do I not have to pay for, before I can get my mortgage paid off?  I've been paying every month, but I'm willing to not pay, if it means you will pay my mortgage off for me.  Let me know.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

My Recovery Story: Part 2

Here's the next installment:
 
It has been over twebty-four hours since the signing of the stimulus bill, and I still have not heard what my piece of the pie is going to be, or when it will arrive.  Please let me know, ASAP, as I want to buy a new Big screen HDTV.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

My Recovery Story, Part 1

Obama has a site up and running called Recovery.gov. On the front page is an opportunity to share "Your Recovery Story."  I intend to do just that, frequently and loquaciously, and encourage all to do the same.  I will post my Recovery Stories here, one by one, just to let everyone know how the "recovery" is affecting me.

Here's part one:

I have noticed that every time an announcement is made concering the so-called stimulus plan, my paltry investments lose even more value.  In the future, please refrain from actually announcing any plans until you actually have a coherent, workable plan devised.  Remember, even if SOMETHING must be done, it is better to do NOTHING than to do the WRONG thing.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (10) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Choices Have Consequences, or How Hating Gym Led to Fifteen Years of Agony: A Story for Valentine's Day

Unlike in the world inhabited by our leaders in Washington, in the Real World, choices have consequences.  Even the seemingly most inconsequential decisions we make can have long-lasting, far-reaching effects.  I would like to illustrate this with a more or less true story that actually happened in almost exactly the way I'm going to tell you. 
 
It's odd, really. I have loved music ever since I was very young, but I REALLY hated music class, from kindergarten all the way through eighth grade. Sometimes in elementary school, all the music classes, from all six grades , got together at night and held a concert for all the parents of the kids, who naturally pretended that the program was the most beautiful thing they'd ever heard.  Mostly, I think we were probably pretty lousy, or worse.  It was a public school to begin with, and it wasn't one of those public schools specializing in a certain area of the arts and sciences.  I guess I first realized this later, when I learned that most people sing from sheets with notes on them, not just lyrics. I also learned, later, about a thing called harmony, where not everybody sings the exact same note at the exact same time.  I still can't actually SING harmony, but then, I'm a tenor, so I don't have to.
 
During my years of elementary school, there were also times when all the students would assemlble in the gym, in what we called, appropriately, assemblies.  We had some pretty cool stuff come through our gym (which seemed huge at the time, but the last time I was in there, a few years ago, seemd really tiny), including magicians, a yo-yo expert and the man who wrote and illustrated the "Clifford the Big Red Dog" books, which was kind of awesome.  The particular assembly I'm thinking of right now, however, involved the ninth grade choir from the Junior High that was literally just up the street from my elementary school. We were separated by only a sledding hill and and a football field.  Well, this choir came down to our gym and put on a show involving forty-five minutes of dancing and singing, and they all looked like they were having a great time while they were at it, which was kind of the opposite of what OUR music programs consisted of.  The whole experience left a small impression on an impressionable young kid.
 
While I was disliking music class, I also had opportunity to attend another class that I disliked exponentially more than music class: gym.  I have never been the most nimble of athletes. "Bull in a china shop" is probably one of the more charitable ways to describe my athletic prowess.  Nevertheless, I was required to attend on a regular basis, which I did, except when I could weasel a "Note from Mom" to get out of actually taking part.  I was neither fast nor strong nor anything that one would expect of an athlete, except big enough to be an offensive lineman on the school flag football team, which I did, poorly, for a couple of years. In fact, I seldom missed an opportunity to highlight my athletic inability, leading to several years warming the bench in not only football, but basketball (I could actually shoot free throws, as long as I wasn't required to dribble or actually move), and baseball (T-ball the first year, and one hit total in two full years of actual Little League pitching).
 
So, fast forward a few years and I'm in eighth grade music class.  Between my seventh and eighth grade years, our school change from a junior high to a middle school, moving sixth grade to the middle school, and the ninth grade to the high school.  There were cahnges in the way classes were scheduled, and a "Common Learning Period," which was essentially code for time spent doing nothing particularly constructive.  This was the result of some liberal education theory at the time that had gained currency, and essentially changed very little in what we actually learned, or how we went about learning it.  It simply meant that money had to be spent researching the change, implementing the change, and reviewing how the change went.  Also changing the name on the building. For the most part, its effect on students was pretty much minimal, except that Home Economics and Shop went from "Pick One for the Whole Year" to "Take Both, One Each Semester." 
 
Anyway, during my eighth grade year, we alternated days between gym class and music class. I thought this was pretty ideal, as it didn't allow for too much irritation to build up from either class, as a result of too many consectutive days of either class.  Actually, once a month in music class, we had what was called "Free Music Day," or some similar thing, where we got to bring in records (remember those?) and the teacher would attempt to screen them for objectionable material that we tried, occasionally successfully, to sneak through. Do you remember the fuss about supposed "Backwards Secret Messages to Satan" in the Led Zeppelin song "Stairway to Heaven?"  Not only was this during those days, but the teacher who got hammered for it taught at our city high school. So, to say things were a little tense would be an understatement.  We couldn't even sneak in Journey's "Open Arms," a big hit at the time, although I did manage to sneak in "Pi$$ on the Wall," by the J. Geils Band.  Adding to the amusement value was the fact that our teacher was highly religious, and we were all Godless Public School Heathens.
 
It was in this class, on a stormy day, that a fateful announcement came to us.  The other music teacher (there were two) came in to "speak to us" about the choir program at the high school.  He gave a long spiel about this, that and the other, most of which I don't remember, or wasn't really important to me, in any case.  What stuck out in my mind was this: whereas the majority of people had to have gym class every day for a full semester, people in choir got to go Every Other Day.  Granted it was then for the whole year, thus stringing out the agony, but I wouldn't have to worry about Residual Gym Class Irritation Buildup. I thought, then, of the choir show I had seen at in my elementary school gym, and the fun they had seemed to be having while they were doing it. Oddly, it didn't occur to me at the time that I would actually have to do things like sing, or put on concerts, but what are you going to do? 
 
So, needless to say, I signed right up.
 
The next year, I showed up for my first day of choir class, and realized the speech hadn't been all that effective on anyone else.  There were ten of us in the boys' choir, which met separately from the girls' choir.  Not only that, but there was actual sheet music to read from, not just a mimeographed lyric sheet.  To add to the problem, I was categorized as a bass, which means simply that nobody else's voice had changed yet either.  This required me to sing harmony, which, as I said before, I hadn't even heard of prior to that day.  Rounds like "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" were as close to actual harmony as I had ever been.  And there were only ten of us, only two with prior experience, to attempt to make beautiful music. Not a whole lot of places to hide.
 
To my credit, and my everlasting surprise, I made it through.  This had a lot to do with actually enjoying the work (which came as quite a surprise to me), although I suspect in the end it was a young teacher who was too inexperienced to know how hopeless a situation he was dealing with.  To him I give a world of credit for making the experience not only educational, but  a whole lot of fun.
 
From there, it was on to what was called Advanced Choir, which was basically the same group of guys from the year before, except now we were Sophomores.  Our choir director was older than our first teacher, though not by much, and she was much more experienced in the field.  In an interesting coincidence, I found out later, was that the choir show at my elementary school was directed by none other than my new choir director, in her last year before going to the high school.  Between the beginning of freshman year, and the middle of sophomore year, everyone's voices had started changing.  For everyone else, this meant deeper, more masculine voices. For me, it meant my voice started to resemble Mickey Mouse.  I ended up as a second tenor. Bonus: I got to sing melody, not harmony. 
 
My dad spent thirty-some years as a draftsman at Goodyear, which, I found out in later years, was not a job he much cared for. Not the drafting part, and not really even the Goodyear part, but a long, deep, complicated tale, the whole of which I, even to this day, am not completely knowledgable about.  There were some interesting benefits, though, one of which was access to good seats for season tickets at Goodyear Community Theater, which was truly outstanding in its class.  We went to many shows there, including a lot of musicals, which were my favorite.  So, when the time came to audition for our school musical, it was only natural, being in choir, that I would try out. 
 
I didn't make it my freshman year, when "The King and I."  I did go to see the show, and was very impressed. I found out later that our high school was known in the area for the quality of its music and theater program, particularly the vocal music department led by my choir director.  When they threatened to cut our choir and musical theater programs if we didn't pass a levy, she kindly reminded the administration that the department was pretty much self-supporting, and that the Broadway musicals every year actually turned a profit. 
 
My sophomore year, I got a bit part in "Guys and Dolls," which is to say I was on stage for almost a full ten seconds.  For this, I attended rehearsals faithfully for ten weeks, two to five hours a night, and sometimes weekends.  I think our directors (we had three: I Music Director - our choir director; a Drama Director - a Spanish Teacher; and a Dance and Artistic Director - the Director of another great local community theater, Weathervane, and a great dancer as well) felt sorry for me, as they saw I was there pretty much constantly with little to do besides homework and reading.  So I became the "Backstage Director." 
 
In that capacity, I was responsible for making sure props were where they were supposed to be, and for making sure that set changes got done the way they need to be done.  I took pretty readily to the job.  As unlikely as it may seem to those who know me well, I actually am a very good organizer when I abssolutely have to be, and with a cast of eighty kids, I kind of had to be.  Still, it wasn't all easy.  In fact, I believe it was the most cursed show our school had ever done, and remained that way at least through my tenure there.  There were several injuries.  One of the crew apparently left one of the outlet hole in the floor open, which led to one girl, playing a minor but pivotal role, breaking her leg.  One of our dancers fell down the stairs to the dressing rooms and sprained her ankle.  A podium didn't get moved, and when a backdrop came down on it, one girl tried to catch it and broke her fingers. And, one of the lead was straddling the pipe at the bottom of a backdrop when it started going up, lifting her, easilythree feet in the air before she fell. If you don't know, the backdrops are weighted down by a pipe weighing easily two hundred pounds, and they go up and down very quickly.  Yeah, serious pain.  Fortunately, the kids I went to high school were pretty tough: Not one even missed an entrance, much less a performance, despite their various injuries.
 
Someone who was angry with me for my Little Hitler act as Backstage Manager once told me that the position was a joke position, that they gave it, essentially, to the person that had the least stage time.  I told them that that was fine, but that I was going to treat it seriously, because I wanted to do the best job I could.  After the final show, that same person told me that I had done a great job, and that the show had run much smoother than any of the other three he'd been in.  Even now, almost a quarter of a century later, that makes me feel good.
 
Just a side note: when you go to see a live performance, between scenes, watch for the stage crew. What goes on behind the scenes, and how it's accomplished can be as fascinating as what is actually on stage, sometimes more so, especially at a lousy show.
 
The next year, there were two possibilities for choir - the Junior/Senior Choir, and the A Cappella Choir.  The difference was night and day as to which one you wanted to be in: A Cappella Choir was the one you had to audition to get into, and gave you a chance to be in the school show choir, The Melodymen and Melodettes, affectionately referred to as the M&M's.  That the pinnacle of high school music, and was truly the place I wanted to be. 
 
Due to the lack of interested guys from my junior class, as well as the extra attention possible due to such a small group of sophomoes, I happened into a spot on the A Cappella Choir, which was really cool, since, for the first time, the boys and girls were together in the same class.  Not that it did ME any good, but it was really pretty cool, nonetheless.  We had a number of concerts during the year, which were were always well attended, especially considering the auditorium seatd close to a thousand people.  I got to share the stage with some very talented people, both in the choir and in our spring musical that year, "Kiss Me, Kate."
 
If you haven't seen "Kiss Me Kate," you ought to: It's pretty good.  It's about a theater company trying to put on a gloriously awful musical version of Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew," featuring music by Cole Porter.  It features a lot of difficult language, an lot of tough choral parts, and a lot of screaming and yelling, primarily, but not limited to, the actual directors trying to get the cast to get the difficult language and tough choral parts correct.  This year, up to and including final dress rehearsal, we never finished the entire three hour show in less than five hours.  Somehow on opening night, it all came together and went pretty much perfectly. This year, I had my very first opportunity to sing a solo on stage, consisting of one line of five words.  I upped my stage time to almost three minutes this year, and had several little bit parts.
 
The year ended, however, on a down note. I didn't get into the M&M's, which was my dream throughout high school.  This really sucked.
 
The next year, a few weeks in, I got called in to our choir director's office, and was offered a position on the stage crew with the M&M's, which involved travelling with the group not only to their competitions around the state, but to their first national competition in California.  This was not quite what I'd envisioned, but it would more than suffice. It actually involved mostly handling props and making things appear almost like magic.  I also had more stage time than I had in my first spring musical.  I was pumped. 
 
It was a pretty good year, all told, though with a few pretty awful moments.  We won the competitions we went to, in state, and did not win the national competition due to what I can only describe as blatant favoritism on the part of the judges.  We missed a competition when our two best athletes, and two of the most popular students, were killed in a car crash after a Cavs game.  I didn't know either of them, but the fathers of both were teachers at our school, and it hot the whole school pretty hard, to the tune of a couple days off school.  And I'm not making light there: Our school superintendant wouldn't cancel school for anything short of a full-on blizzard, so you know it was pretty bad.
 
The best thing that happened to me all year was when my director told me that, if I had been as good at the beginning of the year as I was at the end, that I would definitely have made the group as a performer.  That might not seem like a lot to most people, but to me, a guy who'd never really even thought of joining a choir four years before, and with no real formal training in the art, that was high praise from someone I really respected, and still do respect very highly.
 
So, off I went to college.  I decided to take voice lessons and join the choir, which wasn't a show choir, but a concert choir specializing in all sorts of classical music, from baroque to opera to American folk and back again.  Our choir was directed by a man who, to this day, I believe is about the most talented singer I've ever heard. He was also responsible for the voice lessons.   I wish that I had been focused and disciplined enough to take my studies more seriously. I might really have made something of myself in the music world. Or not, you never can tell. But it would have been nice to take a serious shot at it.
 
But, anyway, I spent two years in the concert choir, and did some theater, including the musical "Godspell," where I had my first solo of more than five words.  We toured the Northeast several times, singing in Boston, Greenwich, Connecticut, and Washington D.C. among others.  The highlight of the tours was a couple of songs in front of the altar at St. Patricks Cathedral in New York City.  That was also the trip I went to the top of the South Tower of the World Trade Center for the first time.  I know thousands of people were up there over the years, but I always what it was like up there, and then think of the people that might have been up there THAT day. (Although, I believe it was too early for the observation deck to have been open.  Had it been an hour later, the death toll would have likely been tens of thousands.)
 
All in all, that's a pretty good run I had for a decision made because I basically hated gym, but it doesn't yet explain the FiFteen Years of Agony. 
 
After my sophomore year of college, I ran somewhat short of funds, meaning there wasn't likely to be a junior year the following year.  So, I made my way home after spending the summer working security, and got a job at the local hospital as a file clerk.  Actually, I went through a temporary agency, which is why I always like to say that I spent that year as a Kelly Girl. At the time, and maybe still today, Marietta College had what was called "Four-Day Break," which fell a week or two before homecoming in October.  I had three good friends that I had met through my time in theater and in the MC Concert Choir, and they decided to take a trip for Four-Day Break, culminating in a night with me before heading back to school.
 
Now it's painfully obvious, at least to me, especially at the time, that there is one thing conspicuously absent: a girlfriend.  I had dated a few times in high school, and I had a lot of friends who were girls, but no one that I could call a girlfriend.  It was to the point where, when combined with my proclivity toward the theater, even my brother thought I was gay.  Oops. 
 
Well, over Four-Day Break, my friends came up, and I hit it off with one of them in a way that we hadn't quite hit it off before.  By the end of the weekend, I was promising to make the trip to Homecoming, which I had not previously intended on making, especially as I hate dancing in public. The intention, on the part of my other two friends (who now have been married to each other, incidentally, for fifteen years),  was to put the third friend and I together and see what happened, little beknownst to me. 
 
When I got to the dorm room on Saturday evening, before we went to dinner, we all ended up waiting for one person, who was running late.  Eventually they called her and she told them she thought she was going to skip out on the evening. Now, what comes next is horribly, HORRIBLY, out of character for me.  I asked, "Is she cute?"  (Okay, that's not so out of character.) The reply was: "When she wants to be."  Which was enough to pique my interest.  I asked for her number, and called her out of the blue, which is not something I would ever do, as I am, surprisingly to those who know me, a bit shy.  I actually talked her into coming along, and to my eternal surprise, she said "Okay." 
 
So, I waited by the front door of the dorm, watching from behind the stairs, when behold, a Vision in Blue.  She most certainly was much more than cute: She was beautiful.  Not in the supermodel, cover of Vogue, made-up and plasticized way, but just in a very natural way that hit me REALLY hard, and not only in a naughty way.  We ended up sitting next to dinner, and at the dance, disappeared into the upstairs, where we shared our first kiss. And our second. And our third. And more than I can even remember, now.  Our friends were a little torqued, not only because their best-laid plans had gone astray, but because we ended up rapt and wrapped in each others arms.  This went so much faster than anything I'd ever experienced before, I just couldn't believe it was happening to me: Love at First Sight.
 
The night seemed to last forever, but was gone in the blink of an eye. To her credit, she didn't sleep with me that first night. Of course, there wasn't a whole lot of sleeping going on either, but she kept her honor, if you know what I mean.  Not for lack of me trying.  But seriously, we mostly talked and cuddled and kissed, which was just wonderful. 
 
There were a lot of good days after that, followed by some really bad days, mostly, but not completely, my fault.  The friend that I was supposed to end up with turned out to be the lucky one.  It probably never would have worked to begin with.  She's too nice, and I'm too warped.  Fortunately, I had found someone whose warps complemented mine.  We had many ups and downs, and never thought we'd get to where we did: The Wedding Bell Chapel on Fifth Avenue in San Diego.  That was March 22, 1994.
 
I've not been the perfect husband. In fact, living with me can be a very painful experience. I know. I've done it.  I wasn't perfect before, I wasn't perfect after, I'm not perfect now, nor am I likely to attain perfection in the future, near or far.  And yet, through all the problems, through my Navy career, my alcoholism (three and a third years sober, and counting), through two pregnancies, and through all the crap that I've handed her, she still loves me, and she's still with me.  And that, my friends, is Fifteen Years of Agony. Her Agony. And all because I really Hated Gym.
 
Happy Valentine's Day.
 
I Love You, Katie!
Tags: valentine  
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (8) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Donkey Dung 2-12-09

These guys just keep the crap coming.  I feel it necessary to share.
 
Glorious Leader B. Hussein Obama let fly with this gem at a meeting in Elkhart, Indiana:
 
"You can't get corporate jets, you can't go take a trip to Las Vegas or go down to the Super Bowl on the taxpayer's dime."
 
The mayor of Las Vegas was a trifle perturbed.  Let's analyze this statement.  Las Vegas, a city in which the economy is based to a great extent on tourism, a large part of which is business travel and conventions, is now verboten to all those businesses taking bailout bucks, according to Dear Leader. Methinks, somehow, that this is not exactly the type of CHANGE that the good citizens of Las Vegas had HOPEd for.
 
Speaking of Nevada and vast, empty wastelands, from the mind of Nevada Senator Dingy Harry Reid comes this:
 
 "Like any negotiation, this involved give and take, and if you don't mind my saying so, that's an understatement, but the agreement we've reached stays faithful to the principles I've outlined."
 
Give and Take is democRat parlance for Pitch and Catch, as in "Dingy Harry is Pitching and Arlen Specter is Catching, if you know what I mean, and I think you do."
 
What's the difference between Harry Reid and a large bowl of warm vomit?  No, seriously, can you think of one? I can't.
 
Speaking of Arlen Specter, I think we all ought to nmae him and his fellow "moderate rePukelicans," Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins as Dis-Honorary democRats, since their careers as Republicans are clearly over.  Out of 219 Republicans in Congress, 216 stayed true to their party and its principles. But, hey, on the bright side, they got their name on the news for a day.  Good luck in your states' primaries, guys.  No, not really. I hope you get trounced like the Washington Generals.  When this dog turd of a pork barrel bill hits the fan, you'll have all the electability of an Air America host. So, unless you're planning on moving to Minnesota, you probably ought to get ready to sublet that Washington townhouse.
 
Since we're ripping new ones in the idiots who are nominally on our side that voted for this porker, let's have a quote from Maine Senator Susan Collins:
 
"I'm particularly pleased that we have produced an agreement that has the top line of 789 billion dollars, that it's less than either the House- or the Senate-passed bills"
 
Call me dated, but I seem to remember a "Blondie" comic that had Blondie walking through the door with about a hundred packages, saying, "Hey, Dagwood, guess how much money I saved you, These were all on sale."  Which leads to my point: What the hell kind of name is "Dagwood," anyway?  Er, wait, my point is: Taking a hundred billion dollars off the top of nine hundred billion you SHOULDN'T BE SPENDING IN THE FIRST PLACE is not saving money, it's just wasting less money.  I can think of something that would bring the monstrosity to an even 780 billion and it would actually do us some good: Allocate a billion dollars for the acquisition of a tube of KY Jely for every man, woman and child in America, because our butts are about to be screwed raw, and we ain't even gonna get a kiss first.
 
Might as well put one in there from the other Senator from Maine, Olympia Snowe:
 
"[The Porkulus Bill] the package represents a compromise that was established through true consensus building."
 
Consensus?  You had THREE Republicans out of TWO-HUNDRED-NINETEEN that thought this was anywhere even approaching a good idea. I guess you mean "Consensus" in the sense of "Ninety-Five Percent of Them and One Percent of Us." What did Dingy Harry promise her? A new vibrator? How stupid does she think we are? The only reason the democRats want this to look bipartisan is so that when it fails, the blame gets shared.  If they were confident it would do ANYTHING positive, they would take all the credit themselves.  Let's look at the words of John McCain:
 
“[T]his agreement is not bipartisan. I've been in bipartisan agreements, many. This is three Republican senators. Every Republican congressman voted against it in the House, plus Democrats. And all but three Republicans stayed together on this. That's not bipartisanship. That's just picking off a couple of senators.”
 
I may have policy disagreements with John McCain, but I certainly have respect for him as a man, and in this case, he is dead on. Of course, according to the Obamessiah, these three are patriotic, not the guy who has actually done more for his country than run for office. As the linked article says, it is not only patriotic to pay taxes (unless you are a democRat), it is patriotic to throw the taxpayers' money down the toilet and smile at them while they're doing it. 
 
And last, but certainly not least, a real whopper from John Kerry:
 
"I've supported many tax cuts over the years, and there are tax cuts in this proposal. But a tax cut is non-targeted. If you put a tax cut into the hands of a business or family, there's no guarantee that they're going to invest that or invest it in America. They're free to go invest anywhere that they want if they choose to invest."
 
I don't know about you, but I would hesitate to take economic advice from a guy whose grades aren't even a good as my mediocre efforts.  At least my crappy grades came in upper-level math classes.   And how about that picture on that link?  Isn't it scary that John Kerry's most attractive feature is his personality.  That is truly a face that only a mother could love, and then only if that mother were an angler fish.
 
Well, that's all I have time for at the moment. I'll be back soon with more stupid democRat nonsense.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (18) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Stupid Liberal Tricks

Has it occurred to anyone else, that under Atkins v. Virginia, most members of the House and Senate could not legally be executed? They might not even be competent to stand trial. 
 
Case in point:  Former Senator Joe Biden, now offically Obama's assassination insurance, was discussing the "Stimulus" Package the other day, when he came out with this gem:
 
"If we do everything right, if we do it with absolute certainty, there's still a 30 percent chance we're going to get it wrong."
 
Now, I may be wrong, but I believe this means that there is almost one chance in three that the fe-duh-ral government is about to turn a trillion dollars of our tax money into, essentially, used toilet paper.  To those who think the lottery is a great investment for their retirement funds, this probably sounds like a pretty safe bet. On the other hand, those of us who actually have responsibilties, things like mortgages and utilities and, well, eating, probably wouldn't bet a quarter of our yearly income on those odds. 
 
Thirty percent chance of failure, one trillion (that's Trillion, with a "T") dollars, and the fate of the free world hanging in the balance.  Call me crazy, but I'm not liking those odds very much. I think I need to make an "Honest Mistake," and "Forget" to pay taxes this year.  I'll put it somewhere safer, like in my fireplace.
 
Next up is Nancy the Red.  She really wants to sell this awful bill, so much so that she makes the rather astounding claim that every man woman and child in this country loses a job about once every month-and-a-half:
 
“Five hundred million people will lose their jobs each month until we have an economic package.”
 
Not to worry, Nancy, with the creative liberal ideas for birth control, we can just abort our way out of the recession.  A few million abortions, and there will be that many fewer people to lose their job.  I've never understood the democRats' propensity to fight to abort the people most likely to fall for their line of garbage. I mean, it doesn't take a high school education to see how idiotic some of these "ideas" are.  Fortunately for them, a high school education at most of their their primarily democRat-run big city schools doesn't take a high school education.
 
Here's one of Barney Frank's All-Time Greatest Hits:
 
Well, change it by the voters being tougher, frank -- I think that part of the problem is the voters.  You know, nobody in the Senate -- well, a couple in the Senate but nobody in the House parachuted in, and the voters have to be tougher, I don't think they hold us to a high enough standard.
 
This one brings tears to my eyes, my head is spinning so badly.  Let me translate for the Barney-impaired:
 
"The problem with Washington is that the voters keep re-electing idiots."
 
Yep, like up there in New England, they keep re-electing a big, fat, gay, cigar-chomping imbecile from Massachusetts to the U.S. House of Representatives.  I'm not sure why they call New Englanders the "intellectual elite."  I mean, if they were that smart, they wouldn't live in New England, would they? I'd like to see him try this out in the real world:
 
Boss: "Mr. Frank, how did you manage to lose a hundred million dollars in one day?"
 
Barney: "It's your fault for hiring me."
 
Makes sense to me.
 
Then, there's Dingy Harry, who came up with this gem:
 
“You can’t find a company anywhere in America that doesn’t support this legislation {the Stimul-X Package) because they know it will create jobs.”
 
Apparently Harry doesn't know how to use Google, because I found this one right in Washington D.C. on the very first page. Dingy Harry's claim is similar to the one Obama made that "All Economists Agree" with the need for his profligate spending.  Of course, the two hundred economists, including several Nobel laureates (on the other habd, that  Prizehas been so devalued, of course, in recent years that they even hand them out to liars and fools like Al Gore) who signed an open letter disproving that claim don't really count, Obama will just use his Jedi mind trick, and we will all fall into line.
 
And finally, from the Obamessiah himself:
 
"Don't come to the table with the same tired arguments and worn ideas that helped to create this crisis!"
 
Translation: "We only want All-new tired arguments and freshly worn ideas to create an even bigger crisis."   
 
And:
 
"We are not going to get relief by turning back to the very same policies that, for the last eight years, doubled the national debt and throw our economy into a tailspin."
 
Nope, we're going to create new and improved policies, to quadruple the national debt and throw our economy into a full blown depression.
 
That's all I can handle for now.  I'll come back to the quotes in a week or two with a new Heapin' Helpin of Fresh, Steamin' Donkey Dung.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (30) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Here I Go Again

Why I will never own, or likely ride, a motorcycle: Only two wheels.
 
Once again, on Sunday night, I go out to my car and feel that little tug at the wheel that lets me know all is not right.  I got out and looked at the front tire, driver's side: Okay. Front tire, passenger's side: Okay. Rear tire, passenger's side: Okay. Rear tire, driver's side: Not okay. I don't have a can of Fix-A-Flat with me, and I can see that trying to get to the gas station will just ruin the tire, which I hope to have repaired the next day.
 
Now, I don't know about y'all, but I like to shop, especially after Christmas.  All the toys and stuff go on sale, and I can start stocking up for birthdays and the next Christmas.  The problem is that my kids tend to get everywhere in the house and the garage, so no matter how well I think I've hidden stuff, here comes my daughter. "Daddy, can I have the thing that's in the back of the attic closet, covered by ten blankets and wrapped up with duct tape?"  And of course, I answer, "What thing that's in the back of the attic closet, covered by ten blankets and wrapped up with duct tape?" Which leads to a recital of next years birthday and Christmas gifts. 
 
So, I keep the stuff, for as long as I can, in the trunk of my car, on top of the little crappy doughnut tire that we are supposed to think is a "spare."  So, there I am, eleven-thirty at night, in an empty parking lot, jamming to the sound of Bill O'Reilly reruns on the radio, transferring toys from the trunk into the back seat, until I can get enough leverage to pull the floor of the trunk up and dig out the little crappy doughnut. 
 
So, I start jacking the car up, and turn and turn and turn the little thing that cranks up the screw: No bumper jacks with the big old tire iron that gets the car up in about thirty seconds for us. No, we get the stupid little thing that required ten minutes and fifty cranks to raise the side of the car three inches.  So, I managed to get the old tire off, flat as a pancake, and by this time frozen that way. I go to put the crappy little doughnut on, and realize I'm about a quarter inch shy of actually being able to get it on the screws.  So I go to crank about another twenty times.
 
Well, I found a patch of rust on the side of the car that was under what appeared to be solid metal.  Instead of going up a quarter inch, I get crunching sound and a drop of an inch-and-a-half.  Being too stubborn, or as my wife says: male, to take the thing down, reposition and try again, I keep cranking up. I need an inch-and-three-quarters, I get an inch-and-a-quarter. Crunch, another half inch down.  Finally, I get the thing up, and the crappy little doughnut on the screws. 
 
This is, of course, the perfect time for the parking brake to not want to hold the wheel steady. So, I get to push the wrench one way with my right hand, while simultaneously pushing the tire the other way with my left.  I manage to get, I hope, the lug nuts tightened, so the crappy little doughnut will stay on long enough to get home.  So, finally, about ten after twelve, I finally leave the parking lot.  At least THIS time it wasn't snowing. 
 
So I go to stop at Giant Eagle, which is a pretty good grocery store, even if they are based in Pittsburgh. My wife is constantly complaining about how much she hates the compact fluorescent lights bulbs, and I figure I'll stop to get some good, old-fashioned incandescents. (I spelled incandescent and fluorescent without even looking them up. Impressed, aren't you?)  So, I go over toward that section, and it just happens to be the night they are waxing the floors, so seven aisles are taped off and I can't get to the bulbs. 
 
On the other hand, I did find the complete series of "Invasion" on DVD for fifteen bucks, and since I like sci-fi a lot, maybe something good came out of it after all.
 
So, the next day, I go to get the tire fixed, and figure I'll get another fixed from an earlier flat.  Well, the half-hour to forty-five minutes turns into an hour and forty five minutes, BOTH tires have damage on the side, of course, and I have to get a new tire.
 
And that is why I will never get a motorcycle: Only two wheels, and no room for a spare.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (8) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Eight Miles High - The Actual Post

Thanks to Jennifer I found this article, with the following quote from Nancy the Red:
 
"Actually, those investments (food stamps and unemployment insurance) bring a bigger return than the tax cuts,” [Pelousy] said, adding: “but tax cuts where we have them – to the middle class – we think will give us our biggest return.”
I will now translate for those who don't speak crazy-talk: Food stamps and unemplyment insurance will stimulate the economy more than tax cuts, but tax cuts will stimulate the economy more than food stamps and unemployment insurance.
 
I said I would translate. I didn't say it would make sense.
 
This sent me on a quest, not for the Holy Grail, but for other stupid things the democRats have said. Not dishonest things. I would be here until March if that was what I was looking for. No, I wanted stupid things. Things that would make people who were paying attention go "What did you just say? Are you nuts?" 
 
I further handicapped my search by excluding anything said by Joe Biden. That would be too easy, and again, I would be here until March.
 
So, without further ado:
 
"There is no question that western Pennsylvania is a racist area."  This happy quote was made by John "Jack" (off) Murtha, Congressman from, you guessed it, Western Pennsylvania.  Even better, this was his apology.  The original statement was "This whole area, years ago, was really redneck, Particularly older people. They want change but they don't want to see things go too far."  And, yes, this is the same Murtha who has a little Pay-to-play scandal brewing in his own home district, and who was also a co-conspirator (though unindicted) of the ABSCAM fiasco about thirty years ago.
 
About the only thing in Pennsylvania as stupid as Murtha, other than Steelers fans, would have to be the people who keep voting him into office, although I suspect those two groups are, in many cases, one and the same.  Either that or they're too high on Meth to know what they're doing.
 
Next up, this gem of a quote from Senator Dianne Feinstein:
 
 "Banning guns addresses a fundamental right of all Americans to feel safe."
 
Um, okay.  I sure glad I've got her keeping me safe.  Even more so since I know how safe the neighborhoods in her home state of California are.  Yup, since California has some of the strictest gun control laws in the country, as well as mandatory minimums for gun crimes, I now feel perfectly safe walking through, say Compton, or Oakland, or East L.A. Because it doesn't take a fool to see that if guns are against the law, then nobody will use them.  Oh, wait, yes it does take a fool.  Of course, since medicinal marijuana hot the Golden State, I suspect that there really IS something in the (bong)water.
 
Next up, Barney Frank. I'm not sure where to begin with good old Barney. There is such a wealth of material. This one is actually two parts, and will need a little background.  In his home state of Taxachusetts, there was a bank that wasn't going to receive TARP funds, as it was under investigation for "Unsafe and Unsound Banking Practices." There were also complaints about excessive executive pay, which seems to be a common enough complaint nowadays,  except that most companies aren't quite brazen enough to try and justify the acquisition of a Porsche for the use of their CEO. Good old Barney steered TARP money their way that they weren't previously in line to receive. The article I found mentions a fact I hadn't heard before: OneUnited is the only "Black-Owned Bank" on New England. That leads of course to this wonderfully post-racial quote from Congressman Frank:
 
“I believe it would have been a very big mistake to put the only black bank out of business.”  So, not only do we now have the first Affirmative Action President, but we are now doling out Tarp money looted from the taxpayers in order to bail out an Affirmative Action Bank. 
 
It turns out that a large part of their banking failure was that they were overly invested in the Affirmative Action Mortgage Giants - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  This leads to another winner from Barney:
 
“It was a case of the federal government causing the problem.” Put that in conjunction with this: "I think this is a case where Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are fundamentally sound. They're not in danger of going under. They're not the best investment these days from a long term standpoint going back. I think they are in good shape going forward. They're in the housing market. I do think their prospects going forward are very solid." 
 
Let me translate this for the Barney-impaired: "I told everyone that Fannie and Freddie were not so good before, but now, hey, they should Buy Up! Of course, in retrospect, knowing they were in danger of collapse, maybe it wasn't such a good idea to recommend them to everyone.  Of course, since I'm in Congress, I'll just blame the whole thing on a generic "Federal Government," and more specifically, on George Bush, since he's at fault for everything from the Spanish Civil War on.  And, oh yeah, this bank in my district, they're a bunch of crooks, but they deserve a bailout because they're black."
 
Frank is either an idiot, a jackass, or my personal favorite, both.
 
And last (for now), but certainly not least, we have our SCROTUS (Socialist in Charge of Ruining Or Trashing the United States), proving that under those finely tailored suits he wears not boxers or briefs, but a Giant Presidential Onesie. 
 
"You can't just listen to Rush Limbaugh and get things done. There are big things that unify Republicans and Democrats. We shouldn't let partisan politics derail what are very important things that need to get done."
 
I swear, you can't make this stuff up.  I would like to quote another president, also a Democrat, who was a far better man than the current occupant will ever be able to even pretend to be: "If you can't take the heat, GET OUT OF THE KITCHEN!"  Of course, I expect that we'll be forced to put up with at least four years of Fine Whine coming out of the Whit House.
 
Seriously, though, what is this guy thinking? Does he really think the Republican Party takes its instructions from Rush Limbaugh? If it did, there would be no TARP money, there would be no Fannie and Freddie, there would most likely not be a recession going on now for the democRats to exploit, and make no mistake, they ARE exploiting it, as well as all of us.  All this idiotic statement did was irritate Republicans and make them realize that Obama wanted not just one lapdog for the White House, but a whole Congress of them.  Finally, the Republicans in the House stood up and acted like Republicans, instead of stooges for the democRats. 
 
This is just the tip of the iceberg.  For a party that spent eight years blasting Bush for his malapropisms, these guys are really a bunch of Joe Bidens, and Joe Biden, in turn, is essentially a size twelve foot perpetually in search of a mouth in which to lodge itself.  Unfortunately, the American People seem to be asleep at the wheel, or smoking an awful lot of crack, hence the title of this post.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (20) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »