Saturday, 2 November 2013

I'm changing my name to Guillermo Hernandez

I'm changing my name to Guillermo Hernandez NeutronButthole2013-11-02 07:58:27Sanchez and working off the books. Ah hahahahaha! I should have a Mexican Matricula card promptly. some great WWII PICS - our greatest generation! gdc19612013-11-02 07:58:10these are without a doubt, the very best pictures of WW11 personnel and aircraft I've seen.......... http://www.mission4today.com/index.php?name=ForumsPro&file=viewtopic&t=14428&finish=15&start=15Funny huh? I love it § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:58:05yrk★ Bahhers are already dead, why beat Crazy_________Dude2013-11-02 07:57:23a dead horse? They're doing the good work for us. GOP hates tea baggers more than dems hate them. I am enjoying tea party-GOP civil war. I hope they knock out each other with guns.fmyI vote Green son § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:56:45nhmI'm doing fine. § born-lucky2013-11-02 07:56:00GOP Ohio Senate Votes to 'Ban Libertarian Party' lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:52:51GOP Ohio Senate Votes to 'Ban Libertarian Party' from 2014 Election The Ohio Senate voted 22-11 this week to pass legislation that would set new rules for minor political parties in Ohio. The legislation, Senate Bill 193, would relax vote thresholds for minor parties to be recognized by the state, and it would push back the deadline for parties to submit paperwork for a general election. Senator Bill Seitz, the Cincinnati Republican sponsoring the bill, has said the legislation is needed as state rules governing minor parties have been in limbo since a federal court held in 2006 that they were overly restrictive. Since then, the state has continued to recognize four minor parties: the Libertarians, the Green Party, the Constitution Party, and the Socialist Party. Seitz said on the Senate floor that new rules are needed to ensure recognized political parties have some proof of support. He said the current situation is like the "wild, wild West. "Obviously, if you are in one of those minor parties, you probably would like that current lawless state of affairs to continue, because you get to stay on the ballot without demonstrating any modicum of public support," Seitz said. "I don't think that's appropriate public policy, and that's why we drafted Senate Bill 193." The American Civil Liberties Union is raising concerns along with third parties in Ohio, telling lawmakers that the proposals' petition requirements are onerous and the changes come too close to Ohio's 2014 statewide elections. Libertarian and Green party officials renewed complaints that the reforms would make it extremely difficult for them to participate in next year’s elections, and that the leglislation effectively "bans" their party from the 2014 election. witnessing the death throes of the GOP... The lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:52:33witnessing the death throes of the GOP... The Last Days of the GOP We could be witnessing the death throes of the Republican Party I once wrote about lobbying, and this week I called some Republicans I used to talk to (and some that they recommended I talk to) about the effect the shutdown is having on the Republican Party in Washington. The response I got was fear of Republican decline and loathing of the Tea Party: One lobbyist and former Hill staffer lamented the “fall of the national party,” another the rise of “suburban revolutionaries,” and another of “people alienated from business, from everything.” There is a growing fear among Washington Republicans that the party, which has lost two national elections in a row, is headed for history’s dustbin. And I believe that they are right to worry. What is happening in the Republican Party today is reminiscent of what happened to the Democrats in the late 1960s and early 1970s. At that time, the Democrats in Washington were faced by a grassroots revolt from the new left over the war in Vietnam and from the white South over the party’s support for civil rights. It took the Democrats over two decades to do undo the damage—to create a party coalition that united the leadership in Washington with the base and that was capable of winning national elections. The Republicans could be facing a similar split between their base and their Washington leadership, and it could cripple them not just in the 2014 and 2016 elections, but for decades to come. dabWe are? I get so confused sometimes § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:52:28People. Straight from the horses mouth. I bet crusaders2013-11-02 07:51:28you get yours from the internet. LOLI'll be damned § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:50:23unkGOP surrender roundup: Sadness, woe and conserva lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:49:34GOP surrender roundup: Sadness, woe and conservative civil war John Boehner may have decided that he'd rather not plunge the United States into default quite just yet, but the true believers? They're mad. Really, really mad. A roundup of arsonist reactions: Speaker Pelosi Part 2: Opening Jan 5. 2015 — @DRUDGE Rush Limbaugh on Wednesday blasted the Republican Party as “irrelevant” and responsible for “creating one of the greatest political disasters” he’s ever seen. “I was trying to think earlier today, if ever in my life I could remember any major political party being so irrelevant,” the conservative radio host said on his show, according to a transcript. “I have never seen it. I have never seen a major political party simply occupy placeholders, as the Republican Party is doing.”

Rush says the party still refuses to offer "serious opposition" to Obama, again claiming that this is because Obama is black. Hardliner and actual CNN contributor Erick Erickson, or maybe he's not there anymore because who the hell watches CNN these days:
I am tired of funding Republicans who campaign against Obamacare then refuse to fight. It’s time to find a new batch of Republicans to actually practice what the current crop preaches. The Tea Party Nation is very, very sad:
Barack Obama demanded unconditional surrender from the Republican Party. He pretty much got it. […] In short, the GOP got nothing from their fight. But then again, McConnell, Boehner and the GOP establishment never tried.
 FreedomWorks and Club For Growth are frothing and foaming.
 FreedomWorks: "The line separating the Democrats and the Republican establishment is fading- it might have disappeared today." — @philipaklein 
 But House conservatives like Raul Labrador know what the real problem with their plan was. It's the fault of that damn meddling media for saying House Republicans wanted to repeal Obamacare instead of calmly explaining that the Republicans merely wanted to reasonably exchange defunding or delaying the law in exchange for allowing the federal government to continue to function. unkDemographics Killing Off the Religious Right.... lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:48:52Demographics Killing Off the Religious Right..... Religious progressives are on the rise. Are we facing down the end of the conservative death grip on religion in America? It's true that religious progressives have always been a part of the conversation—it's not just Republican politicians who pay fealty to God in their public speeches and appearances—but by and large, when faith is discussed in public forums, it's almost always religious conservatives using it as a cudgel to attack women's rights, gay rights, and secularism. That may be changing, however, as the numbers of religious progressives are on the rise, according to the Public Religion Research Institute. In fact, for people ages 18-33, religious progressives outnumber religious conservatives. According to the survey, 23 percent of people aged 18 to 33 are religious progressives, while 22 percent are nonreligious and 17 percent are religious conservatives. By contrast, only 12 percent of those aged 66 to 88 are religious progressives, whereas 47 percent are said to be religious conservatives. I'm sure religious conservatives had a hunch that they were losing young people long before this polling data confirmed it, just by looking at the people sitting in their pews. Evangelical leaders have been fretting about this loss for a couple of years now, and it's an open secret that the youngest generation finds the reactionary politics and hostility toward science that marks religious conservatism to be repulsive. Some of the kids fleeing the flock just end up having no religious beliefs at all, but some clearly want to retain a connection to faith without having to sign off on the anti-feminism, homophobia, and creationism that comes with the more conservative churches. sgfI've been IP'ed, no biggy in my case § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:48:23sgfI have no idea, it's dedicated to Puggy § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:46:06unkGOP Congressional Candidate Switches Parties, Sa lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:42:33GOP Congressional Candidate Switches Parties, Saying Hate Has No Home in Representation Congressional candidate and Army veteran Jason Thigpen was formerly a Republican, seeking election to the U.S. House in North Carolina’s 3rd Congressional District, running against Republican Representative Walter Jones. But Thigpen switched parties yesterday. He is now running as a Democrat. Thigpen said, “Enough is enough. After discussing it with my wife and family, I’ve decided to run as a Democrat rather than a Republican. I simply cannot stand with a Party where its most extreme element promote hate and division amongst people.” Thigpen says he’s received a lot of support from other North Carolina Republicans, and that the vast majority of Republicans don’t agree with these “radical nut-jobs”. Thigpen, an Army veteran who received a Purple Heart, is not impressed with his past party’s efforts to steal the right to vote from Democrats, “I didn’t go to war to defend the liberties and freedoms of one Party, race, sex, or one income class of Americans. Whether white, black, Hispanic, Asian, man, woman, gay, lesbian, straight, rich, or poor – we fought together as equals, side-by-side for the benefit of every American in the same. So, to come home from serving our country and see North Carolina legislators using their super-majority status to gerrymander districts and pass a law to deliberately suppress and oppress the voting rights of Democrats but more specifically minorities and college students, is absolutely deplorable.” The final straw was the Republican shutdown, which Thigpen notes was “real patriotic”. He said, “Shutting down the government was seemingly easy for our elected Representatives, as they’re not adversely affected with their pay being protected by the Constitution. They were some real patriots though, huh? These so called Representatives sat around in Washington playing chicken with their constituent’s lives all while patting each other on the back saying ‘great job.’ Yeah that’s real patriotic all right.” Whatever motivated Thigpen, the country needs more Republicans standing up to their party’s hatred and saying no more. unkTea Party's Obamacare Threat Could Harm GOP Elec lie_____detector2013-11-02 07:42:09Tea Party's Obamacare Threat Could Harm GOP Election Chances, Republicans Warn WASHINGTON -- Long-serving Republicans aren't engaged in an increasingly public smackdown of their tea party colleagues because they disagree with them -- it's more that they don't want a few hotheads to blow their party's best chance in years to retake control of the United States Senate. Several tea party-powered senators have laid down a gauntlet of late, saying the GOP should refuse to pass a bill to fund the government in September unless all funding for the implementation of the health care reform law is cut. It's a message -- championed by Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah), Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) -- that appeals to the enthusiasms of a population that united against Obamacare under the banner of Taxed Enough Already in 2009, a year in which federal taxes actually hit historic lows. But more senior members of the GOP caucus -- most prominently Sens. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.) -- have said they see the idea as ill-conceived and unreasonable. In an unexpected twist, the veteran lawmakers who are not exactly known for being voices of moderation are appealing for a more deliberate approach. Republican leaders said that while they believe the health care law will be the train wreck the GOP is forecasting, following the path of Cruz, Lee and Rubio could produce a more immediate derailment -- of the GOP's electoral chances in 2014. "I'm not sure why we should advocate for something that's absolutely impossible. The only way Obamacare is going to be repealed is with a 60-vote Republican Senate, and then, in order to override a presidential veto, I think it's 67 votes," McCain said. "I haven't seen an attempt to override a veto in a long time. It's a non-starter." And a political land mine, he added. "Those of us who have been around for a while know what happens when there's the threat of a shutdown of the government: It's the Congress that gets blamed," McCain said. "If the minority uses its strength, its 41 votes [to filibuster government funding], then clearly the American people will blame the Congress. And they do -- that's the history. And those who say that's not the case ignore the lessons of history and the realities of American politics." rali know.. as do you. you just deny it § polygraph4barak2013-11-02 07:39:08fmySeriously? Technology is politicized now? Irony_Guy_Returns2013-11-02 07:34:50Of course the iPhone because I can afford one and my work is all Mac-based.balHospitals opting out of 0bamacare Mutlap2013-11-02 07:32:19I will predict a large portion of the USA will pay cash to doctors for quality care and carry 0bamcare because they have to. Just like they do in england. Best care there is the cash care. I paid cash for cat scan. Scheduled very next day day cost 450.00. Cash talks.sgfNo, Carter was a good man in a bad time, also bushworstever2013-11-02 07:30:15railroaded by oil and Bushco IpdxBernanke, the great architect of the collapse, Frank_Lee2013-11-02 07:29:29but many other morons were involved, too. Paulson, Kashkari, Geithner, I know it's not all bush's fault, but he was in charge.sgfYou have to give him points for trying I agree § bushworstever2013-11-02 07:29:17fmyI'm curious. You libs like the I phone or crusaders2013-11-02 07:28:35android? The division is so fucking amazing! I know your answer but I guess you could lie.gfkwhy would anyone want to shoot a TSA agent? slatman2013-11-02 07:25:19hmmm.....I wonderpdxAt first I was kidding, but you really don't hav Incontinentia2013-11-02 07:22:38anything elsepdxI what way, specifically? § Cheese952013-11-02 07:20:01not if i was king § polygraph4barak2013-11-02 07:18:46You probably aren't even a whole person. DSXmachina2013-11-02 07:18:01If I ask you to keep a secret, you will promise to do so, but you will be unable to. The person making the promise will be sincere in his intent, but another person will arise in your consciousness who will forget the promise, or become excited and accidentally let slip part of the promise, or will fail under the pressure of questioning. make me king and i will § polygraph4barak2013-11-02 07:15:24



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