Friday, November 07, 2008

Pop Stars & Hard-Cores

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Andrew Breitbart is sitting in for Michael Savage this afternoon, and he had a couple of brilliant things to say.

First:
Pop culture is key to winning elections. Bad or good, "star power", celebrity, marketing and public relations are key to winning elections. If Conservatives ever hope to be relevant, we've got to find/develop candidates that can succeed in that arena.
Second:
Immediately after the election of 2000, the George Soros crowd, MoveOn.org, DailyKos, HuffingtonPost, and the Mainstream Media, began their 8 year crucifixion, assassination, undermining and ruination of George Bush's presidency. Without missing a beat, without the slightest "honeymoon", without "wishing him well", without "uniting behind our new president", without "reaching across the aisle", without ever accepting him as "our President".

They encouraged and supported our enemies, they hoped and worked for America's defeat and humiliation because it would mean President Bush's defeat and humiliation.

They spewed their malice and poison into the body politic until debate, discussion and civility was impossible. They offered their political opponents only malignant venom.

And when the nation was sickened to death by their malevolence and spite, they offered us the miraculous cure to the pestilence they had created: Barack Obama...the "uniter".


And a lot of fools bought it.

I'm just not inclined to be gracious to their waterboy. He's theirs. Not mine. He's as tainted with their disease as they are. (No matter what the appeaser Republicans say.)

I guess that makes me an asshole. But I like bringing guns to gunfights. It's time we stop trying to "negotiate" with the Leftist bomb-throwers.

Isn't that what we scream at Obie?
"You can't negotiate with terrorists who only want to kill you!"

Well, how about we take our own advice! And understand how virulent our "enemy" is.

In this I'm willing to take a page out of Osama Bin Laden's book: No-one respects the weak horse. And we've acted like broken-down nags for too long.

The Gunslinger

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