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Your inspiration seems to be something more profound, an embrace of Michael Moore hatred that you'll be hanging on to for a good decade, coupled with the sweetness of a cleansed political memory that comes after your party's victories, but before the majority party's infighting and overreaching begins. Your more expansive worldview is harder to attribute to having one too many at the Adam's Apple downtown, Hank, if you know what I mean. But it's bold. I like it! Hang onto it -- it'll keep you warm during the cold nights of the Congressional investigations that are the staples of second-term presidents. |
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It just seems to me that youze guyz are going quite overboard on the demonization of an influence that I think is way overperceived. Note how I keep pointing out "me atheistic" - I have less love for the sinbots than you, most likely - but with your constant snide "faith-based putzoids" this and your "Jeezuz-howls-on-the-train" that, you just seem so horridly bitter that you're gonna shoot yourselves all in the feet. Maybe better to wash them? |
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Seemed a silly premise to me. Perhaps even snide. In any event, I'm a bit baffled at your surprise and disappointment that others would point out this Administration's, and your party's, special relationship with the Lord as counterexamples. Trust me, we hear you each and every time you proclaim that "you athiestic" and that you not like them. Nevertheless, bilmore, it's you're party, and you got to dance with them that brung ya, even if the partners are not always to your liking. We in the newly-formed minority understand the deal. And, as a matter of perspective, I'd imagine that you in the majority would remember the GOP's colorful history during the bomb-throwing days of the Gingrich Era. Beyond the ultimate truth of whether the Godliness of the GOP will bring your party political deliverance or exile, making these arguments are what political minorities do. Where, exactly, in your lively discussion about political wackos did you think this conversation would go? |
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This wasn't about "do I love our religio-centrics". This was about "D's need to determine which way, if any, they want to or need to move to rebuild a viable winning base." My Boxer point was, she and others of her ilk (that's like a social club in California) are stepping up and assuming the "face" of the D's right now. I doubt that's a good move for the D's. If anything, I think there are more votes to be mined by moving D's slightly center than by moving left. Come up with a candidate less fulsomely and historically liberal than Kerry, with the same ideas and plans, and I think the D's win. A candidate, and a party, that responds to the more extremist left view, while being more satisfying for the hardcore activists, marginalizes D's to a smaller and smaller vote. We seem to be able to survive our Buchanans. Can you survive your Boxers? |
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Democrats survived its Kennedy affliction from the 1980s, and prospered (relatively speaking) for years thereafter. Boxer may or may not be the "face" of the Democratic party now. Frankly, I think you could argue that the differences between California's two senators and their approach to the Rice nomination that so affected you reflects the difference that the party is trying to sort out now. You seem to prefer to look at the snapshot and conclude that not only that this is Boxer's ugly day in the sun, but also to draw long-term lessons from it. I prefer to think that it's not a snapshot, it's a movie. |
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Voting irregularities in Ohio 2004? Check. Bush lied- poeple died? Done. What next? |
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http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com...ary_aus118.jpg Cheney's Coat Stopped the Vote! aV |
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I'm not saying they have to move hard to the middle, but they do have to marginalize the 30% of the party that wants to pull the to the left. Clinton understood this. Hillary understands this. |
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aV |
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Ty- better get some new bloggers
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,145825,00.html
Polls Close in Historic Iraqi Elections BAGHDAD, Iraq — The polls in Iraq have closed, ending the country's first open elections in more than 50 years and setting a course for what U.S. officials hope will be a long democratic future. All around the country, Iraqis defied threats of violence and cast their votes. An initial estimate of turnout from the Independent Electoral Commission indicated that 72 percent of eligible Iraqi voters had turned out to cast their ballots. 72%? Hell Ty, what'll it be once it's ready for democracy? |
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