Monday, September 07, 2009

 

Scandalous Obama speech to schoolkids!

Presidentnik Barack Hoooinsane Obama calls for revolution, pledges to lead America's youth in armed socialist rebellion!

Not.

Now, S.T.F.U, you morons.

--ER

Comments:
Man, if that's whut he gonna be sayin, why in the hell are so many throwing a tantrum. I've heard a ton of talkins like this before...what's wrong with ol POTUS doin the same. Except fer the part bout landin on the moon(everbody knows that wuz faked), that's a dang fine peppy talk. He doesn't sound like a righty or lefty, he sounds like somebody what got some sense.

Ain't nothin wrong with disagreeing, but to do it just to be disagreeable is the mark of jackassity.
 
"why in the hell are so many throwing a tantrum"

Shall we list the reasons?
 
Gotta love the little checkmate Obama played. Let the wackjobs lose their minds over the "socialist" agenda in the speech, then release the text making them look like even bigger wackjobs.

Well played.
 
The controversy over President Obama's speech to the nation's schoolchildren will likely be over shortly after Obama speaks today at Wakefield High School in Arlington, Virginia. But when President George H.W. Bush delivered a similar speech on October 1, 1991, from Alice Deal Junior High School in Washington DC, the controversy was just beginning. Democrats, then the majority party in Congress, not only denounced Bush's speech -- they also ordered the General Accounting Office to investigate its production and later summoned top Bush administration officials to Capitol Hill for an extensive hearing on the issue.

Unlike the Obama speech, in 1991 most of the controversy came after, not before, the president's school appearance. The day after Bush spoke, the Washington Post published a front-page story suggesting the speech was carefully staged for the president's political benefit. "The White House turned a Northwest Washington junior high classroom into a television studio and its students into props," the Post reported.
 
Fortunately, the Dems are in control of Congress now, too.
 
Vengence. They just want vengence, that's all. Long memories inside the beltway. Long and mean.
 
Indeed, ER.

Some folks were stupid to criticize the previous speeches by previous presidents, which I guess, in their paranoia-addled minds, is a perfect excuse for the wingnuts to do the same. I particularly like how the wingnuts criticize Obama for suggesting that kids write him with ideas about how they can help, yet conveniently ignore the fact that GHWB did exactly the same thing.

Whining "But they did it too!" is rarely ever a convincing argument for stoopid behavior when children do it. When adults do it, it's just downright embarrassing to watch.

Also, too bad Obama isn't also giving a lesson on theft and plagiarism, a lesson Ms/Mr Anonymous could clearly use.
 
Redacted blog, you saw it here first.
 
oAnonymous herself notes that the reaction to President Bush's policy speech came after the speech.

Isn't that all we are really asking? Aren't we just asking for reason to be present in the debate?

When the protest comes before the delivery, it is a sign that reason is absent and bad motivations are present. It is irrational politics that most of us are complaining about, not rational politics.

And Obama isn't even giving a policy speech. IT'S A PEP TALK FOR GOD'S SAKES. Bush was selling Leave No Child Behind, which did one big thing right and a hundred things wrong.

Disagreement is not what Democrats expect to avoid. That would be irrational. That would be the current state of mind of almost all Republicans.

Give us Colin Powell. Give us Christine Todd Whitman. Give us Olympia Snow. Give us Susan Collins, give us Orin Hatch, Kay Bailey Hutchinson, John McCain, Rudy Guilliani.

We will disagree, yes. But bizarre, irrational, crazy propaganda whoring will not be a part of our body politic.
 
Feodor said: "We will disagree, yes. But bizarre, irrational, crazy propaganda whoring will not be a part of our body politic."

Whoa, wait, let's not give that all up just yet!
 
From Feodor: "Give us Colin Powell. Give us Christine Todd Whitman. Give us Olympia Snow. Give us Susan Collins, give us Orin Hatch, Kay Bailey Hutchinson, John McCain, Rudy Guilliani."

On that list are (a) a man who sold his soul for power, and realized too late that there aren't any refunds; (b) a woman who was hired to do a specific job, then prevented from doing that job, then when she tried to go public with all the ways she was prevented from doing her job, had her reputation destroyed; (c) two lady Senators from the great state of Maine who are adept at making sure nothing gets done in the US Senate; (d) an elderly Senator whose low point was the destruction of the character of Anita Hill in order to save the nomination of Clarence Thomas; (e) a retiring lady Senator who has achieved only the distinction that coming from Texas doesn't mean you can really do anything; (f) an elderly media-whore with absolutely no accomplishments other than truncated campaign finance reform; (g) Mayor Noun-Verb-9/11.

I'd want a different list. Sadly, there isn't one.
 
As if Democrat power holders are without sin.

Rangel? Ethical worries with investments and sweetheart real estate.

Biden? Plagiarism.

Chris Dodd with significant mortgage financing advantages while directing policy on Countrywide.

The great Senator from Massachusetts we just buried

If GKS wants a morally antiseptic politics, he's going to be looking for a looooooong time.
 
So, the fact that I listed my issues with your list of GOP folks obviously means I believe the Democrats are all rainbows and butterflies.

Right.
 
Your previous comment inferred that is one sided. I don't really see that you can deny that.

And since it is obviously not "rainbows and butterflies" on either side, your last comment just undermined your own previous comment.
 
How you reach that conclusion, Neil, I mean Feodor, I really cannot fathom. Unless you assume either that I am so blindly partisan that I don't see the faults of political leaders regardless of ideology or party, or that noting the faults of individuals you listed automatically means I would find no fault with a similar list of other politicians from another party is ridiculous on its face.

Politics is a game of power. Those drawn to it suffer from the flaw of an attraction to power and its perquisities, including the abuse of power. These are facts I accept. You listed a group of individuals whom, I assume, you thought highly of. I, on the other hand, do not, for the specific reasons mentioned and others besides. Had you listed Robert Byrd, Joe Biden, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, and any number of other Democratic politicians, under a certain set of circumstances, I would certainly list their vices, faults, and failings.

My problem was with what I took to be your mistaken belief that the small list you gave consisted of Republicans of either virtue or honor enough to be serious members of a loyal opposition. I do not. Your sweeping judgments based on minimal information, completely out of context, once again miss the mark.

Yawn.
 
LOL. One of y'all should just challenge the other to a duel.

Or better yet: a game of Yahtzee.

:-) and ;-) to you both!
 
Yahtzee is the standard grammar for GKS.

And a duel is what he does with his own reasoning.
 
I've rarely seen a guy so brittlely unselfconscious, especially when his own shape shifting is pointed out to him.

He uses "Neil," as a reference?:

You can take the boy out of the nerd, but sometimes you can't take the nerdishness out of the boy.
 
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