So enforcement of US immigration laws is terrorism to Mr. Obama? Oh my. Such an audacious display of shameless pandering could be admirable, as far as practical politics go, if it didn’t betray the utter cluelessness of the man.
In my humble opinion, Tony Snow had as much — if not more — impact on the American political landscape as Tim Russert.
While watching CNN while doing cardio, I noted yet again obvious bias of that “news” network, with Wolf Blitzer dwelling forever on a story that even the network’s own Jeffrey Toobin, obsequious legal court jester to the media elite, dismissed.
A reader just messaged me his view on why gay men are so neurotic. While I don’t think this holds true for all gay men, I do think it applies to some, particularly those who live not far from me in the center of West Hollywood.
No sooner did Fred Barnes say he thought McCain should use the issues of gay marriage and gays in the military to prevent social conservative voters from staying home, then readers either via e-mail or in a comment asked me in the words of this post, whether gay Republicans would tolerate the Barnes Option.
I just got this high-larious email from the Re-Elect Kucinich for Congress Committee. (How the frick did I get on THAT list?)
Anyway, enjoy this laugh….
I’m starting to wonder, which Barack Obama will be governing from the White House — if he is elected?
The flip-flop on immediate withdrawal versus adopting the Bush-McCain Iraq plan is too obvious.
With my Mom doing much better, I returned to LA as planned today, but feel pretty drained, having chosen to spend more time with my brother (father to an energetic nephew) last night rather than go to bed at a decent hour, especially given my early departure (6 AM LA time) from Cincinnati this morning.
Don’t roll down the hill with your two-and-one-half-year-old nephew after eating pizza.
At that age, once isn’t enough, especially when there’s the chance to crash into an indulgent uncle and cry “I caught you” while giggling.
Senator McCain:
In his Op-ed in yesterday’s New York Times, your longtime supporter Bill Kristol contends that your campaign has “largely frittered away” your “ three-month general election head start.
This morning, I did something I don’t normally do in LA. I scanned (& read) the New York Times (my Mom subscribes to the print edition).
I wonder if it’s being around my family where the women are Democrats, the men Republicans that has made me less inclined to write about politics.
Today, as my Mom, now at home, has been doing much better, I decided to visit the two houses where I lived as a child.
550 metric tons of “yellowcake” uraninium, the “last major remnant of Saddam Hussein’s nuclear program” removed from Iraq.
After my sister returned to the hospital to spend the balance of the evening with my Mom, I returned on I-71 to my brother’s where I am currently staying.
Today, my brother who had sat with my Mom when she was in her operation joined my sister, step-sister and myself in my Mom’s hospital room and showed us a picture he had received in an e-mail.
In his constant flipping and flopping, Obama shows that his followers supporters’ hopes notwithstanding, he’s just another typical politician.
I flew into Cincinnati yesterday to be with the PatriotMomWest as she recovers from back surgery and to spend Independence Day with my sister who flew in from San Francisco as well as my brother who still lives in the town where we grow up.
There doesn’t seem to be any issue on which Obama hasn’t changed his position in the course of this campaign.
Well, except maybe poor Jimmah.
Recently, I sent Limbaugh an e-mail message, his preferred means of long-distance communication, asking what his own presidential agenda would look like.