As little as I respect...

catocom

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

recent history shows that there will be no prosecutions for people in a certain circle.

corp+gov=power

"The People" (majority) are not going to do jack-shit it looks like.

What can we do? Somebody tell me.
 

Inkara1

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

He got in trouble for having his dick sucked. He was charged with lying under oath.
He got in trouble for having his dick sucked and then lying about it under oath. It was brought up in court during a sexual harassment trial to show a pattern of behavior. He denied it under oath. Had he admitted it under oath, there would likely have been no impeachment case, although he would have probably lost the lawsuit and gotten in trouble with his wife... which ended up happening anyway.
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Re: As little as a respect...

He got impeached for lying to a grand jury.

His dick wasn't the problem.
 

spike

New Member
Re: As little as a respect...

Yeah, he was acquitted.We'll have to see what kind trouble Bush's lies end up getting him into.
 

2minkey

bootlicker
Re: As little as a respect...

We'll have to see what kind trouble Bush's lies end up getting him into.

um, yeah, prolly not much gonna happen since he's about out of office and destined to fade quickly from any remaining relevance.
 

spike

New Member
Re: As little as a respect...

I've been hearing that it may be easier to prosecute after he's out of office.
 

Cerise

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

"Been hearing that?" :rolleyes:

I've heard libs are upset to the point of puking when they find that their conspiracy dogs won't hunt. :shrug:

pukesa4.jpg
 

GrandCaravanSE

Active Member
Re: As little as a respect...

He got in trouble for having his dick sucked and then lying about it under oath. It was brought up in court during a sexual harassment trial to show a pattern of behavior. He denied it under oath. Had he admitted it under oath, there would likely have been no impeachment case, although he would have probably lost the lawsuit and gotten in trouble with his wife... which ended up happening anyway.

I still like bill no matter what, is was are first black president.
 

spike

New Member
Re: As little as a respect...

"Been hearing that?"

Yes, he certainly won't be able to affect the investigations when he's out of power and having a someone else in office with access to the records will certainly help.

No need for any conspiracies. Just a real investigation into crimes.

I heard the Reps are upset to the point of feltching that this has become a real possibility and their savior turned into such an ass.
 

jimpeel

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

Camille Paglia likes Palin and takes the Liberal attack dogs to task in her most recent Salon article.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/paglia/2008/11/12/palin/index1.html

Given that Obama had served on a Chicago board with Ayers and approved funding of a leftist educational project sponsored by Ayers, one might think that the unrepentant Ayers-Dohrn couple might be of some interest to the national media. But no, reporters have been too busy playing mini-badminton with every random spitball about Sarah Palin, who has been subjected to an atrocious and at times delusional level of defamation merely because she has the temerity to hold pro-life views.

How dare Palin not embrace abortion as the ultimate civilized ideal of modern culture? How tacky that she speaks in a vivacious regional accent indistinguishable from that of Western Canada! How risible that she graduated from the University of Idaho and not one of those plush, pampered commodes of received opinion whose graduates, in their rush to believe the worst about her, have demonstrated that, when it comes to sifting evidence, they don't know their asses from their elbows.

Liberal Democrats are going to wake up from their sadomasochistic, anti-Palin orgy with a very big hangover. The evil genie released during this sorry episode will not so easily go back into its bottle. A shocking level of irrational emotionalism and at times infantile rage was exposed at the heart of current Democratic ideology -- contradicting Democratic core principles of compassion, tolerance and independent thought. One would have to look back to the Eisenhower 1950s for parallels to this grotesque lock-step parade of bourgeois provincialism, shallow groupthink and blind prejudice.

I like Sarah Palin, and I've heartily enjoyed her arrival on the national stage. As a career classroom teacher, I can see how smart she is -- and quite frankly, I think the people who don't see it are the stupid ones, wrapped in the fuzzy mummy-gauze of their own worn-out partisan dogma. So she doesn't speak the King's English -- big whoop! There is a powerful clarity of consciousness in her eyes. She uses language with the jumps, breaks and rippling momentum of a be-bop saxophonist. I stand on what I said (as a staunch pro-choice advocate) in my last two columns -- that Palin as a pro-life wife, mother and ambitious professional represents the next big shift in feminism. Pro-life women will save feminism by expanding it, particularly into the more traditional Third World.

As for the Democrats who sneered and howled that Palin was unprepared to be a vice-presidential nominee -- what navel-gazing hypocrisy! What protests were raised in the party or mainstream media when John Edwards, with vastly less political experience than Palin, got John Kerry's nod for veep four years ago? And Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, for whom I lobbied to be Obama's pick and who was on everyone's short list for months, has a record indistinguishable from Palin's. Whatever knowledge deficit Palin has about the federal bureaucracy or international affairs (outside the normal purview of governors) will hopefully be remedied during the next eight years of the Obama presidencies.

The U.S. Senate as a career option? What a claustrophobic, nitpicking comedown for an energetic Alaskan -- nothing but droning committees and incestuous back-scratching. No, Sarah Palin should stick to her governorship and just hit the rubber-chicken circuit, as Richard Nixon did in his long haul back from political limbo following his California gubernatorial defeat in 1962. Step by step, the mainstream media will come around, wipe its own mud out of its eyes, and see Palin for the populist phenomenon that she is.

I think she was giving (dis)honorable mention to a few of the Liberals who gather here when she stated:

"As a career classroom teacher, I can see how smart she is -- and quite frankly, I think the people who don't see it are the stupid ones, wrapped in the fuzzy mummy-gauze of their own worn-out partisan dogma."

"As for the Democrats who sneered and howled that Palin was unprepared to be a vice-presidential nominee -- what navel-gazing hypocrisy!"

Bwaaaaahahahahahahaha!!
 

catocom

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

recent history shows that there will be no prosecutions for people in a certain circle.

corp+gov=power

"The People" (majority) are not going to do jack-shit it looks like.

What can we do? Somebody tell me.

well, I've heard several people now in business say the business is ok atm,
but they are mad as hell, and don't even want the gov. to get sales tax as
much as possible.
Compounding the economy, so called problem.
 

valkyrie

Well-Known Member
Re: As little as a respect...

well, I've heard several people now in business say the business is ok atm,
but they are mad as hell, and don't even want the gov. to get sales tax as
much as possible.
Compounding the economy, so called problem.
I don't think these businesses have any say in whether the gov't gets sales tax, other than cutting their own throat and shutting down. If the business sells something, they are libel to collect and send back the sales tax to the gov't. If they falsify the sales records, that's a crime.
 

catocom

Well-Known Member
They aren't cutting their own throat.
These businesses have non-perishable commodities in storage, that are climbing in value.

They are also very diverse.
Taxes are certainly paid, without hesitation or delay, but changes are occurring.
Mainly in cutting overhead to the bone, and beyond, save employees atm.
 
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