WHY WE'RE ANGRY
Just got this letter from John Conley, the Marine combat Vet (who sent me his Purple Heart, God bless him!)
Dear Lyd,
What Imus said was inexcusable and deserving of decisive punishment, but more inexcusable to me is the ongoing urgency to completely destroy his life and the very positive things he and his wife have built to help kids fight cancer. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton have both needed forgiveness in the past for racial slurs and incidents (Jackson with his anti-semitic "Hymietown" remark in describing New York City and Sharpton with the Tawana Brawley myth he rushed into and helped perpetuate.)........both incidents just as inciteful, if not more, than anything Don Imus has said or done.
In this case not only is there no forgiveness, but the punishment grossly outweighs the offense and a feeding frenzy has developed among bored journalists trying to uncover new excuses to hammer Imus even harder. The theory seems to be that If you want to prove you're not a racist, then step up and take your pound of flesh from Don Imus. I fear the pendulum is now swinging a little too far the other way.
John
**************************
Part of being a public figure or celebrity means dealing with unsolicited opinions about yourself. On this blog as well as on others, I have been stung and hurt to the core by cruel, sexist comments. The first time it happened, my cheeks stung and I burst into tears, feeling lower than I had in my entire life. I can't imagine what these young Rutgers women must have felt like after working hard to get to college, to earn their place on the Rutgers team, to make it to the finals — only to be dismissed as whores (no matter the catchy slang, "ho's" means one thing and applies to the worst thing men can call women.) Black women have it harder than any other group; they have been marginalized, forsaken, forgotten and maligned and yet they have such dignity and innate beauty in the face of unbearable hardship.
Imus lost his MSNBC show, a signal that sexist, racist hate-speak will not be tolerated on the public airwaves. But much worse than Imus on any given day, are Glen Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage — who also have their own shows. They systematically engage in hate-speak and Nationally syndicated Clear Channel radio host Glen Beck has actually sent out screaming death wishes to certain Democrats he hates. He called hurricane survivors in New Orleans "scumbags," and said he "hates" 9-11 families: "I didn't think I could hate victims faster than the 9-11 victims. (More below, but first this...)
Please Go back and listen to Rush Limbaugh, Glen Beck, Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly's shows. Every single day, they provoke people to hate their fellow man, to hate anyone who is not pro-Bush, pro-war labeling peacemakers as traitors. Every other word out of their mouths conveys their disgust for perceived liberal bias, for human rights groups, environmentalists, liberals, gays, Muslims, women's groups, feminists, "Hollywood" Democracts and their fellow man.
Is this kind of hate-mongering good for America? Is the politics of personal destruction good for America? Does anyone know the truth about the "Swift Boat Veterans" who ruined John Kerry? Did the media ever get the word out that the man behind this campaign was a completely deranged individual who was caught lying and posting threats on blogs -- and had no credibility whatsoever? I will post the truth you missed in my next thread.
On all these political talk shows, every single pundit, except for Keith Olbermann — are raving right wingers. Chris Matthews aside, there are no other intelligent, Progressive or Democrat-leaning talk show pundits with thoughtful, reasoned voices -- such as Paul Waldman or Scott Ritter or Robert Dreyfuss or Arianna Huffington. The list is endless. We have so many wonderfully intelligent people that could be talk show hosts, yet we get these sinister loud-mouths who dumb America down such as Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh.. and of course Bill O'Reilly, one of the most hateful hypocrites on the public airwaves. Why are they still on the air? They take glee in stirring up hatred. What a tragedy for America. We need to become a softer, kinder nation. We need to come together and see each other with fresh eyes. We are all one race, and we are all flawed.
BUSH LIED, THOUSANDS DIED and are dying ....WHY?
In case you didn't know the reasons most Americans are so upset with Bush, here is a brilliant article that describes how we feel. This is an an article by Paul Waldman, Senior Fellow at Media Matters and author of "It's Not Enough to Be Right: What Progressives Must Learn From Conservative Success." We had him on our show a few weeks ago. Don't forget, this Saturday morning at 9 AM PST we're honored to have Congressman Charlie Rangle, who has been serving America for over 30 years. He's a great wit, and a man with such a keen eye and big heart. He's on CNN and MSNBC almost every week.
ALL THE RAGE
There's No Denying it, we Progressives are Angry
by Paul Waldman
We can’t deny it any longer. There’s no point in hiding it, no point in trying to explain it away. Yes, it’s true: We progressives are angry. And we no longer care if the centrist, moderate guardians of the establishment scold us for it.
Our anger is not just some vague feeling whose source we can’t put our finger on. It isn’t based on absurd conspiracy theories and it isn’t illogical.
We’re angry because of what has happened to our country, because of how we’ve been treated, and because of the innumerable crimes the conservatives have committed. We’re angry at the president, we’re angry at the Congress, we’re angry at the news media. And we have every right to be.
Yes, we’re angry at George W. Bush. We’re not angry at him because of who he sleeps with, and we’re not angry at him because we think he represents some socio-cultural movement we didn’t like 40 years ago, or because he hung out with a different crowd than we did in high school. We’re angry at him because of what he’s done.
It’s true, we don’t like the fact that the most powerful human being on the planet is such a ridiculous buffoon that he can’t put two coherent sentences together without beginning to giggle and shimmy his shoulders. But we’re not angry because we think he’s stupid, we’re angry because he treats us as though we’re stupid. We’re angry that he lied to us, and lied to us and lied to us again. We’re angry that when he lies to us it isn’t because he’s caught up in scandal or got caught doing something he shouldn’t have, it’s part of a carefully constructed plan to fool the public.
Yes, we’re angry about Iraq, and we may be for the rest of our lives. We get angry every day when we open our newspapers and see the photo of another young soldier who died for this, another one maimed for life, another one with a tormented and broken soul. We’re angry about the couple of trillion dollars this war will cost. We’re angry about the thousands of young men around the world have been driven into the arms of al Qaeda, who have decided to devote their lives to killing Americans because of this war. We’re angry about the thousands upon thousands of Iraqis who have died in the orgy of bloodshed we unleashed, and the living too, those whom we said we were coming to “liberate,” but who now find themselves in a suffocating, endless miasma of fear and misery and death.
We’re angry that when we talk about ending this monstrous war, the soulless hypocrites who are glad to send more and more men and women to be scarred and maimed and killed in Iraq have the gall to accuse us of not “supporting the troops.” We’re angry that people whose actions exhibit nothing but contempt for freedom and liberty and justice, who wouldn’t know real patriotism if it came up and smacked them across the face, pin a little flag on their lapel and say that we’re the ones who hate America.
We’re angry because people who said the Iraqis would greet us as liberators, who said Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were good buddies, who said this nightmare of a war would bring a flowering of democracy across the Middle East—this band of idiots, the Kristols and the Krauthammers and the Kagans and the Kondrackes, is treated as “serious” and “credible” on matters of national security, while those of us who were right about the war are dismissed as some sort of fringe whose ideas are too silly to listen to.
We’re angry that America may now be the only country in the world in which torture is an officially sanctioned policy, proclaimed proudly in public. We’re angry that in our name prisoners are subjected to sleep deprivation, water boarding and other forms of psychological torture to the point where they are literally driven mad. We’re angry that the president has decided, over 750 times, that if Congress passes a law and he doesn’t like it, he’ll just ignore it. We’re angry that this administration has argued over and over, in public and in court, that if the president does it, it’s not illegal. We’re angry that they tell us we have to shred our freedoms in order to be safe, and that so many of our fellow citizens shrug their shoulders and think it’s no big deal.
And we’re angry that Bush has made our nation so hated around the world. We’re angry that the next time a Democrat gets elected, most of their time will be spent cleaning up the god-awful mess Bush has made of everything.
We’re angry that we and our children and our grandchildren will have to keep paying off the nation’s debt, which now stands at nearly $9 trillion. We’re angry because every other industrialized country in the world has a single-payer health care system that works, and we pay more for ours than any of them, yet we have 45 million people with no health insurance. We’re angry that the insurance companies have convinced their obedient servants in Congress that the Rube Goldberg perpetual paperwork machine we have now is somehow “the best health care in the world” and preferable to a system in which you go to your doctor, get treated and go home, without having to fill out 10 forms and get down on your knees before the gods of the HMO bureaucracy to get a partial repayment minus your deductible and your co-pay.
We’re angry that the federal government is brimming with people fundamentally opposed to the mission of the agencies over which they preside, the anti-environmentalists who run the Interior department, the mining company lobbyists in charge of mine safety and the union-busters in charge of worker safety. We’re still angry about Hurricane Katrina, that our government left thousands of its citizens stranded to suffer and die, while the president thought that the guy presiding over the disastrous failure was doing a heckuva job. We’re angry that our government sends religious fundamentalists around the world to discourage condom use, thus condemning untold numbers of people to unwanted pregnancy, disease and death.
We’re angry that forty years after the Voting Rights Act, the Republican Party continues to exploit racism and do everything in its power to stop black people from voting in each and every election. We’re angry that in the richest country in the world we can’t seem to find our way to a system in which you go to the polls, cast your ballot and know that it will be counted. And yes, we’re still angry about what happened in Florida in 2000, that through lying and cheating and pure luck the Republicans were able to steal a presidential election, and five unprincipled partisans on the Supreme Court helped them do it. We’re angry that every time we look at Al Gore all that pain and frustration and outrage comes bubbling up through our guts no matter how hard we try to “get over it.”
We’re angry that some of the most powerful people in America see nothing wrong with getting down on their knees to kiss the rings of radical clerics espousing a theology as maniacal as any on earth. We’re angry that we have to endure lecture after lecture on “family values” from people who rush from their pulpits, whether in church or in Congress or on cable chat shows, to a motel room to give in to their desires and revel in their transgression before rushing back to those pulpits to wag a finger in all our faces with talk of sin. We’re angry that people whose souls are so twisted by hate and shame they make John Winthrop look like Wavy Gravy have the nerve to tell us how to live “moral” lives.
We’re angry that when some pompous fool who less than a decade ago demanded that Bill Clinton be impeached in order to demonstrate our fealty to the “rule of law” comes on television to explain how Scooter Libby’s perjury and obstruction of justice mean nothing and he must immediately be pardoned, Wolf Blitzer doesn’t say, “Get out of this studio, you contemptible hypocrite, and don’t ever come back.”
We’re angry because a repellent ghoul like Ann Coulter can regularly advocate the murder of people with whom she has political differences, yet continue to get invited on the Today Show. We’re angry that journalists who ought to know better tut-tut progressive bloggers for using dirty words but don’t blink an eye when conservatives spew forth the most abominable hatred and calls for violence that one could imagine.
We’re angry that there is not a single show on cable news in which a progressive is given an hour to spout off his or her opinions, but that privilege is given to the likes of Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck and John Gibson and Tucker Carlson and Joe Scarborough and all the other two-bit electronic hucksters of phony aggrievement.
We’re angry because snake-oil salesmen like William Donohue— despite being an anti-Semitic homophobe —can issue a press release expressing patently phony outrage about something somebody said, and get the mainstream press to jump like trained dogs. We’re angry because a band of liars like the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth can hoodwink the media into doing their dirty work for them. We’re angry because every despicable Republican attack gets recycled as knowing, arched-eyebrow commentary by “mainstream” commentators.
Those are a few of the things we’re angry about, and yes, that’s a lot of anger. But you know what? There’s nothing wrong with being angry. Anger is the appropriate reaction to moral outrages, to crimes against our common humanity, to the actions of those who would turn our country into something twisted and ugly.
Paul Waldman is a senior fellow at Media Matters for America and the author of the new book, "Being Right is Not Enough: What Progressives Can Learn From Conservative Success."
© 2007 TomPaine.com
From Lydia: I struggle with my anger toward Bush and I pray for him to gain wisdom, compassion and to truly understand the Christ Truth. As a mother of young sons, I feel such agony over the deaths of our soldiers — young kids barely out of high school — and I am so horrified at Bush's arrogance, that he doesn't seem to care about human life. I am most upset that Bush proclaims he's a Christian, yet persists in doing the exact opposite of the Great Peacemaker's teachings. The "anti-Christ" means "evil in the mind of man; evil in human thought." I do not believe in a physical "anti-Christ" but Bush and the pro-war politicians, including misguided evangelical leaders such as John Hagee, Tim LaHaye and Pat Robertson represent the anti-Christ thought on earth right now; of this I have no doubt. Research how they are connected to White Supremacists. Jesus himself called the religious leaders, the pharisees a "brood of vipers" and got very angry with them. We are angry with Bush for his wanton destruction of lives and our democracy.
But I know that thinking the worst of Bush, or anyone, never helps them. We have to send love to those who are in the dark, that have lost their way. We need to see the good in people, even those we think are evil, becaues there is no power in evil except that which we give it with our thoughts. This is prayer: seeing the good in others so overwhelmingly that our vision of them actually changes the situation. Even with terrorists, dictators, "deciders" — and in the environment, world affairs, financial crises — it works for our worst enemies. It's written in the New Testament, in red lettering.

Dear Lyd,
What Imus said was inexcusable and deserving of decisive punishment, but more inexcusable to me is the ongoing urgency to completely destroy his life and the very positive things he and his wife have built to help kids fight cancer. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton have both needed forgiveness in the past for racial slurs and incidents (Jackson with his anti-semitic "Hymietown" remark in describing New York City and Sharpton with the Tawana Brawley myth he rushed into and helped perpetuate.)........both incidents just as inciteful, if not more, than anything Don Imus has said or done.
In this case not only is there no forgiveness, but the punishment grossly outweighs the offense and a feeding frenzy has developed among bored journalists trying to uncover new excuses to hammer Imus even harder. The theory seems to be that If you want to prove you're not a racist, then step up and take your pound of flesh from Don Imus. I fear the pendulum is now swinging a little too far the other way.
John
**************************
Part of being a public figure or celebrity means dealing with unsolicited opinions about yourself. On this blog as well as on others, I have been stung and hurt to the core by cruel, sexist comments. The first time it happened, my cheeks stung and I burst into tears, feeling lower than I had in my entire life. I can't imagine what these young Rutgers women must have felt like after working hard to get to college, to earn their place on the Rutgers team, to make it to the finals — only to be dismissed as whores (no matter the catchy slang, "ho's" means one thing and applies to the worst thing men can call women.) Black women have it harder than any other group; they have been marginalized, forsaken, forgotten and maligned and yet they have such dignity and innate beauty in the face of unbearable hardship.
Imus lost his MSNBC show, a signal that sexist, racist hate-speak will not be tolerated on the public airwaves. But much worse than Imus on any given day, are Glen Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage — who also have their own shows. They systematically engage in hate-speak and Nationally syndicated Clear Channel radio host Glen Beck has actually sent out screaming death wishes to certain Democrats he hates. He called hurricane survivors in New Orleans "scumbags," and said he "hates" 9-11 families: "I didn't think I could hate victims faster than the 9-11 victims. (More below, but first this...)Please Go back and listen to Rush Limbaugh, Glen Beck, Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly's shows. Every single day, they provoke people to hate their fellow man, to hate anyone who is not pro-Bush, pro-war labeling peacemakers as traitors. Every other word out of their mouths conveys their disgust for perceived liberal bias, for human rights groups, environmentalists, liberals, gays, Muslims, women's groups, feminists, "Hollywood" Democracts and their fellow man.
Is this kind of hate-mongering good for America? Is the politics of personal destruction good for America? Does anyone know the truth about the "Swift Boat Veterans" who ruined John Kerry? Did the media ever get the word out that the man behind this campaign was a completely deranged individual who was caught lying and posting threats on blogs -- and had no credibility whatsoever? I will post the truth you missed in my next thread.
On all these political talk shows, every single pundit, except for Keith Olbermann — are raving right wingers. Chris Matthews aside, there are no other intelligent, Progressive or Democrat-leaning talk show pundits with thoughtful, reasoned voices -- such as Paul Waldman or Scott Ritter or Robert Dreyfuss or Arianna Huffington. The list is endless. We have so many wonderfully intelligent people that could be talk show hosts, yet we get these sinister loud-mouths who dumb America down such as Glen Beck and Rush Limbaugh.. and of course Bill O'Reilly, one of the most hateful hypocrites on the public airwaves. Why are they still on the air? They take glee in stirring up hatred. What a tragedy for America. We need to become a softer, kinder nation. We need to come together and see each other with fresh eyes. We are all one race, and we are all flawed.
BUSH LIED, THOUSANDS DIED and are dying ....WHY?

In case you didn't know the reasons most Americans are so upset with Bush, here is a brilliant article that describes how we feel. This is an an article by Paul Waldman, Senior Fellow at Media Matters and author of "It's Not Enough to Be Right: What Progressives Must Learn From Conservative Success." We had him on our show a few weeks ago. Don't forget, this Saturday morning at 9 AM PST we're honored to have Congressman Charlie Rangle, who has been serving America for over 30 years. He's a great wit, and a man with such a keen eye and big heart. He's on CNN and MSNBC almost every week.
ALL THE RAGE
There's No Denying it, we Progressives are Angry
by Paul Waldman
We can’t deny it any longer. There’s no point in hiding it, no point in trying to explain it away. Yes, it’s true: We progressives are angry. And we no longer care if the centrist, moderate guardians of the establishment scold us for it.
Our anger is not just some vague feeling whose source we can’t put our finger on. It isn’t based on absurd conspiracy theories and it isn’t illogical.
We’re angry because of what has happened to our country, because of how we’ve been treated, and because of the innumerable crimes the conservatives have committed. We’re angry at the president, we’re angry at the Congress, we’re angry at the news media. And we have every right to be.
Yes, we’re angry at George W. Bush. We’re not angry at him because of who he sleeps with, and we’re not angry at him because we think he represents some socio-cultural movement we didn’t like 40 years ago, or because he hung out with a different crowd than we did in high school. We’re angry at him because of what he’s done.
It’s true, we don’t like the fact that the most powerful human being on the planet is such a ridiculous buffoon that he can’t put two coherent sentences together without beginning to giggle and shimmy his shoulders. But we’re not angry because we think he’s stupid, we’re angry because he treats us as though we’re stupid. We’re angry that he lied to us, and lied to us and lied to us again. We’re angry that when he lies to us it isn’t because he’s caught up in scandal or got caught doing something he shouldn’t have, it’s part of a carefully constructed plan to fool the public.
Yes, we’re angry about Iraq, and we may be for the rest of our lives. We get angry every day when we open our newspapers and see the photo of another young soldier who died for this, another one maimed for life, another one with a tormented and broken soul. We’re angry about the couple of trillion dollars this war will cost. We’re angry about the thousands of young men around the world have been driven into the arms of al Qaeda, who have decided to devote their lives to killing Americans because of this war. We’re angry about the thousands upon thousands of Iraqis who have died in the orgy of bloodshed we unleashed, and the living too, those whom we said we were coming to “liberate,” but who now find themselves in a suffocating, endless miasma of fear and misery and death.
We’re angry that when we talk about ending this monstrous war, the soulless hypocrites who are glad to send more and more men and women to be scarred and maimed and killed in Iraq have the gall to accuse us of not “supporting the troops.” We’re angry that people whose actions exhibit nothing but contempt for freedom and liberty and justice, who wouldn’t know real patriotism if it came up and smacked them across the face, pin a little flag on their lapel and say that we’re the ones who hate America.
We’re angry because people who said the Iraqis would greet us as liberators, who said Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were good buddies, who said this nightmare of a war would bring a flowering of democracy across the Middle East—this band of idiots, the Kristols and the Krauthammers and the Kagans and the Kondrackes, is treated as “serious” and “credible” on matters of national security, while those of us who were right about the war are dismissed as some sort of fringe whose ideas are too silly to listen to.
We’re angry that America may now be the only country in the world in which torture is an officially sanctioned policy, proclaimed proudly in public. We’re angry that in our name prisoners are subjected to sleep deprivation, water boarding and other forms of psychological torture to the point where they are literally driven mad. We’re angry that the president has decided, over 750 times, that if Congress passes a law and he doesn’t like it, he’ll just ignore it. We’re angry that this administration has argued over and over, in public and in court, that if the president does it, it’s not illegal. We’re angry that they tell us we have to shred our freedoms in order to be safe, and that so many of our fellow citizens shrug their shoulders and think it’s no big deal.
And we’re angry that Bush has made our nation so hated around the world. We’re angry that the next time a Democrat gets elected, most of their time will be spent cleaning up the god-awful mess Bush has made of everything.
We’re angry that we and our children and our grandchildren will have to keep paying off the nation’s debt, which now stands at nearly $9 trillion. We’re angry because every other industrialized country in the world has a single-payer health care system that works, and we pay more for ours than any of them, yet we have 45 million people with no health insurance. We’re angry that the insurance companies have convinced their obedient servants in Congress that the Rube Goldberg perpetual paperwork machine we have now is somehow “the best health care in the world” and preferable to a system in which you go to your doctor, get treated and go home, without having to fill out 10 forms and get down on your knees before the gods of the HMO bureaucracy to get a partial repayment minus your deductible and your co-pay.
We’re angry that the federal government is brimming with people fundamentally opposed to the mission of the agencies over which they preside, the anti-environmentalists who run the Interior department, the mining company lobbyists in charge of mine safety and the union-busters in charge of worker safety. We’re still angry about Hurricane Katrina, that our government left thousands of its citizens stranded to suffer and die, while the president thought that the guy presiding over the disastrous failure was doing a heckuva job. We’re angry that our government sends religious fundamentalists around the world to discourage condom use, thus condemning untold numbers of people to unwanted pregnancy, disease and death.
We’re angry that forty years after the Voting Rights Act, the Republican Party continues to exploit racism and do everything in its power to stop black people from voting in each and every election. We’re angry that in the richest country in the world we can’t seem to find our way to a system in which you go to the polls, cast your ballot and know that it will be counted. And yes, we’re still angry about what happened in Florida in 2000, that through lying and cheating and pure luck the Republicans were able to steal a presidential election, and five unprincipled partisans on the Supreme Court helped them do it. We’re angry that every time we look at Al Gore all that pain and frustration and outrage comes bubbling up through our guts no matter how hard we try to “get over it.”
We’re angry that some of the most powerful people in America see nothing wrong with getting down on their knees to kiss the rings of radical clerics espousing a theology as maniacal as any on earth. We’re angry that we have to endure lecture after lecture on “family values” from people who rush from their pulpits, whether in church or in Congress or on cable chat shows, to a motel room to give in to their desires and revel in their transgression before rushing back to those pulpits to wag a finger in all our faces with talk of sin. We’re angry that people whose souls are so twisted by hate and shame they make John Winthrop look like Wavy Gravy have the nerve to tell us how to live “moral” lives.
We’re angry that when some pompous fool who less than a decade ago demanded that Bill Clinton be impeached in order to demonstrate our fealty to the “rule of law” comes on television to explain how Scooter Libby’s perjury and obstruction of justice mean nothing and he must immediately be pardoned, Wolf Blitzer doesn’t say, “Get out of this studio, you contemptible hypocrite, and don’t ever come back.”
We’re angry because a repellent ghoul like Ann Coulter can regularly advocate the murder of people with whom she has political differences, yet continue to get invited on the Today Show. We’re angry that journalists who ought to know better tut-tut progressive bloggers for using dirty words but don’t blink an eye when conservatives spew forth the most abominable hatred and calls for violence that one could imagine.
We’re angry that there is not a single show on cable news in which a progressive is given an hour to spout off his or her opinions, but that privilege is given to the likes of Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck and John Gibson and Tucker Carlson and Joe Scarborough and all the other two-bit electronic hucksters of phony aggrievement.
We’re angry because snake-oil salesmen like William Donohue— despite being an anti-Semitic homophobe —can issue a press release expressing patently phony outrage about something somebody said, and get the mainstream press to jump like trained dogs. We’re angry because a band of liars like the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth can hoodwink the media into doing their dirty work for them. We’re angry because every despicable Republican attack gets recycled as knowing, arched-eyebrow commentary by “mainstream” commentators.
Those are a few of the things we’re angry about, and yes, that’s a lot of anger. But you know what? There’s nothing wrong with being angry. Anger is the appropriate reaction to moral outrages, to crimes against our common humanity, to the actions of those who would turn our country into something twisted and ugly.
Paul Waldman is a senior fellow at Media Matters for America and the author of the new book, "Being Right is Not Enough: What Progressives Can Learn From Conservative Success."
© 2007 TomPaine.com
From Lydia: I struggle with my anger toward Bush and I pray for him to gain wisdom, compassion and to truly understand the Christ Truth. As a mother of young sons, I feel such agony over the deaths of our soldiers — young kids barely out of high school — and I am so horrified at Bush's arrogance, that he doesn't seem to care about human life. I am most upset that Bush proclaims he's a Christian, yet persists in doing the exact opposite of the Great Peacemaker's teachings. The "anti-Christ" means "evil in the mind of man; evil in human thought." I do not believe in a physical "anti-Christ" but Bush and the pro-war politicians, including misguided evangelical leaders such as John Hagee, Tim LaHaye and Pat Robertson represent the anti-Christ thought on earth right now; of this I have no doubt. Research how they are connected to White Supremacists. Jesus himself called the religious leaders, the pharisees a "brood of vipers" and got very angry with them. We are angry with Bush for his wanton destruction of lives and our democracy.
But I know that thinking the worst of Bush, or anyone, never helps them. We have to send love to those who are in the dark, that have lost their way. We need to see the good in people, even those we think are evil, becaues there is no power in evil except that which we give it with our thoughts. This is prayer: seeing the good in others so overwhelmingly that our vision of them actually changes the situation. Even with terrorists, dictators, "deciders" — and in the environment, world affairs, financial crises — it works for our worst enemies. It's written in the New Testament, in red lettering.

Labels: bush corruption, Cheney Iraq, cheney stolen billions Iraq impeach bush, war criminals
255 Comments:
OUTSTANDING post Lydia.
It about raps up my feeling exactly.
By
Clif, at 2:20 PM
Clif:
The sad thing is Lydia didn't even get half the atrocities covered due to lack of space.
Great post.
By
Larry, at 2:22 PM
Yes, excellent post Lydia and so true..
(I replied to your comment on the previous post Lydia)
By
S-Q, at 2:26 PM
Amazing post Lydia!!!!!!!!!
You echoed my feelings as if you read my mind!
By
Mike, at 2:28 PM
Thank you, but Paul Waldman wrote this piece. I'll post the link from Common Dreams and Tom Paine
I wrote a similar piece last year, but so many atrocities have been added, I have to add several more pages!
By
Lydia Cornell, at 2:36 PM
Staples Inc. President receives $9.93 million in compensation in 2006, as his employees average $7.50 per hour.
Inequity in Corporate America.
By
Larry, at 2:46 PM
It isn't limited to those of us on the left end anymore.
Traditional conservatives in the mold of William F. Buckley are howling, and Libertarian types like Ron Paul are up in arms as well. The peculiar populist-winger Pat Buchanan has also had very few kind words for the Commander in Chimp and his lawyer-shooting buddy.
By
Jolly Roger, at 2:57 PM
There are always a few who will defend this mess in Washington and beyond, no matter how bad it gets.
Curious how those few defenders seem to be un-phased by all the mess around them.
By
Larry, at 3:00 PM
Staples Inc. President receives $9.93 million in compensation in 2006, as his employees average $7.50 per hour.
------------
Larry:
How many thousands did he give to GOP? It's the good old boys system..
By
S-Q, at 3:28 PM
Clif, Lydia et al........check out the reviews for this book, it is just what you were both talking about the other day.
It used to be that more was better. Industrialization, urbanization, specialization and capitalism made people wealthier, healthier and happier. But where are we now? In his new book Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future, Bill McKibben poses the controversial theory that economic growth and industrial expansion just aren't as good for people as they used to be. While the Industrial Revolution gave birth to widely dispersed wealth and a new middle class, McKibben cites statistics that suggest around 80 percent of us are poorer today than we were five years ago, relative to the cost of living.
And we're unhappier, too—as measured by statistics on depression and surveys that ask people point-blank if they've considered suicide. Many people feel unconnected to family and neighbors. Bigger houses help us live out TV-generated fantasies of the American dream, but they also make us more lonely. We eat cheap corporate junk that was trucked in from over a thousand miles away. And the accumulation of greenhouse gases—a direct result of unchecked growth—threatens the very survival of our planet.
If more money, more acres and more cheap tortilla chips are no longer the secret to happiness, what is? Farmers markets, as they symbolize the kind of future McKibben would like to see. Such markets provide an outlet for small-scale, organic, non-corporate farmers offering food that hasn't grown tired in its journey from California or Florida. And they provide an opportunity to connect with other people, the beginnings of community. Most of all, they provide a business paradigm that unhooks people from a system of reckless growth.
In short, McKibben thinks we need another kind of bottom line that doesn't just measure profit, but also measures fulfillment and a sense of connection. He notes in his first chapter that two birds named "More" and "Better" used to roost together on the same tree branch. But these days, McKibben writes, "Better has flown a few trees over to make her nest. That changes everything."
Beginning with his prescient treatise on global warming, The End of Nature (1990), McKibben has been investigating and elucidating some of the most confounding aspects of our lives. He now brings his signature clarity of thought and handsomely crafted prose to a pivotal, complicated subject, the negative consequences of our growth-oriented economy. McKibben incisively interprets a staggering array of studies that document the symbiotic relationship between fossil fuels and five decades of dizzying economic growth, and the many ways the pursuit of ever-higher corporate profits has led to environmental havoc and neglect of people's most basic needs. At once reportorial, philosophic, and anecdotal, McKibben, intoning the mantra "more is not better," takes measure of diminishing returns. With eroding security, a dysfunctional health system, floundering public schools, higher rates of depression, "wild inequity" in the distribution of wealth, and damage to the biosphere, McKibben believes a new paradigm is needed, that of a "deep economy" born of sustainable and sustaining communities anchored in local resources. Using the farmer's market as a template, he explains the logistics of workable alternatives to the corporate imperative based on ecological capacities and the "economics of neighborliness." With the threat of energy crises and global warming, McKibben's vision of nurturing communities rooted in traditional values and driven by "green" technologies, however utopian, may provide ideas for constructive change.
To move forward, increasing equality and happiness, we need to turn the clock back: thinking locally rather than globally, buying from and selling to our neighbors to create true communities.McKibben (Wandering Home, 2005, etc.), who has worried about the fate of our planet since at least The End of Nature (1989), weighs in here on the pursuit of happiness. For too long, he observes, we have believed that more equals better and assumed that greater economic growth brings prosperity to all. Instead, he ably argues, growth has increased inequality and decreased human happiness. Americans have been consuming at an unconscionable rate, destroying their families and communities by working longer hours and patronizing huge corporations. Reporting from around the world—he offers examples from China, Bangladesh, India, Central America and elsewhere—McKibben revisits some topics close to his heart: global warming, the rapid depletion of fossil fuels, the growth of agribusinesses, the impending water crisis. He tells stories about ordinary people doing extraordinary things to improve both the local economy and the overall quality of local life. Farmers’ markets are growing around the country; merchants in a small Wyoming town are competing successfully with Wal-Mart (a corporation attacked throughout); a local Vermont radio station actually provides public services and serves the public interest. The author also tells his own stories, which are the gold in the alluvial gravel of all of his work. Here, he describes his recent determination to buy only from local farmers and to eat only foods that are in season. This is something we should all do, he avers; it not only improves the local economy but creates greater community cohesion as well.McKibben tries to stay optimistic in his most quixotic work, but darkness presses at the edges of every page.
Challenging the prevailing wisdom that the goal of economies should be unlimited growth, McKibben (The End of Nature) argues that the world doesn't have enough natural resources to sustain endless economic expansion. For example, if the Chinese owned cars in the same numbers as Americans, there would be 1.1 billion more vehicles on the road?untenable in a world that is rapidly running out of oil and clean air. Drawing the phrase "deep economy" from the expression "deep ecology," a term environmentalists use to signify new ways of thinking about the environment, he suggests we need to explore new economic ideas. Rather then promoting accelerated cycles of economic expansion?a mindset that has brought the world to the brink of environmental disaster?we should concentrate on creating localized economies: community-scale power systems instead of huge centralized power plants; cohousing communities instead of sprawling suburbs. He gives examples of promising ventures of this type, such as a community-supported farm in Vermont and a community biosphere reserve, or large national park?like area, in Himalayan India, but some of the ideas?local currencies as supplements to national money, for example?seem overly optimistic. Nevertheless, McKibben's proposals for new, less growth-centered ways of thinking about economics are intriguing, and offer hope that change is possible. (Mar. 20)
By
Mike, at 3:32 PM
MSNBC has just announced they will stop carrying the Don Imus radio show in the morning....
By
Clif, at 3:40 PM
Katie Couric, ..plagerism.., is she starting to channel the coulterguist?
Couric keeps blog post of 'plagiarized' story that got producer fired up on CBS News site
By
Clif, at 5:31 PM
Couric probably thinks she will get a few viewers with controversy.
By
Larry, at 5:33 PM
Clif:
I have never listened to Imus or Limbaugh or any of those guys...they have nothing of interest for me.
By
S-Q, at 5:39 PM
Domestic Policy Subcomittee have requsted answers from seven leading oil companies on why gas prices are going to hit $4 per gallon.
It's about time.
By
Larry, at 5:40 PM
Larry:
I think Couric is a losing situation...she would do best to start writing children's books!
LOL
By
S-Q, at 5:40 PM
Larry:
Yes way past time to do some explaining!
By
S-Q, at 5:41 PM
SQ,
I agree. Couric is horrible and needs replaced. Instead they include her in 60 minutes.
By
Larry, at 5:41 PM
SQ,
Bush wants gas prices as high as possible since he has less than two years to rape consumers even further.
By
Larry, at 5:42 PM
Too bad she kept her mouth shut till after she died;
Neocon Godmother Considered Iraq War a Mistake
money quote which she never let the public know about;
In the book, she reports--apparently for the first time--that she had "grave reservations" about George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq. She notes that at the time, "I was privately critical of the Bush administration's argument for the use of military force for preemptive self-defense." She does not say where and to whom she voiced her misgivings--if she did. Most strikingly, she argues that the war--with respect to bringing democracy to Iraqis--did more harm than good.
(snip)
Kirkpatrick suggests the Bush administration and her neocon colleagues rushed into the war irresponsibly:
Iraq presented a very different set of circumstances from Afghanistan, however. These are things we ought to have known and taken into account when weighing our decision to invade in 2003.
Iraq lacked practically all the requirements for a democratic government: rule of law, an elite with a shared commitment to democratic procedures, a sense of citizenship, and habits of trust and cooperation. The administration's failure involved several issues, but the core concern is that they did not seem to have methodically completed the due diligence required for reasoned policy-making because they failed to address the aftermath of the invasion. This, of course, is reflected by the violence, sectarian unrest, ethnic vengeance and bloodshed we see in Iraq today.
No "due diligence." Kirkpatrick is politely charging that George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell and other top administration aides invaded a nation recklessly. Can there be a more damning indictment?
**********************************
They all knew it was illegal immoral and just plain stupid, but still kept their mouths shut,
DAMN them.
By
Clif, at 5:46 PM
The awakening of a neo-con grandmother.
By
Larry, at 5:48 PM
Right before she went to sleep permanently?
Well I guess better late then never.
By
Clif, at 5:53 PM
At least she left behind the truth.
By
Larry, at 5:56 PM
And her hand in creating 3294 soldiers who returned in the dark of the night in flagged covered coffins.........
By
Clif, at 6:04 PM
Did Imus actually lose his simulcast, or was it just suspended?
By
Carl, at 6:07 PM
Nice post, Lydia. I like how you equated your experiences, which if I recall correctly were more than just one dumb comment from a wizened Alzheimer's patient, to the Rutger's team.
By
Carl, at 6:09 PM
Carl MSNBC fired him, he will no longer be simulcast
By
Clif, at 6:11 PM
Lydia,
...and That's why Regime Change is Coming to America!
*Cheers*
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 6:18 PM
Al Franken is on Larry King.
By
Larry, at 6:19 PM
Al Franken on has just called for Glen Beck to get the boot,
Way to go Al.
Beck is an ignorant idiot.
By
Clif, at 6:29 PM
They need to get Beck, Limbaugh and those idiots on Fox.
They all do the same thing.
By
Larry, at 6:31 PM
While they're at it, cleaning house all around, let them lose Michael Savage, Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Ann Coulter, Michelle Malkin...hell, just about any snot-nose right wing pundit! They all have this peculiar brand of hate-speak when it comes to people of superior morality.
By
Carl, at 6:41 PM
Hey, GEF.
By
Carl, at 6:42 PM
Hello Carl! :)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 6:48 PM
Larry,
quote: They need to get Beck, Limbaugh and those idiots on Fox.
Idiots on Fox ?
Are you kidding me ?
Fox has nothing but Govt shills working there..
That's not a news agency that's a Govt propaganda tool!
Even More so than the others...
More like glorified teleprompter readers and the information is coming straight out of the Pentagon.
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 6:51 PM
I agree GEF. It is easy to run your mouth when your talking points are delivered to you.
By
Larry, at 6:53 PM
Senate votes to ease restrictions on Stem Cell research, in spite of Bush's veto threat.
By
Larry, at 6:54 PM
larry,
quote: I agree GEF. It is easy to run your mouth when your talking points are delivered to you.
LOL*)
And they need brains and degrees for that ?
Shoot they could outsource all that news reading to border crossed immigrants for less money!
Instead of Hannity & Colmes we could watch Juanito & Rudolpho and pay them less.
Instead of O'reilly factor they could substitute O'Jose factor!
Instead of Fox and Friends they could put on Paco y Sus Amigos!
Fox would make a profit and their ratings would go up big time! :)
They could use Fox as a fast tract to Citizenship.
Read the Fox/Pentagon Teleprompter for 5 years and you become a Citizen.
Good Deal! :)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:02 PM
GEF,
Sounds like all winners and a welcome change to what is already there.
By
Larry, at 7:04 PM
larry,
We need someone to send the memo to Faux!
;)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:08 PM
GEF:
They won't read it unless it says Neo-Con alert at the beginning.
By
Larry, at 7:13 PM
Ya'll ferget the trailor park nascar set will just have to get another rich foreigner to create another main stream mouth piece fur the reichwing noise machine.
Other wise they''l have to just listen to their radios from now on, Rush he tell them the truth don't cha know?
By
Clif, at 7:13 PM
Limbaugh can pop a few more pills in celebration now.
By
Larry, at 7:17 PM
Rush Limbaugh is Insane because of all the Meds and Island Hopping..
That Carribbean Sun melts your brain don't'cha know ?
That good ole boy is one incident away from a long prison term!
;)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:19 PM
Limbaugh likes to make quick trips with his Viagra to South America, seems he pays less money for his obsession.
By
Larry, at 7:21 PM
larry,
Oh sure Viagra he imports, but what is he downing while there...
Perhaps the Feds should take a close look inside those cigars!
LOL*)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:22 PM
Limbaugh uses those Cuban cigars and all the Viagra to help his bloated carcass make it through the day.
By
Larry, at 7:26 PM
Global_Evildoer_Fighter said...
Larry,
quote: They need to get Beck, Limbaugh and those idiots on Fox.
Idiots on Fox ?
Are you kidding me ?
Fox has nothing but Govt shills working there..
That's not a news agency that's a Govt propaganda tool!
Even More so than the others...
More like glorified teleprompter readers and the information is coming straight out of the Pentagon."
Fox lies is the ministry of propaganda......they oughta be in a remake of the movie 1984 because them and the Bush Administration are a bunch of Orwellian fascists straight out of 1984!
By
Mike, at 7:30 PM
You know larry one of these days someone is going to get so pissed off at Limbaugh that he or she is going to shove that cigar all the way up Rush's brain while it's still lit!
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:32 PM
Fox needs to get all the neo-con blowhards, place them on an island and let them talk their way back.
There certainly is enough wind there.
By
Larry, at 7:33 PM
Mike,
quote:
Fox lies is the ministry of propaganda......they oughta be in a remake of the movie 1984 because them and the Bush Administration are a bunch of Orwellian fascists straight out of 1984!
Here's the Media Card!
Collect them all! LOL*)
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:33 PM
GEF:
I hope you are right. Limbaugh says racist things every week but they let him go.
By
Larry, at 7:34 PM
larry,
NeoConjob Island is a place where everyone believes their own lies and they lie to each other about what really happened on the Island..
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:36 PM
larry,
quote:
I hope you are right. Limbaugh says racist things every week but they let him go.
I guarantee it.
Either that or Rush will get sued so bad that Rush himself will swallow the Cigar while gasping at the Subpoena!
By
Global_Evildoer_Fighter, at 7:38 PM
Limbaugh bought his way out of pill shopping and the way he is going, maybe he will have to buy his way out of jail.
By
Larry, at 7:39 PM
Like I said before I really could care less about Imus, I think it is a distraction the Right Wing owned Corporate Media are using to deflect from all the scandals, incompetence and criminality and i really dont want to hear about it 24/7 but there is one point i wanted to address and Lydia kind of touched on it allready.
Lydia, I agree with you completely that what Imus said is wrong, its dispicable and we really shouldnt have that kind of hatespeak and racial smearing in our media.....and for the record I never listened to Imus and dont think much of him..........now here is the but........
But I dont want to see this kind of stuff selectively enforced where there is a double standard and only certain people are held accountable.........namely the ones without powerrful GOP connections and allies.
If we want to get rid of hatespeak, racial slurs and biased news coverage............we need to be fair and consistent and get rid of slugs like Coulter, Glen Beck, rush Limbaugh, Hannity, etc,,,,,,,
We also need to break up the media empires and conglomerates, bring back the fairness doctrine and bring news reporting back to reporting facts rather than biased slanted propaganda.
I'm no fan of Imus but I dont want to see him get strung up as a sacrificial lamb while hateful fools like Coulter and Beck have a bully pulpit to spew theor hatespeak because they have powerful connections in governmenent and the Reich Wing fascist corporate media empires.
I'm tired of all the douible standards and hippocrissy of the Reich Wing......they wanna get rid of fools like Imus fine take out the trash and get rid of Coulter, Beck, hannity etc.. as well and we should not stand for a potential presidential candidate like Newt to smear hispanics by saying spanish is the language of the ghetto and they should all learn to speak American............we dont need this kind of ignorance in a president.
By
Mike, at 7:47 PM
Hey GEF!
By
Mike, at 7:47 PM
Bush wants gas prices as high as possible since he has less than two years to rape consumers even further.
-----------
Larry:
Isn't that the truth? Gas prices and war machine!
By
Suzie-Q, at 7:50 PM
They won't do anything to the neocon talkers.
Corporate America owns the media.
By
Larry, at 7:52 PM
Hey guys!
I was working on the new blog and eating dinner... and trying to chat on my blog!
LOLMAO
By
Suzie-Q, at 7:52 PM
Suzie,
Bush has to get all the oil revenue he can before 2009.
By
Larry, at 7:53 PM
Suzie,
Don't spill soup on the keyboard.
By
Larry, at 7:54 PM
They need to get Beck, Limbaugh and those idiots on Fox.
--------------
Larry:
I can't stand Glenn Beck!
Ugh!
By
Suzie-Q, at 7:56 PM
Suzie,
Beck is a neo-racist in the worst way, and an arrogant pig to boot.
By
Larry, at 7:56 PM
Larry:
The first time I saw him on CNN, I had to shut it off and never watched him since.. He is so repulsive!
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:05 PM
GEF:
I'm glad to see you came over to chat with these guys! ;)
Are you still here?
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:05 PM
GEF is out digging up dirt on Limbaugh.
By
Larry, at 8:07 PM
Larry said...
They won't do anything to the neocon talkers.
Corporate America owns the media."
Thats part of the problem that Congress needs to address.
By
Mike, at 8:12 PM
Congress won't address that, Corporate America owns much of Congress.
That is why jobs are flowing to China and India.
By
Larry, at 8:14 PM
Suzie-Q said...
Bush wants gas prices as high as possible since he has less than two years to rape consumers even further.
-----------
Larry:
Isn't that the truth? Gas prices and war machine!"
Well there's several factors at work here, Bush and Cheney are oil men and are in bed with and beholden to big oil and all the oil cronnies.
Secondly not only does Bush and Cheney benfit directly financially from high oil prices but so does thedir government which is running huge deficits andf needs all the revenue it can get to fund Bush's folly (his war of choice)
Governments get more in revenue from high oil prices than the oil companies themselves......for every dollar Exxon Mobil Earns, the goverment gets 25 cents while Exxon only makes a 10 cent profit.
By
Mike, at 8:20 PM
Larry said...
GEF is out digging up dirt on Limbaugh."
That shouldnt take very long..............BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
By
Mike, at 8:21 PM
Oh and the next time the Neo Cons piss and moan and cry because they are no longer getting their way on EVERYTHING and the majority are no longer ruled by the fringe wacco's and wealthy elite who are a tiny insignificant minority..........remind them about what Cheney and Bush said after the 2004 election when Cheney said the tax cuts are "their due and they deserve it"........and Bush was crowing about his political capital and how he wanted to dismantle social Security and all the other sfety nets and protections for the working class and poor.
Before these arrogant buffons buffalo you into making concessions remember how they behaved and gloated when they ruled all 3 branches of government and look how they cry and whine mow that they "ONLT" control 2 branches of government.
By
Mike, at 8:27 PM
Halliburton moves operations to the Mideast to avoid prosecution, gas prices rise, Bush stirs up conflict with Iran and for the next two or more years, Americansa will pay with blood and dollars.
By
Larry, at 8:28 PM
Halliburton moves operations to the Mideast to avoid prosecution, gas prices rise, Bush stirs up conflict with Iran and for the next two or more years, Americansa will pay with blood and dollars.
By
Larry, at 8:29 PM
Halliburton moves operations to the Mideast to avoid prosecution, gas prices rise, Bush stirs up conflict with Iran and for the next two or more years, Americansa will pay with blood and dollars.
By
Larry, at 8:30 PM
Mike said...
Larry said...
GEF is out digging up dirt on Limbaugh."
That shouldnt take very long..............BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
---------------
Guys:
Don't be surprised when Limbaugh gets his Subpoena!
LOL
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:30 PM
Halliburton moves operations to the Mideast to avoid prosecution, gas prices rise, Bush stirs up conflict with Iran and for the next two or more years, Americans will pay with blood and dollars.
By
Larry, at 8:30 PM
Lets hope Limbaugh and Beck get subpoena's together. Throw in O'Reilly and Hannity for good measure.
By
Larry, at 8:33 PM
Larry:
Do you have trigger finger tonight? LOL
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:36 PM
Hey, earlier today as the news was coming in on MSNBC dropping Imus, I added to my blog post about how I think Glen Beck, Rush Limpbaugh and Michael Savage should also be off the air --
and just as I hit publish, Keith Olbermann came on saying the same thing. Now Al Franken on Larry King --
I guess this Imus thing is going to start a chain reaction (I hope) going in the right direction.
We can only hope. But at least it means America is waking up to what these mean-spirited "conservatives" have done to ruin our country — and justify hatred and this rush to war.
By
Lydia Cornell, at 8:36 PM
Suzie,
It comes from too much coke.
By
Larry, at 8:36 PM
Imus was the lesser of the evils. Those like Limbaugh and Beck get a free ride because of their right-wing babble.
By
Larry, at 8:38 PM
I guess this Imus thing is going to start a chain reaction (I hope) going in the right direction.
---------
Lydia:
I agree with that.. let's hope so! ;)
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:39 PM
Larry:
Cola will do that to ya~!
LOL
By
Suzie-Q, at 8:40 PM
Look at all the names Limbaugh calls people, and Beck asking a Congressman if he was aiding the enemy because he was Muslim.
They do this all the time as well, but they get a pass.
By
Larry, at 8:42 PM
Lydia Cornell said...
Hey, earlier today as the news was coming in on MSNBC dropping Imus, I added to my blog post about how I think Glen Beck, Rush Limpbaugh and Michael Savage should also be off the air --
and just as I hit publish, Keith Olbermann came on saying the same thing. Now Al Franken on Larry King --
I guess this Imus thing is going to start a chain reaction (I hope) going in the right direction.
We can only hope. But at least it means America is waking up to what these mean-spirited "conservatives" have done to ruin our country — and justify hatred and this rush to war."
Well thats pretty much the point I wanted to make this morning!
By
Mike, at 8:42 PM
Larry said...
Suzie,
It comes from too much coke."
Lay off the hard drugs Larry theyte bad news LOL :D
By
Mike, at 8:43 PM
Larry said...
Imus was the lesser of the evils. Those like Limbaugh and Beck get a free ride because of their right-wing babble."
Yeah and that REALLY bothers me thats why we need to make noise about this so people will listen and hopefully hear the will of the people!
By
Mike, at 8:44 PM
Limbaugh and Michael Savage and Beck and countless others fill the airwaves with racist and sexist comments, and they aren't even fined.
By
Larry, at 8:46 PM
Larry said...
Look at all the names Limbaugh calls people, and Beck asking a Congressman if he was aiding the enemy because he was Muslim.
They do this all the time as well, but they get a pass."
LOL on that note look at Wolfowitz having an affair with a muslim woman............wonder if the Neo Cons will call him a traitoe and say he's "collaborating" with the enemy :D
By
Mike, at 8:46 PM
Wolfowitz will get a pass like all the rest of them.
Corporate America owns far too much for any justice to really prevail.
By
Larry, at 8:48 PM
disgusting isnt it that American has been bought by these despicable corporate fascists!
By
Mike, at 8:55 PM
Just wait till Bush sneaks the new North American Union by everyone. Jobs will really leave then.
By
Larry, at 8:59 PM