Posts categorized "Absurdity"

May 16, 2008

Day After "Appeasement" Remark, Ghost of Prescott Bush Hovers Over WH (satire)

Posted by Brad Jacobson

One day after President Bush likened presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama to those who appeased Adolph Hitler, the ghost of the president's grandfather, Prescott Bush - in an SS uniform, muttering German and gesticulating angrily - has been hovering high above the White House since dawn.

An anonymous Bush administration staffer said the White House initially believed MoveOn.org, which many administration officials have compared to Hamas, had orchestrated the specter of Bush's grandfather. (Prescott Bush, a true American hero, helped fund Hitler's war machine and, as the BBC revealed last year, co-conspired to overthrow President Roosevelt to create a Nazi-style government in America.) But MoveOn.org spokesman Adam Green denied his organization's involvement, saying, "Dude, if we could do that, we would've done it a long, long time ago. We would've saved a lot of money."

Prescott's ghost has attracted crowds of onlookers who might otherwise have taken the usual long-distance gaze at the White House before moving on to the Capitol's heavily trafficked monuments. One dumbstruck eyewitness, Stanley Huffle, a history professor at American University, said, 'It's as if history and karma have merged."

Around noon, the National Guard attempted to shoot down Prescott's ghost or at least disperse him to a less visible area. But the bullets merely sailed through his shadowy form, only seeming to further inflame his rhetoric. A passing German tourist quoted him as saying, "Our failure to please the fuhrer has led directly to this point in history, where a schwartze might be president, homosexuals can marry in California, and bagels are more commonplace than f***ing Wonder Bread!"

Following yesterday's heated Hardball confrontation between host Chris Matthews and right-wing radio personality Kevin James, James returned to discuss Prescott's ghost with Matthews.

"You see, Chris, like I said yesterday, Obama is an appeaser," began James. "Fine. Whatever," replied Matthews. "Just tell me whose ghost is floating above the White House right now."

"Look, Chris, an appeaser appeases those who make use of appeasement, which leaves us vulnerable to another 9/11-style attack." Matthews repeated, "I've asked you a simple question. Who is hovering sixty feet above our White House, sir?"

"But that's not the point, Chris. Appeasement--" "Listen, you mutant, just answer the question. You don't know. Do you? Do you?" "Of course I do, Chris. It's the, the...ghost of appeasement's past or something."

"Wow. Wow. You really just lucked into that, didn't you? Just stepped right in it."

"If luck means appeasement, then yes."

"You're an idiot. Thanks for coming on."

"Thank you, Chris."

During an impromptu White House press conference, press secretary Dana Perino told reporters, "First, let me start by saying that though some candidates think the afterworld revolves around them, the appearance of Prescott's ghost over the White House has nothing to do with President Bush's speech in the Knesset yesterday."

Veteran White House reporter Helen Thomas replied, "Sure. Pay no attention to the man behind the cloud."

Cross-posted from MediaBloodhound.

May 09, 2008

CNN's John King Calls Off Wedding, Moves In with Map (satire)

Cnnspan_4Posted by Brad Jacobson

John King, chief national correspondent for CNN, broke off his engagement to colleague Dana Bash Thursday after revealing a months-long affair with his interactive election map.

Wolf Blitzer, lead anchor for the network's 2008 election coverage, said he'd grown increasingly uncomfortable with King's infatuation over his touchscreen sidekick. But Blitzer claimed he didn't know until the Pennsylvania primary that King and his "magic map" were counting more than votes.

"We were all very excited about Pennsylvania. Another big night for the best political team on television. But the truth is," explained Blitzer, "viewers only saw John with his map on-camera. Off-camera, he didn't leave her side. John didn't step away for refreshments the entire evening. Not even for a Skittle." Blitzer, suddenly visibly upset, composed himself before adding, "Later that night, long after Pennsylvania had been called for Clinton and most of us had already gone home, one of our producers brought a Krispy Kreme over to John. She found him with his pants around his ankles and his hand on Florida. I won't get into what was resting on New Jersey."

Little is known about the coquettish wall map. Her interface is called Perceptive Pixel Multi-Touch Screen. King and the "magic wall," another one of her nicknames, only began working together on January 8, the day of the New Hampshire primary. But their chemistry blossomed with each successive night of primary and caucus coverage, each passionate wave of King's hand, each poke and tap into one of our nation's voting precincts.

Still, most friends and family were shocked. Mr. King and Ms. Bash, whom he also met on the job at CNN, seemed very much in love and looking forward to their future together. A Catholic, King even converted to Judaism for his now former fiancée. In a February interview with The Forward, he compared the excruciating pain of his adult circumcision to sitting through the 2005 Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof, starring Rosie O'Donnell and Harvey Fierstein.

Continue reading "CNN's John King Calls Off Wedding, Moves In with Map (satire)" »

May 07, 2008

Congressional GOP wakes from coma...

From Politico:

"Shellshocked House Republicans got warnings from leaders past and present Tuesday: Your party’s message isn’t good enough to prevent disaster in November, and neither is the NRCC’s money.

The double shot of bad news had one veteran Republican House member worrying aloud that the party’s electoral woes — brought into sharp focus by Woody Jenkins’ loss to Don Cazayoux in Louisiana on Saturday — have the House Republican Conference splitting apart in “everybody for himself” mode.

“There is an attitude that, ‘I better watch out for myself, because nobody else is going to do it,’” the member said. “There are all these different factions out there, everyone is sniping at each other, and we have no real plan. We have a lot of people fighting to be the captain of the lifeboat instead of everybody pulling together.”

In a piece published in Human Events, the Republicans’ onetime captain, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, warned his old colleagues that they face “real disaster” on Election Day unless they move immediately to “chart a bold course of real reform” for the country."

I am not sure what is more astounding, the fact that Republicans are shocked (shocked I tell you) that their looting of the US treasury, illegal war of choice, and gross-massive corruption is not popular OR that Newt Gingrich thinks that after 7 years of this, a sudden show of "real reform" in a few months will make a difference.

This is what happens when you have no interest in governing, but instead, only in winning elections. Yes Congressional GOP face an electoral disaster, one long overdue in my humble opinion and one likely to have happened sooner if not for all those pesky voting glitches and flag-waving dirty tricks (like getting your opponent out of the way by putting him in jail). 

And no Mr. Gingrich, a "bold course of real reform" won't really put a dent into the massive criminal enterprise the GOP has constructed, which is now thankfully crumbling all around them. I say we first put these folks on trial for fraud, bribery, abuse of power, and so forth and then if they are acquitted (by some miracle) you are more than welcome to suggest "bold reforms." Sound about right?

May 06, 2008

Indiana Polls Protected from Dangerous Decrepit Nuns

(updated below)

Posted by Brad Jacobson

Today in Indiana, a roaming pack of octogenarian and nonagenarian hooligans attempted to exercise their right to vote. Apparently, they didn't realize this was America:

About 12 Indiana nuns were turned away Tuesday from a polling place by a fellow bride of Christ because they didn't have state or federal identification bearing a photograph.

Sister Julie McGuire said she was forced to turn away her fellow sisters at Saint Mary's Convent in South Bend, across the street from the University of Notre Dame, because they had been told earlier that they would need such an ID to vote.

The nuns, all in their 80s or 90s, didn't get one but came to the precinct anyway.

"One came down this morning, and she was 98, and she said, 'I don't want to go do that,'" Sister McGuire said. Some showed up with outdated passports. None of them drives.

They weren't given provisional ballots because it would be impossible to get them to a motor vehicle branch and back in the 10-day time frame allotted by the law, Sister McGuire said. "You have to remember that some of these ladies don't walk well. They're in wheelchairs or on walkers or electric carts."

Take a walk, grannies! Oh...you can't walk. Well, just move it along, then. Nothing to see here, sisters!

Just another segment of our citizenry unconstitutionally penalized by last week's Supreme Court ruling. According to the Associated Press, thanks to this brilliant piece of legislation, more than twenty percent of blacks also won't be able to vote today in Indiana.

Did I mention that Indiana has never recorded "a single alleged case of in-person voter fraud in the state's history"? Ah yes, the preemptive doctrine applied to our own elections. It's not enough the government has privatized our electoral process, granting voting machine companies the right to proprietary secrets that directly impede our ability to verify the vote. Now, if you're not already purged from the voter rolls before you show up or some "accidental" and unverifiable glitch counts your vote for the candidate you voted against, you might be shooed away like the 98-year-old nun if you don't have the right ID.

To paraphrase Larisa, welcome to Soviet America!

Well, at least our mainstream media gave this anti-democratic Supreme Court decision the attention it deserved.

UPDATE: Brad Friedman, a truly impressive voting integrity watchdog, has much more.

April 30, 2008

Don Siegelman hit with travel restrictions...

Well America, it has come to this. If you don't know who Don Siegelman is, I suggest you start HERE. Now for the news update:

"WASHINGTON (AP) -- Former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman has been barred from traveling without getting prior approval.

Siegelman tells The Associated Press that he was informed by his probation officer Tuesday afternoon that he was being classified as a special offender for travel purposes. The classification means he must get approval from the judge overseeing his case and from the district where he seeks to travel.

The Democrat was sentenced to more than seven years in prison on corruption charges and was recently released pending his appeal."

Just in time to deny Siegelman the right to travel to Washington for his Congressional testimony?  Or is it simply that Karl Rove has thrown a temper tantrum and called in the Stasi to make Siegelman fall out of circulation? What country is this?

April 28, 2008

Look how cute, the bigots cry racism...

Leave it to Shiksa Malkin to once-again stand-up against racism - something she only does when she can actually distort what is being said by anyone left-leaning in order to then use those paid-for talking points to help the GOP machine. Here is what Malkin writes this morning about Rev. Wright's speech:

"Good morning, people. I’ll be on Fox and Friends at around 8:15am to talk politics. Today’s engine-starter is The American Digest’s post on Jeremiah Wright’s racial brain theories.Do you remember nutball racialist professor Leonard (Blacks are “sun people,” whites are “ice people.”) Jeffries?
<snip>
As I noted yesterday, Wright acted out the differences between black and white marching bands.
<snip>
If he’s this comfortable mocking black/white differences in front of media cameras, I can only imagine what he says in private to his faithful black liberation ideology adherents."

Well Michelle proves finally what I have always suspected. The right-wing brain does not see complexity nor does it understand metaphor. It does, however, appear to hate rather well and so this sudden race to defend black America from a popular black pastor leaves me baffled.

After all, is this not the same bigot who argued in defense of Japanese concentration camps? Is this not the same bigot who routinely attacks Muslims and Islam? How very strange that this bigot would suddenly care about black America being insulted by what she now is trying to spin as racists slurs of a black minister. Quite simply put, what Malkin does not get is everything and what she is paid to parrot is garbage.

Let me just say what I got out Rev. Wright's speech. What Malkin points to as white-left brain theory is really what is generally referred to those who study the brain as creativity and emotion vs. logic and how the brain controls both. To say someone is creative is not to say they are unintelligent. By the same token to say that someone is logical does not make them intelligent. But Wright is NOT talking about intelligence in this regard.

Wright is appearing to use this as a metaphor to emphasize how the culture of the American black community is one of storytelling and song from a slave-history in which those were the only tools of expression and documentation available to an enslaved people. He discusses how those traditions have been attacked as  matters of intelligence, when they are in fact matters of culture.

Why is that so difficult to understand for Shiksa and the other brain-dead that walk among us? What Wright appears to be saying is that the Euro-centric way of speaking and expression is acceptable no matter how crude, illogical or how un-artistic, while the black-centric way of speaking and expression is seen as a deficiency that must be remedied, even if not remotely crude and entirely logical and artistic.

He shows how an opera singer conveys story through song and also how stories are expressed in black folk music and blues. In other words, what Wright is saying is that the black culture is itself being judged as deficient by a society that views intelligence not based on culture, but on test scores. Now does that sound remotely racist to anyone with any sense? No, it only sounds racist to a bigot.

I urge you to watch the speech in its entirety and not just the snips culled for sale by paid propagandists.

Now for another example of bigots running to defend black America. This one is from the mental-all-star Ed Morrissey:

"This sounds oddly similar to claims made in The Bell Curve by Charles Murray and Richard Hernstein, a book that created a firestorm of controversy with claims that race made a difference in IQ scores, among other claims. The two authors got reviled as racist enablers and their work became denigrated among a wide swath of researchers for seriously overreaching the science on which they relied for their conclusions. Bob Herbert wrote in the New York Times that The Bell Curve was “a scabrous piece of racial pornography masquerading as serious scholarship,” and that the book was “just a genteel way of calling somebody a n****r.” The American Psychological Association dismissed the racial differences hypothesized as “unsupported”."

Now see, this is really interesting. I have read the Bell Curve - because I had to for a debate class in which I argued against its assertions (which were not all that difficult to debunk). The fact that Morrissey can compare Rev. Wright's metaphor to the racist drivel of the Bell Curve indicates that Morrissey has never read the book, but simply Googled around for something "intelligent" to say.

The Bell Curve argued that certain "races" (as though the human race is actually a variety of different species or something equally idiotic and bigoted) were more intelligent than other races. The authors of this piece of shite were white "intellectuals" for starters, which made their message that much more offensive. More importantly, the authors, Charles Murray and Herrnstein are conservatives, with Murray as a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.  In other words, these fine bigots come from the same side of the bigotry isle as Ed Morrissey and Shiksa Malkin.

Unlike Rev. Wright, Murray and Herrnstein were not using metaphors.  They were claiming actual scientific proof of the intelligence of the various "races," based on so-called "scientific" studies they had conducted.   And what did they base their findings on? Well, they gave tests to immigrants, uneducated migrant workers, the poor, natives of various tribes, and university students and such (among the larger testing pool).

Do you think they tested black university students and white university students from the same type of socio-economic background as well as other similarities that would ensure that the research was not skewed toward a particular group of people or a particular definition of intelligence?

Nope. They tested highly educated whites against the same measurements they applied to uneducated blacks and from this they got the results they claim as proof.

In addition, cultures that had better educational models, like Japan, were identified as genetically and inherently  "more intelligent", as though the quality of the system of education had nothing to do with the level of intelligence measured subsequently. But even we take the quality of the education system of the equation and look simply at all poor people in the US, regardless of gender, "race" etc., would these authors have found a better testing method? No. Because they also don't seem to account for cultural variants.

When testing indigenous people of various African tribes, what types of "intelligence measuring" tools did they employ?  Right, the types of measurement tools that don't apply to the culture. In some cultures, for example,  the measurement standard for intelligence is in the ability of the person or group to organize the food supplies and resources for an entire tribe. In this country, we cannot seem to manage that even though we have all of the wealth and resources that should make such a task much easier.

Bell Curve does not make that distinction, Rev. Wright does.  In other words, Wright argues precisely against what the Bull Curve asserts. So how did Ed Morrissey happen to confuse this? Well, as I have said, he likely did not read the Bell Curve, but simply Googled for something inflammatory to use in his swift-boating of Rev. Wright.

Finally, why are bigots feeling so insulted by something that has nothing to do with them? Let the black community express their feelings on the matter. Shiksa Malkin tries to do this with topics related to Jews and Israel, despite her not being a Jew or a citizen of Israel. Why? How does this in any way affect you, Michelle? Oh wait, I forgot, they get paid to be part of the nationalistic swarm that is released to help swift-boat someone or something that their handlers fear.

April 27, 2008

Scoop: Do Test Makers Cheat Copyright?

Posted by David L Steinhardt

With this year's 25 Most Censored Stories up (see Larisa's post from yesterday), it's time to revisit one from 2003.

But first, some background:

A funny thing happened to my friend Steven last year. So funny, he's suing.

Steven Michael Harris has been a Broadway actor, the youngest-ever Ringmaster for the Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey Circus, a neuroscience theorist, and a school presenter. He had just done a presentation about writing at a school, a presentation that includes excerpts from his children's book about circus life, This Is My Trunk.

The school's principal soon called not only to thank him for a great presentation, but also to tell him how thrilled the kids were, when they took a standardized test the next day, to see that an excerpt from Steven's book was part of the test.

Steven didn't know his book was excerpted in standardized tests.

The book had been published by Atheneum in 1984. Steven's contract specified that if the book ever went out of print, all rights would revert to him. Additionally, the contract specified that if Atheneum, or a potential successor company, were ever declared bankrupt, that all rights would revert to him.

By 1990, the book had gone out of print. In 1991, Maxwell Communications, which owned Macmillan (of which Atheneum was a division), went bankrupt. One would think his contract would have terminated, and that he alone would have had the power ever since to make decisions about, and profit from, This Is My Trunk.

But in 2007, Simon & Schuster, the new corporate parent of what had been Atheneum, was still selling portions of Steven's book to McGraw-Hill for use in standardized tests.

How could they get away with this? Well, tests are secret. Even the copyright office doesn't receive a copy. They're handled under a special procedure. Everyone who handles the tests are obligated to maintain secrecy as well.

The school principal, when telling Steven about his book's inclusion in the test, let one very big cat out of the bag.

On April 10, 2008 Steven filed suit in federal district court in New York, against both Simon & Schuster and McGraw-Hill, charging copyright infringement.

In 2002, my elementary-school classmate Jeanne Heifetz made news by blowing the lid off of how standardized tests heavily edit some literary excerpts in the name of "sensitivity guidelines" that end up not only violating authors' copyrights, but test students on words writers never wrote. The story made 2003's 25 Most Censored list.

My pal Steven's lawsuit appears to be blowing the lid off an equally nefarious practice. Expect to hear more.

April 24, 2008

Is Rove ready?

Cross-Posted at Huffington Post

##

Karl Rove asks: Is Barack Obama is ready for Prime Time? (as though someone requested his opinion). Strangely, after Murdoch purged the WSJ of actual editors and writers, an infestation appears to have occurred. Yes, two days in a row, WSJ=propaganda.

Here is what  Mr. Rove cobbles together in hopes of passing it off as something resembling an intelligent opinion:

With $42 million in the bank, money is the least of Sen. Obama's problems. He needs a credible message that convinces Democrats he should be president. In recent days, he's spent too much time proclaiming his inevitable nomination. But they already know he's won more states, votes and delegates.

Sorry? Who asked you for your opinion other than the propaganda machine that paid you to pen it?

I think the more important question is why won't mister Rove testify under oath about his involvement in the prosecutions of:

1. Former Alabama Democratic governor, Don Siegelman
2. Sitting Mississippi State Supreme Court Justice, Oliver Diaz Jr.,
3. Mississippi famed attorney and large fund-raiser for Democrats in the South, Paul Minor
4. Mississippi Judge, West Teel
5. Mississippi Judge, John Whitfield

Or perhaps instead of writing irrelevant opinion pieces by a soon to be irrelevant publication - not unlike its sister network outlet, Fox Noise - Mr. Rove might want to explain if he is ready to testify about:

1. His relationship to convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff
2. His relationship to allegedly corrupt 11th Circuit judge, William Pryor
3. His relationship to allegedly corrupt Alabama judge, Mark Fuller
4. His relationship to Bill Canary, the husband of  the allegedly corrupt AL USA Leura Canary
5. His relationship to absolutely corrupt AL USA- via his friendship Bill Canary - Alice Martin
6. His involvement with the huge influx of cash delivered to Mississippi Republicans during the 2000 campaign and later, through the US Chamber of Commerce
7. His relationship to the head of the Chamber, Tom Donohue
8. His relationship to the US Attorney scandal in general, and the cases in AL and MSi in particular

I could go on, but really, all I want to know is if Karl Rove is ready to testify under oath? Mr. Rove has consistently claimed innocence, without the balls to defend himself like any innocent person would do.

I would testify under oath if I were trying to clear my name. Would you not do everything in your power to clear your name? Then why won't Mr. Rove even show up to testify?

I know Mr. Rove must really think himself clever in his continued (and flaccid) strategy to keep the Democratic primaries "in-play." Surely Mr. Rove must realize - given the alleged size of his brain (apparently in compensation for less fortunate aspects of his physique) - that keeping the Democratic primaries going and going and going is not going to make the John McCain-Jack Abramoff scandal go away. It might be on the back-burner, but it is not going to go away.

No, the real question is and has been, are you Mr. Rove, ready for prime-time? The Obama question is not something anyone needs to hear from you, Mr. Rove - especially you, who put a not-remotely ready for prime-time, night-time, or any-time, man into the Oval Office under the spin of paid -off pundits.

A man who could argue in public about the readiness of George W. Bush for prime-time is a man whose opinion on anyone's readiness for anything should be entirely ignored.

No, the only person apparently not ready for prime-time is you, Mr. Rove. But that is hardly a surprise, now is it?

April 21, 2008

Podhoretz continues to illustrate his intellectual deficiencies...

Office_space_drawing_by_elloh John Podhoretz and I are both upset about the New York Times blockbuster exposing the use of retired military officers by the Bush administration to deliver domestic, government propaganda (See my post about it from yesterday). 

I am astonished that the story fell off the news radar so quickly and angry that the revelation has yet to move anyone in Congress to decry the administration's covert and illegal tactics. Podhoretz, on the other hand is angry that the Times published the article.

But before we get into Podhoretz's latest nonsense, let's recall how he got his job writing  with the big boys to begin with:

“I think some people are pretty shocked,” said Jacob Heilbrunn, whose book “They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons” is coming out in January. John Podhoretz, movie critic for The Weekly Standard magazine and a political columnist for The New York Post, “isn’t seen as a heavyweight intellectual,” said Mr. Heilbrunn, who has discussed the appointment with several neoconservatives. Rather, “he is seen as being a beneficiary of his parents’ fame in the George W. Bush mold.”

<snip>

Still, of the more than 30 people contacted for this article, several who have written for the magazine or have contributed money to the Commentary Fund said they were troubled by the family connection, the lack of an open search process and what they consider to be Mr. Podhoretz’s lack of intellectual credentials for such a highbrow journal, partly because he has written so much about popular culture. A former writer for Commentary said the appointment repudiated one of neoconservatism’s founding principles, a commitment to meritocracy. He, like other respondents, asked not to be identified because of longstanding ties either to the magazine or to the Podhoretz" family."

Now, keep this in mind when you read Podhoretz's attack on the Times over the military propaganda story:

"I think, based on many years of experience working at various newspapers, that there is an explanation for the extreme length — 7800 words — of the story and the fact that it manages to find nothing more than an effort by the Pentagon to get good coverage. The Times thought it was on to something very big, ended up with something very small, and then took what little they had and tried to make a silk purse from the sow’s ear that was reporter David Barstow’s investigation."

His many years of experience were mostly movie reviews and covering society, so how he actually thinks that he has a  grasp of  investigative journalism is beyond me. Now had he written an article about a newly released film, then his "based on many years of experience" claim might be relevant, but even then, would still seem arrogant. But if his credentials are lacking, the issues he has with Barstow's article illustrate his intellectual deficiencies rather well.

(Note: the drawing is by Elloh and can be seen here).

Continue reading "Podhoretz continues to illustrate his intellectual deficiencies..." »

April 18, 2008

Rove says needs WH permission to testify (lie) in Siegelman inquiry...

So remember when in response to Dan Abrams' interview of Don Siegelman, Karl Rove's attorney - Robert Luskin - said the that Rove would absolutely testify if subpoenaed? Well now that the House Judiciary Committee has decided to take Rove up on his offer, Rove and his attorney both wet their pants and cry like little girls with a skinned knee. First up is Luskin's latest public wee-wee session, in which he says:

"Whether, when, and about what a former White House official will testify ... is not for me or my client to decide."

Yes, how much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood and so forth. Aside from the overuse of words starting with the letter W, Luskin's assertion that Rove is somehow protected by the Executive on this won't stand up in any court . Rove's conversations with people in Alabama and at the DOJ are not covered by executive privilege.  Plus, Luskin has already said on the record that his client would testify. So which is it? If Luskin's woodchucking is not enough, Rove then goes on to send Abrams an angry five page letter. Although Abrams did not get into the specifics of what Rove said, I assume it went something like this:

Dan, I am outraged at your assertion that I did anything wrong, ever. You can ask George and Dick and they will both tell you I was a very good boy, not a naughty, nasty boy. Everyone is lying but me because they are all green with envy at my abilities as a super hero in my own mind. I won't stand for this defamation. We are in a war on terror and you are emboldening the terrorists. We are fighting them over there, so we don't have to fight them over here. All of you are flip-floppers. I did not help out Valerie Plame, err, frame Don Siegelman. I am not a monster!

I did tell you did I not that Rove would never testify under oath? Odd though, someone so aggressively claiming to have been wronged and wanting to clear their name, takes every opportunity to hide instead of actually making an effort to defend themselves with facts. Now why do you suppose it is that Rove is so unwilling to testify about what happened in Alabama? Surely if he had no knowledge of it, then his testimony under oath would only bolster his assertions, right? Now why would someone with "nothing to hide" as Luskin has said of Rove, be so angry while at the same time being so unwilling to speak in his own defense? I leave these questions for your consideration. In any case, here is the video footage from the Abrams Report


My Photo

Piggy Bank

tip jar for AL

Tip Jar

Books by AL Writers

  • Larisa's upcoming...
  • Jeff Huber's Upcoming ...

Get at-Largely via Email

  • Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

Pictures from the muck

  • Pertyyyyyyyy
    Pictures of me working on various stories, of actual stories and locations, of random musings, of pure and total nonsense.

Help Support at-Largely

Reporters Under Attack

Raw Story News

Click, Click

BuzzFlash News

DAILY CARTOON click to enlarge
ANDERTOONS.COM ENTERTAINMENT CARTOONS

Categories