Tuesday, October 16, 2007


RedState's Lord Vegas Makes What Is For Him A Reasoned Argument. These Clowns Are Considered Important Because?

I just thought I would post what you are missing over at RedState this afternoon. It's good to see that the knuckle dragging crowd continues meeting its "high" standard of reasoned discourse. The following is a post taken in its entirety from Redstate.com. Fair use? You bet. I am commenting on just how disgustingly childish "Redstate.com" posters are every day of the week.

The Democrat persuasive model by Lord_Vegas

The way to persuade the American Public is to use logic as demonstrated below


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About the Author
Vegas picture

Lord Vegas is a true American. some would call him a Mutt, but he prefers to eat Trolls for breakfast.
Reply To This — User Info — #7







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Thursday, June 21, 2007


Ben Stein Contributes To Al Franken's Campaign

RawStory has posted an article entitled Franken 'wins' Ben Stein's money for Senate run. Written by Ron Brynaert the article chronicles the contributions to Franken's senatorial campaign by his showbiz buds. Conservative Blogger Saint Paul at Fraters Libertas has scanned Franken's recent FEC report and has created an extensive list. The headline is catchy and it involves the "biz." Beyond that not much to learn, except that it links to some wingnut named Brian Maloney of the Radio Equalizer. Maloney is shocked that Republican Ben Stein would ever contribute money to a Democrat even if the Democrat is a personal friend.

The other day I read a story posted at TheHill.com . It seems Homeland Security Chief Michael Chertoff referred to Edward Kennedy's work on the immigration bill as awesome. Redstate's Kowalski went nuts. TheHill reports that

Chertoff said he doesn’t spend a lot of time reading blogs, but suggested comments in the blogosphere and on talk radio or cable television have created a climate that makes it tougher to get support for the immigration bill. While some blogs are “well-reasoned,” he said some “have a lot of capital letters and exclamation points” as well as curse words and attacks on people’s motives.

“That’s where we lose perspective over language sometimes, that you’re a sellout or a traitor if you support the bill,” Chertoff said.
How tribal have we become when Republican Ben Stein can't spend a $1,000 of his own money to help one of his friends? Why can't wingnuts have moonbat friends anyway? Aren't we all Americans first?

As Michael Chertoff points out the tribal atmosphere makes it very difficult for people of goodwill to reach a compromise on any difficult subject. I may not like the immigration bill, but it is nice to know that Michael Chertoff and Edward Kennedy worked together to fashion a compromise. That's democracy.

All the moonbat v wingnut tribalism we encounter these days reminds me of Sunni v. Shia. We all know how well that is working out.




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Monday, April 30, 2007


Is The Long Neo-Conservative Nightmare Really Over?

Glen Greenwald says the Republican noise machine, and their allies in the corporate press are no longer able to gain traction when they try to unfairly tar and feather Democrats. Trex echos Greenwald in a post called the "Incredible Shrinking Right." He points to the long overdue collapse of David Broder from "from Beltway Godhead to Bleating Dickhead in just a few short, easy steps" as an example of the rapid decline of conservatism. Kevin Drum points to an article by Michael Finnegan in the LA Times indicating that Republican regulars are too embarrassed by their party to answer poll questions. A commenter named Dave over at TMP (I can't find the comment right now) points to a significant decline in the number of comments at Redstate.com. It's true. You go to Redstate and they are posting, but nobody is commenting. You would think the site is a start-up like WTWC instead of a site that became valuable enough to be sold by the founders for real money.

What does it all mean? First, Americans are fed up with Iraq. They have been to the mall and have returned to discover the President has tied down our army occupying a country that doesn't want to be occupied. It is a country that only one American really wants to occupy. Sadly his name is George Bush. Second, Americans were appalled by Katrinia, and the lack of response shown by the administration to other Americans during their hour of need. It has dawned on many Americans that this administration puts the success of a small gang of cronies above all. Not many of us are in that small gang, which is really a subset of a subset of a subset. Third, the Alberto Gonzales hearings have demonstrated that for this crowd the department of justice is just another political tool. David Iglesias was on Bill Maher the other night. Maher gave the story perspective. At the end Iglesias was called a hero for putting his country ahead of his party. Maher's house Republicans sat on their hands looking embarrassed.

It sounds like our team is on a roll. We are finally winning. Well, during all of this I have been reading a series of books about the Civil War. You know, during the Civil War there were any number of battles where one side or the other thought it had won. Their soldiers stopped fighting. Sometimes they started looting. The other side rallied and ran the "victors" right off the battlefield.

Yes, Republicans are down right now, but they are down because of their own failures. Primarily they are down because they realize they have supported a maladministration that doesn't really share their core values. They are embarrassed because they have been hosed by the neo-cons. Folks, the Republican base will recover and will gain control of their party, maybe not in time for 2008, but recover they will.

The Democrats have yet to actually achieve anything. The war in Iraq continues unabated. We don't have universal health care. America's industrial base continues to decline. We still face a host of complicated social issues that have yet to be addressed. George Bush's maladministration is still in power. The justice department is still a wholly owned subsidiary of the RNC and is being run by Karl Rove.

Don't become complacent. Don't start bragging. The battle isn't won. If we let up they will rally and we could be run from the field. We need to make sure we remember that right now the Republican rank and file probably feels betrayed. I don't think they have abandoned their basic principles. We need to make sure we are inclusive and thoughtful when arriving at suggested solutions for Americas problems. Some of their basic principles are pretty much basic Democratic principles. Some aren't but there is room for compromise on many issues. This is a time for Democratic compassion.




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