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Esmter |
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Why wouldn't there by be more Mormons than Muslims in the U.S.? it's a 200 yr old home grown American religion. Islam is thousands of years old and
rooted in its location (hajj to Mecca, salah, etc). It's a really poor comparison...
-Em
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randyfromDe |
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It's not a poor comparison. No one would call the U.S. a Mormon nation, and they meet or outnumber Muslims in population. The comparison was only intended
to highlight how much of a buffoon Odumbo really is, compared to his "intellectual" mass market persona. It's such an easy thing to verify that
it's embarrassingly stupid.
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starshine1763 |
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randyfromDe wrote: Except that he didn't call the US a Muslim nation.
Paige
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randyfromDe |
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Right. Just like when I say that Barack Obama could be considered the dumbest President ever, I'm not saying he's one of the dumbest Presidents ever.
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supposeisaid7 |
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Thomas Sowell Thursday, June 04, 2009 As part of the biographical preoccupation with Judge Sonia Sotomayor's past, the New York Times of May 31st had a feature story on the various New York housing projects in which she and other well-known people grew up-- including Whoopi Goldberg, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Thelonious Monk and Mike Tyson. There was a map of New York City and dots pin-pointing the location of the project in which each celebrity grew up. As an old New Yorker, I was struck by the fact that not one of the 20 celebrities shown grew up in a housing project in Harlem! The housing projects in which they grew up were different in another and more fundamental way. As the New York Times put it: "These were not the projects of idle, stinky elevators, of gang-controlled stairwells where drug deals go down." In other words, these were public housing projects of an earlier era, when such places were very different from what we associate with the words "housing project" today. Just the reference to unlocked doors on the apartments there, so that children could more easily visit playmates in nearby apartments on Saturday mornings to watch television, creates an image that must seem like something out of another world to those familiar only with the housing projects of today. There were standards for getting into the projects of those days and, if you didn't live up to those standards, they put you out. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was quoted as saying, "When kids played on the grass, their parent would get a warning." That seems almost quaint when you think of what has gone on in the housing projects of a later era. Since there has been so much talk of putting some of Sonia Sotomayor's inflammatory words "in context," perhaps we should put her personal life in context, if the media insist on making her personal life a factor in her nomination to the Supreme Court. While she grew up in a public housing project, the words "housing project" in that era did not mean anything like the housing projects of today. A relative of mine lived in one of the housing projects back then-- and we were proud of him, as well as glad for him, because such places were for upright citizens in those days-- working class people with steady jobs and good behavior. Clever intellectuals had not yet taught us to be "non-judgmental" about misbehavior or to make excuses for vandalism and crime. While Sonia Sotomayor was not born with a silver spoon in her mouth, let's not make her someone who rose from such depths as those conjured up by the words "housing projects" today. It is bad enough that biographical considerations carry such weight in considerations of nominees for the Supreme Court. But, if biography must be elaborated, let it at least be done "in context." It has always made me a little uneasy when generous well-wishers have discussed my educational background as if it was something almost miraculous that I came out of the schools in Harlem and went on to Ivy League institutions. But any number of other people did exactly the same thing. The Harlem schools of that era were no more like the Harlem schools of today than the housing projects of that era were like today's housing projects. They had classes grouped by ability and, if you were serious about getting a good education, you could get into one of the classes for kids who were serious and receive an education that would prepare you to go on in life. There is a lot to ponder about why both the schools and the housing projects degenerated so much after the bright ideas of the 1960s intelligentsia spread throughout society, leaving social havoc in their wake. Too many people who rose to where they are today because of a foundation of traditional values have become enthralled by the very different ideas prevalent in the elite intellectual circles to which they moved. Judge Sotomayor seems to be one of those, with her ideas about race and the policy-making role of judges. It is bad enough that so many of those "advanced" ideas have undermined for others the foundation that Sonia Sotomayor had as she grew up, despite being raised in a home with a modest income. There is no need to let her use the Supreme Court to destroy more of those traditional American values.
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randyfromDe |
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It's about time! Here, I was just thinking "geez, there sure are a lot of Muslim Americans dying at the hands of (non-Muslim) American
terrorists." I'm glad that Eric Holder has finally come out and pledged support to protect our Muslims in the U.S! This injustice has gone on too
long!
Oh, wait. I've got that backwards. My mistake. It wasn't a Muslim soldier who just got murdered, or a mosque that was being plotted against, it was a non-Muslim soldier who was murdered and a Jewish temple that was almost destroyed. Glad to see that the U.S. has pledged to defend the "religion of peace" from the rest of us hateful Americans, because we've got this stupid idea that we'd not like to be murdered on our own soil. http://www.usdoj.gov/ag/speeches/2009/ag-speech-090604.html |
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supposeisaid7 |
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Can't wait to see all the lefties scramble to� minimize all of these connections as coincidental and meaningless.� The only thing that frustrates me about this clip is that he fails to point out at the end what is blatantly explained in their modus operandi....that the WAY these groups wanted to "collapse the economy" so their socialist structures might rise to popularity includes increasing the numbers of demands on the welfare and unemployment systems to unsustainable levels. Sound a little similar to what you see happening around you every day? Let me guess...that is purely coincidental too? I'm pissed at BOTH parties for this type of mismanagement and game playing. It needs to stop. IN BOTH parties! |
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supposeisaid7 |
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The Cap and Trade bill (aka HR2454/Waxman-Markey ) is up for vote today. This is nothing more than a thinly veiled method of taxing achievers &
transferring wealth to the poor.
Check out this little pearl nestled within, the text lifted directly from the bill up for vote today: Energy Tax Credit and Energy Refund The bill would provide energy tax credits to low income households which suffer reduced purchasing power as a result of Title VII (enforcement) of the Clean Air Act. Additionally, the bill directs the EPA to administer an "Energy Refund Program" to provide monthly cash refunds to low income individuals. These refunds will be considered non-taxable income. The size of the tax credit and refund will be determined by formulas specified in the bill. UNBELIEVABLE!!!! We will ALL have reduced purchasing power from this bullshit. Yet those of us who actually get out there and work and don't live off the government get to suck it up & deal, while the monies generated from our higher electric bills and higher prices of consumer goods gets directly deposited into the hands of those that idly sit on their asses contributing nothing but another uninformed vote for the hand that gives them all this shit. |
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supposeisaid7 |
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supposeisaid7 |
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supposeisaid7 |
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mattmorgeson |
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ah yes good ole Glenn Beck.....dont forget about hannity, limbaugh, and levin
Electric guitars -Washburn HB-35 -JM sig ( sunburst ) -Peavey T-60 Acoustics -Martin D-35, -Martin D-41, and 5 home made. Amps -Marshall JCM 2000 TSL halfstack
-Fender hotrod Deville, -Crate Vtx 212 -Fender Acoustasonic jr.
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shotgundmb |
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So, this country is really going to hell in a handbasket, eh?
I sense massive "change" coming in 2010....Also glad to see Peter Schiff and Rand Paul running for Senate. We need those type of libertarian leaning candidates to really turn the GOP back into the party of limited government. |
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