Shaira
Are we nuts? Traditional Shaira Islam is the most intolerant, racist, murderous major religion. Our world boasts legions of kind and equanimious Muslims - but they are not traditional, they are Reformed. Shaira law IS radical. Mohamed had 30+ wives, including a girl of 9. He broke truces to slaughter his enemies, and people who criticize him in any way have been killed. How do we define murder as a human right? I believe in Allah but not in Islamic Shaira Law. It is the epitome of human rights violations.
In related news, we tried to broker a deal with the Taliban in Pakistan, that if they agreed to stop hurling bombs & bullets at us, we'll allow them to go their merry way, to merely rape, kill, bully and otherwise terrorize their own people. Gee, what a great deal! Listen, did I miss a memo? I thought this was the era of "Change"!? Thank GOD the Taliban rejected it.... now how's that for irony?
Democracy, American Style
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's got all the integrity of an appliance-repair contractor. "What's that, sir? No, no I did not say 'yes, I did." I am afraid you misunderstood what I said. What I actually said was, 'no.' It's an easy mistake to make."
The
Democrats wimp out on gun control. Could we talk about defining issues please?
There's only two - how to be a decent human being, and how to help your
neighbor to do the same. There was a dude with a beard, sandals and well-developed Messiah
complex who made a big to-do about exactly this a while back. I'm pretty sure
he was against the stockpiling of weapons.
How did Karl Rove and Dick Cheney become mouthpieces
for the Republican party? It's like the bull elephants in the coal mine:
They're foul and mean, choking on their own toxic fumes, a product of the
atmosphere they they, themselves, poisoned. The canaries got off easy.
DEMS about American streets: "I see nut-nink". PUBS: "Waaaahh!!! (whine)" DEMS in the U.N.: "I hear nut-nink!" PUBS: "pppssssssshhh!!!! (piss)" DEMS internationally: "I say nut-nink!" PUBS: "Ooooohhhhhhhh (moan)".
RIP, Philadelphia Officer John Pawlowski
http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20090214_Shooter_had_death_wish__police_say.html
I'd say God damn this city but it looks like the good citizens of Philadelphia have beat Him to it. When is the underclass of this city going to recognize that they represent? And I'm talking social, not racial, class here, because this country is drawn on economic lines. Yet shooter Rasheed represents Black America in the eyes of many the length and breadth of this county, he represents the city in the eyes of suburbanites and rural Americans, he represents the poor in the eyes of the world. This city - this country - will never take a step forward until we realize that while we are busy making political statements there are entire cultures we ignore or marginalize or avoid... to everyone's detriment. You want to talk about racism? The young dudes in the Inner City think every cop is corrupt, every white is racist. I don't exaggerate. I worked there, taught there, lived there. Now I have a white neighbor down the block who thinks every dark-skinned person is beyond reach, even vile. When are Black leaders going to go into the city and try to reach these brothers, instead of worried about unfairly being labeled an Uncle Tom? When are White leaders going to do the same, instead of being worried about the stigma of being unfairly maligned as a racist? Go and tell all these hotheads them to behave themselves, tell them to wake up and see the world not as a harmful place but teach instead teach them Humanity's dearest lesson?
That most of the harm and love that befalls us in this lifetime is of our own doing.
God damn political correctness. Go out into the world and make a difference. Treat people as people and take the time to reach someone beyond your sphere. And hug a cop!!
Obama and his First 100 days
Gazas
Evil still prevails in some locales of this world.
India and Thanksgiving
I intended to drop in here and say exactly that, but I have to confess I'm a little taken aback that there is no mention of India anywhere on the home page.
Are we so preoccupied with the affairs of our country that we have we lost our compassion? Growing up as I did in the 70s and 80s, that used to an oft-echoed critique of our Republican-led country. Do we truly realize how precious a commodity life is, how precious is our own station in this United States of America?
Today I acknowledge the troubling times in which we live. ..... And how gratitude fills my soul, while in so areas around the globe - India, Zimbabwe, Iraq, North Korea, Sudan, others - being thankful means you and your loved ones surviving another day with even a scrap of food in your belly.
It's past time for me - for us all - to get right with our neighbor, ourselves, our God. It is past time for divisive politics or thinking, it is past time to seize the moment and act.
Happy day and happy Season to all. May our eyes, minds and arms be forever open.
The stuff we do to stuff in the name of stuff
The Story of Stuff
http://storyofstuff.com/
Be Well but never Be Still,
-Mark
Miriam Makeba
It's About Time
I have been called naive, blind, cynical. I am none of these. Though I do have famously obvious personality quirks, I have kept the faith and maintained my idealism. If in one breath you argue that race shouldn't matter and in the very next breath you argue it should matter for any person "of color", you're the blind cynic. Martin Luther King, Jr, fought for a colorblind society. Hear that? Colorblind.
Nice to see that the country has finally caught up with his dream. After all, I've been a believer since the start.
CONGRATULATIONS!!!!
Now comes the hard part, dunnit? Are you big enough not to gloat, not to proceed with an air of superiority, not to cry "racist" at every turn? Obama's landslide proves the lie that Republicans are nothing but mean-spirited goons. If the majority of you are on this site were right, the 'Pubs would have at least come close to stealing the election. You just sat there, seeking proof to your own mean-spirited theories, that Republicanism=evil. You are wrong. You are also wrong about America being a racist country. If it were, this historic election would not have happened. Somehow I think many of you will still refuse to admit that. (Although they are still some pockets of racism, like American Indians, where we most assuredly are. Democrats are probably worse than Republicans in this one. Sadly, it all comes down to political clout.)
So now we ALL have to work together. Accept the fact that there are people who have different opinions and outlooks than yours. Don't dismiss them because they do. And don't just take your ball and go home when you feel that you have they power and they, whomever they may be, don't.
Time will tell. And God blessed America!!!!
I was wrong.
So anyway, there's this doofus coming from the polling station, which is on a one-way street. And he's riding the wrong way, and comes around the intersection where I'm about to turn onto the one-way street - and I'm going the right way! Not only does he almost hit me, he curses me out!
Hey, I'm glad that he voted. But he's definitely one idiot I will be watching out for.
And out of idle curiosity (mind you), I wonder whom he voted for?
No Idiots Today.
...just read on facebook a comment from one person who begged another person not to vote for McCain. I mean, begged.
Why should friendship have anything to do with out voting preferences? Why should anyone's character come into question because we have a difference of opinion?? That's inexcusable.
I wrote this last night and it bears repeating: "You should be proud to be able to come to your own opinions and standards of judgment. It shows you're alive."
Happy day, people! No matter what. Happy, happy day!!!!!!!
Lexigraphy
"Idealistic" - holding on to a standard of excellence, (THUS: not surrendering it to the conflicting desire of the group.)
"Prejudiced" - having an opinion or feeling not based on reason or logic/
"Racism" - a belief or doctrine in the superiority of one race over another
(THUS: opinions and feelings can be changed, doctrines not. This country is not racist (not toward Blacks, anyway) .
Idiot Watch 11/3/08: Me, Mark Still
With only a day to go, it's pretty obvious by now that Obama is a shoe-in. The next 4 years will be heralded as a change in an orgasmic fury of bliss. And I use the mixed metaphors deliberately; a change is gonna come, no doubt. But it won't be the party the rank-and-file are expecting. Of course, this society of ours continues to be dominated by obtuse fools who refuse to acknowledge that the change has come, and has been here for awhile. Obama, Clinton, Palin.... They all represent that America is the land of equal opportunity-. But we remain mulish camps of monolithic people.
I will not vote for him. I once was his biggest fan, even campaigning for him in the classroom. But not now. He has naively made too many contradictory promises, he threw himself a Vanity Project major network celebration last week, with money garnered from a broken campaign pledge. He has decided to talk tough, even thuggish, on Pakistan, even threatening the war he so strenuously disavows. He panders to the Israel lobby and pro-lifers and gun-toters, even though his record on these subjects suggests far otherwise. He is elitist - a small-town boy made good, he now hobnobs with the urban intelligentsia. He looks down his nose at small town residents.
I will not vote for McCain. I wish that the SNL version I saw of him a couple of days ago was just normal, everyday McCain - but it's not. A man with a steady flow of that kind of charisma, eloquence and self-deferential wit needs to be in the White House. But there are no comers, are there? Maybe Ron Paul is, but he dropped out because - and Obamamaniacs, take note - he wanted to put his money to better use. McCain more and more seems like a grumpy old man, sniping at a candidate who's about to give him a whuppin'. And who probably followed some bad advice on the way to that whuppin'.
(Heh. Can't you imagine the conversation 'twixt Palin and McCain? "Sarah, really, just drop out. Please. We goofed." "Uh-uh, no way John. I'm going places.""But Sarah, you can't see Russia from Pennsylvania Avenue." "Nope, and I can't see that many stars as I would in Alaska, either. But I will see one in Washington; My own. Rapidly ascending." "Will you at least make fun of yourself on SNL?" "Nope. Ain't gonnadoit.. wouldn't be prudent.")
The truth of the matter is, it's the bulk of Obama's frenzied fans that turn my stomach sour, not so much the man himself. Obama just doesn't seem ready yet - but Obamamania? When I started on this blog, the insults and outrageous assumptions about me came flying! Now I'm just ignored - as this piece may surely be as well. Obamamaniacs ignore the gaffs their man makes, as well. They share the Bush mentality: if you're not with us, you're against us. Here is a short list of words I've read and heard to describe people who questioned Obama and his campaign: "racist," "bigoted," "lacking in mental acuity," Republican," "conservative," "backwood," "blind," "Bush fans," "fearmongers," "traitorous," "of a certain ilk," "doltish." Never any credit for a person simply thinking independently.
Have people on the other side been just as bad? "You betcha," he said with a wink. But I thought this was the Season of Change. To tell you the truth, all I see is a mentality of "It's Payback Time!" And to go further into the truth, I've been facing and fighting against that sort of inane mindset all of my life. I've often been ridiculed and ostracized because I elect to go my own way, and can just as easily criticize the teams on both ends of the field. This is why I have taken such exception when so many smug doofi got together to beat up on McCain and Palin not on the issues - but on insubstantial trivia, making full use of the words I listed above and many others.
And whereas McCain has quieted the few bigots in his assembly crowds, Obama has never done the same to his supporters. He believes the lies and taunts they come up with. Lord knows McCain should have done the same to his campaign management, that Palin should have done the same herself.
But I've been in McCain's position, ostracized and shouted down by bullies. So yeah, he's had my sympathy. I still think he's a decent man - despite every show and magazine in the country talking potshots at him. I still think Obama's a decent person. But neither one deserves the White House now.
So whom do I vote for? I must admit I know precious little of Chuck Baldwin. I know Ron Paul says to support him, but I would have had to have known this guy for at least a year before I'd consider anything so drastic. But after much consideration, I decided to vote for him anyway. Why? I know he can't win. My vote will say there's more than one choice between two candidates - that I don't have to settle for the same old distortion the media and the public forcefeed me every 4 years. There are options, other viable candidates. And what Paul and presumably Baldwin have to say makes more sense than the clueless rhetoric coming from the Obama and McCain camps.
Hey, Obama is for universal healthcare. I fully support this. McCain wants to walk softly and carry a big stick. I'm for that, too. But after waiting a year for either one of these guys to deliver the knockout punch and fully sway me, I know now it ain't coming.
So to all you self-congratulatory, liberal elite out there, enjoy the party. And get ready for what's to come. Obama's going to be breaking far more promises soon, and there's many tough choices that will have to be made. I pray that we in this country can finally unite and emerge victorious. But we love to pick sides - and the way things have been going in this country, I have my doubts.
With only a day to go, it's pretty obvious by now that Obama is a shoe-in. The next 4 years will be heralded as a change in an orgasmic fury of bliss. And I use the mixed metaphors deliberately; a change is gonna come, no doubt. But it won't be the party the rank-and-file are expecting. Of course, this society of ours continues to be dominated by obtuse fools who refuse to acknowledge that the change has come, and has been here for awhile. Obama, Clinton, Palin.... They all represent that America is the land of equal opportunity--. But we remain a monolithic people.
I will not vote for him. I once was his biggest fan, even campaigning for him in the classroom. But not now. He has naively made too many contradictory promises, he threw himself a Vanity Project major network celebration last week, with money garnered from a broken campaign pledge. He has decided to talk tough, even thuggish, on Pakistan, even threatening the war he so strenuously disavows. He panders to the Israel lobby and pro-lifers and gun-toters, even though his record on these subjects suggests far otherwise. He is elitist - a small-town boy made good, he now hobnobs with the urban intelligentsia. He looks down his nose at small town residents.
I will not vote for McCain. I wish that the SNL version I saw of him a couple of days ago was just normal, everyday McCain - but it's not. A man with a steady flow of that kind of charisma, eloquence and self-deferential wit needs to be in the White House. But there are no comers, are there? Maybe Ron Paul is, but he dropped out because - and Obamamaniacs, take note - he wanted to put his money to better use. McCain more and more seems like a grumpy old man, sniping at a candidate who's about to give him a whuppin'. And who probably followed some bad advice on the way to that whuppin'.
(Heh. Can't you imagine the conversation 'twixt Palin and McCain? "Sarah, really, just drop out. Please. We goofed." "Uh-uh, no way John. I'm going places.""But Sarah, you can't see Russia from Pennsylvania Avenue." "Nope, and I can't see that many stars as I would in Alaska, either. But I will see one in Washington; My own. Rapidly ascending." "Will you at least make fun of yourself on SNL?" "Nope. Ain't gonnadoit.. wouldn't be prudent.")
The truth of the matter is, it's the bulk of Obama's frenzied fans that turn my stomach sour, not so much the man himself. Obama just doesn't seem ready yet - but Obamamania? When I started on this blog, the insults and outrageous assumptions about me came flying! Now I'm just ignored - as this piece may surely be as well. Obama maniacs share the Bush mentality: if you're not with us, you're against us. Here is a short list of words I've read and heard to describe people who questioned Obama and his campaign: "racist," "bigoted," "lacking in mental acuity," Republican," "conservative," "backwood," "blind," "Bush fans," "fearmongers," "traitorous," "of a certain ilk," "doltish." Never any credit for a person simply thinking indecently.
Have people on the other side been just as bad? "You betcha," he said with a wink. But I thought this was the Season of Change. To tell you the truth, all I see is a mentality of "It's Payback Time!" And to go further into the truth, I've been facing and fighting against that sort of inane mindset all of my life. I've often been ridiculed and ostracized because I elect to go my own way, and can just as easily criticize the teams on both ends of the field. This is why I have taken such exception when so many smug doofi got together to beat up on McCain and Palin not on the issues - but on insubstantial trivia, making full use of the words I listed above and many others.
And whereas McCain has quieted the few bigots in his assembly crowds, Obama has never done the same to his supporters. He believes the lies and taunts they come up with. Lord knows McCain should have done the same to his campaign management, that Palin should have done the same herself.
But I've been in McCain's position, ostracized and shouted down by bullies. So yeah, he's had my sympathy. I still think he's a decent man - despite every show and magazine in the country talking potshots at him. I still think Obama's a decent person. But neither one deserves the White House now.
So whom do I vote for? I must admit I k now precious little of Chuck Baldwin. I know Ron Paul says to support him, but I would have had to have known this guy for at least a year before I'd consider anything so drastic. But after much consideration, I decided to vote for him anyway. Why? I know he can't win. My vote will say there's more than one choice between two candidates - that I don't have to settle for the same old distortion the media and the public forcefeed me every 4 years. There are options, other viable candidates. And what Paul and presumably Baldwin have to say makes more sense than the clueless rhetoric coming from the Obama and McCain camps.
Hey, Obama is for universal healthcare. I fully support this. McCain wants to walk softly and carry a big stick. I'm for that, too. But after waiting a year for either one of these guys to deliver the knockout punch and fully sway me, I know now it ain't coming.
So to all you self-congratulatory, liberal elite out there, enjoy the party. And get ready for what's to come. Obama's going to be breaking far more promises soon, and there's many tough choices that will have to be made. I pray that we in this country can finally unite and emerge victorious. But we love to pick sides - and the way things have been going in this country, I have my doubts.
With only a day to go, it's pretty obvious by now that Obama is a shoe-in. The next 4 years will be heralded as a change in an orgasmic fury of bliss. And I use the mixed metaphors deliberately; a change is gonna come, no doubt. But it won't be the party the rank-and-file are expecting. Of course, this society of ours continues to be dominated by obtuse fools who refuse to acknowledge that the change has come, and has been here for awhile. Obama, Clinton, Palin.... They all represent that America is the land of equal opportunity--. But we remain a monolithic people.
I will not vote for him. I once was his biggest fan, even campaigning for him in the classroom. But not now. He has naively made too many contradictory promises, he threw himself a Vanity Project major network celebration last week, with money garnered from a broken campaign pledge. He has decided to talk tough, even thuggish, on Pakistan, even threatening the war he so strenuously disavows. He panders to the Israel lobby and pro-lifers and gun-toters, even though his record on these subjects suggests far otherwise. He is elitist - a small-town boy made good, he now hobnobs with the urban intelligentsia. He looks down his nose at small town residents.
I will not vote for McCain. I wish that the SNL version I saw of him a couple of days ago was just normal, everyday McCain - but it's not. A man with a steady flow of that kind of charisma, eloquence and self-deferential wit needs to be in the White House. But there are no comers, are there? Maybe Ron Paul is, but he dropped out because - and Obamamaniacs, take note - he wanted to put his money to better use. McCain more and more seems like a grumpy old man, sniping at a candidate who's about to give him a whuppin'. And who probably followed some bad advice on the way to that whuppin'.
(Heh. Can't you imagine the conversation 'twixt Palin and McCain? "Sarah, really, just drop out. Please. We goofed." "Uh-uh, no way John. I'm going places.""But Sarah, you can't see Russia from Pennsylvania Avenue." "Nope, and I can't see that many stars as I would in Alaska, either. But I will see one in Washington; My own. Rapidly ascending." "Will you at least make fun of yourself on SNL?" "Nope. Ain't gonnadoit.. wouldn't be prudent.")
The truth of the matter is, it's the bulk of Obama's frenzied fans that turn my stomach sour, not so much the man himself. Obama just doesn't seem ready yet - but Obamamania? When I started on this blog, the insults and outrageous assumptions about me came flying! Now I'm just ignored - as this piece may surely be as well. Obama maniacs share the Bush mentality: if you're not with us, you're against us. Here is a short list of words I've read and heard to describe people who questioned Obama and his campaign: "racist," "bigoted," "lacking in mental acuity," Republican," "conservative," "backwood," "blind," "Bush fans," "fearmongers," "traitorous," "of a certain ilk," "doltish." Never any credit for a person simply thinking indecently.
Have people on the other side been just as bad? "You betcha," he said with a wink. But I thought this was the Season of Change. To tell you the truth, all I see is a mentality of "It's Payback Time!" And to go further into the truth, I've been facing and fighting against that sort of inane mindset all of my life. I've often been ridiculed and ostracized because I elect to go my own way, and can just as easily criticize the teams on both ends of the field. This is why I have taken such exception when so many smug doofi got together to beat up on McCain and Palin not on the issues - but on insubstantial trivia, making full use of the words I listed above and many others.
And whereas McCain has quieted the few bigots in his assembly crowds, Obama has never done the same to his supporters. He believes the lies and taunts they come up with. Lord knows McCain should have done the same to his campaign management, that Palin should have done the same herself.
But I've been in McCain's position, ostracized and shouted down by bullies. So yeah, he's had my sympathy. I still think he's a decent man - despite every show and magazine in the country talking potshots at him. I still think Obama's a decent person. But neither one deserves the White House now.
So whom do I vote for? I must admit I k now precious little of Chuck Baldwin. I know Ron Paul says to support him, but I would have had to have known this guy for at least a year before I'd consider anything so drastic. But after much consideration, I decided to vote for him anyway. Why? I know he can't win. My vote will say there's more than one choice between two candidates - that I don't have to settle for the same old distortion the media and the public forcefeed me every 4 years. There are options, other viable candidates. And what Paul and presumably Baldwin have to say makes more sense than the clueless rhetoric coming from the Obama and McCain camps.
Hey, Obama is for universal healthcare. I fully support this. McCain wants to walk softly and carry a big stick. I'm for that, too. But after waiting a year for either one of these guys to deliver the knockout punch and fully sway me, I know now it ain't coming.
So to all you self-congratulatory, liberal elite out there, enjoy the party. And get ready for what's to come. Obama's going to be breaking far more promises soon, and there's many tough choices that will have to be made. I pray that we in this country can finally unite and emerge victorious. But we love to pick sides - and the way things have been going in this country, I have my doubts.
With only a day to go, it's pretty obvious by now that Obama is a shoe-in. The next 4 years will be heralded as a change in an orgasmic fury of bliss. And I use the mixed metaphors deliberately; a change is gonna come, no doubt. But it won't be the party the rank-and-file are expecting. Of course, this society of ours continues to be dominated by obtuse fools who refuse to acknowledge that the change has come, and has been here for awhile. Obama, Clinton, Palin.... They all represent that America is the land of equal opportunity--. But we remain a monolithic people.
I will not vote for him. I once was his biggest fan, even campaigning for him in the classroom. But not now. He has naively made too many contradictory promises, he threw himself a Vanity Project major network celebration last week, with money garnered from a broken campaign pledge. He has decided to talk tough, even thuggish, on Pakistan, even threatening the war he so strenuously disavows. He panders to the Israel lobby and pro-lifers and gun-toters, even though his record on these subjects suggests far otherwise. He is elitist - a small-town boy made good, he now hobnobs with the urban intelligentsia. He looks down his nose at small town residents.
I will not vote for McCain. I wish that the SNL version I saw of him a couple of days ago was just normal, everyday McCain - but it's not. A man with a steady flow of that kind of charisma, eloquence and self-deferential wit needs to be in the White House. But there are no comers, are there? Maybe Ron Paul is, but he dropped out because - and Obamamaniacs, take note - he wanted to put his money to better use. McCain more and more seems like a grumpy old man, sniping at a candidate who's about to give him a whuppin'. And who probably followed some bad advice on the way to that whuppin'.
(Heh. Can't you imagine the conversation 'twixt Palin and McCain? "Sarah, really, just drop out. Please. We goofed." "Uh-uh, no way John. I'm going places.""But Sarah, you can't see Russia from Pennsylvania Avenue." "Nope, and I can't see that many stars as I would in Alaska, either. But I will see one in Washington; My own. Rapidly ascending." "Will you at least make fun of yourself on SNL?" "Nope. Ain't gonnadoit.. wouldn't be prudent.")
The truth of the matter is, it's the bulk of Obama's frenzied fans that turn my stomach sour, not so much the man himself. Obama just doesn't seem ready yet - but Obamamania? When I started on this blog, the insults and outrageous assumptions about me came flying! Now I'm just ignored - as this piece may surely be as well. Obama maniacs share the Bush mentality: if you're not with us, you're against us. Here is a short list of words I've read and heard to describe people who questioned Obama and his campaign: "racist," "bigoted," "lacking in mental acuity," Republican," "conservative," "backwood," "blind," "Bush fans," "fearmongers," "traitorous," "of a certain ilk," "doltish." Never any credit for a person simply thinking indecently.
Have people on the other side been just as bad? "You betcha," he said with a wink. But I thought this was the Season of Change. To tell you the truth, all I see is a mentality of "It's Payback Time!" And to go further into the truth, I've been facing and fighting against that sort of inane mindset all of my life. I've often been ridiculed and ostracized because I elect to go my own way, and can just as easily criticize the teams on both ends of the field. This is why I have taken such exception when so many smug doofi got together to beat up on McCain and Palin not on the issues - but on insubstantial trivia, making full use of the words I listed above and many others.
And whereas McCain has quieted the few bigots in his assembly crowds, Obama has never done the same to his supporters. He believes the lies and taunts they come up with. Lord knows McCain should have done the same to his campaign management, that Palin should have done the same herself.
But I've been in McCain's position, ostracized and shouted down by bullies. So yeah, he's had my sympathy. I still think he's a decent man - despite every show and magazine in the country talking potshots at him. I still think Obama's a decent person. But neither one deserves the White House now.
So whom do I vote for? I must admit I k now precious little of Chuck Baldwin. I know Ron Paul says to support him, but I would have had to have known this guy for at least a year before I'd consider anything so drastic. But after much consideration, I decided to vote for him anyway. Why? I know he can't win. My vote will say there's more than one choice between two candidates - that I don't have to settle for the same old distortion the media and the public forcefeed me every 4 years. There are options, other viable candidates. And what Paul and presumably Baldwin have to say makes more sense than the clueless rhetoric coming from the Obama and McCain camps.
Hey, Obama is for universal healthcare. I fully support this. McCain wants to walk softly and carry a big stick. I'm for that, too. But after waiting a year for either one of these guys to deliver the knockout punch and fully sway me, I know now it ain't coming.
So to all you self-congratulatory, liberal elite out there, enjoy the party. And get ready for what's to come. Obama's going to be breaking far more promises soon, and there's many tough choices that will have to be made. I pray that we in this country can finally unite and emerge victorious. But we love to pick sides - and the way things have been going in this country, I have my doubts.











