Friday, November 28, 2008

Some Politically Incorrect Thoughts from VDH

I found this on several sites, finally checked it out. Don't miss the comments, they contain some priceless reminders that PDS (Palin Derangement Syndrome) hasn't been wiped out.

The memes about dumb Republican rich kids and stupid "trailer trash" seem to be immortal. No silver stake through the heart of them can stop their inexorable zombie stagger throughout the American media. If we are to believe the myths, Republicans have a diseugenic breeding program whereby smart parents give birth to morons, who, nonetheless, manage, through family endowments and legacy admissions, to attend the finest schools. No such devious strategies are needed to taint the intellectual accomplishments of the white poor - despite inability to benefit from Affirmative Action policies or parental arm-twisting of college admissions, they somehow manage to stumble into those non-Ivy institutions known as state schools, and, through unknown means, graduate.

Not that any education does them good; any accomplishments pale in comparison to the Liberal Elite's most mundane jobs.

Sarah Palin's work as Mayor and Governor? Piffle.
Hillary, Obama, Pelosi - Great, FABULOUS - just don't ask for specific accomplishments.

Own a profitable business that employs many people at fair wages (think Walmart)? REALLY bad.
Own a failing, subsidized alternative energy business (hopefully not actually selling anything tangible - carbon credits are SO 21st Century)? REALLY good. Particularly when your name is Kennedy or something spiffy like that.

Run a profitable media company (Rush)? Bad.
Run a failing media company (NYT)? Good.

It's all in the nuance, 'ya see.

Lori Drew Case

This is a tough one.  The crimes that she was convicted of are misdemeanors; in fairness, she isn't guilty of greater crimes.

That having been said, what is the appropriate punishment for Ms. Drew?

Public shunning.

Yeah, I know we don't really do that anymore - more's the pity.  But, this case is the perfect example of how community pressure would be the best response.

Anywhere she is, people should walk out of - restaurants, schools, churches, anywhere.  The proper response is total silence - for the rest of her life, if she continues to be unrepentant.  It's the Amish solution, and, the fact of the matter is, it works.

Will her kids also suffer?  Probably.  Perhaps that will be the goad she needs to finally have a "come to Jesus" moment.

Sending her to jail will simply reinforce her self-centered, I'm-the-victim-here attitude.  Instead, deliver the day-to-day reminders that her behavior was childish, careless, and unacceptable in an adult society.

Will that change her?  I wouldn't count on it.  But, it's still the right thing to do.
Blogged with the Flock Browser

Working on an Old PC

I just got my old PC back, after an extended time in the repair shop (OK, the problem was 2-fold - lack of money to fix it, and the fact that it was in Cleveland, and I'm in SC).  My dear SIL, who is a hardware genius - are you reading this? - did it on his own limited time, for a favor.  It truly was a Thankful Holiday, as I now have access to 2 laptops, 1 Mac, and 1 PC.  It comes in handy for those times when you need to access certain types of software (such as in the classroom.  I use some science software that is only available in PC).

It's different.  I find I'm trying to use some shortcuts that aren't on a PC.  Much of the software needed updating.  In browsers, some bookmarks aren't there.  It's kind of disorienting.

One task I'm planning on next week is moving the pictures, documents, pdfs, and movies to an external hard drive.  I've been meaning to do that for a while, but now I have greater motivation.
Blogged with the Flock Browser

Alleged Terrorists?

This Power Line post spotlights an issue that I've long been annoyed about - the propensity of the Old Media (OM) to misrepresent reality in an effort to be "fair":
This kind of silly political correctness infects reporters and news services world-wide. They think they're being scrupulous--the man hasn't been convicted of being a gunman yet!--when in fact they're just being foolish. But the irrational conviction that nothing can be known unless it has been determined by a court and jury isn't just silly, it's dangerous.
Call a spade a spade - and an armed terrorist just that.

What He Said

There's a lively discussion on The NextRight blogs about the future of the Republican Party.

Well, actually, there's a raging policy discussion everywhere you find 2 Republicans gathered together - nobody likes to lose, and we all are pretty much agreed that there are some systemic changes that need to be made.

But what changes? Soren Dayton has a post indicating that the cure will include more bottom-up activity - in other words, listen to the "little people".

Whether you like Sarah Palin or not, it's clear that her extraordinary ability to relate to that group is unparalleled. The party needs to capitalize on that by using her in the national headquarters (no, I don't think she needs to be the head - she has a state to run). But, whoever gets the job of leader of the RNC needs to have her number on his/her speed dial. Set up a national series of meetings over the next 2 years. That'll have two results:

  • She can raise the money for some local committees. That will help build the locals, provide training for the new kids in organizational activities (i.e., recruiting, using new media to bring in newbies, and GOTV in the next Congressional elections). She is a proven draw, and that will add the curious, but not identified.

  • She relates to that very group we want to expand - the right-leaning, but non-affiliated. Use the famous Palin ability to talk to "da pipple". Find out what their concerns are, and WHY. It's a great chance to do the "in-the-field" polling - BEFORE it's needed. The RNC doesn't have a good sense of what people want - or the party wouldn't have run nobody's choice - otherwise known as J. McCain.


We need to utilize the new media before we get blown out again. So, we also need to make sure that we fund some experiments using them.

  • Work with likely conservatives on campus (Econ & Business professors) to sponsor student activities. Our base students need to be thoroughly versed in the history of the conservative movement, its philosophical roots, & the Gramscian & Alinskian tactics and strategies. Train them to be the foot soldiers that will work for conservative groups in need of assistance.

    Additionally, make sure ALL these campus activists are versed in the new media. They should all be blogging, networking with those who do, and building their alternative media Rolex (OK, that's an outdated term - the kids all use Contact Lists on their cells).

  • Exploit the power of the web. Get the names and emails of those who attend the events, yes, but also go back to that person, and find out:

    • Do they use their cell phone as a text device?
    • Do they Twitter?
    • What are their social networks? Facebook, Meetup, AIM, or other gathering places?


    Then, DON'T just file and forget. Use that list, and have regular events and activities throughout the year, EVEN in off-years. We should be training these local people to engage their acquaintances in conversations, leading to eventual invitations to join in activities.

    Not a party - these will be people not committed enough for that step. Just a local activity that will expose them to the conservative message, and also provide them a congenial group to spend some time with. This needs to be a relationship-building activity.

  • Divvy up the work at the local level. These days, few families can afford to have an unemployed adult. Even housewives are busier than they used to be - many are on the run non-stop, even those who have kids in school.

    So, it makes sense to plan on organizing tasks around a distributed model. More people doing less, rather than the reverse. That's not an insurmountable obstacle, given the power of computers to schedule and track.

Monday, November 24, 2008

What Type of Blogger Am I?


The analysis indicates that the author of http://rightasusual.blogspot.com is of the type:
ISTP - The Mechanics
[ISTP]
The independent and problem-solving type. They are especially attuned to the demands of the moment are masters of responding to challenges that arise spontaneously. They generally prefer to think things out for themselves and often avoid inter-personal conflicts.

The Mechanics enjoy working together with other independent and highly skilled people and often like seek fun and action both in their work and personal life. They enjoy adventure and risk such as in driving race cars or working as policemen and firefighters.

Yeah, I could see that - not police or a smoke-eater, but I teach in an urban school. Very similar, except for the weapons (mine).

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Really Strange Tattoos

I found references to some strange tattoos on Ann Althouse's blog. When I say STRANGE, I'm not kidding:
Ropes tattooed around your arms and legs so when you crossed your arms or legs it would appear as if you were suggesting bondage.

Robot parts tattooed on working segments of your body.

Open eyes tattooed on your eyelids.

A mustache tattooed with glow-in-dark ink, just for fun.

Jagged backhoe bucket teeth tattooed around your mouth.

Mucus tattooed draining from your nose.
The rest of the suggested tattoos are even stranger.

Catching Up on Personal Business

I've been too busy to blog. My husband was in the hospital for minor surgery, and I've not been sleeping well with him gone. With luck, he'll be out by today.

Meanwhile, I've been following the Turkey Trauma of the nation. Due to an interview outside a poultry processing plant, the nation has learned that - gasp - turkeys DIE to provide us with Thanksgiving dinner!

It's all Sarah Palin's fault. If she hadn't been in that cruel video, we'd still be blissfully ignorant.

And, not only did she rob us of our ignorance, but she failed to demonstrate the proper anguish for the Killing Fields of Thanksgiving. It's almost as though she KNEW what it was to kill her own food!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

You Like Me! You REALLY Like Me!

Powerline points out a likely reason Obama won. It wasn't his nuanced positions, his statesmanlike demeanor, his appeal to reason.

It was that the public WANTED him, in a deeply personal and, ultimately, irrational way. They wanted change in their lives, and, once they decided that he was The Change Candidate, all following information was filtered through that sieve.

A similar phenomenon happens when teenagers fall in love. Any criticism about their beloved is ignored - because YOU JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND!

The facts are superfluous. Even if believed, it won't change their mind - don't you GET IT? WE'RE IN LOVE!

And so the American Public (at least, sufficient numbers of them) were IN LOVE with That One. The One. The person without whom their lives would mean nothing.

He hangs with a bad crowd?

Dad, you just don't understand!

We don't know anything about his past - and what we do know sounds kind of shady.

Dad, you just don't understand!

His money comes from questionable sources?

Dad, you just don't understand!

WHY was this "Love Effect" so important this election?
  • This was a younger crowd that was voting. Like many youngsters, they can be easily swayed by emotion.

    I'm not knocking that. It's part of what keeps our government vital, that fresh infusion of enthusiasm when demographics favor the young blood into the system.

    When their candidate wins, it can sweep clean the smelly stables of politics.

  • Obama played the right buttons. Able to talk easily with people, and yet, aloof. Not on a first-name basis with everyone (think about how you refer to him. He's only a little older than Sarah Palin, and yet he's invariably referred to by his last name, unlike Sarah, who is always called by her first).

    A few selected appearances on national shows at length, otherwise, short appearances where the content is carefully limited.

  • When negative information comes up, deny in a short statement, then allow the supporters to carry the water for him.

    Like high school - not saying much, but letting your posse run off the nay-sayers.


So, who was John McCain?

He was the Assistant Principal.

Nobody likes the AP.

Nobody.

America's Election 2008 - High School Musical 2.5!

Saturday, November 15, 2008

The Cost of Sanctuary?

I found this link to a story about a fatal hit & run.
Police have not doubt about how Laufer died: Dorantes slammed into the rear of his Harley at a tremendous rate of speed. As the arrest warrant noted, Dorantes' SUV left no skid marks. The reason is because he never braked -- either before or after the collision.

Instead, he kept going, pressing the accelerator pedal toward the floor. No matter that -- right in front of him -- a motorcycle was struck upright to his SUV's grill. And for a few seconds, he even could see Laufer's body on the motorcycle and SUV's hood, before it flew onto the highway 317 feet after impact. By then, Laufer was dead. According to the medial examiner, the horrific impact ripped his heart from its arteries and veins; his brain was severed from its spinal attachments.

The riderless Harley's rear tire left a single skid mark as Dorantes roared down the highway -- a shower of sparks and burning rubber right in front of him. "I don't think there is any way he (Dorantes) could not have known that the motorcycle was attached to his SUV for over a mile," Det. Francois told a local news outlet. "Between the sparks and the smell and the bike being feet in front of his face, after an impact there's no way he could have not known.”

A witness told of seeing a SUV race down an exit ramp at 80-85 mph -- a motorcycle attached to its front end. The Harley broke loose not far away, sliding onto a traffic island. Its rear tire was pulverized, its rear rim structurally destroyed.

Near the point of impact, the skid mark from the Harley's tire zigzagged along the highway, suggesting to Laufer's friends who visited the site that Dorantes was swerving violently to dislodge the motorcycle.
But, hey, that driver's rights were preserved. And, after all, it was only a privileged Anglo that was killed.

No harm done.

I WAS Going to Send This to All My Friends...

I was going to send this to all my friends. Got into the Compose mood, carefully checked all the contacts who might find it worthwhile, carefully placed the contact into the bcc: field, so they wouldn't be spammed.

Then, meaning to close another window, I closed the mail program.

As Homer says, "D'oh!"

So, I'm posting the link here, thus re-affirming the main point of the post - we don't communicate directly with friends anymore.
My old friend Ake (’awke’) Larsson was in St. Petersberg when he received my letter this week, as usual tinged with news about the curious desperation and isolation of Life in America.

He wrote about the boozy St. Petersberg tables where they were celebrating some colleague’s PhD, and it sounded like something out of Milan Kundera–just that, the idea of people at a table, the same table, for a long night in which an event is consecrated and celebrated, between people, friends, who went out of their way, in this case traveled from Sweden to Russia, to celebrate.

How often do any of us have that anymore?

These damn machines.

I fear the erosion and extinction of corporeal time, corporeal friendship, bodies together in time and space, more than I fear any other loss including the first amendment or polar ice caps. I sit at miserable piece of white plastic each night and I type forth, trying to connect and be less alone. The Internet. Soundless, it starves us very slowly. It is like a very tiny straw through which we are permitted survival breath. My father’s voice–I rarely hear it anymore. Friends voices, I never hear them. We email each other about getting together and then we cancel and send more email. Like ash flakes falling on a dying world, these emails.
Read the rest - it's a provocative treasure.

After reading it, I understood the rock opera Tommy as I never had before.

Friday, November 14, 2008

10 Days After

I've reached the last stage of post-election realization after my candidate didn't make it:
Eh.
I have bigger things to worry about - a Senator (Graham) who is anxious to give away the store to Democrats - even before the Dems became our Ubermasters. An economy that may well sweep away any hope of a comfortable retirement. A job that is taking more of my time and energy than I reasonably have - without leading to a feeling of accomplishment. A house that needs to be swept out, straightened up, and battened down for winter.

I plan to spend some time taking care of home and work business, and what little remains will be devoted to the work of rebuilding a party infrastructure, from the ground up.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

5 Years - and Still Here

I was just checking, and realized that today is my Blogiversary.

So, in honor of that hallowed moment of creation, here's a link to the first post.

Some of the best of those posts (at least, the ones that caused the most comments, number of views, or, some I just, in retrospect, liked):

Remembering 2 Vets

I cannot visit either vet today. One is my father, dead for the last 10 years. He was a vet in WWII, a survivor of the European front. He was artillery, and the damage to his hearing was extensive. He spent much of the last 10 years of his life missing so much of what was being said around him, due to his hearing loss. As a result, the human connections he was able to make on the Internet were even more important to him.

In the last several years of his life, I wasn't able to visit as often as I would have liked. He smoked, and my asthma flared up every time I was around him. The last few months, I had a respiratory infection I couldn't shake, and was not able to stand more than a short time in the same room, as the smoke made it hard for me to breathe.

The other vet is my brother. He served in Vietnam, as a radio specialist. Basically, he repaired damaged or non-working radio phones. Although not generally dangerous, it was a vital job in a difficult war. When he returned, like many vets, he found it difficult to find his place in life. He worked, and eventually bought a home, but never married. Later in life, he turned to drink, and is currently staying in a facility to get sober again. He's not able to have contact with family at this point, so none of us can visit. I'm crossing my fingers that he is able to have success with this program, and spend some time with us in SC.

This day is for all the vets, living and dead, healthy and sick. If you know a vet, thank them for their service. If you can, participate in the parades and other activities.

He's BA-A-A-A-ACK!!!

From the Chicago Sun Times, May 11, 2008:
Rob Malley, a Middle East policy adviser to likely Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama, resigned after news surfaced that he had been meeting with Hamas -- something Obama pledged he himself would never do.
Well, that's good. Obama found himself an adviser who displayed poor judgment and an unsavory affiliation with Hamas, and got rid of him.

Why was that so important?
The issue of whether to have dealings with Hamas is a particularly sensitive matter for Obama, who needs to persuade skeptical Jewish voters that he is a strong supporter of Israel. Last week, presumptive GOP nominee Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) highlighted a Hamas leader's statement that he hoped Obama would win the White House. Asked about McCain's suggestion that Obama is "favored by Hamas," Obama said McCain was "losing his bearings as he pursues this nomination."

Last month, as former President Jimmy Carter was set to meet with Hamas leaders, Obama told a group of Jewish activists and clergy in Philadelphia that he would not sit down with Hamas.
Well, that settles that. No wonder 80% of American Jews voted for Obama - they could trust him to keep his word.

Oh, yeah?
within hours after Obama’s election victory, Malley was back as a key player in the president-elect’s team of advisors—on his way to Syria. Mr. Obama, meanwhile, received a most friendly communication from Hamas, congratulating him on his “historic victory.”
You watch - between the leftist Jews that run Israel right now, and the American Jews with a death wish for Israel, that tiny democracy in the totalitarian Mideast will be gone within a decade.




My apologies - when I quoted that last section, I forgot to add the source - it was Front Page Magazine's John Perazzo:
John Perazzo is the Managing Editor of DiscoverTheNetworks and is the author of The Myths That Divide Us: How Lies Have Poisoned American Race Relations. For more information on his book, click here. E-mail him at wsbooks25@hotmail.com

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Has America Become a 3rd-World Country?

Right now, the Minnesota state Senate election is in the process of being stolen, just as the Washington state election was stolen in 2004. That's NOT right-wing hyperbole, just fact.

Al Franken LOST. The Minnesota election rules mandate that a recount is conducted when the count is so close, which I support. What I can't stomach, is the way that the Franken forces are STEALING the election. To believe that, suddenly, 100 extra votes were unearthed, from a single precinct, is to stretch belief. To believe that ALL of the previous "missing" votes were for Franken, is to be as credulous as an adult that still believes in Santa Claus.

Come on, folks! These are phony votes! I realize that some devout supporters want Franken to win, but have they no shame?

Damnit, where are the Democrats of integrity? Where are the Democrats who have too much pride to blatantly falsify the process that our forefathers died to preserve?

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

One Warning

Pride goeth before a fall.

The One is filled to the brim with that particular failing. As is his wife.

Steps for the Future

We're out, they're in. What can we do?

  • Get a backbone. Coordinate the efforts of Senate & House Republicans, and work together. Stand up against truly awful Court candidates - threaten filibuster, and force replacement of underqualified candidates with more moderate ones.

  • Get a strong National Chairman, and re-build the local party. Bring in new blood, and make sure they are comfortable with the new media. Start training programs for the rank & file.

  • Provide resources to fight fraud in election boards. Get the lawyers out for challenges - NOW! Before the fraud becomes entrenched, and it's harder to eliminate.

  • Build your defense. Learn procedural tactics, and how to delay, re-vamp, bury, and stall truly horrible legislation. Make a fuss at every point. Force a delay, so as to make them give up another objective.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Be of Good Cheer

I read this analysis of the pre-election polling with growing excitement. I was led to the site by Ace of Spades. The clincher for me was this, talking about Palin's effect on people, particularly men:
Even dry McCain became far more energetic and has sounded like a different person, as if he had passion, as time went on after Palin joined the ticket. While no one else will comment on this, it is something I’ve noticed as I have gotten older how a woman can draw out a man. Palin seems to be creating that effect from the men around her.

When I ask people, “Why do you like Palin?” they respond, “Because she is normal.” They see her family as normal, her way of talking as normal, and her personality as their personality. More intriguing, people I have asked seem to really want to watch Palin’s family for the next four years. They did not respond the same to McCain’s family, or Obama and Biden’s.

Other points in the post that resonated with me included:
The polls are way, way off this election cycle. Pollsters have admitted that this election has the highest ‘refusal to respond’ number. The ‘undecideds’ are people who don’t want to declare their choice. Why would they do that? If you belong to a Union, and they tell you to vote for Obama or ‘else’, you will not answer a pollster for it could be a union boss checking up on its members. PUMAs have declared their intention to lie to pollsters and they are organized. And there are many people who don’t want to declare ‘McCain’ because of being percieved as a ‘racist’.

Look, days away from the election and there are like 11% undecideds? No! This is not normal. The Bradley Effect is occuring with the undecideds.
Yeah. Some of those who refuse to answer polls are like me (like my ornery father, I refuse to talk to pollsters, even friendly ones. I agree with his position - it's nobody's D&&N business who I vote for.) Before today, I never considered that his refusal might have something to do with union pressure.

Dad was like a lot of people; while generally cordial, he REALLY didn't like to be pushed. When given the high-pressure treatment, he would "cut off his nose to spite his face".





Much later - 7:11 pm

I'm watching the election coverage, and winding down for the evening. Cross your fingers.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Fran Hits Another One Out of the Ballpark

I'm a HUGE fan of Fran Porretto, who writes at Eternity Road. I've not been keeping up with him lately (I've been over-focused on blogs dealing with election news. Fran writes less of the super-timely current events - his stuff lingers, and will be savored for some time to come - rather like a good stew).

[Stop to eat me breakfast - the above made me realize that I'm hungry]

Here's another priceless post.
Unless you live somewhere really, really special, you have to know one or more persons who will vote for Obama on November 4. That is, you have to know one or more persons whose ethical standards and character judgment are so poor that they'll use their franchise to affirm the elevation of a lying Chicago thug to the most powerful office on Earth.

Have you asked yourself how anyone could be that stupid? If so, congratulations: you're a conservative. The giveaway is that you didn't assume those folks are villains; conservatives are reluctant to pronounce that verdict while a shred of doubt remains.

You see, your Curmudgeon has been contemplating lines: lines that run straight from the Democrats' embrace of felonious campaigning to the behavior we can expect of them if they're granted, or succeed in stealing, federal hegemony.

No human action is divorced from all other things. Every human action expresses a conviction of some sort. The conviction expressed by the theft of an election -- electoral politics being the process that obviates violent revolution as the transition mechanism between governments -- is this one: The cause is superior to any and all ethical standards.

There's a logical straight line that runs from unquestioning devotion to a cause through the willingness to steal an election to the willingness to abrogate all guarantees of rights. That line has been sketched almost to its terminus by Barack Obama's predecessors; he and his supporters are trying to complete it. Rest assured: if he gains the White House, they most certainly will.

Cults of personality, such as the one upon which Obama has risen so far, are dangerous precisely because of the crowd's tendency to free the Maximum Leader and his lieutenants from all constraints. Few of the original constraints that were supposed to safeguard our constitutional republic remain unshredded. Even freedom of expression has taken some blows. But should Obama attain the Oval Office, you can kiss what we have left --including freedom of expression, which "liberals" once hailed as the guarantor of "democracy" -- goodbye. The man is simply uninterested in your rights; if you're not one of his supporters, you deserve to be silenced. You could even be stripped of your franchise, or have it rendered insignificant by the enfranchisement of millions of illegal...whoops, excuse your Curmudgeon, undocumented immigrants.


Don't forget to Vote!

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Deja Vu?

Let me understand this:



  • An election campaign that seems to have VERY shaky controls on the grabbing of the cash

  • A Vice-Presidential candidate who says strange things, and is put under wraps for a time

  • An undercover operation that involves a "plumber", that the campaign has APPARENTLY no connection to

  • A paranoid belief that the other side will steal the election

  • Dirty tricks

  • Threats by campaign officials


Whoever does this remind you of?

Just A Few More Days

I've been running around for the last few weeks, trying to get caught up on school work, and get ready for the convention. I have had to skimp on something, and that's been the housework. The house now looks like someone dropped a paper bomb in the living room, and another one - this time a clothes bomb - in the bedroom.

I expect that it will take at least 2 more days to make it livable again.

On the politics front, I'm tired of trying to analyze the widely varying polls. If you believe some polls, Obama needs to start measuring the White House for drapes. If you believe others, McCain will squeak by. No matter which you see, all the pollsters are hedging their words, hoping that their reputation won't suffer in the aftermath.

Feh. And eh.

What is the only thing that counts, the actual vote, is still 3 days away. I'm personally rooting for McCain/Palin, but am not willing to say that they will win. To hear the media tell it, the majority of the country is filled with knuckle-dragging Neandertals who want to Stick It To The Black Man. Hence, the widely-held belief that the Bradley Effect will do Obama in.

I'm personally of the belief that much of the frenzied grasping for votes by ACORN and other Nuts is because they fear that Effect. That, and they honestly believe that there is a nefarious cabal who are programming the machines to record votes (falsely) for Republicans, planning to cruise the streets on Election Day, glaring intimidatingly & caressing weaponry menacingly, and engaging in other chicanery, all to wrest the fairly-won election from the despairing hands of the Deserving Black Man.

Caps intended for emphasis.

Me, I believe that Republicans are too busy doing what they always do - taking the money out of orphan's hands, tantalizing the homeless by holding food just out of reach, and otherwise amusing themselves while waiting for the government bailout of their portfolio - to bother themselves with stealing votes.

Besides, few Republicans would want to steal the rightful job of Democrats.

Lies of the Left

This COULD be a lengthy post. But, I'll try to winnow it down to a reasonable length. The CA Parent Bribery 'Scandal' - the 1...