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That is what I thought too.

THE ANNOINTED ONE wrote:
> Dick, How very politically incorrect of you.... and like most things
> that are really politically incorrect, there is way more than a simple
> grain of truth involved.
>
> On Jul 2, 7:24 pm, dick thompson <rhomp2...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
>> http://www.fredoneverything.net/SexualFuture.shtml
>>
>
>

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Dick, How very politically incorrect of you.... and like most things
that are really politically incorrect, there is way more than a simple
grain of truth involved.

On Jul 2, 7:24 pm, dick thompson <rhomp2...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> http://www.fredoneverything.net/SexualFuture.shtml

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On Jul 2, 6:49 am, GregfromBoston <greg.vinc...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Whoa!

Did I startle you...?
>
> I'm not an Obama fan, but this is ridiculous!

What is ridiculous about it....?

http://www.youtube.com/user/FeelTheChangeMedia#g/u
He's a devout Muslim and a Christian, for convenience....

He's deceiving us....
>
> 10 bucks says YOU didn't get into Harvard

I didn't apply....

If I did, I wouldn't pick "Community Organizer" as
a course. With Obama, it's "Communism Organizer".

At least I know how many states there are. And it ain't
57. Search "Obama's gaffes". A Harvard Grad? He got
in because of Affirmative Action.....

He gets tongue tied if the teleprompter goes out. I think
the guy is brainless. He is the enemy within. Committing
treason. We need to take up arms against him. I'm
surprised he hasn't been assassinated by now. He is a
mad, wild ass, dictatorial, pompous, arrogant, self centered,
regulations up the yin yang, Allah ass kisser...

('wild ass', see Genesis 16) <jewishvirtuallibrary.org>

He's regulating all incandescent lights, illegal, 1/1/2012.
Destroying jobs. I'm stocking up on 100 WATT bulbs.
Soft White. He'll probably order the Military and or, the
National Guard, to do a house to house search....

Obama, speaking to a crowd of Mexicans, joked....
"If they could, they would build a higher fence, a wall
and a moat on the border. Filling the moat with alligators."
(I'd go for Piranha)

He didn't mention all the shovel jobs it would entail. I
think it's a good idea. Build it one quarter mile from the
border, wall first. Get the National Guard home. They
are not the "International Guard". Have them patrol the
1/4 mile stretch as the wall is being constructed....
(No illegals need apply)

Boy....that would get the economy back on track. Like
the WPA project did....and we're at war....so what's the
problem. It should be done for Home Land Security......

Housing and private businesses. Maybe even a hospital
would be constructed for those working on the project.

One three letter word, "JOBS". Lots, for all trades and
non trades....

Vote me for President. I'm an independent....very....

I won't stack my cabinet with super rich Communist cronies.

One other thing. The mainstream tout Obama as the first
Black African to be elected President. Shouldn't he be
called the first Mulatto African to be elected President?

Am I stupid or something for thinking that? They color him
black. He himself said he is a mongrel....

So..
He is the first Mongrel African, to be elected President....

OOFA....
There is a hierarcy at play upon the Earth....
Isalm, Judaism, and Crop Markings, are a part of it.....

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http://www.fredoneverything.net/SexualFuture.shtml

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141 White House staffers make six figures

 @CNNMoney July 1, 2011: 6:22 PM ET
white-house-money.gi.top.jpg

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- One out of every three White House employees makes at least $100,000 a year, according to data released by the White House on Friday.

Top earners pull down a salary of $172,200 a year, while three employees have a salary of $0. Most staffers fall somewhere in the middle.

The average salary is $81,765 a year, while the median employee salary is $70,000. The lowest full time salary is $41,000 a year.

The list is a little top heavy, with 21 sharing the title of top earner. But the names at the top are among the most recognizable the White House has to offer.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney makes $172,200, as does counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, speechwriter Jon Favreau, adviser David Plouffe and Chief of Staff Bill Daley.

While that's well above the national average, White House staffers often command far more lucrative salaries in the private sector -- and some gave them up to work for Obama.

Congressional loot: What's Nancy Pelosi worth?

Plouffe, for example, walked away from a $1.5 million salary as a consultant at Plouffe Strategies when he joined the administration.

Records also show that Daley, former Midwest chairman and head of corporate responsibility at JPMorgan (JPMFortune 500), raked in $8.7 million from the bank in 2010, including a $675,000 salary and $4.8 million bonus.

Obama himself earns $400,000, double the $200,000 President Clinton earned annually during his eight years in office. The president's pay hike went into effect during the presidency of George W. Bush.

In total, the 454 White House staffers earn a payroll of $37,121,463. To top of page



http://money.cnn.com/2011/07/01/news/economy/white_house_salaries/

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Actually,  I tend to agree with the HOA.  If I understand the article, which doesn't really go into much detail, the HOA blocked the building of the home, because of fear that the home would lower property values.....I understand that, and if I lived in the neighborhood,  I too would object if someone was attempting to put a mobile home in my neighborhood....I know that is a stretch, but without knowing more,  I understand at least the issue....
 


 
On Sat, Jul 2, 2011 at 9:10 PM, dick thompson <rhomp2002@earthlink.net> wrote:
http://chronicle.augusta.com/latest-news/2011-06-28/group-looks-other-sites-paralyzed-vets-home?v=1309274691


Under the circumstances would you even want to live in a subdivision like that?  I surely wouldn't.

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http://pajamasmedia.com/vodkapundit/2011/06/30/halperin-im-sorry-the-president-is-a-dick/

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http://chronicle.augusta.com/latest-news/2011-06-28/group-looks-other-sites-paralyzed-vets-home?v=1309274691


Under the circumstances would you even want to live in a subdivision
like that? I surely wouldn't.

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Fannie Mae And Friends: Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua Rosner begin
Reckless Endangerment with a cast of characters, in four categories. The
first is "Fannie Mae and Friends". (One of the categories, "Doubters and
Those who Pushed Back", is a list of white hats. The other two,
"Subprime Lenders and Their Enablers" and "Feckless Regulators", list
people with some responsibility for the 2008 financial breakdown. I hope
to get to all four categories, in time.),, Here's the first group, with
links to their Wikipedia articles, where they exist:,[D] James A.
Johnson,[D] Franklin Delano Raines,[D] David O. Maxwell,[D] William
Jefferson Clinton,[D] Barney Frank,[R] Robert Zoellick,[D] Thomas
Donilon,[D] Larry Summers,[D] Robert Rubin,[D] Richard Holbrooke,[D]
Leland Brendsel,[?] Timothy Howard,[D] Thomas Nides,[D] Herb Moses,[R]
R. Glenn Hubbard,[D] Peter Orszag,[D] Bruce Vento,[R] Robert Bennett,[R]
Kit Bond,[R] Stephen Friedman,[D] Maxine Waters, Though they don't say
so, Morgenson and Rosner appear to have listed them in order of
declining culpability, with James A. Johnson the most guilty for Fannie
Mae's failure, and Maxine Waters the least.,, (David O. Maxwell was the
Fannie Mae chief executive officer from 1981 to 1991, just before James
A. Johnson. Although, according to Morgenson and Rosner, he had run the
company well, he erred by picking Johnson as his successor. Leland
Brendsel was the chief executive of Freddie Mac, 1987-2003. Timothy
Howard was the chief financial officer of Fannie Mae, 1990-2005. Herb
Moses was Barney Frank's "partner" for many years. Congressman Frank
asked Fannie Mae to give Moses a job. They did, and Frank in return gave
Fannie Mae favors — at our expense.),, In front of each name, I've given
my best guess at their party affiliation, except for Timothy Howard. I
suspect he's a Democrat, but was unable to find any direct evidence in a
quick search.,, As you can see, this is a predominantly Democratic
scandal. And I think that it is fair to say that James Johnson deserves
more of the blame than all the rest put together, so it is even more a
Democratic scandal than a simple count of the D's and R's would make you
think.,, But it is a scandal that has done little damage to most of the
people on that list. (And little damage to most of the people on the
"Subprime Lenders and Their Enablers" and "Feckless Regulators"
lists.),, Most of the Democrats on that list have Obama connections.
Obama asked Johnson to be on his vice-presidential search committee, but
dropped Johnson after "it was reported that he had received loans
directly from Angelo Mozilo, the CEO of Countrywide Financial, a company
implicated in the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis". Franklin Raines has
also advised Obama, at least informally. Clinton's wife works in the
Obama administration. Thomas Donilon is currently Obama's National
Security Advisor. Larry Summers was Obama's first head of the National
Economic Council. Robert Rubin is one of Obama's part-time economic
advisors. Richard Holbrooke served in the Obama administration as a
special envoy, until his death last December. Thomas R. Nides is
currently Obama's Deputy Secretary of State for Management and
Resources. Peter Orszag was Obama's first head of the Office of
Management and Budgeting.,, Obama chose at least 2 people on that list
to be informal advisors, and named 6 of them to official positions in
his administration. (I think it likely that he would have found a place
in his administration for Johnson and Raines, if it weren't for their
legal problems.) It is almost as if helping destroy Fannie Mae and cause
the 2008 financial crisis was a resumé-enhancer for our current
administration.,, Does Obama know that these advisors and appointees are
intimately connected with the Fannie Mae disaster? I don't know — but I
would certainly like to know the answer to that question.,, (Jamie
Gorelick, mistress of disaster, is not on the list, even though she was
vice chairman of Fannie Mae, 1997-2003. In fact, she is not even listed
in the index to Reckless Endangerment.) ,- 1:38 PM, 29

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http://www.investors.com/EditorialCartoons/Cartoon.aspx

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http://www.worldstarhiphop.com/videos/video.php

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http://www.grouchyoldcripple.com/archives/008680.html

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Fake Progressive #563,822
Posted by Thomas Woods on July 2, 2011 10:30 AM

It's Michelle Goldberg of The Daily Beast, who says Obama's "greatest fault in office has been a misplaced faith in the GOP's capacity for reasonableness." (I leave aside any critique of the substance of her article, where she claims that nearly all "serious" economists say we need tax increases and spending cuts, as if this were primarily an economic rather than a moral question; whether we "need" tax increases is based on whether we believe in expropriation of peaceful people, whether we believe in the immoral uses in which the confiscated funds will be employed, whether we believe the innocent can be held liable for debts racked up by sociopaths without their consent, etc.)

Anthony Gregory recently noted that Obama just might be guilty of worse offenses than having "a misplaced faith in the GOP's capacity for reasonableness." These offenses, you might think, would be abhorrent to "progressives." And maybe they are, to the 37 progressives with actual principles. Michelle Goldberg, who thinks the key divide in the country is between Democrats and Republicans, is still plenty enamored of what she creepily calls "our president." It's worth recalling Anthony's indictment, an indictment that anyone on the Left with a shred of principle would be repeating every day, but about which we hear not one syllable from Michelle Goldberg:
He shoveled money toward corporate America, banks and car manufacturers. He championed the bailouts of the same Wall Street firms his very partisans blamed for the financial collapse. He picked the CEO of General Electric to oversee the unemployment problem. He appointed corporate state regulars for every major role in financial central planning. After guaranteeing a new era of transparency, he conducted all his regulatory business behind a shroud of unprecedented secrecy. He planned his health care scheme, the crown jewel of his domestic agenda, in league with the pharmaceutical and insurance industries.

He continued the war in Iraq, even extending Bush's schedule with a goal of staying longer than the last administration planned. He tripled the U.S. presence in Afghanistan then took over two years to announce the eventual drawdown to bring it back to only double the Bush presence. He widened the war in Pakistan, launching drone attacks at a dizzying pace. He started a war on false pretenses with Libya, shifting the goal posts and doing it all without Congressional approval. He bombed Yemen and lied about it.

He enthusiastically signed on to warrantless wiretapping, renditioning, the Patriot Act, prison abuse, detention without trial, violations of habeas corpus, and disgustingly invasive airport security measures. He deported immigrants more than Bush did. He increased funding for the drug war in Mexico. He invoked the Espionage Act more than all previous presidents combined, tortured a whistleblower, and claimed the right to unilaterally kill any U.S. citizen on Earth without even a nod from Congress or a shrug from the courts.
None of this, evidently, is worse than having "a misplaced faith in the GOP's capacity for reasonableness."
0
By today's standards, King George III was a very mild tyrant indeed. He taxed his American colonists at a rate of only pennies per annum. His actual impact on their personal lives was trivial. He had arbitrary power over them in law and in principle, but in fact it was seldom exercised. If you compare his rule with that of today's U.S. Government, you have to wonder why we celebrate our independence. "It was a famous victory."

Honoring Jefferson
July 1, 2004 
Joseph Sobran

In observance of Independence Day, Time magazine has put Thomas Jefferson on its cover. Naturally, the copious articles within pay his genius worshipful lip service, while missing the essence of it. They are more interested in current obsessions -- such as his views on race and whether he had children by one of his slaves -- than in his political philosophy.

The last thing Jefferson would want would be mere lip service. The "self-evident truths" of his Declaration of Independence -- that all men are created equal, that their Creator has endowed them with unalienable rights, that government derives its just powers from the consent of the governed -- were meant to be challenges, not platitudes.

Today we repeat them as if nobody ever doubted them. And we seldom reflect on what they actually mean. But Jefferson never ceased pondering their implications, like Euclid exploring the remotest implications of the simplest axioms.

By today's standards, King George III was a very mild tyrant indeed. He taxed his American colonists at a rate of only pennies per annum. His actual impact on their personal lives was trivial. He had arbitrary power over them in law and in principle, but in fact it was seldom exercised. If you compare his rule with that of today's U.S. Government, you have to wonder why we celebrate our independence. "It was a famous victory."

A master of several languages and many sciences, Jefferson sought to reduce political philosophy to simple terms every American could understand. The Declaration distills the political philosophy of John Locke, which Jefferson regarded as the consensus of reasonable men of his own generation.

Jefferson's 1798 Kentucky Resolutions -- one of his most important writings, neglected and disparaged today -- took the Declaration's self-evident truths a step further. He argued that the "free and independent states," as parties to the Constitution, must not allow the Federal Government to monopolize constitutional interpretation; for if that government could define the extent of its own powers, the whole purpose of the Constitution would be defeated.

One of Jefferson's recent biographers remarks that this argument was "dangerously close" to an argument for the states' right to secede from the Union. That is exactly where it led, as the Confederacy later contended. The states had the same right to withdraw from a Union they deemed tyrannical that they had had to withdraw from the British Empire.

Jefferson was willing to apply the radical logic of those self-evident truths. He was a conservative radical -- he argued against secession except as a last resort -- but a radical nonetheless. Those truths weren't empty slogans; they were active principles, full of explosive potential.

That potential exploded in 1860, when states did begin seceding. The new president, Abraham Lincoln, who claimed to be a disciple of Jefferson, had to ignore much of Jefferson's thought in order to justify suppressing secession as "rebellion." He incessantly cited the truth that all men are created equal, but he evaded the part about the consent of the governed and established military dictatorships in the conquered South, while effectively criminalizing Jefferson's views on secession in the North.

All this set a lasting precedent for pretending to honor Jefferson while distorting his real philosophy. Following this tradition, Time gives us a toothless Jefferson whose views wouldn't rattle today's status quo. His great enemy Alexander Hamilton, who took a far more liberal view of the "implied powers" of the Federal Government, is much more in vogue now.

Today it's fashionable to condescend to Jefferson by saying his philosophy is a bit old-fashioned -- plausible in an agrarian society, maybe, but hopelessly out of date now. Jefferson would reply that self-evident truths are never "old": A proposition is either true or false. If his truths were true in 1776, they were always true, and will always remain true.

A slaveowner, Jefferson saw that those truths were fatal to slavery. And his personal conduct on slavery has been rightly criticized on his own principles. But that is all the more reason to take his principles seriously. A man of Jefferson's intellect, merely creating a philosophy to justify himself, would have come up with a very different set of principles.

The best way honor Jefferson -- the only true way -- is to take his words as seriously as he meant them.

http://www.sobran.com/columns/2004/040701.shtml
0

Anti-TSA Groping Bill Fails in Texas
Written by Kelly Holt   
Thursday, 30 June 2011 11:27

Texans around the state, and other Americans who have followed the travails of passing an anti-TSA groping bill in Texas this year, were stunned and disheartened when the Lone Star State's special session ended early Tuesday without passing the popular Travelers' Dignity measure.

It was a wild ride on a bucking bronco for the bill. It first sailed through the Lone Star State's regular House session (with unanimous approval), but the feds then threatened not to allow commercial flights in the state if the bill were to become law. The threat caused the state Senate to back away from the bill, which died without a vote in the Senate chamber. But after the regular legislative session, Texans deluged Governor Rick Perry's office with emails and phone calls imploring the Governor to call up the anti-TSA groping bill in a special session of the Texas legislature that had been convened for other purposes. During this time, two Texas officials denounced the groping they were subjected to by the TSA, and their personal stories, circulated on YouTube, fueled the firestorm of grassroots support for the anti-TSA groping bill.

Responding to the pressure, Perry called up the bill for consideration by the special session ­ after which the bill was blocked by the Texas Speaker of the House before being approval by a House committee. The House went on to pass a weakened version of the bill, the Senate strengthened the weakened version (almost restoring it to the original), and the special session ended without a final version of the bill being cleared by the legislature. In the end, the legislation failed not because it was voted down, but because it could not be brought up a second time on the same day in the House to allow for a vote on the final version without a suspension of the rules. The suspension, which required 120 yeas in the 150-member House failed by a vote of 96-26, in part because some of the bill's supporters had gone home.

After the vote on suspending the rules, Representative David Simpson of Longview (pictured above), the author of the anti-TSA groping bill, unloaded on the legislative leadership in a final speech, taking aim at "phony politicians." He recounted the famous Churchill speech about never giving up, and promised that he would never back down in his effort to stop unconstitutional searches of airline passengers in Texas. He then reminded his colleagues that he did not represent special interests, but was brought to the job by people who believed he would keep his constitutional oath. Simpson emphasized that lawmakers should restrain themselves from using the law for their own ends.

Urging the people of Texas to not be confused about why the bill failed, he laid the blame for its defeat squarely "at the feet of the leadership of this state." Simpson also noted the historical significance of two Texas battles: the Alamo and Goliad. Students of Texas history will remember that both these crucial steps in the struggle of "Texians" for independence were nothing less than massacres by the enemy. Not until Sam Houston surprised his opponents at the Battle of San Jacinto were the Texians finally victorious. They lost two battles, but won the war.

The war in Texas against the TSA's egregious searches will commence again when the state's biennial legislative session convenes in January 2013. Texans are urging continued opposition in sister states until they can take up the mantle again. Lone Star constitutionalists point to the role of constituent influence ­ grassroots organizations, radio talk shows, and a persistent flow of calls, letters, and e-mails to the State Capitol ­ for keeping the issue front and center in lawmakers' attention.

Simpson declared in his final speech, "As long as there is tyranny we must never cease to oppose it."

http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/politics/8056-anti-tsa-groping-bill-fails-in-texas-after-lawmakers-leave-session-early
0
Patriotism is not blind trust in anything our leaders tell us or do.
===========================

Duh!

This dude is a moron

On Jul 1, 3:59 pm, MJ <micha...@america.net> wrote:
> The True Meaning of PatriotismPatriotism Is Not the Waving of a FlagLawrence W. Reed
> June 2003 • Volume: 53 • Issue: 6 •
> Patriotism these days is like Christmas -- lots of people caught up in a festive atmosphere replete with lights and spectacles. We hear reminders about "the true meaning" of Christmas -- and we may even mutter a few guilt-ridden words to that effect ourselvesbut each of us spends more time and thought in parties, gift-giving, and the other paraphernalia of a secularized holiday than we do deepening our devotion to the true meaning.
> So it is with patriotism, especially on Memorial Day in May, Flag Day in June, and Independence Day in July. Walk down Main Street America and ask one citizen after another what patriotism means and with few exceptions, you'll get a passel of the most self-righteous but superficial and often dead-wrong answers. America's Founders, the men and women who gave us reason to be patriotic in the first place, would think we've lost our way if they could see us now.
> Since the infamous attacks of September 11, 2001, Americans in near unanimity have been "feeling" patriotic. For most, that sadly suffices to make one a solid patriot. But if I'm right, it's time for Americans to take a refresher course.
> Patriotism isnotlove of country, if by "country" you mean sceneryamber waves of grain, purple mountain majesty, and the like. Almost every country has pretty collections of rocks, water, and stuff that people grow and eat. If that's what patriotism is all about, then Americans have precious little for which we can claim any special or unique love. And surely, patriotism cannot mean giving one's life for a river or a mountain range.
> Patriotism is not blind trust in anything our leaders tell us or do. That just replaces some lofty concepts with mindless goose-stepping.
> Patriotism is not simply showing up to vote. You need to know a lot more about what motivates a voter before you judge his patriotism. He might be casting a ballot because he just wants something at someone else's expense. Maybe he doesn't much care where the politician he's hiring gets it. Remember Dr. Johnson's wisdom: "Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel."
> Waving the flag can be an outward sign of patriotism, but let's not cheapen the term by ever suggesting that it's anything more than a sign. And while it's always fitting to mourn those who lost their lives simply because they resided on American soil, that too does not define patriotism.
> People in every country and in all times have expressed feelings of something we flippantly call "patriotism," but that just begs the question. What is this thing, anyway? Can it be so cheap and meaningless that a few gestures and feelings make you patriotic?
> Not in my book.
> I subscribe to a patriotism rooted in ideas that in turn gave birth to a country, but it's theideasthat I think of when I'm feeling patriotic. I'm a patriotic American because I revere the ideas that motivated the Founders and compelled them, in many instances, to put their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor on the line.
> What ideas? Read the Declaration of Independence again. Or, if you're like most Americans these days, read it for the very first time. It's all there. All men are created equal. They are endowed not by government but by their Creator with certain unalienable rights. Premier among those rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Government must be limited to protecting the peace and preserving our liberties, and doing so through the consent of the governed. It's the right of a free people to rid themselves of a government that becomes destructive of those ends, as our Founders did in a supreme act of courage and defiance more than two hundred years ago.
> Call it freedom. Call it liberty. Call it whatever you want, but it's the bedrock on which this nation was founded and from which we stray at our peril. It's what has defined us as Americans. It's what almost everyone who has ever lived on this planet has yearned for. It makes life worth living, which means it's worth fighting and dying for.An American SpinI know that this concept of patriotism puts an American spin on the term. But I don't know how to be patriotic for Uganda or Paraguay. I hope the Ugandans and Paraguayans have lofty ideals they celebrate when they feel patriotic, but whether or not they do is a question you'll have to ask them. I can only tell you what patriotism means to me as an American.
> I understand that America has often fallen short of the superlative ideas expressed in the Declaration. That hasn't diminished my reverence for them, nor has it dimmed my hope that future generations of Americans will be re-inspired by them.
> This brand of patriotism, in fact, gets me through the roughest and most cynical of times. My patriotism is never affected by any politician's failures, or any shortcoming of some government policy, or any slump in the economy or stock market. I never cease to get that "rush" that comes from watching Old Glory flapping in the breeze, no matter how far today's generations have departed from the original meaning of those stars and stripes. No outcome of any election, no matter how adverse, makes me feel any less devoted to the ideals our Founders put to pen in 1776. Indeed, as life's experiences mount, the wisdom of what giants like Jefferson and Madison bestowed on us becomes ever more apparent to me. I get more fired up than ever to help others come to appreciate the same things.
> During a recent visit to the land of my ancestors, Scotland, I came across a few very old words that gave me pause. Though they preceded our Declaration of Independence by 456 years, and come from three thousand miles away, I can hardly think of anything ever written here that more powerfully stirs in me the patriotism I've defined above. In 1320, in an effort to explain why they had spent the previous 30 years in bloody battle to expel the invading English, Scottish leaders ended their Declaration of Arbroath with this line: "It is not for honor or glory or wealth that we fight, but for freedom alone, which no good man gives up except with his life."
> Freedomunderstanding it, living it, teaching it, and supporting those who are educating others about its principles. That, my fellow Americans, is what patriotism should mean to each of us today.http://www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/the-true-meaning-of-patriotism/

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Whoa!

I'm not an Obama fan, but this is ridiculous!

10 bucks says YOU didn't get into Harvard
>
> >      <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/author/scottystarnes/> Assploding
> > Hypocricy: Two Days After Scolding Congress for work habits, Bam heads to
> > Presidential Retreat for Holiday
> > Weekend<http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/2011/07/01/assploding-hypocricy-tw...>
> > *Scotty Starnes
> > <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/author/scottystarnes/>*| July 1,
> > 2011 at 1:35 PM | Tags: Camp
> > David <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/?tag=camp-david>, Obama
> > vacation<http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/?tag=obama-vacation>,
> > President Obama <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/?tag=president-obama>,
> > slacker-in-chief
> > <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/?tag=slacker-in-chief>|
> > Categories: Political
> > Issues <http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/?cat=35145> | URL:http://wp.me/pvnFC-5ya
>
> > <http://scottystarnes.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/color-obama-vaca-vin...>
>
> > That's the Obama pattern. Say one thing, do the exact opposite. It's the "do
> > as I say, not as I do" routine he is famous for. This is our
> > slacker-in-chief.
>
> > Washington<http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2011/07/01/obam...>—President
> > Barack Obama will be taking a break for the Independence Day holiday
> > weekend.
>
> > All those fundraisers and traveling on the taxpayer's dime sure is tiresome.
>
> > He'll travel to Camp David in western Maryland Friday afternoon, following
> > some morning meetings.
>
> > Morning meeting? Translation: A few rounds of golf.
>
> > Daughter Malia has a holiday birthday. She'll turn 13 on Monday.
>
> > Wanna bet Bam skips Malia's birthday to play golf?
>
> > Add a comment to this
> > post<http://scottystarnes.wordpress.com/2011/07/01/assploding-hypocricy-tw...>
>
> I can't believe Obama was elected. The most incompetent nincompoop
> ever.....
> A two year no vote Senator! A Harvard Grad. Harvard. A dumbed down PC
> School.
> A high grade moron can get into Harvard and graduate. It's a
> government special
> interest, entitlement. Just like the Mortgage fiasco. A regulation on
> the banks to lend
> money to people who couldn't afford to pay the mortgage. A deliberate
> trashing of
> the industry. Barny Fwank made it law!
>
> The half ass Liberals, of Ass wholes (great Mascot they have there. A
> Jackass
> AKA, an Ass.)
>
> They are, as Archie Bunker says to Claire Packer, a Liberal running
> for City
> Counsel.  "You Liberals get your way, we'll all be hearing one big
> FLUSH...."
>
> How true....
>
> I think Obama should be arrested for treason, by the very SS who
> protect him....
> Tried and executed. He appoints all Socialists to his cabinet! They
> put in Socialist
> ideals.  Very subtle. And dangerous. A psychological thing.....
>
> They are, the enemy within.....
>
>
>
>
>
> >   [image: WordPress]
>
> > WordPress.com <http://wordpress.com/> | Thanks for flying with WordPress!
> > Manage Subscriptions<http://subscribe.wordpress.com/?key=5d39acfd19218362d540a3fc3dc3315d&...>|
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> > by Email <http://support.wordpress.com/post-by-email/> feature.
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> > *Trouble clicking? Copy and paste this URL into your browser:*http://subscribe.wordpress.com- Hide quoted text -
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> - Show quoted text -

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I'm Sitting on this barstool talking like a damn fool
Got the twelve o'clock news blues
And I've given up hope on the afternoon soaps
And a bottle of cold brew
Is it any wonder I'm not crazy?

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0
This animal has robbed 100's of children and parents, and there's a
bevvy of duncecaps that think he's fucking CUTE.

http://articles.boston.com/2011-06-30/lifestyle/29722851_1_shirt-make...

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0
http://www.grouchyoldcripple.com/archives/008682.html

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http://www.grouchyoldcripple.com/archives/008677.html

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