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Willingness to Fight Obama...
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Nov 21, 2014 17:55:53   #
Brian Devon
 
Hemiman wrote:
It's good that your president is now sending our troops back to Iraq,to deal with ISIL.



*********
Two things.

1.He is OUR president...that's how it works in a Democracy. He stops being our president on Jan. 20, 2017.

2. I, like many progressives, do not agree with the U.S. revisiting the quicksands of Iraq. It's a fools errand that will only result in failure as it always does in the middle east.

3. The only wise thing to do in regard to the middle east is stay the hell out. You don't go camping in places infested with rattlesnakes---you just keep away---period.

Reply
Nov 21, 2014 18:00:34   #
Hemiman Loc: Communist California
 
Brian Devon wrote:
*********
Two things.

1.He is OUR president...that's how it works in a Democracy. He stops being our president on Jan. 20, 2017.

2. I, like many progressives, do not agree with the U.S. revisiting the quicksands of Iraq. It's a fools errand that will only result in failure as it always does in the middle east.

3. The only wise thing to do in regard to the middle east is stay the hell out. You don't go camping in places infested with rattlesnakes---you just keep away---period.
********* br Two things. br br 1.He is OUR presid... (show quote)


What do you do when they show up at your front door with a machete and a pole.

Reply
Nov 21, 2014 18:21:05   #
Brian Devon
 
Hemiman wrote:
What do you do when they show up at your front door with a machete and a pole.




************
You acknowledge you have been listening to way too much Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Mark Levin and all the other chickenhawk losers on AM hate radio and Fox......and then you acknowledge that it is now messing up your sleep and giving you stupid make-believe dreams of scary, brown people with machetes.

Reply
Nov 21, 2014 20:18:57   #
vernon
 
Brian Devon wrote:
**********
Isis is just the latest flavor boogeyman, preceded by Al Quaida, the Taliban, the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, etc., etc

These ever-changing boogeymen are how the defense contractors keep the billion dollar payments coming for their latest killing toys.

The Muslims have been brutally slaughtering each other since long before the United States became a nation. Why the sudden interest in the middle east in the 20th century?

Our interest in that part of the world, coincidentally intensified, right around the time of American peak oil in 1972.

The U.S. could give two shits about homicidal tyrants if they don't have a resource we want or aren't strategically located.

Idi Amin, in Uganda, slaughtered millions. The U.S. reaction---crickets.

Saudis lop off arms and heads of "heathen" and adulterers with frightening regularity. The U.S. just shrugs. Why? Because we have the type of oil relationship with the Saudis that we want.

Saddam Hussein's biggest problem was that he wanted a type of oil economy that wasn't operated on terms favorable to the U.S.

You really believe we would give a rat's ass about ISIS if they:

1. Couldn't be used as bait to drain the American taxpayers dry for more armaments.

2. The main export of Iraq were OLIVE OIL instead of fossil fuel oil.

Give me a break. The problem with rightwingers is that they think everyone is as stupid and gullible as they are.
********** br Isis is just the latest flavor booge... (show quote)


you are one screwed up american hater, like said hiter wasent all bad.

Reply
Nov 21, 2014 21:03:48   #
Hemiman Loc: Communist California
 
Brian Devon wrote:
************
You acknowledge you have been listening to way too much Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Mark Levin and all the other chickenhawk losers on AM hate radio and Fox......and then you acknowledge that it is now messing up your sleep and giving you stupid make-believe dreams of scary, brown people with machetes.


No answer,maybe you could slap their face and demand they go away,or you could threaten to call OBAMA.

Reply
Nov 21, 2014 23:36:58   #
squirrelmender Loc: Florida
 
Don G. Dinsdale wrote:
I'm sending this to you who are a little "Left of Center", not to convert you, I don't think I have the words for that, and I think we need the balance of "Left & Right & Center" to make America work the way the founders has intended... John Adams & Thomas Jefferson were at opposite ends of the then political spectrum, as some of you and I are now but they and you and I have found a way to correspond and remain sivile most of the time... No the reason I'm sending this to you so you can grasp just how concerned the "We the People" on the "Right" are... Don D.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tea Party News


Friend(s) --

There are some things that cut so deep that the ensuing pain that shoots through me is unbearable. Just thinking about it makes my pulse race, sweat beads on my skin and I gasp for air. It's as if the walls are closing in and I'm trapped, can't get out.

That's what happens to me when I think about what Obama has done to our military. The fear—thinking about what will become of us because of his actions—is absolutely paralyzing.

His actions have been converted but methodical and utterly diabolical. No one noticed at first. Then one day we realized this sick, twisted man had systematically destroyed something so critical to America—our lives, our safety, our freedom—it ripped through us like a jagged knife.

Folks, our military is now unrecognizable. And yet only the Tea Party has the guts to speak out.

We see how Obama is destroying America and we refuse to sit quietly.

This man we are ashamed to call president took our armed forces apart apart piece by piece, little by little so no one would notice until it was too late.

Suddenly, out of nowhere, 200 of our military's top generals were gone. Obama took them out.

Then he took out those under the generals. Anyone who dared to speak out against his rabid actions was suddenly demoted for no reason or worse, relieved of duty or stripped of their pension.

If they dared to defy the Commander in Chief, punishment would come swiftly. Trumped up charges and allegations of gross misconduct would appear out of thin air with no basis.

Finally, our military men and women from all branches went silent. They became afraid to speak out.

The writing on the wall had never been as clear as it is now. You go against Obama and you're done.

Well guess what? TOUGH!

We love our military and We the Tea Party are not afraid to stand up and speak out! We are the only ones with the guts to do it.

And I can tell you that even though we took control of the Senate and the House Obama is not going down without a fight.

Already he's stepping up his efforts. Getting more radical and rabid. The Republicans are playing it tepid so it is up to us, the Tea Party, to keep pressing hard.

We are the only ones fighting and not backing down. We are the only ones with the guts to speak out and speak the truth:

OBAMA IS DESTROYING AMERICA AND MUST GO!

We want Obama out in the worst way and we are not afraid to stand and fight. Will you stand with us, united in our effort to rid the Oval Office of this vile and putrid plague?

As if all of this were not bad enough, Obama cut the military's funding. Trillions of dollars wiped from the Pentagon budget.

Our military men and women on the front lines, facing heavily armed opposition and terrorists, have been left helpless...without the budgets they do not have the proper weapons and arms to fight and defend themselves or our country.

Obama has gone so far as to not only take away their weapons but the freedom of religion. Yes folks, no more crosses or Bibles lest they upset the Muslims in the Middle East.

This is an outrage! Utterly despicable.

Tomahawk and Hellfire missiles are being wiped out. These are the big guns of the military—these missiles are a major part of our defense systems.

These are the missiles that protect us from terrorists! In 2016 the Tomahawk missiles will become extinct—annihilated from our country's arsenal.

And the Hellfire missiles? Gone by next year.

What's Obama expect our military to do? Fight like wussies with a pen and a phone?

He might as well put up a billboard inviting our enemies to feast on American blood.

I'm fuming - seething with anger. This has to stop!

If you agree then stand with me. Do something right now to end this bloody siege on our military.

Call your Representatives and Senators and Email then and even fax them, tell them we voted on the 5th for men and women with the "guts" to stand and fight.

I have a team ready to storm Washington with demands that our military be restored and our country protected from terrorists that sit in waiting, looking for just the right moment.

We are also working "underground" with top retired military generals and officers to strategize our takedown of the Obama regime.

One of the things that shakes me to the core is knowing how Obama has committed an all-out assault on our military since the day he took office. First he shredded their ranks and then their dignity.

It has all been part of a cold and calculated strategy to bring America to her knees. While he was doing that he created his own shadow army.

The Obama army has loaded up on weapons, arms and munitions, tanks, body armor and body bags! The horror of it all is hard to swallow.

He is just waiting for the right moment to declare Martial law. And who will we have to defend us?

Please, I beg you to help us stop these atrocities to our "War-Fighters" your help will make a huge difference in how far we can advance in our efforts and how much we can do every hour of every day.

Without your help we fail. Then imagine what will happen. I shudder at the thought.

Right now, as I speak to you he is still destroying what little is left of our military. He is not taking any chances that his plan will fail.

Why else would be send our troops into the Ebola-stricken areas—the hottest of the hot spots? Our military was not created for missions of mercy. That's why we have the Red Cross and Doctors without Borders.

It doesn't add up—unless you know what evil lurks within him. What's absolutely sickening is that he is demonizing and demoralizing our soldiers and will make them the enemy when they return with Ebola.

With the top generals out and their supporting staff gone, Obama knows our military is just too weak to fight.

But we're not and we refuse to sit back and watch this happen!

Now I want you to put all the pieces together:

Our military is purged...Obama and the Dems are still on an all-out assault to grab our guns.

Then there is the 24/7 NSA spying...the witch hunt by the IRS...the outrageous spending (new reports show he is the most expensive president in the history of America)...the egregious violations of our Constitutional rights...utter disregard for the Rule of Law...and bashing of our military.

Enough is enough!

Will you stand with us and fight these atrocities?

Will you back our military? Or will you back the bus over them?

Do you have the guts to do what it takes?

Steve Eichler - Tea Party
I'm sending this to you who are a little "Lef... (show quote)

I'm a woman from the old USA, can't stand Obammy, never voted for him and always knew what he is all about. With that being said I have no military training but, I stand with the TP and all the generals in an all out assault on the fraud administration. In two years we won't have any rights or freedoms and will have to salute him instead Of the flag. " I'll die first"

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 00:05:57   #
Constitutional libertarian Loc: St Croix National Scenic River Way
 
Brian Devon wrote:
************
You acknowledge you have been listening to way too much Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Mark Levin and all the other chickenhawk losers on AM hate radio and Fox......and then you acknowledge that it is now messing up your sleep and giving you stupid make-believe dreams of scary, brown people with machetes.


This is my answer to your liberal anti military industrial economy. Be sure to actually think about what it says the administration decided it's policy was going to be back in 2012.

Even you know that you cannot keep the peace from a position of weakness or vulnerability.

Issue Brief #4190 on Missile Defense
April 2, 2014
Tomahawk Cancellation an Error of Defense Strategy and Alliance Policy
By Steven P. Bucci, Ph.D. and Theodore R. Bromund, Ph.D.

8
Print PDF
Earlier this month, the U.S. Navy announced that it will stop buying Tomahawk cruise missiles in fiscal year (FY) 2016 and will seek to field a replacement within a decade.
This decision is an error of both defense strategy and alliance policy. Congress should reject the Navy’s plans and require that it continue to buy a sufficient number of Tomahawks annually to keep production lines open and unit costs affordable until a replacement can be effectively deployed into service and until Britain and Australia (which use or plan to use the Tomahawk), after close consultation with the U.S., are satisfied that the replacement will affordably offer them capabilities that are equivalent or superior to those of the Tomahawk.
U.S. Navy Plans to End Tomahawk Purchases
On March 4, Navy spokeswoman Lieutenant Caroline Hutcheson publicly confirmed that the Navy had made substantial reductions in the number of Tomahawks it planned to purchase.[1]
In FY 2014, the Navy bought 196 Tomahawks, but in its proposed budget for FY 2015, the Navy plans to buy only 100 missiles and none thereafter. Instead, it will shift investment to a next-generation system and, beginning in FY 2019, will establish a recertification program for its stockpile of approximately 4,000 missiles.
In a March 27 hearing, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus argued that “the supply of Tomahawks that we have today that have been manufactured are sufficient … [to] carry us through any eventuality that we can foresee.” Senator John McCain (R–AZ) expressed surprise at the decision, describing it as “really rolling the dice … when we haven’t even begun the assessment of what that new weapon would look like.”[2]
Implications of Navy Plans for U.S. Defense and Industrial Base
The Navy’s plans raise four serious issues for the United States:
The argument that the existing stockpile of Tomahawks is ample because it is large enough for “any eventuality that we can foresee” ignores the fact that most U.S. military operations are not foreseen. In 1999, during the Kosovo campaign, missile stockpile levels were critically low due to heavy expenditures in the previous years. In 2003, coalition forces fired more than 725 missiles in the opening phases of the Iraq War—one-third of the entire inventory.[3] These precedents make it clear that it is imprudent to end production of a vital weapons system on the grounds that the future can be foreseen with sufficient clarity to know that no further purchases will be needed.
While the Navy’s budget proposal allocates funds to maintain the industrial base for unplanned maintenance before the FY 2019 recertification program, the specialized component suppliers and the skilled personnel necessary for maintenance are unlikely to survive the proposed 98 percent decline in the program’s budget from FY 2014 to FY 2018, especially since the manufacturer's legal responsibility for ensuring that the Tomahawk works ends when production ends.
The Navy has argued that foreign military sales would help “sustain the Tomahawk industrial base” to FY 2019, but, to date, Britain is the only other nation that has purchased the Tomahawk.[4] It is a rule of defense production that unit cost decreases as production increases. With only British purchases to keep the program going, the cost of the Tomahawk would rise substantially, as it will start to do in FY 2015 as U.S. purchases shrink. Moreover, the Navy has contradicted itself by asserting that the costs of winding down the Tomahawk program assume that foreign sales “are no longer viable.”[5]
Any replacement for the Tomahawk is still years from deployment. The Navy announced on March 26 that its goal is to develop new missiles “for delivery around 2024.” New weapons systems are regularly subject to delays. It is possible—even likely—that the new missile will not enter service until well after 2024. Even if the 2024 deadline is met, the new missile will not be available in sufficient quantities to address service requirements until well after that date. In either case, the U.S.’s stockpile of Tomahawks runs even greater risks of being inadequate.
The decision to terminate the Tomahawk program is particularly perplexing given the Administration’s own decision in its 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance to reduce the size of U.S. forces so that they cannot “conduct large-scale, prolonged stability operations.”[6] The implication of this policy is that U.S. reliance on stand-off weapons like the Tomahawk will only increase.
Implications of Navy Plans for Alliance Policy
On March 26, speaking at an event at The Heritage Foundation, U.K. Defense Secretary Philip Hammond dismissed concern over the future of the Tomahawk program:
Very fortuitously, The Washington Post tweeted this morning about Tomahawk being … zeroed out.… [S]ince I was at the Pentagon [this morning], I took the opportunity to ask, and I was told that there is no such decision, that budgets in that level of detail for 2016 have not yet been published and any such suggestion must be speculation at this stage.[7]
The Navy’s published budget, the statement of Secretary Mabus, and the Navy’s public comments dating as far back as March 4—three weeks before Secretary Hammond’s speech—make it clear that the fate of the Tomahawk program is not speculation. It is difficult to understand why he was told otherwise.
It appears that Britain has not been consulted about the fate of the Tomahawk program. Since its entire attack submarine fleet has been fitted to fire this missile, this lack of consultation, like the U.S. cancelation of the Skybolt missile system in 1962, is a serious breach by the U.S. of its responsibilities to its closest ally.
It is true that the U.S. could sell Tomahawks to Britain from its stockpile, but Britain might be unwilling to invest in a system with a fading defense industrial base behind it. Moreover, the unexpected U.S. decision to end the program means that Britain will now have to contemplate the retrofit of its attack submarine fleet, at considerable expense, to fire an entirely new missile.
The Royal Australian Navy may also be surprised by the U.S. decision, as it is currently completing three destroyers equipped with Tomahawk-capable launch systems. The Australian government’s incorporation of this capability has also been jeopardized by the Navy’s actions.[8]
Continue Tomahawk Production
All weapons eventually go out of service, but it is only sensible not to end production of one weapon until its replacement is ready. This is particularly true when the weapon in question is a mainstay of both U.S. forces and the forces of the U.S.’s closest allies. British and Australian dependence on continued U.S. production imposes a serious responsibility on the U.S. that it should not shirk.
There are good reasons to be wary of congressional micromanagement of defense acquisition,[9] but Congress has a vital role to play in correcting policy errors made by the executive branch. Because of its impact on U.S. security and on the alliance with the U.K., the decision to terminate the Tomahawk program is such an error, one that should be corrected by a congressional decision to continue Tomahawk production until a replacement can be effectively deployed into U.S. and allied service.
—Steven P. Bucci, PhD, is Director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign and National Security Policy and Ted R. Bromund, PhD, is Senior Research Fellow in Anglo–American Relations in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, divisions of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. The authors thank Emil Maine, Research Assistant in the Davis Institute, for his assistance.
Show references in this report

Reply
 
 
Nov 22, 2014 01:22:45   #
Brian Devon
 
[quote=Constitutional libertarian]This is my answer to your liberal anti military industrial economy. Be sure to actually think about what it says the administration decided it's policy was going to be back in 2012.

Even you know that you cannot keep the peace from a position of weakness or vulnerability.

Issue Brief #4190 on Missile Defense
April 2, 2014
Tomahawk Cancellation an Error of Defense Strategy and Alliance Policy
By Steven P. Bucci, Ph.D. and Theodore R. Bromund, Ph.D.

8
Print PDF
Earlier this month, the U.S. Navy announced that it will stop buying Tomahawk cruise missiles in fiscal year (FY) 2016 and will seek to field a replacement within a decade.
This decision is an error of both defense strategy and alliance policy. Congress should reject the Navy’s plans and require that it continue to buy a sufficient number of Tomahawks annually to keep production lines open and unit costs affordable until a replacement can be effectively deployed into service and until Britain and Australia (which use or plan to use the Tomahawk), after close consultation with the U.S., are satisfied that the replacement will affordably offer them capabilities that are equivalent or superior to those of the Tomahawk.
U.S. Navy Plans to End Tomahawk Purchases
On March 4, Navy spokeswoman Lieutenant Caroline Hutcheson publicly confirmed that the Navy had made substantial reductions in the number of Tomahawks it planned to purchase.[1]
In FY 2014, the Navy bought 196 Tomahawks, but in its proposed budget for FY 2015, the Navy plans to buy only 100 missiles and none thereafter. Instead, it will shift investment to a next-generation system and, beginning in FY 2019, will establish a recertification program for its stockpile of approximately 4,000 missiles.
In a March 27 hearing, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus argued that “the supply of Tomahawks that we have today that have been manufactured are sufficient … [to] carry us through any eventuality that we can foresee.” Senator John McCain (R–AZ) expressed surprise at the decision, describing it as “really rolling the dice … when we haven’t even begun the assessment of what that new weapon would look like.”[2]
Implications of Navy Plans for U.S. Defense and Industrial Base
The Navy’s plans raise four serious issues for the United States:
The argument that the existing stockpile of Tomahawks is ample because it is large enough for “any eventuality that we can foresee” ignores the fact that most U.S. military operations are not foreseen. In 1999, during the Kosovo campaign, missile stockpile levels were critically low due to heavy expenditures in the previous years. In 2003, coalition forces fired more than 725 missiles in the opening phases of the Iraq War—one-third of the entire inventory.[3] These precedents make it clear that it is imprudent to end production of a vital weapons system on the grounds that the future can be foreseen with sufficient clarity to know that no further purchases will be needed.
While the Navy’s budget proposal allocates funds to maintain the industrial base for unplanned maintenance before the FY 2019 recertification program, the specialized component suppliers and the skilled personnel necessary for maintenance are unlikely to survive the proposed 98 percent decline in the program’s budget from FY 2014 to FY 2018, especially since the manufacturer's legal responsibility for ensuring that the Tomahawk works ends when production ends.
The Navy has argued that foreign military sales would help “sustain the Tomahawk industrial base” to FY 2019, but, to date, Britain is the only other nation that has purchased the Tomahawk.[4] It is a rule of defense production that unit cost decreases as production increases. With only British purchases to keep the program going, the cost of the Tomahawk would rise substantially, as it will start to do in FY 2015 as U.S. purchases shrink. Moreover, the Navy has contradicted itself by asserting that the costs of winding down the Tomahawk program assume that foreign sales “are no longer viable.”[5]
Any replacement for the Tomahawk is still years from deployment. The Navy announced on March 26 that its goal is to develop new missiles “for delivery around 2024.” New weapons systems are regularly subject to delays. It is possible—even likely—that the new missile will not enter service until well after 2024. Even if the 2024 deadline is met, the new missile will not be available in sufficient quantities to address service requirements until well after that date. In either case, the U.S.’s stockpile of Tomahawks runs even greater risks of being inadequate.
The decision to terminate the Tomahawk program is particularly perplexing given the Administration’s own decision in its 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance to reduce the size of U.S. forces so that they cannot “conduct large-scale, prolonged stability operations.”[6] The implication of this policy is that U.S. reliance on stand-off weapons like the Tomahawk will only increase.
Implications of Navy Plans for Alliance Policy
On March 26, speaking at an event at The Heritage Foundation, U.K. Defense Secretary Philip Hammond dismissed concern over the future of the Tomahawk program:
Very fortuitously, The Washington Post tweeted this morning about Tomahawk being … zeroed out.… [S]ince I was at the Pentagon [this morning], I took the opportunity to ask, and I was told that there is no such decision, that budgets in that level of detail for 2016 have not yet been published and any such suggestion must be speculation at this stage.[7]
The Navy’s published budget, the statement of Secretary Mabus, and the Navy’s public comments dating as far back as March 4—three weeks before Secretary Hammond’s speech—make it clear that the fate of the Tomahawk program is not speculation. It is difficult to understand why he was told otherwise.
It appears that Britain has not been consulted about the fate of the Tomahawk program. Since its entire attack submarine fleet has been fitted to fire this missile, this lack of consultation, like the U.S. cancelation of the Skybolt missile system in 1962, is a serious breach by the U.S. of its responsibilities to its closest ally.
It is true that the U.S. could sell Tomahawks to Britain from its stockpile, but Britain might be unwilling to invest in a system with a fading defense industrial base behind it. Moreover, the unexpected U.S. decision to end the program means that Britain will now have to contemplate the retrofit of its attack submarine fleet, at considerable expense, to fire an entirely new missile.
The Royal Australian Navy may also be surprised by the U.S. decision, as it is currently completing three destroyers equipped with Tomahawk-capable launch systems. The Australian government’s incorporation of this capability has also been jeopardized by the Navy’s actions.[8]
Continue Tomahawk Production
All weapons eventually go out of service, but it is only sensible not to end production of one weapon until its replacement is ready. This is particularly true when the weapon in question is a mainstay of both U.S. forces and the forces of the U.S.’s closest allies. British and Australian dependence on continued U.S. production imposes a serious responsibility on the U.S. that it should not shirk.
There are good reasons to be wary of congressional micromanagement of defense acquisition,[9] but Congress has a vital role to play in correcting policy errors made by the executive branch. Because of its impact on U.S. security and on the alliance with the U.K., the decision to terminate the Tomahawk program is such an error, one that should be corrected by a congressional decision to continue Tomahawk production until a replacement can be effectively deployed into U.S. and allied service.
—Steven P. Bucci, PhD, is Director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign and National Security Policy and Ted R. Bromund, PhD, is Senior Research Fellow in Anglo–American Relations in the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, divisions of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation. The authors thank Emil Maine, Research Assistant in the Davis Institute, for his assistance.
Show references in this report[/quote]





***********
I voted for President Obama twice. I strongly favor a sharp down-sizing of the military and a simultaneous increase in emphasis upon affordable health care for all. We have very different values. Where I live, I am the norm in a very liberal, well educated, very green, non-militaristic, university town.

I am thankful that I am not surrounded by neighbors who think and vote like you. There are advantages to living in a very blue town in a very blue state.

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 01:26:32   #
Hemiman Loc: Communist California
 
Brian Devon wrote:
***********
I voted for our president twice. I strongly favor a sharp down-sizing of the military and a simultaneous increase in affordable health care for all. We have very different values. Where I live, I am the norm in a very liberal, well educated university town.

I am thankful that I am not surrounded by neighbors who think and vote like you. There are advantages to living in a very blue state.


You also eat shit and draw flies and normal people don't want to be around you either.

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 01:31:29   #
America Only Loc: From the right hand of God
 
Brian Devon wrote:
**********
Nuclear arms changed everything. What is the firepower of the combined ships on your list compared to one Trident submarine?

Old conservatives (and old generals and old admirals) are always fighting the last war---from their couches (and now, keyboards).


The child molester has spoken.....

Leave the USA you communistic pile....scum bags like you do not deserve any freedoms of the USA...and aside from that...anyone like you that can go bragging about what you do to your own children, should be sent to the gas chamber....or worse.

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 01:37:10   #
America Only Loc: From the right hand of God
 
Brian Devon wrote:
************
You acknowledge you have been listening to way too much Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage, Mark Levin and all the other chickenhawk losers on AM hate radio and Fox......and then you acknowledge that it is now messing up your sleep and giving you stupid make-believe dreams of scary, brown people with machetes.


You have been listening to way too much "Pedophile Pete" and have concluded that due to your not being sent to prison yet for the crimes you have done against your own family members as well as other innocent children, that you should be sleeping with such stupid make-believe dreams that you will not ever be arrested, but you should know that brown, white, asian, mexican people with machetes desire to chop off your head for the vile and obscene crimes you commit against children.

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 06:08:00   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
OR we could really make a difference and cart our sweet selves right to the White House yard, encircle it with millions of people DEMANDING ARREST and REMOVAL, NOW, not later...Come to think about it, we may have to find out what golf course he's on instead!!!

U.S. Tom Coburn told USA Today that if President Obama violates the U.S. Constitution and grants amnesty to illegal aliens, the reaction to his executive order may turn violent.

“The country’s going to go nuts, because they’re going to see it as a move outside the authority of the president, and it’s going to be a very serious situation,” Coburn said. “You’re going to see — hopefully not — but you could see instances of anarchy. … You could see violence.”

Currently there is a call for patriot groups to protest at the White House. Activist and U.S. Marine Manny Vega told Guerilla Media host Pete Santilli that “…we will use our 1st Amendment in front of the White House but we have backup, we got the 2nd Amendment behind us.”

“This is real. This is going on. We are going to the White house. This will be a peaceful assembly but we will be aggressive. We will be loud and apply the pressure so Obama will resign.”

“This is a critical moment in our history. We will go there and we will demand Obama to resign; that his entire administration resign including Vice President Joe Biden. We will give them an ultimatum. If they do not, we will conduct a citizens arrest,” said Vega.

http://benswann.com/sen-coburn-you-could-see-instances-of-anarchy-you-could-see-violence-armed-patriots-headed-to-white-house-to-arrest-obama/

Reply
Nov 22, 2014 10:14:54   #
vernon
 
Brian Devon wrote:
**********
If half the military budget were spent on affordable apartments, our seniors would not have to recycle cans to pay the rent. Is this the way you think it should be? Really?

A lot of other nations prefer that this not be the life of their oldest citizens---and they are smart enough to not waste limited resources on the war machine---and instead devote those funds to necessary social services.



ive been retired fot over 20 yrs.i have never missed a days work except for trips.i dont need or want an apartment furnished to me by the theft of govt.and thats all it is the govt stealing of others labors.and if you forget the main function of the fed govt is national defence

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