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Nov 1, 2015 18:17:23   #
oldroy wrote:
While the authorship of this is somewhat suspect (to put it mildly), it is rather amusing to speculate on how such a letter might be received!
Adopt a Terrorist ! This is BRILLIANT !
The Canadians know how to handle complaints. Here is an example. A Canadian female liberal wrote a lot of letters to the Canadian government, complaining about the treatment of captive insurgents (terrorists) being held in Afghanistan National Correctional System facilities. She demanded a response to her letter. She received back
the following reply:

National Defense Headquarters
M Gen George R. Pearkes Bldg., 15 NT
101 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa , ON K1A 0K2
Canada

Dear Concerned Citizen,

Thank you for your recent letter expressing your profound concern of treatment of the Taliban and Al Qaeda terrorists captured by Canadian Forces, who were subsequently transferred to the Afghanistan Government and are currently being held by Afghan officials in Afghanistan National Correctional System facilities.
Our administration takes these matters seriously and your opinions were heard loud and clear here in Ottawa . You will be pleased to learn, thanks to the concerns of citizens like yourself, we are creating a new department here at the Department of National Defense, to be called 'Liberals Accept Responsibility for Killers' program, or L.A.R.K. for short.
In accordance with the guidelines of this new program, we have decided, on a trial basis, to divert several terrorists and place them in homes of concerned citizens such as yourself, around the country, under those citizens personal care. Your personal detainee has been selected and is scheduled for transportation under heavily armed guard to your residence in Toronto next Monday .
Ali Mohammed Ahmed bin Mahmud is your detainee, and is to be cared for pursuant to the standards you personally demanded in your letter of complaint. You will be pleased to know that we will conduct weekly inspections to ensure that your standards of care for Ahmed are commensurate with your recommendations.
Although Ahmed is a sociopath and extremely violent, we hope that your sensitivity to what you described as his 'attitudinal problem' will help him overcome those character flaws. Perhaps you are correct in describing these problems as mere cultural differences. We understand that you plan to offer counseling and home schooling, however, we strongly recommend that you hire some assistant caretakers. Please advise any Jewish friends, neighbors or relatives about your house guest, as he might get agitated or even violent, but we are sure you can reason with him. He is also expert at making a wide variety of explosive devices from common household products, so you may wish to keep those items locked up, unless in your opinion, this might offend him.
Your adopted terrorist is extremely proficient in hand-to-hand combat and can extinguish human life with such simple items as a pencil or nail clippers. We advise that you do not ask him to demonstrate these skills either in your home or wherever you choose to take him while helping him adjust to life in our country.
Ahmed will not wish to interact with you or your daughters except sexually, since he views females as a form of property, thereby having no rights, including refusal of his sexual demands. This is a particularly sensitive subject for him.
You also should know that he has shown violent tendencies around women who fail to comply with the dress code that he will recommend as more appropriate attire. I'm sure you will come to enjoy the anonymity offered by the burka over time. Just remember that it is all part of 'respecting his culture and religious beliefs' as described in your letter.
You take good care of Ahmed and remember that we will try to have a counselor available to help you over any difficulties you encounter while Ahmed is adjusting to Canadian culture.
Thanks again for your concern. We truly appreciate it when folks like you keep us informed of the proper way to do our job and care for our fellow man. Good luck and God bless you.
Cordially,
Gordon O'Connor
Minister of National Defense
While the authorship of this is somewhat suspect (... (show quote)


It may be a sarcastic spoof but I think making it a reality would only be fair. Eh!
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Nov 1, 2015 18:09:43   #
ldsuttonjr wrote:
America's post-Constitutional culture
By William Smith
Published June 26, 2015
Conservatives seem stunned that the U.S. Supreme Court ignored the plain language of the ObamaCare statute and upheld the legality of the premium subsidies that will flow indefinitely as the nation’s newest entitlement. Their surprise is similar to the shock they express every time the GOP congressional leadership passes a pork-laden spending resolution that lasts through the end of the fiscal year, essentially denying budget hawks the opportunity to trim federal spending.
This march of federal spending is an entirely predictable outcome. As foreseen by Tocqueville in 1835, America has developed a post-constitutional culture in which citizens are transformed from independent citizens into weak dependents, fully reliant upon the dispensations and “protections” of government. The Supreme Court and the Congress are now largely infirm, fatally weakened by the growth of an Executive branch that provides ever-expanding dispensations and “protections.” The entitlement state has killed the separation of powers.
The fundamental goal of the Constitution’s authors was to ensure liberty; by separating the different powers of government they barred one branch of government from having all the tools to dominate the body politic. As James Madison wrote in Federalist #47: “The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands…may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.” Over the last 100 years, with the growth in the federal government, the Executive branch has accumulated powers so vast that Madison’s admonition has been reduced to an interesting historical artifact.
Justice Roberts’ opinion in King v. Burwell confirms Tocqueville’s prediction. He writes that the Court must uphold the statute because, to do otherwise, “would destabilize the individual insurance market”. In other words, federal benefits must flow no matter what the law actually says. In a feat of verbal gymnastics that would make a German philosopher blush, Roberts explains over many paragraphs that the language of the law is “ambiguous” when it is actually quite plain and simple. For the Court’s majority, it appears, protecting the flow of premium subsidies is what really matters, not the law. Roberts’ opinion claimed fidelity to the congressional statute when, in fact, he was simply protecting the political reputation of the Court by avoiding an assault on the entitlement culture.

The Roberts’ opinion is Tocqueville’s nightmare: the citizens of democracy will voluntarily give up their liberty, even to the point of ignoring constitutional prerogatives, in return for care from an all-powerful government.

And, there is now no area of American life in which the federal government does not claim the role of caretaker. It exists to make college education “affordable to all”, to dispense subsidized healthcare, to provide housing and mortgages, to furnish food and, yes, even cell phones. It secures access to “free” birth control for young women, and “protects” children against obesity by dictating the menu for school lunches.
This beneficence is not limited to the welfare state or the protection of lower-income people. Corporate lobbyists swarm Washington to access government largesse. Huge industry sectors – insurance, pharmaceuticals, transportation, construction, defense – are government dependents. As Goldman Sachs will tell you, the federal government’s beneficent interventions can put much money into the pockets of the wealthy. Telecommunications lobbyists help the government in directing the airwaves and Hollywood-backed environmental groups urge the government to increase dramatically the regulations of our food, water and air.
Eerily prescient, Tocqueville characterized the future of American government: “Above this race of men stands an immense and tutelary power, which takes upon itself alone to secure their gratifications, and to watch over their fate. That power is absolute, minute, regular, provident, and mild.”
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Because the Executive has emerged as the “immense and tutelary power”, the era of constitutional government has largely ended. The immensity of the Executive has transformed the Congress and the Judiciary into political irrelevancies who, despite their rhetoric, act primarily to grease the skids of the Executive’s so-called beneficent dispensations, protections and regulations.
Consider the role of Congress in a post-constitutional era. To the authors of the Constitution, the Legislative branch was potentially the most powerful and the most dangerous branch because of its close proximity to the populace. For this reason, certain precautions were taken to make the legislative branch less potent, such as creating a bi-cameral legislature, granting veto power to the president, and establishing judicial review.
In the post-constitutional order, however, the Legislative branch is largely powerless in the face of an Executive that is the fountainhead of popular gratifications. Even legislative leaders with large majorities are unable to utilize their overwhelming power of the purse to fight off the Executive. The Executive branch now stonewalls congressional investigations with impunity and blatantly ignores congressional statutes. In the face of breathtaking encroachments by the Executive, both Speaker Boehner and Majority Leader McConnell have publicly eschewed a “government shutdown.” They know the post-constitutional culture will not tolerate turning off the spigot of governmental largesse; they have surrendered their most powerful tool because they fear the new entitlement culture. Members of Congress want, above all, to win their next election.

Over the last century, Congress has abdicated the major powers it was given in Article I of the Constitution. The Federal Reserve coins money and manages the economy, not the Congress. Trade agreements with foreign nations are done by the Executive on a “fast track” with little input from Congress. The Constitution directs the Congress to “raise and support armies” and yet military base closure decisions are made by unelected commissions. The Congress is happy to let the President decide questions of war and peace; we have gone to war in Iraq again without a new resolution by Congress. And, of course, Article I provides Congress with the authority to “establish a uniform rule of naturalization”, i.e. to regulate immigration – res ipsa loquitor.
Congress is now the weakest branch. More importantly, Congress has intentionally enfeebled itself to get in on the game of spreading government largesse and protection. The deepest desire of the post-constitutional congressman is not to decide the great and important questions facing our nation such as war and peace, but rather to hold hearings on the menu for school lunches, to add new benefits under Medicare, or to issue yet another press release about a newly-funded bridge for the district. (My congressman recently communicated with me concerning household preparation for a storm, urging me to stock up with water, etc.) Congress, in short, is no longer a serious branch of government that grapples with the serious responsibilities it was given under the Constitution.
This is a now a cultural challenge, no longer one that our political or constitutional systems can address. The political unpopularity of government shutdowns should indicate to conservatives that our national culture is now firmly post-constitutional. Members of Congress and GOP presidential aspirants can hold hearings and press conferences, can appear on Fox News, and can criticize the Executive but what they cannot do --- what they will not do – is weaken the Executive’s role as the nation’s great benefactor.
Conservatives have “won” the Congress and lost the culture. The archetypical American of the 18th and 19th century-- independent, self-sufficient, resourceful -- is fading into history as a representative American is now more likely to be a bailed-out investment banker or the recipient of an “Obama phone”. Congressional leaders are therefore not obtuse in avoiding government shutdowns.
Now, consider the post-constitutional Judiciary. The latest ObamaCare decision cements the role of the Supreme Court as the Executive’s lap dog in the protection of government power, the plain text of the law notwithstanding.
Under our original constitutional system, the Judiciary would have seen its role as checking the excesses of an imperialist Congress or Executive.
Yet, the first time Chief Justice John Roberts faced the possibility that the Supreme Court would block the dispensation of healthcare benefits under the Affordable Care Act, he knew the culture would not tolerate a Court that placed constitutional principle in the way of government beneficence. Therefore, Roberts twisted himself into a constitutional pretzel in order to accede to the tutelary power of the Executive.
Now, despite the clear intent of the law -- that premium subsidies should operate like Medicaid with state buy-in – the Court again has chosen to protect the federal entitlement state and shirk the separation of powers. Even the FDR-era Supreme Court was cognizant of their constitutional responsibilities when they moved to block the growth of the Executive; like the Congress, the Roberts Court seems to see its primary role as the dispensation of entitlements and other benefits.
In this light, the Tea Party’s platform of returning to the “principles of the Founding” are poignant, but impossible. Truly returning to the principles of the Founding would require the dismantling of the entitlement state. The idea that the American “people” would support this dismantlement, in all its particularities, is a political fantasy. Leaders of both political parties have been adding entitlements, not dismantling them. The entire superstructure of the American political order is now built upon the benefit-dispensing and regulatory power of the federal government and no successful politician has seriously challenged this fact since the New Deal. Even President Reagan could create only a pause, not a reversal, of this trend; President George W. Bush, the last Republican president, accelerated the trend dramatically.
President Obama, on the other hand, knows quite well that we live in a post-constitutional culture. His entire political program is agnostic about what he would view as constitutional niceties. The Congress may huff and puff, make threats and bluster, but they are powerless in the face of the mega-state that is now the Executive branch. Without fear, the president can ignore congressional laws, laugh at their investigations, and launch political attacks on the Supreme Court as they deliberate. He knew, as Republicans voters did not, that the 2014 elections would change nothing and, over the long run, the Supreme Court will largely genuflect before the “tutelary power” of the Executive. Justice Roberts conceded, at the end of his opinion, when facing laws such as ObamaCare, the role of the Court is “more confined.” Mercy.
Tocqueville warned that American liberty would be threatened not by swashbuckling dictators and coup d’etats, but through the “soft” tyranny of a government that takes upon the role of national nanny, protecting the child-citizens from every potential adversity. With this latest Supreme Court decision, it is clear that we now reside firmly in the post-constitutional culture that Tocqueville predicted. Our constitutional republic is now passing over the horizon, what will replace it is yet to be seen.
America's post-Constitutional culture br By Willi... (show quote)


Mr. Smith has hit the proverbial nail squarely on the head. It remains to be seen if the last sound we hear, as free Americans, will be the gurgling of us going down the toilet or gunfire. To the Constitution. God bless America.
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Oct 30, 2015 22:54:01   #
archie bunker wrote:
Oops! :oops:


I am on my second SWMBO and I still do not get it right. It is too bad it is not like the old rancher and the mule.
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Oct 28, 2015 09:44:06   #
Hee Haw!!
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Oct 27, 2015 22:32:59   #
son of witless wrote:
The World Health Organization says that processed meats cause cancer.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonkblog/wp/2015/10/26/hot-dogs-bacon-and-other-processed-meats-cause-cancer-world-health-organization-declares/

So the UN attacks the US on Global Warming and now the WHO attacks us on meat, the production of which also causes Global freaking Warming. What to do?

Eat more bacon.


WHO you ask?? The relativistic hypocritical commie morons at the UN. Bacon shakes, bacon and huckleberry pancakes, bacon caramels, you name it. If it has bacon, yes. Or butter. Or rib eye beef. Dear UN morons, I hope you choke on your broccoli. You know, if we could scare up a little global warming, we could raise more beef and pork!!
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Oct 27, 2015 22:15:00   #
teaman wrote:
Full Of It


Hear, hear!!
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Oct 27, 2015 16:09:47   #
cephusbob wrote:
Maybe if you had been a teacher and had to spend a few hours with your kids behind a locked door, lying on the ground, you would have a different perspective. I have been in that situation several times when some loonie was at my school.



Richard if your school wasn't in a gun free zone maybe you wouldn't be spending so much time laying on the floor!


There are many common sense things one could say in support of our second amendment rights, however, what should always be said about gun grabbers is go ahead and lay on the floor, moron.
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Oct 27, 2015 09:05:17   #
paschn wrote:
http://www.tomatobubble.com/id918.html


Oh look, a squirrel. You ARE a fruitcake.
Love, ZF
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Oct 27, 2015 08:58:08   #
Richard94611 wrote:
Here is the text of a message I received from Dianne Feinstein in response to my urging that the gun laws be tightened (not that guns be taken away) and that gun ownership be much more greatly controlled, so the crazies out there don't go wandering into schools and shooting up students and teachers. And don't tell me that these crazies are not a problem. I have spent a number of hours several times on the floor in my classroom, along with twenty or thirty students, because someone with a gun was on school grounds or in the school building with one or more guns.

Dear Richard:

Thank you for writing to express your support for legislation to prevent gun violence. I appreciate hearing from you on this important topic, and welcome the opportunity to provide you with an update on the work I have been doing in the Senate to promote gun safety legislation.

I share your outrage about the seemingly endless litany of massacres committed in the United States each year as a result of easy access to firearms by criminals, mentally ill individuals, and others who seek to cause harm. From the murder of 20 students and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012 to the ongoing gang epidemic in our nation's cities, more must be done to stop these senseless acts of gun violence.

I have long supported measures to strengthen federal gun laws. I sponsored the Assault Weapons Ban that Congress passed into law in 1994. Unfortunately, the ban was allowed to expire in September 2004, despite my efforts to renew it in 2003, 2004, and 2005. Following the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School on December 14, 2012, in which the shooter used a Bushmaster 223 assault rifle, I introduced the "Assault Weapons Ban of 2013" (S. 150) to again reinstate the ban on assault weapons and high capacity ammunition magazines. I offered the bill as an amendment (SA 711) to the "Safe Communities, Safe Schools Act of 2013" (S. 649). Unfortunately, despite strong public support for the ban, the amendment was defeated by a vote of 40-60 on April 17, 2013.

I also supported an amendment (SA 715) to the "Safe Communities, Safe Schools Act of 2013" introduced by Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Pat Toomey (R-PA), which would have expanded background checks for firearm sales. Currently, a buyer is not required to undergo a background check when purchasing a gun from a private individual, including at a gun show or over the Internet. This amendment was not agreed to by a vote of 54-46, as the threat of filibuster required it to receive 60 votes to be adopted.

You may be interested to know that, in the current Congress, I am the lead cosponsor of the "Gun Violence Intervention Act" (S.1977), which Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) introduced on August 5, 2015. The bill would allow a family member or close associate of a dangerous individual to apply for an order prohibiting that individual from possessing a firearm. Under this legislation, if the dangerous individual has a firearm in his possession, the court would issue a warrant ordering the temporary seizure of all firearms owned by the individual. Additionally, the bill would require that, whenever law enforcement conducts a wellness check on an individual, officers check whether any firearms or ammunition are registered to the individual, if a state maintains such databases. The "Gun Violence Intervention Act" has been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which I am a member.

I also support efforts to improve the submission of records to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System in order to make it more difficult for individuals prohibited from possessing a firearm under federal law, such as felons and domestic abusers, to access guns.

Please know I greatly appreciate your support for strengthening our nation's gun laws, and will be sure to keep your thoughts in mind should the Senate consider gun safety legislation in the future.

Again, thank you for writing. Your continued involvement in gun safety issues is critical to our success. Should you have any additional questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact my Washington, D.C. office at (202) 224-3841.

Sincerely yours,


Dianne Feinstein
United States Senator
Here is the text of a message I received from Dian... (show quote)


Relativistic hypocritical commie moron.
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Oct 27, 2015 08:52:31   #
Elwood wrote:
Going the e-mail rounds. :evil:


The one thing he said which was not a lie. Do you realize that over half of your neighbors agree with this POS. Ah, the power of free (ha ha) stuff. I am not able to invest in gold or silver because I am investing in copper coated lead. The Constitution is black letter law. Long live the Second Amendment.
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Oct 15, 2015 09:19:25   #
Big Bass wrote:
"In Chaos Theory, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on
initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic,
nonlinear system can result in large differences in a larger state." In
other words, a butterfly flapping its wings in Texas can cause a typhoon in
the Japanese Sea later.

Think about it, in mid-20th Century America , an 18 year old hippie,
freshman slut in a Honolulu college had sex with an older, alcoholic Kenyan
politician on a student visa, who had a wife and child back in Africa. And
from this "roll in the hay" comes the collapse and dissolution of the United
States of America in the 21st Century.

Interesting isn't it. It makes you a firm believer in the "butterfly
effect."
"In Chaos Theory, the butterfly effect is the... (show quote)



Interesting concept, it would make a great movie. Oh, never mind, it is really happening. Ha.
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Oct 15, 2015 09:11:56   #
Yuk cubed!!
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Oct 6, 2015 08:48:57   #
Raylan Wolfe wrote:
Democrats say they intend to release the all of Cheryl Mills testimony which the Republicans have cherry picked to spread lies!

http://www.politicususa.com/2015/10/05/democrats-give-republicans-taste-medicine-setting-benghazi-record-straight.html

The Republicans smear campaign against Hillary will be exposed!


Relativistic commie troll.
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Oct 4, 2015 20:23:30   #
ldsuttonjr wrote:
Sunday morning Oct 4 2015; Bill tried to cheer up Hillary this by reminding her that even Nelson Mandela wasnt elected president until after he had served 27 years in
prison. Go Figure!


'Yeeehah' Powder River, let her buck!!
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Oct 4, 2015 11:03:53   #
It is good to laugh at idiocy where ever you find it. Fine batch of toons today. Snicker!
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