The Central Scrutinizer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2001
- Messages
- 53,097
Central Scrutinizer, does that must mean your post #124 is no longer true? Or wasn't ever true?
I don't know. Could you post it here?
Central Scrutinizer, does that must mean your post #124 is no longer true? Or wasn't ever true?
I agree. That's why I refuse to engage in ad-hominems.
Central Scrutinizer, does that must mean your post #124 is no longer true? Or wasn't ever true?
or you could do a search of Cicero's posts and see many fine examples)
Thanks for the plug.
We can now add Joe Miller to the list of failed Tea Party candidates.
What on earth is the TPP?
Not quite. I expect his campaign to come up with... something nutty as a way of prolonging the inevitable humiliation of both he and Quitter Palin![]()
Are you coming on to me? I'm not into teabagging shenannigans.
You have me confused with Scrut. He likes to watch "teabagging."
Thanks for the link. It shows Rachel to be respectful with someone who is challenging her way of doing tihngs, even though she may not agree. Others could learn from her on this.Stewart calls out Maddow and her fellow MSNBC cronies for using Scrut's favorite phrase "teabaggers."
STEWART: It seemed dickish. Democrat Party. Or when you spoke out against the war, there was a subtle undertone of you're un-American, you don't want to win the war on terror. Well, I think that what also comes out sometimes from the other side is teabagger. Now that’s I think derogatory. And I don't think anybody would mistake it for that, for anything other than that. And it's been used on this network quite frequently, by hosts, by guests…
MADDOW: You don't think it was funny that they were calling them, they were saying tea bag the White House before the White House tea bags you?
STEWART: I thought it was funny for a day. I thought it was funny for a day.
MADDOW: Funny enough to play the John Waters clip of the teabagging thing on a bar?
STEWART: For a day. Probably wouldn't have run with it with guests and things for months
MADDOW: I didn't run it for months.
STEWART: No, but your part…
MADDOW: But I got criticized for it for months.
STEWART: Well, because you kind of made hay of it. You made more hay of it than maybe that, you know, that…
MADDOW: Took the joke too far.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gsJrgwxQDo
Thanks for the link. It shows Rachel to be respectful with someone who is challenging her way of doing tihngs, even though she may not agree. Others could learn from her on this.
Maybe this explains how Reid went from being down 4% in polls to winning by 5% in just 3 days?
http://gatewaypundit.firstthings.com...nes-in-nevada/
Rory Reid, the son of Nevada U.S. Senator Harry Reid, is in charge of the voting machines that were reported as malfunctioning and are serviced by the SEIU.
Rory Reid is running as the Democratic nominee for governor of Nevada against Republican Brian Sandoval. Rory currently holds the office of Chairman of the powerful Clark County Commission and is the former chairman of the Nevada Democratic Party; he was elected to the Clark County Commission in 2002.
… snip …
Rush Limbaugh added this on the controversy:
This is Mark Hemingway in the Washington Examiner: “Clark County is where three quarters of Nevada’s residents and live and where Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s son Rory is a county commissioner.” That means that Harry Reid’s son is the person in charge of overseeing the election machines that are being maintained by the SEIU.
01/12/2011
A Las Vegas judge has spared senior ACORN executive Amy Adele Busefink jail time for her role in a notorious voter fraud conspiracy.
Judge Donald Mosley sentenced Busefink to two years imprisonment but suspended the jail time provided that she abides by the terms of her probation. She was also fined a total of $4,000 and ordered to perform 100 hours of community service.
… snip …
Busefink also ran ACORN’s fraud-ridden 2008 voter registration drive. In that drive, officials chucked an astounding 400,000 bogus registrations.
Feb. 2, 2008
… snip …
In 1990, District Judge Donald Mosley provided $10,000 of his campaign money to his then-girlfriend. Mosley called the transaction a “brief loan,” but the woman who received the money told the Los Angeles Times in 2006 it was a gift. Mosley said the money was restored to his campaign fund, but the woman said she did not repay it, the Times reported.
June 08, 2006
… snip …
Las Vegas is a town where District Judge Donald M. Mosley, 59, gave unspent campaign funds to a girlfriend. He called it a loan. She said it was a gift. Canon 7 of the state Code of Judicial Conduct said a judge or a candidate for judicial office "should not use ... campaign contributions for purposes unrelated to the campaign." Mosley acknowledged six years ago in a deposition that he provided her with $10,000 of his political money. Mosley said it was restored to his campaign fund, but his girlfriend said she did not repay it.
Mosley's campaign fundraising reports leave the matter unresolved. They show that the money was neither withdrawn nor paid back.