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RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:21:08 PM   
Brain


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The ass who doesn't know an ass from a hole in the ground or the pot calling the kettle black, keep living in your fantasy world. 

quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckyman

I would bet money you were some Spec 4 rear echelon clerk in the 'rear with the gear".... you are an arrogant ass and unworthy of reading..... typical of ALL libs...fucking useless drival....

(in reply to cuckyman)
Profile   Post #: 121
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:23:44 PM   
dcnovice


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quote:

typical of ALL libs


I love when conservatives use the word lib 'cause it reminds me that the opposite of a lib is a con.

_____________________________

No matter how cynical you become,
it's never enough to keep up.

JANE WAGNER, THE SEARCH FOR SIGNS OF
INTELLIGENT LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE

(in reply to cuckyman)
Profile   Post #: 122
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:37:19 PM   
Brain


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Give me a break , do you think your only one who knows how to run a business? Give me a fucking break.  Everyone in my family owns restaurants, try running a fucking restaurant or a garage.  Don't give me this bullshit that you're an expert businessman and we are imbeciles and should keep quiet.

You guys put 2 wars on a credit card and now you are bitching about the deficit after approving tax cuts for millionaires we couldn't afford. Sorry but you guys have no credibility as far as I'm concerned.


quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckyman

my comments just mirror the volcanic anger out here in the 'real' world... i cannot help but vent when I read shit posted by these lame asses....its just so sad that this nation has endured so much to have ilk like this as a part of its citizenry.... where do these creeps come from?....why are they hell bent upon destruction of this nation?... it boggels my mind that they think everyone is so stupid that only they know where the train goes....and they are so lame as to be laughable...they have NOT actually run a business...had to sweat to pay the bills and payroll....they are just big mouthed know it alls that make my blood boil in anger!

(in reply to cuckyman)
Profile   Post #: 123
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:39:37 PM   
Brain


Posts: 3792
Joined: 2/14/2007
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And a complete 100 percent loser

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jeffff

You are an asshole.


And a poser.


Jeff

(in reply to Jeffff)
Profile   Post #: 124
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:39:40 PM   
slvemike4u


Posts: 17896
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius


quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

Ahhh,but as you stated there was actual genius at work...genius present in the decision to make it a "living" document...rather than a dead and rigid set of rules and regulations.....Yes Thadius true fucking genius!

The only part of it that I see as living is the ability to ammend it, at least in my opinion. They had seen and understood that the nature of mankind had a particular fondness for power, and that keeping that power from a centralized body was in the best interest of the people.

The courts have been on a continuous path of centralizing more and more of the power in this country by reading the Constitution as a "living" document. My earlier example being one such way in which they have done so.


Oh one more quote for thomson....
quote:


Constitutions of civil government are not to be framed upon a calculation of existing exigencies, but upon a combination of these with the probable exigencies of ages, according to the natural and tried course of human affairs. Nothing, therefore, can be more fallacious than to infer the extent of any power, proper to be lodged in the national government, from an estimate of its immediate necessities.
~Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 34, January 4, 1788

Well my friend that right there is probably the best example of what makes one man a conservative(a rigid interpatation of the Constitution) and the other( that would be me for those not following) a liberal..(one who feels the document is a living thing).....might there be a better explanation for the Supremes being of an odd number...and why both parties get a hard on at the thought of having the opportunity to appoint said judges?

_____________________________

If we want things to stay as they are,things will have to change...Tancredi from "the Leopard"

Forget Guns-----Ban the pools

Funny stuff....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNwFf991d-4


(in reply to Thadius)
Profile   Post #: 125
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:43:50 PM   
Brain


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I can't believe this thread got so ridiculous. Too bad it wasn't about Wall Street.  What those assholes on Wall Street did and are still doing because the Democrats and Obama are doing fuck all - that is something to get mad about.

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

To be threatened with physical violence by a anonymous picture of an old man is beyond funny.
btw:it is also a federal crime


(in reply to thompsonx)
Profile   Post #: 126
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 6:46:40 PM   
Thadius


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Mike,

The reason for an odd number is obvious, it make a tie impossible. The framers were afraid to give the judiciary as much power as the other 2 branches (at least some were). With the way things have gone in the past century, it has become clear that it is easier to change policies via the judiciary than via legislation. For one there are far fewer votes required to change, and in some cases create law, than are required via the legislative branch. Finally, with lifetime appointments, the supremes are not beholden to the vote or voice of public opinion, which means if I can get my guys in I can be sure to exact some sort of change even if the legislature and executive change hands.

_____________________________

When the character of a man is not clear to you, look at his friends." ~ Japanese Proverb

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Profile   Post #: 127
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:03:38 PM   
slvemike4u


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Thad,come on did you really think you needed to point out to me that an odd number would avoid the possibility of tie decisions....hell is that why the World Series is a best of seven affair?

_____________________________

If we want things to stay as they are,things will have to change...Tancredi from "the Leopard"

Forget Guns-----Ban the pools

Funny stuff....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNwFf991d-4


(in reply to Thadius)
Profile   Post #: 128
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:05:45 PM   
Thadius


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quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

Thad,come on did you really think you needed to point out to me that an odd number would avoid the possibility of tie decisions....hell is that why the World Series is a best of seven affair?


You did end it with a question mark.

_____________________________

When the character of a man is not clear to you, look at his friends." ~ Japanese Proverb

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Profile   Post #: 129
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:14:45 PM   
slvemike4u


Posts: 17896
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From: United States
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I guess I had just assumed I have banked a little more credibilty than that.....but rereading the post in uestion ,I can't figure for the life of me what that question mark is doing there....LOL.

_____________________________

If we want things to stay as they are,things will have to change...Tancredi from "the Leopard"

Forget Guns-----Ban the pools

Funny stuff....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNwFf991d-4


(in reply to Thadius)
Profile   Post #: 130
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:21:04 PM   
Brain


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You are so full of shit with all the federal money places like Iowa get.  You are talking absolute bull.
Why don't these farms give the money back and then you can talk to me about some poor unemployed schmuck in New York getting his unemployment checks extended.  Like John McEnroe says, “You can't be serious!”
 
Federal Subsidies Turn Farms Into Big Business
 
By Gilbert M. Gaul, Sarah Cohen and Dan Morgan
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, December 21, 2006

The cornerstone of the multibillion-dollar system of federal farm subsidies is an iconic image of the struggling family farmer: small, powerless against Mother Nature, tied to the land by blood.

Without generous government help, farm-state politicians say, thousands of these hardworking families would fail, threatening the nation's abundant food supply.

"In today's fast-paced, interconnected world, there are few industries where sons and daughters can work side-by-side with moms and dads, grandmas and grandpas," Rep. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) said last year. "But we still find that today in agriculture. . . . It is a celebration of what too many in our country have forgotten, an endangered way of life that we must work each and every day to preserve."

This imagery secures billions annually in what one grower called "empathy payments" for farmers. But it is misleading.

Today, most of the nation's food is produced by modern family farms that are large operations using state-of-the-art computers, marketing consultants and technologies that cut labor, time and costs. The owners are frequently college graduates who are as comfortable with a spreadsheet as with a tractor. They cover more acres and produce more crops with fewer workers than ever before.
 
The very policies touted by Congress as a way to save small family farms are instead helping to accelerate their demise, economists, analysts and farmers say. That's because owners of large farms receive the largest share of government subsidies. They often use the money to acquire more land, pushing aside small and medium-size farms as well as young farmers starting out.

"Historically, when you think of family farms, you think of Mom and Dad and three generations working a small or mid-sized farm. It gives you a warm and fuzzy feeling," said Alex White, a professor of agricultural economics at Virginia Tech. "In the real world, it might be a mid-sized farm. But it also might be a huge farm. It might be a corporation."

Large family farms, defined as those with revenue of more than $250,000, account for nearly 60 percent of all agricultural production but just 7 percent of all farms. They receive more than 54 percent of government subsidies. And their share of federal payments is growing -- more than doubling over the past decade for the biggest farms.

Two farms help to tell the tale.

John Phipps of Chrisman, Ill., harvested nearly 170,000 bushels of corn and soybeans last year on two square miles of fertile soil. He grossed nearly $500,000, putting his farm in the nation's top 3 percent. Still, he received $120,000 in subsidies.
 
"It's embarrassing," Phipps said. "My government is basically saying I am incompetent and need help."
 
Several hundred miles northwest, Thomas Oswald farms the same Iowa fields that his relatives worked more than a century ago. The land he rents is about one-third the size of Phipps's, and Oswald's subsidies are much smaller. Oswald contends that federal payments are helping to fuel a spike in land prices that favors the wealthy.

"If the purpose of farm policy was to save the family farm and help stabilize rural communities, then it hasn't worked," Oswald said. "What the government is really doing is subsidizing land and assets, not people."
 
A New Era in Farming

The transformation of the family farm from a small, self-contained business to a complex, technology-driven enterprise is seen today in a rapidly changing rural landscape dominated by larger and wealthier farms. That landscape shows a vastly different picture of family farms than the one often evoked by legislators and industry groups: bigger, more industrial than agrarian, with owners wealthier than most Main Street Americans.

In a late-October speech in Indianapolis, Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns said that, in the face of higher energy prices and natural disasters, "our farmers' resiliency is evident": Agricultural exports are at a record $68 billion; farm equity has swelled to $1.6 trillion, another record; and farmers' debt-to-assets ratio is at a 45-year low.

"Today, producers grow more crops and handle more livestock more efficiently than at any time in the history of mankind," Johanns said.

Nevertheless, just last year the government paid out about $15 billion in income support or price guarantees, which increasingly are going to the largest farms -- those with annual sales of $500,000 or more. Between 1989 and 2003, the share of federal payments for those farms jumped from 13 percent to 32 percent while the share going to small and medium-size farms -- those with $250,000 or less in sales -- dropped from 63 percent to 43 percent.

In 2003, the owners of the biggest family farms reported an average household income of $214,200, more than three times that of U.S. households on average. "Farm households are not, in general, poor," government researchers concluded.

To be sure, there are still many small and medium-size family farms. In fact, they account for nine of every 10 farms nationwide -- 1.9 million farms in all, according to the Agriculture Department's definition. But about a million of those farms are "hobby" or "residential" farms that produce little or no income from crops or livestock. The government's definition of a farm includes any operation that has or could have $1,000 annually in sales.

By including "these very, very small hobby farms" in its overall count, the USDA is "masking the tremendous consolidation" that has occurred, said Iowa State University economist Michael D. Duffy.

The shift in subsidies to wealthier farmers is helping to fuel this consolidation of farmland. The largest farms' share of agricultural production has climbed from 32 percent to 45 percent while the number for small and medium-size farms has tumbled from 42 percent to 27 percent.

As in many states, farmland in Iowa is being gathered up into ever-larger farms. In many cases, the owners are families buying up neighboring tracts. But increasingly, outside investors are also buying Iowa farmland, with "one in five acres of farmland in Iowa now owned by someone who doesn't live here," Duffy said. Many of the outside landlords rent their land to the highest bidders.

Nationally, the average size of a farm has more than doubled in the past two decades, to 441 acres. Many farms now cover thousands of acres, some tens of thousands.

"It seems as though conventional agricultural policy is to get big or get out," said Traci Bruckner, a policy analyst at the Center for Rural Affairs in Lyons, Neb., which works to preserve small farms and rural communities. "To me, that seems backwards."
 
'Farming Is a Science'

From the perch of his $180,000 six-row combine, churning through cornfields that stretch as far as the eye can see, John Phipps has a rare view of American farm policy.

Outfitted against a gray October day in jeans, wool shirt, vest and faded baseball cap, Phipps, 58, resembled hundreds of other farmers as he struggled to change a filter on his combine. But he is hardly typical. Trained as a chemical engineer, Phipps spent five years serving on a nuclear-powered submarine before returning to east-central Illinois in the 1970s.

Today, he calls himself an "industrial farmer" who uses computers, technology and science to get the most out of the 1,800 acres of corn and soybeans he plants in an area of Illinois where the weather and soil are ideal for farming. The strategy has paid off with bigger and better yields.

Yet to Congress and federal agricultural officials, Phipps and his wife, Jan, are struggling family farmers. Last year, the government sent the Phippses a check for $120,000. Thousands of similar checks arrived throughout the Corn Belt, even as many farmers had bumper crops.
"Being labeled as a family farmer immediately qualifies me as someone who needs help," he said. "Name one other business like that -- there are none."

Over the past decade, farmers in the Midwest have produced one record crop after another. Now, surging demand for corn-based ethanol has corn prices at a 10-year high.

Phipps resents the images used to evoke sympathy for farmers. "I think they do us more harm than good," he said as he scrambled to finish his harvest. "I don't think farmers are any more special than anyone else; lots of people work hard and don't get help. Why should farmers get special treatment?"

In addition to farming, Phipps hosts a weekly farm television show, writes a blog and contributes articles to Farm Journal. That income helps significantly, he said, allowing him "a little more flexibility" than other farmers have. In the past five years, the Phippses have also received about $357,000 in federal subsidies.

"I'm not proud of it," he said. "I would like to have the moral courage and financial clout not to take them. But if I don't, I won't be able to compete when it comes time to bid for land."

Phipps knows that this fuels the rising cost of farmland; an acre of land there now sells for about $4,800. "When I belly up and write a check, I am perpetuating the problem," he said. "For the most part, all of the smaller farmers have all been flushed out in the last five years."

Still, Phipps's sympathy extends only so far. Large farms are a "rational and ethical" response to market demands, he said. His family has farmed there for six generations, Phipps himself for the past three decades. He owns 800 acres outright or with his siblings and rents 1,000 acres. His wife is his main helper and drives one of the trucks that haul up to 700 bushels of corn per load to grain bins. "Imagine that: Two middle-aged people able to farm 1,800 acres," Phipps marveled. "That's all because of the immense technology we have at our hands. We are horrendously efficient."

As his combine churns down the rows of corn, Phipps knows exactly how many bushels he is harvesting, acre by acre, row by row. The information is downloaded to his computer so he can put it in a spreadsheet.

"Farming is a science now," he said. "The image of a farmer in bib overalls bumbling along is just wrong. I'm an engineer, for God's sake."
 
'I Want to Earn It'

In mid-November, when the harvest is finished, Thomas Oswald, 40, retreats to his neatly restored house bordering the fields in northwest Iowa that his family has farmed since 1870. There, he dabbles on the computer, checking yields and prices, does odd jobs, and plans for the next planting season. Oswald also serves as chairman of the local Soil and Water Conservation District.
"I want to be known as someone who farms well as opposed to farming big," he says.

The 580 acres where Oswald grows corn and soybeans straddle a gravel road on the outskirts of Cleghorn, a rural farming community. Oswald rents most of the land from his father, Stanley, who at 78 still helps with the harvest. Oswald and his father share the income from the farm, which grosses $150,000 to $250,000. "We're a small to medium-size farm," Oswald said. He also does farming for neighbors, and his wife, Suzanne, works as a travel agent in Cherokee.

As with many farming areas in the Corn Belt, land values are increasing and farms are getting bigger in Cherokee County. Between 1990 and 2005, the average price for an acre of farmland more than doubled, to $3,186, according to a USDA database of land values. Between 1997 and 2002, the number of farms with 1,000 or more acres climbed by nearly one-quarter, while the number of small and medium-size farms, such as Oswald's, declined by 12 percent.

"Land prices are going nuts," Oswald said. "Some farms are going for $4,000 to $5,000 an acre." In summer, it is not unusual to see owners of larger farms "out trolling for land." The chances of smaller farmers successfully bidding for those acres are slim. "You might as well buy a lottery ticket," Oswald said.

For smaller farmers, he said, it is a Catch-22. "In order to afford land, you already have to own land or have a lot of money," he said. "The more subsidies you get, the more money you have to reinvest and expand. That free money distorts the economic pluses and minuses."

The subsidy-fueled competition for land has changed the culture and demographics of farming areas such as Cherokee County. In the past, Oswald said, there was more sharing among neighbors. "It was less about acquiring land," he said. Now, neighbors sometimes are eyed warily as competitors.

Larger, more efficient farms also require fewer workers, offering less opportunity for younger people. Cherokee County has lost one-third of its population since 1960, records show. Across Iowa, there are now twice as many farmers over the age of 65 as under the age of 35, according to Iowa State researchers. "You see the thinning of the population, and at some point you have to ask yourself, 'When does that line become too thin?' " Oswald said.

Contrary to some expectations, the billions in subsidies have failed to slow the exodus. A March 2005 study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City found that hundreds of counties most dependent on subsidies had suffered the biggest population losses and posted the weakest job growth. "Farm payments appear to create dependency on even more payments, not new engines of economic growth," concluded the study's author, Mark Drabenstott.

Oswald has received nearly $98,000 in subsidies in the past five years. Each check is a "cash infusion" that helps to pay the bills. "It's hard to be proud of the little brown envelope if you don't do anything to earn it," he said. "I want to earn it."

Oswald chose to remain smaller, he said, explaining that he does not "want to muscle out Federal Subsidies Turn Farms Into Big Businessneighbors" for land and is conservative about taking on too much risk. And although he may be small, Oswald stressed, he is not backward. "That's an image they use in Washington to sell these programs," he said. "It's an emotion argument -- political."

Research editor Alice Crites contributed to this report.
 
View all comments that have been posted about this article.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/20/AR2006122001591.html


quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckyman

It is NOT the job of people in Iowa to pay for the extended benefits for unemployed people in New York!....let New York pay for New York...its that dam simple....I don't owe them a dam thing, yet I get the bill?...right!...dream on lib....

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Profile   Post #: 131
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:24:56 PM   
Brain


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The  recession Obama got from Bush tripled the deficit. You are biased and full of shit and as far as I'm concerned providing you with facts is a waste of time because you are also loonie

quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckyman

Bush angered all conservatives and we fired him....but he is small potatoes when it comes to this bozo TRIPLEING the Bush deficit.... this guy is not only going to get fired...he will go down in history as the WORST nightmare in Presidental history...even surpassing the peanut idiot Carter.... thought that impossible...

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Profile   Post #: 132
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 7:36:16 PM   
Thadius


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quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

I guess I had just assumed I have banked a little more credibilty than that.....but rereading the post in uestion ,I can't figure for the life of me what that question mark is doing there....LOL.

No worries, I wasn't sure if it was rhetorical or not, and you do rate up there on the credibility tables with me. Save when you go on about those damn conservatives

I see myself as a conservative libertarian. The less government intervention the better off we are as a people. Just my opinion.

_____________________________

When the character of a man is not clear to you, look at his friends." ~ Japanese Proverb

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RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 8:08:07 PM   
slvemike4u


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An opinion that,in my view,is given more weight than most around these parts...if nothing else I figure you have reached it honestly .....not smething that can be said about all.

_____________________________

If we want things to stay as they are,things will have to change...Tancredi from "the Leopard"

Forget Guns-----Ban the pools

Funny stuff....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNwFf991d-4


(in reply to Thadius)
Profile   Post #: 134
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 8:42:23 PM   
cuckyman


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Give me a break.. take your little quiz and stuff it....  I do believe this ...Obama is the first 'Post-American' president....he does not believe in American exceptionalism...he takes no pride in being an American, and sees America as only the Reverand Wright racist nation discribed in his sermons as he sat thru with 20 years of attending his church....  he does NOT share our pride...our history, or our values.... and in that he will fail miserably as he should...  Obama will be, in the end, good for our nation as we, as a people,  will see this 'progressive' movement for what it is....and that is bad for this nation...  he seeks disarmament in a dangerous world....he apologizes for what made America great...and sees the patriot as a 'tea bagger redneck'.... he is NOT one of us....he is one of 'them'....  We have a cancer in this nation...born out of tenured left wing academia invading our schools, a left wing New York based media that has decided that they are smarter than us....and a press that is predominately left wing...as well as a  political party that is nothing but a parliment of whores feeding tax dollars to left wing groups supporing their idiology.....  I think that with the dying of the manufacturing base and the loss of real jobs, middle America has awakened to the fact that they have been used, lied to, and looked down upon by a party of 'elites' who are interested in pure Marxist idiology that would have government control every facet of our lives, and they, and only they, will determine the winners and losers in life, simply because they, and only they, are qualified to determine that.....  That ladies and gentelmen is Post American....and Obama is earning his place in history...every day, every hour, and with every speech he gives....there has never been, nor probably will ever again be.....a man this embittered with the American experience, to hold any high public office...for that much we truely can be grateful ...Now to stop his agenda dead in its tracks... and November will.usher in a landslide rejection of his views, and he will be a prisoner of the office he sits within....with him personally discredited, and his views held in contempt by the people in the present, and historically.... his place forever as the first, and please God, the last, Post American President to hold office..... maybe ACORN or SEIU will hire him as their attorney again to figure out a way to cheat election laws, and yell racism at every opportunity....THAT is his real calling..... community organizing...or as we called them in Viet Nam...communist cadre'....that should be his place in history.... with Carter's ineptness, we finally got the greatest President in my lifetime, and perhaps, just perhaps, we will see the rise of the next great President that shares the views of those that were wise enough to found this nation and give us the greatest, and most unique experiment on this earth...that simply the blessings of liberty.....  free from rule of an out of control federal government.....oh how I will enjoy this administrations disgrace and its rightful place upon the scrap heap of those unworthy of the title of being an American patriot.... freedom is not free...and those who went before paid too high a price for that liberty to let it be diminished by the current ilk so obviously unqualified to hold the postions they currently occupy....but the people of this land are smart enough to correct their electorial blunder, and further more, soon will do just that..... November comes....and Obama's time is ticking down..... deal with it....

(in reply to thompsonx)
Profile   Post #: 135
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 8:44:51 PM   
cuckyman


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I know that  you are a fool...

(in reply to Brain)
Profile   Post #: 136
RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 8:48:29 PM   
cuckyman


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I was an operations and marketing specialist for McKinstry and Assc out of Minneapolis...we turned the tide of bankruptcy for some 7000 franchise owners of a well known national ice cream chain...owned three restaurants and sold them....restaurants are dropping like flies....a bad business to be in....but perfect for lame ass know it alls like you..... I made payroll durning the Carter years instead of buying groceries for my home..... stuff it puke!

(in reply to Brain)
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RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 8:51:47 PM   
cuckyman


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The Bush deficit was less than one trillion...Obama has tripled that..not Bush, OBAMA....and that FACT is going to get his party thrown out on his ass... bud those ARE the facts...not your lies.....

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RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 9:02:02 PM   
cuckyman


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The source says it all....The Washington Post.... only surpassed by Pravda in providing a daily stream of misinformation...perhaps you will next share with us a writing by one of the communist writers from the New York times....  look bud, your jig is up...the people are on to your losers and you are about to be polictally castrated..... and no amount of your squirming is going to stop the herd of people about to throw your left wing clowns into the street....this landslide is going to make 94 look like a warmup..... perhaps then you might just get a clue...but i doubt it... fools like you are why the left will always fall flat on their collective asses...and you are just one of those asses...only you are a true asshole....

(in reply to Brain)
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RE: Lone senator blocks unemployment benefit extensions - 2/27/2010 9:13:33 PM   
DarkSteven


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quote:

ORIGINAL: cuckyman
he seeks disarmament in a dangerous world...



In what way?  He's increased the troop level in Afghanistan.  .
quote:



I think that with the dying of the manufacturing base and the loss of real jobs, middle America has awakened to the fact that they have been used, lied to, and looked down upon by a party of 'elites' who are interested in pure Marxist idiology that would have government control every facet of our lives


The banking system that screwed us over and used fraud to create unusable assets, and got bailed out by TARP is a bunch of Marxists?  I thought they were capitalists that used the system.

The rest of your post is too disjointed for me.

< Message edited by DarkSteven -- 2/27/2010 9:14:03 PM >


_____________________________

"You women....

The small-breasted ones want larger breasts. The large-breasted ones want smaller ones. The straight-haired ones curl their hair, and the curly-haired ones straighten theirs...

Quit fretting. We men love you."

(in reply to cuckyman)
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