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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (365933)1/8/2008 4:41:21 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1572332
 
Actually Colmes is not to blame. If you have ever heard him talking frankly about it, he knows they're only allowing one liberal voice on the whole network, so he'll just suck it up and do the best he can. Did you also know Colmes used to be a comedian? He was also picked I'm sure for his less than manly looks. They want to portray Democrats as less manly and less American. The truth means nothing to Fox News, only pumping up the GOP corporate fascist program.



To: tejek who wrote (365933)1/8/2008 8:14:49 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1572332
 
You two are confirming our opinion of liberals. You want conservatives harassed in public, tarred and feathered. Liberals who break from the herd s/b shot.

Wow, the liberalism - fascism link is real.



To: tejek who wrote (365933)1/8/2008 8:15:42 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1572332
 
Fascism facts

"[T]he very term 'liberal fascism' came from the pen of H.G. Wells, the famed socialist author who delivered a speech at Oxford University in 1932 that included hosannas to both Stalin's Russia and Hitler's Germany. 'I am asking,' Wells told the students, 'for a Liberal Fascisti, for enlightened Nazis.' Democracy, he argued, had to be replaced with new forms of government. ...

"Wells was not unique in offering this call to liberals. In giving us a true alternative history of modern liberalism [in his book, 'Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning'], [Jonah] Goldberg shows how the ideological roots of fascism were liberal and left-wing, as were some of fascism's early proponents, especially in the Italy of Benito Mussolini. Most of us today forget that Mussolini, to his dying day, considered himself a man of the left and a socialist, who through nationalism and the corporatist reorganization of the polity sought to modernize a dying, 19th-century liberalism."

— Ron Radosh, writing on "America's 'Fascist Moment,' " Friday in the New York Sun