hello....day roundin up da brothas.....

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
from where i'm sitting, they all look pretty black to me.

by the way sir, your card came back as insufficient funds:

 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
LOL the large eared one. He has gotta worry about his uncles deportation first thing Tuesday morning.
 

feff f

Active Member
LOL the large eared one. He has gotta worry about his uncles deportation first thing Tuesday morning.

can this get any funnier? but if they look back through some posts of yours, uti, johnny, and many i am missing, this was so fucking predictable. the guy is a total fraud......him and his huge iQ

from his policy statements on marij, his stances on war, his stimuli predictions, th economy, has there ever been a more incompetent potus? seriously
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
can this get any funnier? but if they look back through some posts of yours, uti, johnny, and many i am missing, this was so fucking predictable. the guy is a total fraud......him and his huge iQ
All the presidents have been frauds since Kennedy, although I kinda like Reagan. I kinda like Obama too, wish he was my neighbor, but as the President he scares me.
 

feff f

Active Member
All the presidents have been frauds since Kennedy, although I kinda like Reagan. I kinda like Obama too, wish he was my neighbor, but as the President he scares me.
i dont agree. all pres were human. and made mistakes. but so far, i think obama is the first to actually hate his country.

you can take all the birther crap, the racist crap, the tea bagger crap, and toss that out the window.

i think obama actually believes that our systems of liberty are faulty and he is so smart he knows just how to change them.

i dont think any president before this had actual negative feelings about the virtues of freedom and liberty and hard work. it really is stunning
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
All the presidents have been frauds since Kennedy, although I kinda like Reagan. I kinda like Obama too, wish he was my neighbor, but as the President he scares me.
i never thought of that, but he does seem awful neighborly. he doesn't scare me as POTUS though, he has actual had tangible positive effect in my family, although i would not call him my favorite president ever. or even close.

i dont agree. all pres were human. and made mistakes. but so far, i think obama is the first to actually hate his country.

you can take all the birther crap, the racist crap, the tea bagger crap, and toss that out the window.

i think obama actually believes that our systems of liberty are faulty and he is so smart he knows just how to change them.

i dont think any president before this had actual negative feelings about the virtues of freedom and liberty and hard work. it really is stunning
i don't think any populace before has ever doubted that a president who has gotten to where they are through freedom and hard work actually hates such precepts. you might as well hate blowjobs, or apple pie and baseball, or fireworks on the 4th of july.

in other words, i am calling partisan hackery on the fulafel or the fru fru or the farfenugen, whatever his new name is.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
i dont agree. all pres were human. and made mistakes. but so far, i think obama is the first to actually hate his country.

you can take all the birther crap, the racist crap, the tea bagger crap, and toss that out the window.

i think obama actually believes that our systems of liberty are faulty and he is so smart he knows just how to change them.

i dont think any president before this had actual negative feelings about the virtues of freedom and liberty and hard work. it really is stunning
I don't think Obama really has a personal agenda, I think he has people who pretty much tell him what to do,what to say, how to think and how to feel.
 

Red1966

Well-Known Member
i never thought of that, but he does seem awful neighborly. he doesn't scare me as POTUS though, he has actual had tangible positive effect in my family, although i would not call him my favorite president ever. or even close.



i don't think any populace before has ever doubted that a president who has gotten to where they are through freedom and hard work actually hates such precepts. you might as well hate blowjobs, or apple pie and baseball, or fireworks on the 4th of july.

in other words, i am calling partisan hackery on the fulafel or the fru fru or the farfenugen, whatever his new name is.
Part of the problem is that Obama has only had two jobs, if you can call them that, in his life. "Community Activist" employed by ACORN and politician. He doesn't have any experience with any real business that must make a profit to survive. His pay has always come from a governmental (taxpayers) source. He's never done "hard work". Both his parents abandoned him for some "Cause". All that's greatly influenced his view of the world. He wrote a book titled "Dreams of My Father". Never read the book, but what could he have known about his father's dreams, he never knew his father. All he could know is what his mother told him, and she was a flake. Both his parents were idealist, but they were complete failures as parents. So his parents really taught him that "The Cause" must be achieved no matter what the consequences. That's a philosophy I find to be dangerous.
 

WillyBagseed

Active Member
It is not the experience issue. It is the fact he is 1/2 black. If he went off like he should all you would see in the news would be "angry black man"
 

deprave

New Member
Just ask him something without a teleprompter.

[video=youtube;f6zvuEnvWTg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6zvuEnvWTg[/video]
 

undertheice

Well-Known Member
seldom do we get a chance to see so much hypocrisy surrounding one issue. if many reports are to be believed, this situation goes a bit beyond merely rounding up a few mercenaries. this is precisely the sort of thing that would normally have bleeding hearts howling and licking their chops, but the best we can muster is "oh, you mean the mercenaries". anywhere else in the world, under any other circumstances, these actions would be loudly decried as a tyranny, but hardly a cry is heard. simply because it is under the guise of spreading democracy. you remember that, don't you? it's what we were so vehemently vilified for in iraq. that and bringing down a bloody dictator that had been proven to support terrorist activities around the world. i'm sure y'all will point to the popular support in libya as the greatest difference between these two fracases. who here won't admit that there was quite a bit of prodding by the west to get this little coup going? those of you that raised your hands may now go to the back of the room and hang your heads in shame. you've been shown to be imbecilic partisan hacks and should no longer be allowed to participate in intelligent debate.

from beginning to end, this libyan adventure has been chock full of contradictions and hypocritical maneuverings. the comparison of western actions in libya and iraq seems inevitable, but has been brought up short whenever possible. the differences seem to be all that matters. this time around, it wasn't the great satan, america, who instigated international interference. it was the global community itself. more specifically, the european voice of the global community. america had apparently resigned itself to its place in the world as the global community's watchdog/lapdog. little was made of the speculation that this was a war for oil, though europe receives a significant percentage of its oil from libya, and what little there was aimed itself mostly at american interests. any incidences of friendly fire "accidents" or civilian casualties were relegated to page three and quickly dismissed as natural occurrences in the fog of war. this whole battle seemed short and sweet. it might be claimed that there was more internal support for this war than for the imperialistic designs that were supposedly evident in both iraq and afghanistan, but an alternate rationale may be more to the point. this time we were fighting in support of many of the same elements responsible for worldwide islamic terrorism and that gave support to the insurgency in those other theaters. all in all, the socialistically inclined voices of the world seem to see this as one of those moment in time when we should all gather 'round the campfire and sing kumbaya, in sharp contrast to the venom spewed on our other recent endeavors.

the partisan hackery certainly hasn't been restricted to the left side of the board. in these very forums, as well as a few less obscure spots, i've read attempts by those with a more conservative view to paint libya's erstwhile leader in a more rosy light. they point to the good he has done for his people, the oil wealth he spread among the citizens of his country, and seem to say "well, he wasn't all bad". that he did this through the socialistic means of nationalizing the oil industry seems lost on these folks. y'all remember what "nationalize" means, don't you? it's where the state steals all that private enterprise has built and holds it in the name of the people. it is certainly true that this did improve the lot of the libyan people, but that hardly excuses the abuses he heaped on his nation's citizenry or the terrorist activities he endorsed and supported. what those folks to right of center should realize, what we should all realize, is that qaddafi's tyranny is the natural outcome of the means he utilized to control the nation's wealth. such a swerve toward socialism demands a strong arm at the wheel and the resultant tyranny that always seems to follow. every major socialist power has had a single man or party that wields such power, controlling it at what is assumed to be the behest of the people. this is power taken from the people, lost power that equates to lost freedoms. along with the inevitability of intrusive centralized control is the equally inevitable disquiet of the people when they begin to miss those freedoms they relinquished for the sake of comfort.

i would like to believe that the libyan revolution, along with the whole arab spring phenomenon, will end in a freer middle east. i'd like to, but i can't. this latest bit of news only deepens my fears that the "democracy" spreading throughout the region is of the darker sort. a people steeped in fear cannot be expected to rule wisely. a people infiltrated by hate cannot be expected to do anything other than their worst impulses demand. a people so used to being ruled over with an iron hand are far more likely to resign themselves to another form of tyranny than to pick up the reins of their own destiny. the combining of the power of the present persian state with that of nations newly freed of their masters seems almost impossible to avoid and destined to result in the emboldening of jihadist style sentiments and even more danger for the world at large.
 

Jack Fate

New Member
Is Ghaddafi out of Power?
is Ghaddafi Most likely to die?

GOOD
/end of discussion
But our Dear Leader promised the American people he would never attack a nation that was no direct threat to us. Once again, we see the double standard by the left.
 
Top