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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 3:56:17 PM
From: TideGlider5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
LOL Real threatening. Are you threatened by it?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 3:57:27 PM
From: longnshort10 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
yes they our spliting our sides because of laughing at them. Why don't they pick up their trash. Are all you libs Pigs ?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 3:58:55 PM
From: longnshort4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
Ken you do know they are just spoiled little GREEDY bastards, wanting other people to pay for them.

Now they want free cell phones and internet



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 4:03:32 PM
From: TopCat6 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
"shorty, I can tell that occupy Wall Street threatens you and your friends."

Are you serious?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 4:08:43 PM
From: locogringo8 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224750
 
occupy Wall Street threatens you and your friends.

I don't know about shorty, kenny_troll, but you and your cohorts better start rethinking this.

It's turning out to be hilarious. Have you seen the comments from "Joe Blow" and "Suzie Shopper" on the streets? These people are tuned into Dancing with the Stars, and their soaps, and they don't have the slightest idea or foggiest notion about what is going on. They actually think this is a protest against Obama and the lack of jobs.

Whatta bunch of clowns you libs and your network whores are............AND IT IS ALL BACKFIRING!

The conservatives couldn't have asked for a better setup and outcome.

Christmas has come early this year..........THANKS.....kenny_troll.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 5:25:33 PM
From: joseffy5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Pressure Grows for Holder's Resignation; Subpoenas Threatened

Sunday, 09 Oct 2011
newsmax.com


Pressure is intensifying rapidly for the resignation of Attorney General Eric Holder over the fatally flawed Operation Fast and Furious gunrunning scandal — with Rep. Paul Gosar demanding that Holder quit immediately and Arizona sheriffs saying he should be fired if he won’t resign.


Gosar, an Arizona Republican, issued the call for Holder’s resignation on “Fox and Friends” today.

Meanwhile, Rep. Darrell Issa said on “Fox News Sunday” that his House Oversight and Government Reform Committee may issue subpoenas against top Justice Department officials as early as this week over the controversial Operation Fast and Furious gunrunning scandal. The California Republican indicated that some government actions in the Fast and Furious scheme of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) could have been felonious.

Arizona sheriffs would welcome such subpoenas, as they called Friday not only for Holder to step down or be fired but also for President Barack Obama to instigate an independent investigation into the controversy.

And U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, who has been dogging Fast and Furious along with Issa, maintains that Holder is stonewalling their investigations — and he’s tired of it. "I always tell every agency . . . that I have been investigating, the longer you stonewall, when the truth comes out, the more egg you are going to have on your face,” the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee told Newsmax last week.

Under Fast and Furious, at least 1,400 weapons were allowed to cross the border into Mexico in the hope that they could be traced and would lead ATF agents to cartel bosses.

But ATF lost track of most of the weapons, many of which have been linked to dozens of crimes, including the murder of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry and the slaying of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent Jaime Zapata.

The Arizona sheriffs, speaking at the state capitol in Phoenix on Friday, denounced the 2009 ATF program as a betrayal of state law enforcement. Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu noted that the sheriffs joining him in calling for the investigation are split evenly between Democrats and Republicans.

“This is not a partisan issue, but a serious public safety issue that threatens the safety of our citizens and our deputies,” Babeu said. “Our own federal government has armed the very cartels that our law enforcement are fighting with on a daily basis.”

The sheriffs’ plea for an inquiry came even as Holder himself acknowledged Friday in a five-page letter he sent to six leading members of Congress that the gunrunning operation was “fundamentally flawed” and “completely unacceptable."

However, much of Holder’s letter spurned responsibility for the backfired program and assailed Republican criticism instead. Holder’s letter attacked Gosar specifically for his statement last week that administration officials could be considered “accessories to murder” for their role in the ATF program.

“Such irresponsible and inflammatory rhetoric must be repudiated in the strongest possible terms,” Holder's letter said. “Those who serve in the ranks of law enforcement are our Nation’s heroes and deserve our Nation’s thanks, not the disrespect that is being heaped on them by those who seek political advantage. I trust you feel similarly and I call on you to denounce these statements.”

Gosar refuses to do any such thing, insisting instead that the real issue is the need for government officials to take accountability for their actions.

“This starts with accountability from the top,” said Gosar, who also is a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Pinpointing accountability also is the intent of subpoenas that Issa promises. Issa, who indicated on “Fox News Sunday” that some government actions in Fast and Furious could have been felonious, said his committee intends to grill Justice officials, including Holder, to determine "what did they know and when did they know it?"

"Very clearly he [Holder] had to know when Brian Terry was killed and everyone realized these were Fast and Furious weapons," Issa said. "He had to know something serious had happened, and that's months before he says he knew. If we assume for a moment he didn't know, the question is, is he competent? If in fact a border patrol agent has been murdered, 2,000 weapons have gone [missing], this program has completely gone off the rails — why didn't he know?"



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 5:27:02 PM
From: locogringo5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Need some work, kenny_troll? These guys are typical law abiding liberals up your way.

ThugTrainer Paul V says you're a criminal.........attorney.

Occupy Portland Protesters Arrested for Vandalizing Cop Car


The leftists missed their court date after their arrest.

humanevents.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/9/2011 7:58:04 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
Sharpton On Cain: ‘Old Man River’, ‘Singing And Saying What Right Wing Wants To Hear’



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/10/2011 1:14:04 AM
From: Jorj X Mckie13 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
shorty, I can tell that occupy Wall Street threatens you and your friends.


Are you kidding? Occupy Wall Street is the best thing to happen to republicans since...well, since Solyndra, Fast n Furious and Lightsquared.

How many more OWS losers will we get on camera taking a dump on cop cars? or repeating in unison, everything that is said while they silence a black congressman? or, when interviewed, have no spark of an idea what they are protesting and then shout down the reporter in a clear mob attempt to divert attention from themselves.

I pray this OWS thing stays in the news a long time. However, my bet is that Solyndra, Fast-n-furious (Obama's gun running project providing firearms to mexican druglords) and lightsquared will be in the news much longer.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/10/2011 9:56:45 AM
From: locogringo2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
This fool has a total disconnect from reality, just like you.

Krugman on Wall Street Protests: 'There Has in Fact Been Nothing So Far to Match the Behavior of Tea Party Crowds'

Consider first how Republican politicians have portrayed the modest-sized if growing demonstrations, which have involved some confrontations with the police — confrontations that seem to have involved a lot of police overreaction — but nothing one could call a riot. And there has in fact been nothing so far to match the behavior of Tea Party crowds in the summer of 2009.

Read more: newsbusters.org



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/10/2011 10:00:35 AM
From: chartseer2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Strange that I thought it makes the tea party look even more American.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/10/2011 11:43:31 AM
From: lorne1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224750
 
ken..well I guess this is a sure indication of president hussein obama being re-elected..American's will be overjoyed with hugo's support for obama's zombies....You got a picture of hugo on your bedroom wall with all your other idols? :-)

Chavez slams "horrible repression" of U.S. protestsEnrique Andres Pretel, Reuters
October 9, 2011
au.news.yahoo.com

CARACAS (Reuters) - Socialist firebrand Hugo Chavez condemned on Saturday the "horrible repression" of anti-Wall Street protesters and termed a Republican presidential candidate "crazy" for his criticism of Cuba and Venezuela.

Although still convalescing from cancer surgery in June followed by four rounds of chemotherapy, the 57-year-old Venezuelan president is quickly returning to the tough rhetoric and strong views that have made him famous worldwide.

Not surprisingly, Chavez expressed solidarity with American activists who have been staging rallies and marches against what they view as corporate greed by Wall Street.

The U.S. protests, which began last month in New York and have spread to Tampa, Florida, Seattle and other cities, have mostly been peaceful but sometimes resulted in confrontations. Dozens were arrested and police used pepper spray in New York earlier this week.

"This movement of popular outrage is expanding to 10 cities and the repression is horrible, I don't know how many are in prison now," Chavez said in comments at a political meeting in his Caracas presidential palace shown on state TV.

Chavez, who runs for re-election in a year's time and traditionally ramps up his anti-capitalist rhetoric to try and rally supporters before a vote, also let rip at Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, who referred to the "malign socialism" of Cuba and Venezuela in a speech on Friday.

"He's been attacking Venezuela and Cuba, and talking about the malign government of Hugo Chavez. And he has the arrogance to say that God created the United States so the United States can rule the world," Chavez said.

"And that crazy man might be the president of the United States, in elections that are just after ours."

Venezuela's presidential vote is in October 2012, before the U.S. vote in November.

Chavez said again he was sure he would be given a clean bill of health in time to run a vigorous campaign for re-election in the South American OPEC member nation.

He would return to Cuba, where he was operated on in June to remove a malignant tumor, in a few days for final checks, Chavez said. "We're going to do all the examinations to confirm what we think up to now, that there are no malignant cells left in my body," he told the meeting.

Since coming to power in 1999, Chavez has sought to project himself as a leader of a global "anti-imperialist" movement.

He and allies in the ruling Socialist Party have been gloating over economic and social problems in the United States and Europe as evidence of capitalism's impending downfall.

"Poverty's growing, the misery is getting worse," he said, referring to the causes of the U.S. protests. "But that empire is still there, still a threat ... (President Barack) Obama is on his way down, for lots of reasons. He was a big fraud."

(Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Paul Simao)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (115137)10/10/2011 7:18:14 PM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
ken...Is this your next President and Vice President?

A business pro and someone why knows the political workings of Washington.

And kenny you dem/lib guys cant use the race thingie...aint that great ken?

And they are appearing together.

Herman Cain surges as outsider going against Washington
By Lindsey Boerma
October 10, 2011
cbsnews.com

Video... Herman and Newt

cbsnews.com

Herman Cain finds himself tied for the lead in the GOP presidential nomination race with Mitt Romney, the man he endorsed last time around
THE VILLAGES, Fla. -- Sixty-year-old Susan Tubbs last week waited in line behind 200 people at a Barnes and Noble store, and when it was finally her turn, she held out her copy of This is Herman Cain and meekly voiced a desire to give the author a hug. In spite of his handler's insistence otherwise, presidential candidate Herman Cain halted the swift-moving line, slipped around the barricading booth, and hugged her.

"Sometimes I break the rules," Cain boomed with a toothy grin, pausing to allow a friend of Tubbs photograph the moment.

Indeed, Cain's candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination has broken the rules. When the former Godfather's Pizza executive formed a presidential exploratory committee in January, pundits immediately deemed him unelectable. He had never been elected to public office, his campaign lacked basic organizational infrastructure, and he was virtually unknown outside of business circles. But lately, Cain's long-shot campaign has afforded him many hugs, even more photo ops, and the satisfaction of proving the pundits wrong.

Quite a few Republicans, it seems, were yearning for a hug from a candidate, not with a long resume in government, but without the sort of Washington experience that they see at the root of the country's problems.

"Look at what just happened!" Tubbs gushed after her Cain embrace. "This guy's a real person. He's not a politician, and that's very important to me. But he's got the economic experience, and he says it like it is."

Establishment Republicans, who initially dismissed Cain's candidacy as a pipe dream, were jolted to attention last month, when Cain trounced Texas Gov. Rick Perry in the Florida GOP straw poll, 37 percent to 15 percent. In the last two weeks, he has placed either second or tied front-runner Mitt Romney in national polls, and he has attracted up to 1,000 people at this book-signings.

In a political climate driven largely by the tea party movement that once propelled Perry and Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., to the front of the pack, Cain's arrival in the top tier shouldn't be shocking.

Watch Herman Cain on Sunday's Face the Nation:

Last week, a Gallup poll showes that a record-high 81 percent of Americans are dissatisfied with the way the country is being governed. Florida straw poll participant Bonnie Benefield, of Gainesville, said she had just cast her vote for Cain for the same reason critics originally laughed him off.

"I think he's exactly who the founding fathers had in mind when they set up the office of the president," Benefield said. "He's a businessman; he's not a career politician. He understands what it's like to grow up in the U.S., and he understands what it's like to do business in America."

It's a line Cain himself uses to his advantage. In an interview with CBS News and National Journal last week, he said that he is "the only business problem-solver that's running for president of the United States.

"Now Mitt Romney tries to say that that's him," Cain said. "But see, he was a Wall Street executive. I was a Main Street executive. I've actually made pizzas, made hamburgers, cleaned restaurants, swept the parking lot, OK? I've done all that. I have been a hands-on business executive throughout my career, so I can better connect with people who are working for hourly wages. I can relate to the small businessman. Why? I have been one, and I'm still one."

His description of himself as a newcomer to politics is one of his best applause lines on the stump. At a Houston Junior League breakfast on Thursday, the crowd spontaneously burst into applause when Cain mentioned that he's never held public office. At one point, he told the crowd that he wasn't born "poor," he was born, "po'" - "We had to work our way up to poor," he said.

Later that day, Cain's book-signing event at Texas A&M University in College Station, Perry's alma mater, sold out, and drew 1,000 supporters.

Bobby Tyson, a 23-year-old from The Woodlands in Texas, said he was initially "excited" when Perry entered the race, but is now supporting Cain. "In terms of establishing a relationship with the tea party movement, I think that people really can relate to the fact that he's just an ordinary guy who's worked his way up from very humble beginnings," said Tyson, who added that he thinks the timing is right for a non-politician to chance a White House run.

"I think Barack Obama has actually done Herman Cain a lot of good, because he's woken up a lot of people who were busy working, ordinary Americans who were trying to provide for their families," he said. "So I think people can really relate with the fact that Herman Cain's never held public office before, and I think he's extremely electable."

In the 1980s, Cain worked his way up through the ranks at Pillsbury to manage more than 400 Burger King stores in the Philadelphia area. He turned the region's restaurants from the least profitable to the most profitable. Pillsbury then assigned Cain to turn around the flagging Godfather's Pizza, and within two years he had made the pizza chain profitable. Following a decade-long tenure at the chain's helm, Cain went on to host a talk radio show in Atlanta, called The Herman Cain Show.

"Here in Florida we realize he's a person, he's not a politician, and he's turned a lot of businesses around," said Sandy Russo, who was in line at The Villages book-signing. "I don't know why it's such an absurd idea that a businessman should be president when the economy looks like it does."

As Cain weaved his way through the bookcases to shake hands with the people who turned out at his College Station book-signing, one couple observed him from a distance as he joked with supporters and asked a group of A&M students about their football team's record this season.

"That's the most laid-back politician I've ever seen," the woman marveled. Her husband corrected her, "That's not a politician at all."