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My two cents are: �It is generally agreed that 'Hello' is an appropriate greeting because if you entered a room and said 'Goodbye,' it could confuse a lot of people.� � Dolph Sharp

- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 16:29:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Blob from space may hold secret of life BY NIGEL HAWKES SCIENTISTS believe that they have found evidence of bacteria from outer space on the edge of the Earth�s atmosphere. If confirmed, the discovery will be the strongest evidence yet for a controversial theory called panspermia, which holds that life evolved in space and reached the Earth from comets. The evidence, presented at a meeting in San Diego, California, by one of the theory�s originators, Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe, of Cardiff University, came from experiments in which samples of material were collected by balloons 41 kilometres above the Earth�s surface, on the very edge of space. He said yesterday that he was convinced the bacteria were extraterrestrial. �The chances of getting anything terrestrial at a height of 41 kilometres is remote. It could possibly happen as a result of violent eruptions, or debris from space missions, but we have detected between one and ten clumps of these bacteria per litre ambient air. That�s a huge amount.� High altitude balloons launched from India were used to collect the air samples. Sophisticated sampling devices were employed which kept the air in sterile conditions to avoid any contamination. The scientists are now trying to grow the bugs at Cardiff University�s Centre for Astrobiology and examine their DNA. Professor David Lloyd, who led the analysis of the samples, said: �It may be they are just terrestrial bacteria, but we don�t know how they could have got up to these heights.�
YuM
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 14:58:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: I was on my way to the post office to pick up my case of free M&M's (sent to me because I forwarded an e-mail to five other people, celebrating the fact that the year 2000 is "MM" in Roman numerals), when I ran into a friend whose neighbour, a young man, was home recovering from having been served a rat in his bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken (which is predictable, since as everyone knows, there's no actual chicken in Kentucky Fried Chicken, which is why the government made them change their name to KFC). Anyway, one day this guy went to sleep and when he awoke he was in his bathtub and it was full of ice and he was sore all over and when he got out of the tub he realized that HIS KIDNEY HAD BEEN STOLEN. He saw a note on his mirror that said "Call 911!" but he was afraid to use his phone because it was connected to his computer, and there was a virus on his computer that would destroy his hard drive if he opened an e-mail entitled "Join the crew!" He knew it wasn't hoax because he himself was a computer programmer who was working on software to prevent a global disaster in which all the computers get together and distribute the $250.00 Neiman-Marcus cookie recipe under the leadership of Bill Gates. (It's true - I read it all last week in a mass e-mail from BILL GATES HIMSELF, who was also promising me a free Disney World vacation and $5,000 if I would forward the e-mail to everyone I know.) The poor man then tried to call 911 from a pay phone to report his missing kidneys, but a voice on the line first asked him to press #90, which unwittingly gave the bandit full access to the phone line at the guy's expense. Then reaching into the coin-return slot he got jabbed with an HIV-infected needle around which was wrapped a note that said, "Welcome to the world of AIDS." Luckily he was only a few blocks from the hospital -- the one where that little boy who is dying of cancer is, the one whose last wish is for everyone in the world to send him an e-mail and the American Cancer Society has agreed to pay him a nickel for every e-mail he receives. I sent him two e-mails and one of them was a bunch of x's and o's in the shape of an angel (if you get it and forward it to more than 10 people, you will have good luck but for 10 people only you will only have OK luck and if you send it to fewer than 10 people you will have BAD LUCK FOR SEVEN YEARS). So anyway the poor guy tried to drive himself to the hospital, but on the way he noticed another car driving without its lights on. To be helpful, he flashed his lights at him and was promptly shot as part of a gang initiation. Send THIS to all the friends who send you their junk mail and you will receive 4 green M&Ms -- if you don't, the owner of Proctor and Gamble will report you to his Satanist friends and you will have more bad luck: you will get sick from the Sodium Laureth Sulfate in your shampoo, your spouse/mate will develop a skin rash from using the antiperspirant which clogs the pores under your arms, and the U.S.government will put a tax on your e-mails forever. I know this is all true 'cause I read it on the Internet
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 12:14:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=2041994&BRD=1289&PAG=461&dept_id=156630&rfi=8
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 10:03:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: ...on this coming Sunday's on-line version, that is.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 09:52:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: "....maybe a bleeding southern Missouri virgin there on the wall amidst the dung to be reported in the Carrol County Times..." - Anonymous@(July 29, 2001 at 17:19:47). Shades of Ydog. Speaking of the Times, they just called to make arrangements for a photographer to come out tongight to snap pics of the observatory. Might be worth checking out the features section of the Times' on-line edition at http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1289
Glint
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 09:51:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, the clowns return to the sewer. Oh happy days....
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 09:43:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: The slime has slithered off stage left.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 09:13:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete's back and the rabble rambled off.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 31, 2001 at 06:47:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Leave the Boy Scouts out of this.
Harlan St. Wolf
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 20:51:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: he he

- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 20:21:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Web site administrators running Microsoft Windows NT and 2000 operating systems, along with the Internet Information Services software, should download Microsoft's patch from the company's Web site. Home users running Windows 95, 98 or Me are not vulnerable.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 19:42:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,30897,00.html
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 19:24:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thanks, Glint. By the way, Bush's approval ratings are now at 59%. Read it and weep socialists.
Pete�
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 18:59:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, did your travels take you back to the mainland? Condolences to your wife and kids. While you were away, the anonymice did play.
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 12:10:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, the only reason he is not able to unite is ebcause the liar treasonous pod people socialsits are unwilling to compromise. Give it up pal, your feeble efforts to demonize only prove your complete hypocrisy. Youa nd your sickness known as democrats are O-V-E-R! For good. POW!!!
Pete�
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 10:49:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: More about the E*vils of creeping socialism: "On average, a U.S. citizen turned over $1,921 in total taxes to state government last year. Nationally, state taxes totaled nearly 7 percent of Americans' personal income in 2000, according to Census data released Friday. The biggest state tax burdens were in Hawaii, New Mexico, Vermont, Delaware, and Minnesota, when state taxes are figured in proportion to personal income. Hawaii ranked No. 1 because education, a governmental service covered by local government in other states, is a state service. Because so many state services are often passed on to local governments, economists say a better measure of tax burdens nationwide is a snapshot of both state and local tax collections. But the most recent information on state and local taxes, released last week by the Census Bureau, is already three years old. That data ranked Maine, New York, New Mexico and Wisconsin as having the highest tax as a percentage of personal income in 1998. Both sets of data agree that Connecticut has the highest per capita tax. In 2000, Connecticut residents paid $2,987 per capita to the state, according to the Census Bureau. Tax burdens can influence how much additional money middle-income workers must earn to purchase various goods and services, such as a new car or computer, compared to residents in other states. The true cost of goods and services in high-tax states such as New York is greater than in lower-tax states such as South Dakota. Census data showed state government tax revenues grew from $500 billion in 1999 to $540 billion in 2000, an 8 percent increase. Individual income tax revenues collected by the states rose 13 percent over 1999, according to the 2000 Annual Survey of State Tax Collections. Nationally, states collected about $296 million in licenses on alcoholic beverages, and $4.1 billion on alcohol sales taxes in 2000. The 50 states also brought in $15 billion on motor vehicle taxes. Corporation net income taxes paid to states produced $32 billion nationally. In 2000, no state showed a decrease in total tax revenue, according to the survey based on state government records." Don't forget property taxes, sales taxes and pass through corporate taxation. We already live in a socialsit country. Tiem to take back teh streets from these insidious, slowly strangling pod people!
Pete�
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 10:47:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: President Bush said he would be a uniter. He's proved that by uniting the entire world against the USA.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 10:11:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, Glint, mostly socialist front groups I know very well. Yes, I also heard about the bug. Interesting. I like the Sphinx history too. People travelled the world long before Columbus, obviously.
Pete�
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:35:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Since ydog's no longer around I feel compelled to act as his substitute by posting something amazingly juvenile and devoid of discussion of the actual issues but chock full of bitter name calling >>> Bush Flunks Kindergarten (By Mario Giardiello, Politicalusa) It is time that President Bush reads Robert Fulghum�s Everything I Need To Know I Learned in Kindergarten. As Bush bullies Putin, refuses to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, lies to the American people, and in general refuses to play nice with other world leaders he casts a dark shadow of isolationism over America�s head. As our reputation across the world dwindles we are left to wonder how this happened in such a short time? If he can just remember the rules of kindergarten, then maybe we can get back on track and not be viewed as a selfish, bully-nation. Rule number one in order to pass kindergarten: Play nice. Bush�s inability to get along with others is evident with his blatant disregard for the rest of the world's wishes to ratify the Kyoto Protocol. Even his national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice said, "I don�t believe that it is a surprise to anyone that the United States believes that this particular protocol (Kyoto) is not in its interests�." .....
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:35:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Since when are the words love, sex always synonymous.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:27:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'm sure the fags would love to show them how to rub two sticks together. (tat-tat-bonk-crash!)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:23:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: After they burn through the eggs, hamburgers, and beef stew maybe they can burn some homosexuals. Yeah, teach those Boy Scouts the meaning of the word love.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:14:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Let's hear it for the Scouts! Hip hip hooray! >>> Newsweak Aug. 6 issue � Jeff Moran and some friends from Troop 1320 dropped onto the lawn near Trading Post 13 last Tuesday, a sweltering morning during the 15th Boy Scouts Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill near Fredericksburg, Va. Despite the heat wave, over the next 10 days they would help 32,000 other Scouts burn through 76,000 hamburgers, 479,000 eggs, 10 tons of beef stew�and countless hours energetically addressing a controversy that will not fade. �In the Bible, it�s a sin to be gay,� said Moran, 15, as the sun GLINTed off his dyed blue hair. Keep them out of scouting? �Exactly,� he declared....
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 09:06:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Republicans are the best thing that's ever happened to Californian government, you ungrateful kooks! >>> LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California Gov. Gray Davis has fired five energy consultants because they had conflicts of interest between their official duties and their personal finances, the Los Angeles Times reported on Saturday. The five advisers were all involved in purchasing energy for the state from a generator in which they owned stock, the newspaper said. The firings came after a top state Republican official asked federal regulators on Wednesday to probe possible insider trading violations in Davis' energy team.
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 06:44:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, have you ever heard of the Wekiu bug? It's a tiny 1/4 inch roach like anthropod that is native to the summit of Mauna Kea. Seems the little critter has developed antifreeze for blood and has the ability to "transfer all the water in its body to its stomach to prevent forming fatal ice crystals." Anyhow, the Sierra Club is going apeshit because they claim theat nearly the entire population of the bugs has died off since 1982 and blame the construction of telescopes for it.
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 06:30:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi Pete, glad to see you back. Say, the August Sky & Telescope magazine has a feature about the conflict between Hawaiian culturalists and the astronomy institutions with instruments atop Mauna Kea. Touches on a little history of the place including the 1893 "invasion" by the U.S. and the ceding of lands by Queen Lili'uokalani.
Glint
- Monday, July 30, 2001 at 06:11:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: By the way, do tell us how you feel I am the golem, as in protector of the jews? Eh? Progress for a socialist is three steps back, you got that part right, buckaroo. The two steps forward are the course of all the non-socialists who must fight these enemies of America and the real definition of progress. And those who know that is simply is. Not the mind control distortions of the liars.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 23:30:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Two steps forward, three steps back. That's progress.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 20:06:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: I know we are making progress when the cowardly anon acts as desperate as he does below. Victory will some day be complete when these lying thieves are completely undone. Tlak about forking it. Sheesh!
Pete�
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 19:14:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I met with the Pope and found him to be a very religious man. A man who is very serious about his religion and one who takes his religion very seriously. It took him twenty minutes, but I think he told me "not to fuck things up". I may have to check my notes. Anyway, he was serious and I listened seriously. It was that kind of conversation. Serious, important. Seriously."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 18:51:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Diplomacy should not stop at our borders. It should be something that brings people of different nations together. That's how great continents are made. The are made from countries adjoining each other in diplomatic relations".
Lord of the Fleas
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 18:38:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: "The key to diplomacy is in going to other countries. That's what diplomacy is all about. If it wasn't for diplomacy, we wouldn't need other countries to be our allies."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 18:32:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I saw european children drinking in europe. Before they were adults. I don't think americans should have euoropean children. At least not until they're twenty-one."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 18:21:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Europe was much more cosmopolitan than I thought it could be with all those different languages and cultures. I was impressed at how well they've done since the revolutionary war. There was a Denny's AND a Taco Bell in Venice. And a Number 12 grand slam breakfast at Denny's in Venice is just the same as one in Dallas. That's progress!"
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 18:03:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I just came back from visiting some foreign countries in Europe. Other countries are not like the United States. They are foreign countries, and alot of them are in Europe. I was there recently and just got back to the United States. It's good to be home."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:52:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: "If I wasn't a good communicator I wouldn't be able to talk to all the American people that aren't able to listen to me right now during this interview. That's the problem with interviews, they don't let you speak to the people who have nothing to say and need a voice."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:47:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: The problem with talking about things in detail is the details. They get in the way of talking about the details. About the details of things.
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:43:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: If I had to say something about everything I understood something about then I couldn't say anything at all and would have to talk about nothing. Now how would that seem?
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:42:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I say the things I've said because those are the things I've had to say about what I have to say about things I have something to say something about. It's not hard to understand."
George Bush
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:33:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Someone said once �you can�t go home again�. Maybe it was F. Scott, maybe Hemmingway, maybe someone else or even someone else and else again. Could have been Bruce Rosen tripping in the dorms at UCLA one night. I can't remeber. It dosen�t matter now. Not now. Not after six months vacant from the page. The smart monkeys figured a way out. A way out of the cave. Scrabbled up the granite walls and into the light of day. They�re gone. Only looking back in now. And they see only the last ones left, the idiots. The ones with six or seven fingers fumbling on each hand as they try and count to ten. The ones that couldn�t turn around. The ones left facing the dark wall of the cave. Hurling right-to-life and personal responsibility feces against the wall and ceiling until their very own shit dripped down onto their sloping foreheads and dribbled into their slack-jawed ignorant republican mouths and choked them. Jeremiah monkeys, Glint monkeys, Crynic and Spete monkeys. MK monkeys. Hurling turd after turd against the wall of the cave waiting for a Picaso to appear. Or maybe a bleeding southern Missouri virgin there on the wall amidst the dung to be reported in the Carrol County Times. Meanwhile, a ringmaster seems to remain. A sadistic smarter monkey. Toying Pete up and down like a cheap carnival-prize yo-yo. With little lcd�s invented by ibm that light up when spinning and make the other dumber monkey�s ooh and aawh as they watch the master yank Pete up and let him down. Over and over and over. If I had an outside fork, I�d stick it in this page. Fork the monkeys.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:19:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, that fireball musta been something!
Pete�
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 17:05:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Took a bag full of assortedf English and Dutch beers over to Mr. Peebody a few nights ago. He viewed the big daytime fireball, and was apparently heading north on the same road as me but was probably 2-5 miles farther south than me. He said he didn't mention it to anyone until he saw reports of it on the news because he didn't want people to think he was crazy. Then he added that his first thought after seeing the bollide was me. Should I consider myself insulted that he associated me with questionable sanity?
Glint
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 09:16:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, the homos' attack on the boy scouts is continuing. Some kids on a water skiing trip vandalized some dino tracks in some fossilized mud in Utah. It happens that the delinquints are members of the boy scouts, so of course the liberal press preses that angle of the story, with the blazing headline "Dino Tracks Near Vernal Vandalized by Boy Scouts." Beat up the boy scouts every chance they get. As if the scouts are promoting organized vandalism.
Glint
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 08:50:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: White house staffer Ari Fleischer is on the Commie News Network.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 08:38:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, as I was saying before the server ate my post, the super bowl champions are slated to start their training camp this week once again in the county seat here. The town which was Ydog's favorite conservative enclave in an otherwise unredeemable socialist state. Since his departure he has missed lots of the best gloatings. Oh where oh where has the yellow pup gone?
Glint
MD - Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 08:22:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hello? Testing..1..2..3. Did my previous post just get eaten? Who is this new croc of the ninth turd?
Glint
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 08:17:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 08:11:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Business (free market) exigencies force me to spend the next five days in Colorado, where the coals of true Americanism still smolder. I will return once more at the end of my sejour to evaluate the conservatism quotient of this site before submitting my recommendations to the freep directorate. Shape up.
Croc Nine
- Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 07:32:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: Instead of rounding up cows maybe the conservatives are down in Colombia spreading the Roundup.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 28, 2001 at 22:32:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hillary and Dubya have pulled the wool so far over their eyes they see nothing but the spin. Baa baa baa. They are sheep ambling happily to the slaughter. They are destroying America, and Bill Clinton is pulling the strings, calling every shot. What, China knocks down our airplane in international airspace? Pull the "apologise to the Chinese dictators" string. Troubles with Russia? Hey, pull the string that makes a lodge buddy out of director Putin of the KGB! A man who until recently made his living pulling fingernails out of American patriots and burning their balls with electrode sparks. Why not pull the string that makes Dubya gut the entire American medical system, and replace it with a sue-happy form of socialized medicine where tort attorneys are more important than doctors? Maybe Bill Clinton would pull the string that makes the liberal puppet give American citizenship to every diseased criminal who was able to flout American law and sneak into this country like a rat under a rafter? Wake up, America! The liberals are everywhere! It is time to pick up the gun, live free or die!
Croc Nine
- Saturday, July 28, 2001 at 21:16:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hey, I know this great and glorious land we call America, as well as I know the liberals or dumbocRATS who are its evil enemies. I have been all over this land from Maine to Mexico, From Washington State to the tip of the Florida Keys, seeking out Liberals wherever they may be, and locking them in deadly embrace..... and one thing I have learned: there are cows everywhere. It is not difficult to find a cow in this country. Nowhere in this land are you more than fifteen minutes from a cow. In the unholy tower of Clinton Network News, one is no more than fifteen minutes from a cow by limousine. Even in the heart of Dallas, fifteen minutes with the pedal floored, running lights, will take you past a cow. Everybody needs milk, everybody eats beef, and the cow is there, ready to provide. There are probably more cows in Orange County than in the whole state of Texas. Texas has no monopoly on cows, but it has nothing else so the cow is more apparent there. The liberal Bush's Clintonesque need to go to Texas to see cows is a humiliation to 47 states, plus Alaska and Hawaii, which were unconstitutionally awarded an ersatz "statehood" in the 1950's, by the arch-liberal, Eisenhower and his henchmen Nixon and Fulbright. Why not commune with the cows of Wisconsin? How about Idaho or Georgia or Mississippi, have they no cows? No, go to Texas, commune with the Texas cows, and have a secret tete a tete with Lady Bird Johnson while you're there, and the other Jew factotums of the International Monetary Fund. I heard that the conservatives on this site were true conservatives, who have their eyes open. Instead I find people fawning over the Liar-in-Chief's cow-watching alibi. Wake up , people! Shake the cow-flop out of your eyes and smell the rank smell of liberal socialism! You are nothing but sheeple! You make me puke.
Croc Nine
- Saturday, July 28, 2001 at 21:00:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe they're trying to follow in the footsteps of their leader and are out there somewhere trying to find cows to commune with.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 28, 2001 at 18:59:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: OK, I've waited maybe a day. What gives? Where are the asshole conservatives?
Croc Nine
USA, - Saturday, July 28, 2001 at 15:43:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hang around long enough and you'll see a few asshole conservatives. Have patience.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 21:45:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: I came here because I had heard that it was a bastion of deep conservative theorizing, but it is nothing but a liberal cut and paste site. There is nothing but a bunch of self-congratulatory asshole liberals here, with their snotty, pointy-headed socialist take on everything. I can't believe that any true conservative would want to anywhere near this contaminated slime. Liberals obviously rule the roost here, and it is enough to make me puke. This place should be keyworded and banned on the freep, so real freepers don't waste their time the way I just did.
Croc Nine
USA, - Friday, July 27, 2001 at 20:54:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 20:04:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Japan is pushing to lift the ban on commercial whaling. They said there's too many minke whales. They called them the cockroach of the ocean.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 15:20:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds to me like Bush is using to cows just so he can deliver the punch-line about being a good listener. Sometimes I find it hard to believe that Bush loves seeing cow one.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:57:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: When you think about it, seeing a cow as you walk along IS pretty exciting, and something to look forward to.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:55:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: He likes to talk to cows. They say moo instead of boo.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:51:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: President Bush said on Friday he was eager to start vacation on his Texas ranch, where he would spend time communing with cows. ``I hope a week from tomorrow the Congress takes off and gives all of us a break,'' Bush told student leaders of the Future Farmers of America. He said he was ``heading back to the heartland,'' his 1,600-acre ranch near Crawford, Texas, where he was expected to spend the entire month of August. ``I love to go walking out there, seeing the cows. Occasionally they talk to me, being the good listener that I am,'' Bush said.
I didn't know Hillary was planning to visit the ranch
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:13:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint had better stop bad mouthing the California nuts. Looks like the natives are getting restless. Watch out or they might start playing a tune on their cats.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:06:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: The guy thinks he gets his juice from amazon.com and calls me a fool...
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 13:00:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: In other words, poor ignorant conservative sap, the socialist providers were looking out for the providees, and developed adequate power sources. The private companies not only didn't develop adequate sources, they sold off the ones they had so they could be a delivery service and not have to get their hands dirty. This allowed the private companies that bought the generation plants the opportunity to control prices and squeeze the ratepayer by the balls, especially with a Republican administration coming in, with no committment to anyone but the private energy purveyors. The pulled back substantially as soon as the senate flipped, because what they were doing was illegal, and they could be prosecuted if the balance swung too far.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 12:58:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, fool, the ratepayer who got squeezed was the PG&E ratepayer or the SoCal Edison ratepayer. The ratepayer who didn't feel a squeeze was the SMUD or the LADWP ratepayer. The private companies couldn't supply their customers and had to buy from the municipals. You see, the private electricity companies were too busy thinking about how to merge with amazon.com or webvan.com to spend much time thinking about providing electricity.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 12:49:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: That's right. Let the government make the buying decisions to pay top dollar for electricity from generating companies that are government owned. Nothing wrong with a little insider trading. So what if the rate payers would get a better deal from private companies.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 12:12:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: In other words, if there is any story there, it is not only that the municipally-owned untilities not only took care of their people, they had excess power to sell and did better in the open market than the welfare capitalists. Not a bad record for socialist energy utilities. Let's have more of them, and squeeze these Texas ghouls back into their holes.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 11:14:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Doesn't say they were charging so little. Says they were charged at times less than the peak charge from some of the municipal, or socialist, utilities. From such meagre seeds a red-faced outrage grows. But don't bother me, I'm riveted to the Chandra Levy matter.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 10:06:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sirhan Sirhan
exempt from cal kookdom
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 09:45:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: If they were charging so little, how did they make the 800% profit?
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 09:20:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint's not going to help. Like the rest of the nation, he's too riveted on the Chandra Levy matter to pay any attention to the bomb that went off in Sacramento last week.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 09:16:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Does whoever posted that idiotic screed about Davis claim he can find a point in it other than the idea that huffing and puffing about nothing is fun? What's the story? Glint?
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 09:14:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: For at least nine months now, California Gov. Gray Davis has been screaming bloody murder about how corporate power pirates out of Houston have economically raped and pillaged the state of California, creating an artificial electricity crisis out of thin deregulated air. The story didn't appear to add up. But because the governor's office refused to release information about how much the state paid to whom for electricity over the past several months, who was to say? Lawsuits finally pried that information out of Davis last week and � lo and behold! � "the biggest snakes on the planet" (Davis's words) were charging less than the publicly owned utilities of California itself and even less than the price charged by his right-hand man, David Freeman, head of the L.A. Department of Water & Power. And Davis turns out to have known it all along. Until Davis coughed-up the data, the Left was in hog heaven, scoring point after point about how socialism � at least in the electricity business � was far preferable to capitalism. Alan Richardson, president of the American Public Power Association, recently told an audience that, "California is a great example of municipal utilities that have � taken care of their customers while investor-owned utilities have taken care of their shareholders � Every customer of a private utility is seen as a profit center. With public power, every customer is seen as our owner and neighbor." Anti-utility activist Harvey Wasserman wrote in The Nation that, "dereg apologists are having a hard time explaining why two California power companies were immune to the crisis: the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power and the Sacramento Municipal Utility District. Both are owned by the public � during the crisis, rates charged by both companies have been stable." It turns out, however, that publicly owned utilities charged the state an average of $344 for a megawatt of electricity during the first three months of the year. Private companies were meanwhile charging less than an average of $250 per megawatt. And those Houston-based "snakes" � Reliant, Dynergy, and Enron � were charging less than the publicly owned utilities, less than the sainted and celebrated L.A. Department of Water & Power ($292 per megawatt), less than the Sacramento Municipal Utility District ($330 per megawatt), less than other investor-owned California-based power marketers, and less than the overall market average. Other more ambitious sellers include those municipal "good neighbors" at Seattle's City Light Department ($634 per megawatt), BC Hydro ($498), and virtually every other socialist power entity that bellied up to the California wholesale power market. But that's not to say that the municipals did anything wrong. They had an obligation to local taxpayers to maximize their revenues. Moreover, it turns out that the markups weren't all that great. The cost of producing electricity at the margin was so high because of the run-up of natural gas costs; most of the asking price reflected the cost of spinning electrons back at the plant. "It's insulting to ask for any money back. We weren't part of the problem, and we helped the state in a crisis," Peter Fletcher of the Sacramento Municipal Utility District told theSan Francisco Chronicle. "And it's not like we're doing well." Another interesting revelation is how inept California state agents were when they tried to run a power system previously managed satisfactorily by the utilities. The state "called us and said, 'we're looking for power at $500 a megawatt hour for a seven-hour period,'" Kate Hora of the Modesto Irrigation District told the Chronicle. "There was no negotiation. We just helped them out at the price they named." These are the business wizards that Davis wants to take over the whole system? It should go without saying that this doesn't help the governor's price-gouging argument. The story Hora tells of how the state behaved with her utility is consistent with the stories related by the private marketers. The state asks for power and names a price. The company agrees. And several weeks later, Davis & Co. scream about "the gougers." The story Fletcher tells � of prices mostly reflecting costs � likewise belies Davis's contention that greed explains all. If Sacramento's municipal utility found it hard to make any money even with sales of emergency power at $330 a megawatt, what makes anyone think it was easier for Enron et al.? The Left's entire California story, it turns out, was built upon a breathtaking series of gubernatorial falsehoods and demagoguery. If Davis and his duplicitous henchman, David Freeman, have an ounce of credibility left, it's only because the nation is too riveted on the Chandra Levy matter to pay any attention to the bomb that went off in Sacramento last week.
Gov. Davis deceived Californians about the energy crisis. <'nother california kook pulling the sheeple's eye wool down>
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 07:48:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: As I speculated on July 19, "She [Mrs. Condit] had both motive and opportunity." >>> XXXXX DRUDGE REPORT XXXXX THURSDAY JULY 26, 2001 13:37:07 ET XXXXX COPS: CONDIT WIFE ATTACKED CHANDRA; FURIOUS PHONE CALL The NATIONAL ENQUIRER is set to report in its next edition set to hit newstands Friday that Gary Condit's wife attacked Chandra Levy days before her disappearance after a furious phone call between the two. The ENQUIRER reports that the call between Carolyn Condit and Chandra Levy has been discovered by case investigators in which the missing intern told the wife that Gary Condit was going to dump her, and start a new life with Levy. According to an ENQUIRER source, "Investigators got phone records that show a phone call from Condit's home in California to his apartment in Washington that was over five minutes long. "Condit said that he did not talk to his wife during that phone call because he wasn't in the apartment at the time." Gary Condit is said to have become enraged that Levy broke a cardinal rule of his and picked up the phone at his D.C. apartment, and confronted her over the encounter. Investigators have pieced together that Chandra was at Condit's apartment at the time and saw on the Caller ID that an incoming call was coming from Condit's California home and that Chandra boldly picked up the receiver and that a 'blow-up phone call' ensued. It was after that call, apparently, that Carolyn Condit took off for Washington on April 28. Detectives now want to give Condit's wife a lie detector test because, according to a Justice Dept source, she is "now being looked at as a key to the whole investigation." According to the ENQUIRER, Carolyn Condit has refused to take the exam. Developing...
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 07:27:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: O.K. these are the exceptions. As for the rest of 'em -- freakin' kooks!
Glint
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 07:15:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Old Frozen Beard.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 07:01:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Barbagelata
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 27, 2001 at 06:39:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: March Fong Eu, Angelita Alioto, Quentin Kopp. There's lots of nuts in the basket. Kopp though, I guess he's just a mean bastard, not so much a nut. But what does any of it really matter, in a state crazy enough to elect Ronald Reagan governor? The whole camel slid inside the tent that night.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 23:41:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: How about that kook Earl Warren?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 23:21:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is that the one who's a Reserve Deputy Sheriff?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 20:28:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure we fight about encroachment. California itself is one big encroachment on Mexico. The guy I like is the state senator from up north, the guy who carries the .44 magnum with the Dobermans in the car. Heavy into denying benefits for illegal aliens, then it turned out that he was a Norwegian who jumped ship as a teenager and was an illegal alien himself. Had to get papers quick or lose his right to get food stamps if he needs them.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 19:23:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wonder if there are any California kooks who fight about gourd encroachment.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 18:50:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sam Yorty. I guess he was a dem, then a repug, maybe ended up with George Wallace. Another of those kooks Glint referred to.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 16:17:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: The list goes on. How about that family values guy Boxer beat time before last? Started with an H. He was a newsreader turned pol. Boxer's hounds sniffed him out at a sleazy strip club. Herschenson?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 16:15:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Then there was Dan White.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 16:06:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Shirley Temple.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 15:51:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: B1 Bomber Bob.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 14:53:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyone ever hear of Max Rafferty? California Superintendant of Schools in the '60's? Mr. Chips out of the John Birch Society?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 14:20:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Quackenbush.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 13:34:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Briggs.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 13:30:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Mike Curb.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 13:30:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Barry Goldwater, Jr. and his 3 gram a day coke habit.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 13:29:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Senator Sleepin' Sam Hayakawa, may he rest in peace.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 13:28:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: And don't forget Rep. Sonny Bono, another Californian. A man who knew exactly nothing about everything, and killed himself by skiing into a tree, apparently unintentionally. Duh. Replaced by his bimbo wife, and governance took a big step forward.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 12:17:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: California once had a senator who was a Hollywood tap-dancer who had made movies with Shirley Temple. George Murphy, a right-wing Republican whose great contribution to American government was to serve as the Senate's master of protocol or social chairman. Then we had a governor who trained for the job as a B-movie actor starring opposite chimps, shaved his armpits, and had a wife known for giving the best head in Hollywood. It's a crazy dang place, make no mistake.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 12:15:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Lot of right wing looneys in California, where strange Republican politicians are grown.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 11:51:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is there anybody in California who is not a goddamned kook? >> "Motivated by the mystery of Levy's disappearance, a composer in Los Angeles wrote a 13-minute orchestral score called "Matters of Consequences." David Woodward said he hopes to have the piece performed simultaneously in Modesto and Washington, D.C., although no date or site has been determined. "It is my hope that this contemplative offering will effectively illuminate the symbolic bearings of Chandra's predicament," he said. The instrumental piece employs ocean and cat sounds in the background of standard chamber music instruments -- bassoons, contrabassoons, strings, timpani, gongs, tam tams and bass marimba."
Glint <ocean and cat sounds?>
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 11:12:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: That explains a lot.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 09:46:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: Once got bumped up to 1st class on a flight from St. Louis to Paris. They keep shoving food and booze at you all through the flight. Food, booze, chintz slippers, little leather bags of stuff, all sorts of crap. It was brutal.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 09:44:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: Had to fly to Florida one day. Stopped by petty cash at the defense contractor's on the way to the airport and picked up an envelope stuffed with a two or three thousand in $100's and five $20s for expenses. When the wheels left the ground I ordered a drink. Was flying coach so there was a cash bar but unfortunately the stewardess didn't have change for the $20. She brought the drink said to hang on to Jackson and she'd come back when she could break him. It was a morning flight and so apparently I was the only passenger taking a buzz. In an effort to help her out I ordered a second drink, and then a third. This way she didn't need to collect as much change. When the bar finally closed after last call and she set down round four she still couldn't make change and so the drinks were on Delta.
Glint
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 09:33:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: The world is finally learning about Dianne Feinstein. Only Democrat on my ballots I never voted for. Proud of it. The tip-off was when she ran for the Senate the first time, on a pro-death-penalty platform. Thank the lord we have a true dizzy liberal as a second senator, to balance her off.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 08:37:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: A lot of these stewardesses are men, now. They call them stewards.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 08:33:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: I like to reach up under the stew's skirt and tuck a fiver between the panty crotch and the pussed over twat.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 08:19:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Keep it up. Pete might get the idea it's hip to tip an airline stewardess and cause a scene on the flight home, as she hurls the Sacajawea in his face.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 08:02:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, a buck for the old bag who brings the little bottle.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 07:28:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: With a Nebraska dash, it still only adds up to $4.20.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 06:59:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: We don't believe in tipping, back to home. Saps the virtue.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 06:58:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Let's see, four bottles at four bucks plus a buck for the cunt, that's five times four. hey, where's the change?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 06:56:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's the charcoal. OK if you use gas grill.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 06:54:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: "It's bad enough they charge you $4.00 for one of those little plastic bottles of booze. Now they want to keep you from spending a twenty for four." - Anonymous@20:28. Have you always do this poorly with story problems, Anonymous? "Sir, drinks are $4 a piece but we're having a special offer where you get 4 for just $20." "Duhhh. Adios Andrew Jackson!" lt;> So the latest carcinogen is barbecuing meat. Bad news, I grill out at least 2-3 times a week. Oh well, better than airplane pretzels.
Glint
- Thursday, July 26, 2001 at 06:37:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint probably realizes that the only reason Pete went to the old cunt's funeral was to make sure the lesbian didn't get screwed out of the Chippendale armoir and the copper down-spouts and the hooked rug made out of strips cut from Salvation Army wool jackets. That's also why he had to drive, so he can rent a utility trailer in Sioux Falls and haul the loot back to San Pedro.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 21:16:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: All this is well and good, but where the hell is Glimpse Faintley? He is under strict instructions to carry on the good fight, keep the liberals from capturing the top of the hill, fending them off with Valdosta talkshow blather. Has he forsaken the cause? Did he take a twelve-pack of Oly over to the neighbor as baksheesh for turning the light off and drank it with him, is dancing naked round the light pole and free-peeing for the first time since kindergarten? What the hell is going on here?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 21:08:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Remember the time Hamilton Jorden, pronounced "Jerden", stared at the boobs of the wife of the Egyptian ambassador at a state dinner and told her he wanted to tour the pyramids of Egypt? Evil virtueless liberals. The true EnEmiEs of America.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 21:04:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: Asshole Carter. Took all the fine work of his immediate predecessors and laid it to waste. Then there was Bert Lance. Remember Lancegate? Our darkest hour.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 20:56:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's bad enough they charge you $4.00 for one of those little plastic bottles of booze. Now they want to keep you from spending a twenty for four.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 20:28:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Sen. Dianne Feinstein wants airlines to limit passengers to a two-drink maximum."
feinstein = jack booted nanny bitch
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 20:19:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: That bastard Carter would have cut deals with the Ayatollah if the Ayatollah had offered him any, which he prudently didn't. Who can blame him for waiting to deal with Reagan?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 19:42:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: He would miss it too if he could.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 19:08:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: I knew Carter was pretty horrible and I knew he often sold out our allies. But I had no idea he did so AS A MATTER OF ROUTINE. What pissed me off about the fucker was that he refused to deal with terrorists, especially the, I-rans. Reagan restored pride by sending in the Marines to that little island and by his willingness to cut a deal or two with the Ayatollah. We miss his brain.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 16:59:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why didn't the Panamanians have to give up any canals they had running from one end of the USA to another? It isn't fair. We had to give them ours, but they didn't have to give up anything, unless you count the pineapple-faced dictator.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 16:36:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Reagan was asleep at the switch, and never grabbed the canal back. That is why our ships now have to go around Cape Horn to get from Frisco to Boston, and the Reds are on our flank, ready to drive an armored column up through Amarillo, then right up the backbone of America to Duluth. It is all reagan's fault, the deranged monkey-loving bozo, however hilarious his Philly jokes may have been.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 16:34:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: That's another great thing about the internet, anonymous. You don't even have to transcribe the ideas of your favorite right-wing talk-show host, but can go to his web-site and grab them, paste them right into your discussion board. Who said that moaning and whining because Carter failed to support Somoza and gave the Panama Canal to the Red Chinese would be difficult? Takes nary a brain-cell.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 16:30:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: How could a guy that bad possibly be demonized? It is obvious from the material presented below that the man was a demon to begin with, and needed no demonizing by his enemies. It's good to know that outfits like chuckmorse.com are around to spread the true skinny.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 16:24:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: There you have it, the final word on Carter. Anybody who thinks the guy was demonized should visit the website listed below for the straight scoop. Toodles!
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 14:37:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: "...The Carter Administration, 1977-1980, as a matter of routine, sold out our allies and aided our enemies. His actions condemned nations to left-wing tyranny, Islamic fundamentalist dictatorship, and war. His policies hurt America's economy, weakened our military, and encouraged the "malaise" that he famously referred to. With the election of Ronald Reagan, America rejected the malaise and began to pull itself out from the rubble. Following is a brief revisiting of the Carter foreign policy...." http://www.chuckmorse.com/jimmy_carter.html
"Jimmy Carter Friend to America's Enemies, Enemy to America's Friends"
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 14:34:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: In my strange country there is a different sort of crisis because our leader of old was asleep at the switch because he was smoking the dried leaves of the lotus flower in the ancient bowl of the Vishnu Rajanhaha. Now we find ourselves short of thread for our needles which is needed to sew shut the crusty orifices of our once fair maidens whose awful baiting we must tolerate daily now.
Rajesh Rachabattuni
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 14:04:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau would not have approved of any president who was afraid of a rabbit.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 13:59:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: The way I figure it, Pete probably took the flight when the prices were low, and is now taking the trip when the prices are high. He attributes this to some imaginary disruption in oil policy, rather than to the inherent weirdness of airline pricing. If there's anything dumber to fall off of than a turnip truck, this guy fell off of it.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 13:12:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: What's the new oil policy? Relax stateside drilling controls? That's not an oil policy, that's just a little baksheesh for a few Texans. Piss in the ocean. What is it that makes Pete think some yammering talk show host who should be driving a bus knows anything about policy? Why doesn't he ever bother to learn anything, maybe read the paper? The clown is striving to be the great unwashed all by himself. Hey, Pete, leave some stupidity for the other rubes. No fair hogging it all yourself.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 13:09:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hard to believe that anything as dumb as the golem can type. After a fashion.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 13:05:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: You know, under Cliton. The guy who slept at the wheel and didn't control the A-rabs.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 11:18:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Since when?

- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 10:51:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wow, I didn't realize the cost of oil had just about doubled.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 10:44:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, the problem is the cost of oil caused by Cliton's idiotic non-existent oil policy. In fact, that is what has caused all economic turmoil right now. The truth is I COULD get there if I paid $1300, which is absurd. Just a direct flight used to cost about $350, now it is $650. Due primarily to gas costs, not free competition. Without that, it would be astronomical. Dopes.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 10:22:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: It used to be that just about every airline flight served some kind of hot food. If it wasn't french toast sticks at 11:59 it was salisbury steak at 12:01. Then they did away with the good stuff and started tossing out bag lunches like softballs with cold sandwiches and pouches of mustard. Seemed like a gyp to me. Then the old stewardesses with their crusty mustard snatches stopped with the sandwiches and just dropped a bitty bag of peanuts in everyone's lap. Hey, I'll take the cold sandwiches any day but screw these peanuts! Whose idea was that anyway, some half wit president from Georgia known for his ability for crashin' choppers in the desert? Nowdays you're lucky to get a bag of stinking proteinless pretzels. It sucks because I don't even like the suckers. I'll take peanuts any day. Obviously deregulation is to blame. Next they'll be handing out a jolly rancher to each sardine sitting in coach. It's enough to fuel the air rage in each of us.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 10:06:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Back in the days when we had socialism in this country, before Jimmy Carter deregulated the airlines and screwed everything up, you could get to your cunt mother-in-law's funeral easy, winging in on a warm airplane with a bag of honey peanuts in one hand and a free cup of joe in the other.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 07:03:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: The poor fool will never understand that the reason flights are tough is airline deregulation. Big carriers flocking to the hub cities, the rich routes, and leaving the Perorias of the world twisting slowly, slowly in the wind.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 06:40:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: What, Bush is trying to get all metaphysical on us? Trying to move into the league of what is is. Sorry, No-Lips, what is is is actually pretty damn good. Your Belief thing is just, well, stupid.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 06:18:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course that makes sense to everyone except a liberal whose thought processes shift with the wisps of wind. Traitors. Sick ones to boot. Anyway, leaving in the morn, flights tough and must drive most.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 25, 2001 at 00:05:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I know what I believe. I will continue to articulate what I believe and what I believe--I believe what I believe is right." --President Bush
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 23:14:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: If Pete is going to America or wherever for the old cunt's funeral, why doesn't he leave already? Get on the bus. Keeps popping up like a bar of Ivory soap. I wonder if he's working up one of those complicated, disjointed, self-canceling toasts like the one he prepared for his bro's wedding? For the wake, you know. "Let your love prepare you for the horrors of today's world and your death release you from the yesterdays that didn't come again." That kind of thing. Maybe throw in a little Thoreau, whether he would approve or not. "Death, like the morning star of Dawn, is there only if we are awake to see it. Thoreau would say as much, if he knew about this situation, but he does not. Place your living hand over her dead one. Now you can never say death always has the upper hand. Say only that a pussed over twat can be sewn up, but a death unseen cannot be discharged into a foul mouth, whatever else it will do fine for. Fess Parker would approve. Copywright Pete, 2001." Pete's in-laws are probably used to it, and won't run screaming from the funeral. They'll turn to one another and say, "fortunately, she's a dyke and doesn't depend on this asshole," or, "the lithium seems to be doing some good."

- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 22:01:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, I'm here for the duration. You can count on that. Nuff said.
Harlan St. Wolf
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 21:04:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Brilliant satire, cowardly anon. At least you are good for something after all. Humorousity. Now, don't blink. POW!!!
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 21:02:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 20:52:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau would not approve of the cold coals on this site. He'd toss Carter into the pond followed by a wabid wascally wabbit.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 20:38:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 20:29:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint's been at the pool. This is night 5 that Mr. Peebody's mercury vapor light has been left off. Unfortunately, it was cloudy though. Still, Thoreau might still give his stamp of approval to the whole thing. I suppose Pete has gone to the mainland or wherever the funeral for his mother-in-law will be held. <> Eldest prairie princess flew in today for a few weeks. Family spent the day at Mt. Vernon after picking her up at REAGAN National Airport. <> Well, Jimmy Carter has had his 15 minutes of Fornigate fame. Time to move on. For sure. Bump.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 20:05:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 19:50:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'm going to take five days off and study up on socialist thought, maybe read some Hitler or Norman Thomas. I'll check in every now and then to see if some loon-ball thinks he is King of the Hill. Only then will I emerge to push him off, sliding on the slime of his own liberal boots. Or, if he is not a liberal, on the slime left by somebody else's liberal boots. Toodles.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:59:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where is Whizzer Glint? Why does he always run off and hide when he commits a boo-boo? At least Pete finds a cheap motel room and listens to Rush non-stop for five days. Glint just buries his head in the sand like an ostrich, hoping the shame will pass on by. Locks himself up in the dome and whacks off to his pictures of Linda Tripp. Comes back babbling about Leyland cypress and eyepieces. A very, very sick man. What would Thoreau think of it?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:55:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: So, you're saying Thoreau didn't like ants? Or is this just your interpretation. Is it really YOU who don't like ants?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:50:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Everybody is missing the point. Yes, it is a new daw that has dawned. There is likely a new day to dawn. But only that day dawns to which we are awake. The morning star still shines. That is the point. Not whether Thoreau, whoever he is, would approve. The part about Thoreau was just a throwaway reference to a dead white male. Probably a high-earning mayonnaise lawyer with a lot of amazon.com shares. Try to grok the actual though about the dawn that only dawns when you're awake to see it dawn. That's the koan here. That's the key. Glint understands it. The crynic understands it. Teresa would understand it even as she derided it. Whether Thoreau approves or not is up to each of us to decide. Pete is merely suggesting his opinion. It was his goodbye. He's got to take a few days off to recharge the batteries, listen to right-wing talkshows in a motel room for five days. He was running out of fresh things to say about the socialists. Cut him some slack.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:47:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Didn't he say we live meanly, like ants?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:42:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Who is this Thoreau character, anyway? Is he the guy who used to draw the dog cartoons in the New Yorker? Why is his approval so important?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:41:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau might raise a quizzical eyebrow. He might nod in acquiescence. But he would never approve. Not Thoreau.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:39:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau, asshole, would not have known that the loss of the morning star had occurred. I believe that Thoreau would approve of this interpretation.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:38:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: You mean Thoreau would approve of the morning star still shining? Yeah, I guess he would.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:03:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Shit! Thought I could sneak one by. I thought the poor, pathetic asshole had left. I knew I had completely missed the point of reference and it was par for the liberal course. I was just trying to have some more fun at the jerk's expense. Man, is this guy ever vigilant or what?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 18:02:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau, my bird-brained socialist, would not have even known such things exist. In any event, you completely missed the point of the reference. Par for the liberal course.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 17:05:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau never left the county of his birth. I can't see how he would approve of a world traveler like Pete. It was Thoreau who said, Simplify, simplify, simplify. He would not approve of Pete's two Benzes, Pete's Sharper Image Mr. Telescope, the piss-green copper roof and the fancy-schmancy third level poem.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 16:46:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: I approve.
Thoreau
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 16:44:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau would approve.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 15:56:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: They allowed you scum to continue lying.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:48:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: How did Carter screw up the country? I forget.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:28:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: The same Andrew Jackson who started the Spanish-American War?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:27:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: I think that "Thoreau would approve" line is a real gem, a neat way of carrying sophomore year into adulthood. I'm going to use it every chance I get.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:25:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, another completely asinine liberal ploy. Gee, Jimmy de pee-nit fuhmuh. He wuz de o-ny wun who wuz fo piece and pospertie. Yeahright! Lying SOS liebral. He was a complete bozo who screwed up this country worse than just about anyone since Andrew Jackson.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:18:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thoreau most likely would approve of the stars not falling out of the sky, but of what relevance is that here? Could it possibly be that this Pete character is just trying to project an intellectual image by tossing in the name of a Famous Writer? Quick show of hands: how many of you think Pete is an intellectual guy who knows Thoreau from a hot rock? What! Not even Glint, to whom the baton is passed? Probably too busy trying to fight the rational thoughts that are busting up the talk-show fog in his brain, driving him inexorably toward liberalism. Soon he too will be a traitor and the true enemy of whatever Pete thinks is America.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:16:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Not in xt. Fer shu-are.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:16:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wonder where the pathetic sap is going to be for the enxt several days?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 13:05:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: It was so very unvirtuous of Jimmy Carter to believe in peace and human rights.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 12:52:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, it is a new daw that has dawned. There is likely a new day to dawn. But only that day dawns to which we are awake. The morning star still shines. Thoreau would approve. Unfortunately, I will not be able to keep the rock shined for the enxt several days. Jimmy total idiot Carter ahs not a word to say about anyone, the buffoon. He is just another in a million reasons why no demonrat should ever be allowed to hold any position of power. Ever. Glint, please carry on the good fight for virtue and the American way against all these E*vile scum socialists traitors. They are the true enemies of America! POW!!!
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 12:37:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well ah guess Dubya caint be dat bad, then. Shucks, he's just like our Jimmuh. Twas afraid mebbie he was a takin' after Billuh Cahtah 'nstead.
carter voter
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:54:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: How did this bonehead ever get to be president anyway? His dad? It's hard to believe that a majority of Americans would vote for him.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:54:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: George W. is a lot like Jimmy Carter. All he lacks is the brains, the honesty, the moral integrity, and the lips.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:52:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Alderman Irene Smith cited for public urination" (STL Today) Alderman Irene J. Smith, DemocRAT-1st Ward St. Louis police issued a citation Monday to Alderman Irene Smith related to her apparently having urinated into a waste basket during floor debate last week. City Counselor Patti Hageman said her office would decide whether to charge Smith, D-1st Ward, with violating the city's ordinance against public urination. If a charge is filed, it will go to the city courts, where Smith once was the chief judge. The incident took place July 17 as Smith filibustered against a redistricting bill. The presiding officer ruled that Smith would yield the floor if she left to use a restroom. Friends of Smith surrounded her with a quilt, sheet and tablecloth as she appeared to urinate. Smith could not be reached for comment Monday. Her attorney, Anita Rivkin-Carothers, said if Smith is charged, she will plead not guilty, relying on the city's "inability to prove her guilty of any violation." http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/graphlib.nsf/ByFilename/smith18big.jpg/$file/smith18big.jpg (oink!)
who "leaked" the story about this barnyard SOW?
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:38:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, well at least Ford is keeping his trap shut.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:24:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gerald Ford, the accidental president.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:23:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: WIN buttons, humiliation, clown, double-digit inflation..... this fellow is seriously confused-- these were all Gerald Ford accomplishments. They are what got Jimmy elected. What got him defeated, of course, was Ronald Reagans excellent lying talent and his deal with the Ayatolla to keep the American hostages locked up until after the election.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 11:04:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: A very weak man. He didn't believe women should graciously consent to their husbands.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 10:57:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: An idiot. I will never forget the humiliation he brought to this country. CARTER = MAJOR LOSER. Weak weak man. Jimmy Carter is a first class Clown.
zany chatham
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 10:01:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Jimmuh, have you still got any of those cute WIN! buttons? Those were awfully effective.
Standing Wolf
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:59:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: This from a pres who gave us a 20% plus inflation rate.
Buster
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:55:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: CARTER is critical of Bush? Next to klinton, he was our worst president. Hey Jimmy boy, go eat a peanut.
Judge
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:54:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Jimmy Carter.........who will always be remembered as the President who gave away the Panama Canal.
mary beth
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:53:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Take your polls and shove it...or them! We hate polls and know they are rigged. It was these same polls that showed Clinton wildly popular during the very time of his sexual shame when the populace was screaming for his resignation. Polls? Feh!
Harlan St. Wolf
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:39:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Carter criticizes Bush performance" http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/205/nation/Carter_criticizes_Bush_performance+.shtml
Glint <Carter, what a baitin' set up pig>
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:33:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bad genes?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:26:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: When I got home at 6:30p last night there was a message from a friend who had called about 5 minutes before to report his sighting of that huge daytime fireball bolide over PA last night. He was driving north and saw it, said it lastted about two seconds, flashed twice (almost painfully bright) and left a train which lasted several minutes. He noted the time of the event at 6:19 EDT. Come to think of it, I was driving north too at the time, so why didn't I see it?
Glint
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 09:20:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.aldha.org/images/mouse.gif
democRATS at the rock
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 08:53:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.aldha.org/images/mouse.gif
democRATS at the rock
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 08:53:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where did all the liberals go? Slipped off the hill on their own slime? The evil devil-impersonating liars.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 08:40:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, "fitting." Like "foop", it is a wry summing-up, a glacial comment. Coward socialists impersonating the devil? What can one say but "fitting?" It fits perfectly, for example, with the fact that socialists are evil, as well as cowardly. Socialists are evil. The devil is evil. Fitting that socialists should impersonate the devil. Look closely at this golem's posts, and you will see that no word is wasted. No word is extraneous to the message. Toots.

- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 07:30:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nah, no conclusion. The conclusion is in the Bush strategy of challenging bad ballots in strong Gore areas and defending bad ballots in strong Bush areas. Are you starting to get a glimmer?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 07:25:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: "To further reduce your confusion, a vote cast after election day, or otherwise cast fraudulently, is not a vote." Yes, certainly. However, in addition you appear to be leaping to the unsupported conclusion that a late votes = Bush votes, which is by no means a certainty.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 06:33:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good morning. Here's a snipped from a story on a newsfeed used by the client to add content to their web site: "'Poll shows President Bush gains support from women' WASHINGTON (July 23, 2001 10:49 p.m. EDT ) - First the good news for the White House: During the past six months, President Bush has narrowed the gender gap by stabilizing his political support among American women." <> Took the 10x50 Fuginon's out last night to do some bird watching. One bird was a satellite with some of my software running on it - one of the old Star Wars� experiments - and it's still ticking and clicking images. I wonder if my client's web page will still be up and running 7 years after leaving the job?
Glint
- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 06:27:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, it beats "foop."

- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 06:22:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Fitting?

- Tuesday, July 24, 2001 at 06:20:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Some of your posts sound as if you have relationship with him yourself. That is if hateful, name-calling words are as much his daily diet as they are yours.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 22:29:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nice top see all you coward socialsits back here impersonating the dE*vil. Fitting.
Pete�
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 22:15:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: Embryo flushers just don't understand. If a human flushes an embryo pro lifers call it murder. If it's spontaneous flushing they often say it's God's will. So humans are murderers and God is...well, just doing a God thing.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 22:11:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Everyone should have a Jewess. At least a Jewess. Glad you have yours, even if she is from KC, and even if, like all foul twats, she spits embryos like a gatling gun.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:34:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: The only demographic problem the Republicans have, in presidential* politics anyway, is how many vicious Mussolini Youth judges they can get on the Supreme Court.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:30:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: This is all very interesting, but it's time for me to phone my Jewess. She's from Kansas City originally. Later.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:29:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: That's a little cynical, Anonymous. Remember, this is a man* who had a religious awakening on his 40th birthday hangover. Woke up with Exedrin headache #86 and couldn't get his fevered mind off embryos. It's been a wrestling match since then.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:27:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: And yet every one of those Bible-thumpers' wives is blowing six or seven good embryos out her twat every year. It's enough to make you want to sew it shut. Her foul mouth will do just fine.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:27:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bush is considering it from all angles. He said the question is whether you snuff out a life to save lives. Or at least snuff out six or eight stale cells been sitting in liquid nitrogen for five years with the others that looked good enough to keep for back-ups when the doctor scoped the petri dish.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:24:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, I'll bet Bush* wrestles with this stem cell thing every night. Probably can't sleep what with all the demographics involved. As always, it comes down to the age-old Republican conundrum: Just how many lost votes does the ire of Bible-thumpers really amount to? We call this the Republican Problem.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:24:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: If we funded embryo stem cell research with federal dollars, it would snuff out an additional fifteen or twenty embryos a year. That will hardly put a dent in the fertility-clinic garbage-collection bill.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:20:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's a turrible tough philosophical question, the way the president* says. Takes a mind of a Jesse Helms to figure it out.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:18:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: You mean nobody told him that three out of four of the embryos that develop inside an actual woman never implant on the uterine wall and end up smeared on a tampon? I hope federal dollars are not being used for toilet research, considering that 75% of good American embryos are flushed.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:16:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Today George Bush was wrestling with the great moral question of using cells from human embryos. Apparently nobody has told him about the approximate hundred thousand human embryos now fizzling out in fertility clinic refrigerators across the land.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:13:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Me, I miss Glint. He seems on the edge of starting to think for himself, rather than just repeating what his talk-show host says. It's like watching a duck trying to reason out how to get to a lettuce leaf on the other side of a fence. There's something going on down in that primitive bird area of the brain, the medulla oblongata. Maybe that's why they call him glint.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:09:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Looks like we got to bring the eerily unwholesome Jim Baker back from Japan.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:06:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Forget about Cheney. Dead man walking.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:05:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Exactly.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:00:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Like he did with the chinaman?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:00:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: According to Dick Cheney, if you want to leave all the lights on in your house it's ok but your're going to have to pay for it. Unless you can get the Navy to pay your power bill.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 21:00:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: He's going to do it because he looked into Vlad Putin's eyes and saw somebody he can trust. The little bugger knows how to strip away all pretense and get to the core values, mano a mano.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 20:59:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Let me get this straight. This little dummy, Bush, is proposing to shitcan all the nukes that the big dummy, Reagan, wasted our money on. Is that about right?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 20:33:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why does this character bother to impersonate Pete? He's not very good at it, and who cares to begin with?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 18:58:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: No poetry in your life, cowardly anon? Figures. E*vil socialist.
Pete�
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 17:47:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nice punctuation, there, fat boy.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 16:27:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Talk about cheap, potty mouths. Liberals.
Pete�
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 16:04:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Stick with me, kid, we'll get your head screw on straight after all is said and done. We'll empty the shallow Limbaughism out of you like pouring cheap beer into a toilet.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 15:03:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Another thing you have backwards is the "really quite laughable." It doesn't sound half as phoney that way as it does in true Pete-speak: "quite laughable, really."
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 15:01:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: To further reduce your confusion, a vote cast after election day, or otherwise cast fraudulently, is not a vote. This is why we have rules on absentee ballots, and in fact why everyone else but Florida does not have the 10-day grace period after election day. This may seem a bit persnickity to you, but actually it is quite logical. The point is to count all votes, not to count all votes and non-votes.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:59:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'm beginning to see the basis for your confusion. You think that in a county that votes heavily Democratic, the Democrats are in charge of rejecting flawed ballots. No, what happened is that the Republicans opposed counting flawed foreign ballots in Gore territory but defended flawed ballots in Bush territory. The Democrats argued to reject flawed ballots everywhere. Mull this over in the Goodscience mode and you will begin so see some relationships. After a while, you may not even have it bassackwards.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:54:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: What's weird about this? 1) The intentions of absentee voters, which were expected to favor Bush, were ignored in greater numbers in strongly Democrat counties; 2) no evidence for fraud exists; 3) simply by looking at questionable envelopes there is no way to tell in hindsight wheter a rejectable ballot was a vote for Gore or for Bush; and 4) If all 600 ballots disputed by the NYT were rejected then statistically speaking, counting the expected Gore and Bush votes, Bush still be ahead. Not only did Bush win the count, and the recounts, but he also wins the "logical" recount of absentee votes after the Democrats backpeddle on their mission to count every vote. Really quite laughable. I'm glad the NYT is hot on the case because we need the laughs.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:39:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Your backwards take on the foreign vote count. You have it backasswards and can't see it. No perception. It's weird.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:16:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: What are you talking about?
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:12:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: You got to admire him, though, for his pigheadedness. When he gets something backasswards, he sticks with it.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 14:05:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where did Dr. Goodscience go? That guy spends almost as much time hanging his head in shame as he does gloating. It's got to be unhealthy.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 13:41:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: OK, OK. Toine is King, Toine is king.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 13:40:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: handocunts?

- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 13:37:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Take good care of yourself now,not later. Don't smoke or drink,maybe a glass of wine at night.And above all,enjoy each day like it was your last.Like Satchel Paige said, don't upset the juices in your stomach and don't look back, something might be gaining on you..........John� J - Monday, January 15, 2001 at 17:04:29 (EST)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 13:14:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: notice the subliminal fingerf*cking message buried in the 9th word of this snippet from the open letter of November 15, 2000: "...The statute does not allow for submission of handocunts after the 5 pm tuesday deadline..."
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 13:00:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Christ, no wonder Pete called her a cunt and told her to spread the twat. I mean, just check out those tactics of hers. E-vil!
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:58:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: As opposed to the rich, full rhetoric of Dubya's campaign.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:57:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: My two cents are: The webmaster stands ready to reveal the identity of toine. You ready, boy? E - Tuesday, September 26, 2000 at 20:18:18 (EDT)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:49:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: Retchies on the run. Clock is ticking eh spete?//Bush had another bad day...My bet is he loses the pres and then resigns as gov. He's got a pattern there. ydog - Friday, September 22, 2000 at 19:24:16 (EDT
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:45:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Tick tock...Clinton is toast in 90 days. Nothing that happens in this election could match that joyous day! Pete� - Saturday, October 21, 2000 at 18:11:04 (EDT)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:43:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Tick tock.... 114 days to go.... Pete� - Wednesday, September 27, 2000 at 16:26:40 (EDT)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:41:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Look, Gore is clearly in the lead and will beat Duh-bya by at least 5%. Ho-hum SF, - Wednesday, September 20, 2000 at 15:44:07 (EDT) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:40:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: The only appearance of a paradox would occur in the brains of those who believe the empty rhetoric of the Gore campaign.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:30:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: This just in: "Please join your fellow ** employees in the main atrium this Friday, July 27th for Beer Friday! Start time will be 5:00 PM." Life is too short to argue with those who refuse to move on.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:22:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: No he doesn't. He knows that in them Dem strongholds they only wanted to count Gore votes, hence the great effort to disqualify any votes that were suspected of being Bush votes. No surprise there. Not even a minor paradox.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:19:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint will be back, too. First, though, he wants to figure out the paradox about the deficient foreign ballots being disqualified in Gore strongholds. It's a real nut-buster of a problem, but he'll figure it out sooner or later and change the subject.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:07:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: You got it, Soapy. The power here now is with King Earwax. He's hiding out now, but he'll be back to kick your sorry ass once again.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 12:04:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: You mean we'll never know which Aurora racer won the Keitel's Garage 200, the grey Buick or the yellow Thunderbird convertible?
NASCAR fan
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:33:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: ydog is gone. Pete is King of the Hill now.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:25:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: As far as sex scandals go, the only question that really matters are these: Is the asian chick real, or is she just a fantasy dreamed up in the heat of a pothole porkin' exercise? And if real was the asian chick a workplace underling of either Mr. or Mrs. ydogdingo?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:23:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete is King of the Hill. What hill, an anthill full of fire ants?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:20:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: That should really make Shrub feel like King of the Hill. Losing the popular vote but attaining the presidency via the Supreme Court.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:17:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: So what? Pete's dumber than evern W., and he's King of the Hill.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:11:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: The non-partisan researchers who evaluated the IQ of our last 12 presidents rated the Bushes at the very bottom. George W. was rated a few points lower than his father. The highest IQ rating was given to Clinton.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:02:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bush didn't win the election? Then why is he in the White House?
Jasmine
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 11:00:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anonymous is a fool. The foreign leaders are quite impressed with Little George. Reuters said so, even though it is a socialist front.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:58:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: John chose the easy way out. He croaked. The rest of us have to watch this guy humiliating us in the capitals of Europe. It was better when he was apologizing to the Chinese for letting them knock down our airplane, and looking into Putin's eyes and seeing a man to trust.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:55:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: My two cents are: Its over, The Shrub is President, now what will I do? Oh hell,..........John� J - Tuesday, October 10, 2000 at 13:39:40 (EDT)
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:53:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: The poor fucker is clutching. A disturbing sight for sure. Maybe this will make him feel better: Finally there was a candidate who came closer than Clinton to the magic 50% necessary for legitimacy. That candidate was Al Gore. Close on Gore's heels, however -in fact, within a million votes- was none other than President* Bush. Hopefully, someone will top the magic 50% next time regardless of who Scalia chooses as president*.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:46:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: He's thinking, he's thinking. Just you wait. He'll have it all figured out soon and come up with a good one.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:46:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Or, to put it another way, Mr. Goodscience,despite the empty mantra about the devious Democrats, the only place where an effort was being made to not count every vote was ironically in Democratic strong holds. You should spend more time looking at asteroids and waste less trying to think, Glimpse.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:42:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: You see, anonymouses, the NYTimes reported, "In the 16 counties won by former vice president Al Gore, only 2 out of every 10 ballots that had late, illegible or missing postmarks were counted as valid votes, while in the 51 counties won by George W. Bush, 6 in 10 of those questionable votes counted." In other words, despite the empty mantra of the devious Democrats, the only place where an effort was being made to count every vote was ironically in Republican strong holds. Or, as the Washington Post said, quoting some GOP officials, the apparent inconsistency in the counting of absentee ballots demonstrates "the fact that Gore lawyers tried to throw out as many overseas votes as possible, even in Democratic counties." Count every vote? Ha! Ha! Liar Democrats.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:38:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thanks. Have a good day.
Pete�
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:32:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint was a romantic, anonymous. He wanted to believe that his hero was just as straight a shooter as the home folks back in the cornfields. When he was forced to face the stark fact that the man is just as evil as any liberal socialist, he broke and ran. Oh, he'll still support Bush, mouth support for him, anyway. But his heart is no longer in it. The shame of a rigged election! Why couldn't the majority of the sheeple be as wise as the hicks back home? There wouldn't be this stain of shame. I knew it would go bad as soon as Dick Armey pulled out of the race.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:31:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Cowardly Glint has run off, leaving anonymous King of the Hill! The pain was just too much to take. George Bush cynically applying different standards to different counties, based on whether they went for him or not! Who ever heard of such a thing, in either politics or crime?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:26:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: King of the Hill! No liberal slime under these boots!
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:20:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Getting almost as many votes as the other guy is pretty danged good, in my book.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:19:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, who wants to fraud for the danged sheeple vote, anyway? The vote to fraud is the constitutionally appointed electoral college vote. If we had wanted the sheeple vote, we would have rigged it, but we had to concentrate on the one that counts.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:15:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, I guess that would gnaw at my gut too. If my guy had won the popular sheeple vote but in the end was thwarted by something as unexpected as the constitutionally appointed electoral college. Geesh, and right up until the election he seemed to have it in the bag too. Remember the convention, the hugging, the distancing from the predecessor? Then the heartbreak of losing, then the euphoria of the election night concession flip-flop, the gloating, the yucking it up over the "snippy" remark. The chrome domed Daley hack and the spot light on the startingly inept-in-real-life Warren Christopher shill. Those were the daze, huh?
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 10:03:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: They all ran like panty-hose on a two-dollar woman.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:53:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: King of the Hill!
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:52:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Has there even BEEN a liberal in the presidency since Abraham Lincoln? I guess Woodrow Wilson-- he was sort of liberal, in a cold way.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:48:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Trying to find another hot butten, eh, anonymous?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:44:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Are you calling Clarence Thomas a crook? Just because a guy jokes about pubic hair, you lynch him forever.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:43:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Still, it would be nice if he had got in honest. Getting in crooked just doesn't make the liberals hurt enough.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:42:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah. That's what counts.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:40:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Learning to live with it is tough, especially with that turd in the punchbowl, the popular vote. The shenanigans and slime are easily ignored, but the popular vote, it gnaws at the gut, when you just spent eight years outraged that Clinton didn't get 50% of the vote. So what? Relax! This is just a mediocre little guy you shoehorn in there and hope he doesn't barf on the Pope. It isn't as if we're talking about Babe Ruth or Regis Philben here, some important personage who's got to be clean. This is just a placeholder with a negative vote balance and a questionable Florida election. He's in, isn't he? That's what counts, isn't it?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:39:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: yeah, whatever.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:38:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gee, this seems to be one of your hot buttons! It's not about ballot stuffing, just the breaks, the operations, how to do what one can to rig the outcome of an election. Don't take it so hard. The boy wound up with a presidency, and if it is tainted in history, it's still better than having a liberal in office. Learn to live with it.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:32:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: ...also, dear misinformed and anonymously cowering bitter Gore fan, the envelopes can no longer be associated with specific ballots. So there's no way to know for sure that any "illegally stuffed" absentee ballots were not in fact votes for Gore. What makes you think that, assuming there was any voter hanky panky, that Bush was the only one who had anything to gain by it?
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:27:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Tossing these votes would have left Gore in the lead." The fallacy in yours (and the discrredited NYT) is that you are assuming at least 90% of voters voted in favor of Bush. Even in counties where Bush won the majority of votes the split was more like 65% - 35%, Bush. Tossing out the 600 would also have taken away enough Gore votes such that Bush would have still been ahead. Get over it! Your guy lost and you have been reduced to anonymous living, if your sniping can be called living.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:22:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: This is all past history of course, but still interesting information on what it took to eke out a presidency for Bush, even though he lost the popular vote and possibly the Florida vote. The harm is probably not all that grave, because it was a close election, and, as Glint notes, Bush might actually have won it fair and square. We will never know whether he did, though.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:16:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: genepool reject: "...Demonstrators in black ski masks set upon a stopped police vehicle. They jumped on the roof and smashed the windows with crowbars. The young officers inside were screaming, in pain, terror and fury, witnesses said. One protester hoisted a fire extinguisher above his head with both hands, and aimed at the open rear window of the vehicle. An officer aimed with a pistol and shot, witnesses said. The protester fell. The jeep then ran over him..." gruesome!: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/photo/world/G31642-2001Jul21.html
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:15:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: According to examination of all of them, there were about 600 bad foreign ballots, about 400 of them from strong Bush counties -- no postmarks, US postmarks, double votes, and so on. Remember, these are the votes given 10 days after the election to turn up, but only if the vote was cast before the election. Tossing these votes would have left Gore in the lead before the attempted recounts quashed by Scalia, which would have lent even more interest to the affair. Would Scalia have come up with a different opinion with Gore in the lead? Who could possibly guess the answer to that? Apparently, the reason that 75% of the non-votes counted were from Bush strongholds is that the Bush lawyers carried out a well-organized campaign of protesting suspect foreign votes in Gore counties and demanding that they be given benefit of doubt in Bush counties. The Gore people, on the other hand, had the same standard for all the foreign votes, protesting any that were flawed on the theory that absentee votes usually go to the Republicans. You will remember that the Baker line at the time was that Gore was trying to disenfranchise the military voter.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 09:10:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wasn't there a "protest period" during the vote counting whose sole purpose was to permit challenges to certain votes, primarily in cases where fraud is being alleged? Why didn't they bitch about it then?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 08:57:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Still not enough "impeachable" absentees to change the result: Bush got more votes than Gore! 8-P
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 08:33:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course foreign votes postmarked after the election or faxed in from Maryland don't count. All a Democrat has to do is follow the rules and tell the truth, because his policies are in accord with the wishes of more voters. This is no claim to moral superiority, because a Republican politician hampered by a system of free elections can't win if he tells the truth or counts all the votes. A Democrat faced with the necessity to lie to survive might lie just as easily as a Republican.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 08:09:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Statistically speaking, even if the alleged "fraudulent" absentee votes would have been thrown out, Bush would have still won by 200+ votes. But even so, certainly you aren't advocating throwing out or supressing votes? What woud Al "count every vote/let the will of the voter be known" Gore say to that?
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:55:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bush got more electoral votes? That must be why he has the job. It was his whopping margin in Florida, though, that pushed him over the top, and that was popular. Does anyone know the difference between a recount and a fraudulent absentee ballot?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:52:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: You da man, anonymous.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:45:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Am I King of the Hill, or what?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:44:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Little Bush will be remembered not as a fraudulent president, but as the man who put $300 in most people's pockets. A few, particularly those in the underground economy, won't get their three bills, and some will get $600. I'd like to see the liberals top that.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:44:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Say what you will, this is a damn tough game of "king of the hill", where you can slip off the summit on liberal slime. The liberal who said this was a "vanity page" because Pete was cutting and pasting to himself was paying the fat boy a compliment. It was a clear admission that the liberals have slipped off the peak. Pete stands tall, his thick brogues planted firmly in the slime. The man just won't slip. It's unholy.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:41:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bush got more premium, electoral collegiate, votes. That has been proved time and time again in recount after recount, flawed analysis by the NYT aside.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:39:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'd like to point out that several presidents didn't win the popular vote. Abraham Lincoln, for example, didn't have a majority in 1860, although he did have more votes than the guy who came in second. Bush will not be remembered just as someone who lost his election but was installed anyway, but also for his accomplishments, such as getting the churches into government and apologizing to China.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:26:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, Gore is not around. The interesting part is what history does with an inadequate man, the son of the first homosexual president, whose handlers stole an election. This is probably a first in American history. If he manages to slide by without really major disaster, it will be the only thing to remember about Bush-- or was it Harding? The one whose father's friends frauded the vote? That and the economic slide, which won't last more than ten or fifteen years past this administration.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 07:20:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Condolences to your and yours on the passing of your Mother In Law, Pete.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 06:37:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi Pete. Had a big crowd at the observatory on Friday, about 30-40 persons. Mr. Peebody kept his word and shut off his pole lamp. It's been off ever since. I've got to get a case of beer over to him. Enjoyed the weekend scroll. more signs that the Liberals have taken a licking. Those who aren't worsing their "Gore won (if we could just keep counting till he does)" wounds are in anonymous "safe" mode. That was quite a compliment someone paid you on Saturday when they said this was a "vanity page." They realize the Liberals have slipped on their own slime in the game of king of the hill.
Glint
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 06:32:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, anonymous, it' s shaping up to be another socialist-free day.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 06:09:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thank God there are no socialists here.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 23, 2001 at 06:08:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thank God that sad, sad day is over with. The mournful day when the impostor's mother-in-law died. Such a wailing and beating of breasts there was. Lots of prayers and shaloming around the old farm that bitter day. Let's let it fade into dull memory. Let's try to look toward the future, without the old dead cunt.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 23:41:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: He may be a lamer, Jasmine, but he keeps this site alive, him and the telescope creep. He was posting his third-rate expostulations all over this site while you and every Jew-girl set-up pig like you were spreading their twats and baiting us daily for the big ones cumming. We all hope you can find the toilet, cunt.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 23:35:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: What a pathetic sicko. Finally admits to what sounds like his root problem, chugging earwax, and then claims it wasn't him. Has this guy always been a total turkey? I like to look for the diamond within, but am failing to find one here. It looks like this is just a case of an earwax-eater who listens to a lot of idiotic fringe right-wing talkshows and believes them. Plus the man sounds as if he may be carrying a few extra pounds, and needs milk of magnesia to pinch a loaf. Is there really a person dumb enough to take comfort from the fantasy the Reuters is a socialist organization when he thinks its reports on pro-forma lukewarm ass-kissing by a bunch of disappointed European heads of state shows that Bush is doing well? What a lamer.
Jasmine
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 23:28:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: 20:43:09 is another foul lost cause socialist impersonating the truth known as me.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 22:24:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: That's impostor, not imposter. Anyway, Jasmine, a word to the wise. Stop calling Pete a cunt and telling him to spread his twat. He doesn't take kindly to those tactics and he'll use them against you before you know what's hit you. Got it, girlfrien, sister woman?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 21:15:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: What's this stuff about the New York Times saying the Republicans jimmied the foreign vote in Florida, got 600 illegal votes certified in Bush counties? Criminal election fraud? Won't the liberals ever give up?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 20:48:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: The imposter Pete�'s mother-in-law passed? I'm crying.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 20:44:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, sure, anonymous cowardly socialist pig-f*cker, and, by the way, nice punctuation. Besides, it was the earwax that did me in. Everybody ate boogers, even if they did it in the dark and nobody saw. I was the only one who ate earwax.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 20:43:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course the imposter Pete would eat boogers. Never the real McCoy. Sad day, mother in law passed away. Prayers. Shalom.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 20:40:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure, eat a booger, pay the everlasting price, dildo. It's the age-old schoolyard axiom. If I never teach my children anything else, I can die happy knowing I taught them to confine the booger-eating to alone time, preferrably in pitch dark.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 20:13:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: As a haole, I understand what it is to be a wetback. My second-grade classmates used to beat me up just because I ate earwax and boogers.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 19:17:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: The Pete-thing says that the wetbacks are the cause of many of our domestic problems. Why can't Bush pledge to stop the wetback at the border the way Pete� Wilson did?
Jasmine
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 19:15:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: What's the significance of the Condit fascination? Is this just celebrityitis, more People Magazinism, or is there some sort of fantasy political message?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 18:06:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why isn't Bush buying new weapons for the military? I feel vulnerable to all these foreigners. Why does he want to legalize all the wetbacks? Reagan legalized the wetbacks and they ended up voting for Clinton! Why does he keep apologizing to everybody and saying he trusts Putin? Is this dumb and dumber, or what?
Jasmin
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 16:57:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: That one is just trying to convince himself that it's reasonable to try to take Bush seriously, Jasmine. However, nobody takes him seriously. It is impossible, and American president who didn't even win his election, can't speak, nothing but an ignorant cheerleader. In four years, with a little luck, we Americans can hold an honest election, get the yahoo out of there, and stop feeling embarassed.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 16:54:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pathetic paranoid Pete.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 16:51:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: I thought this was supposed to be a discussion site? Who is this pathetic dork who calls himself Pete? Why is he posting here? Sounds like he's made out of mud, or something.
Jasmine
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 14:42:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, it seems those who spin Bush's foreign efforts are only the anarchists and sociopathic socialists. Since the latest news says Bush did well (even from Reuters, a known socialist front rag): "Sunday July 22 2:11 PM ET By Tom Heneghan GENOA, Italy (Reuters) - Bush-bashing is over in the chancelleries of Europe, at least among the major partners who matter most for the oft-criticized U.S. president. George W. Bush, a foreign affairs neophyte when he entered the White House last January, wound up his first Group of Eight industrialized countries summit on Sunday enjoying at least the grudging respect of his fellow leaders. In a low-key style in sharp contrast to his predecessor Bill Clinton, he put his stamp on the summit by throwing Washington's weight behind issues matching his agenda and deflecting most criticism of points where he and his partners differed. ``I think he did relatively well, `` said John Kirton, head of the University of Toronto's G8 Research Centre. ``On climate change, he got the Europeans to stop bashing him and find a way to move ahead,'' said Kirton, who observed the Genoa summit with a group of analysts from his center. ``On missile defense, everybody's listening and talking as they adjust to this new thinking.'' The relief aid group Oxfam International had good words to say of Bush's first foray onto the G8 stage, where he gave strong U.S. backing for a new health fund to fight AIDS and supported efforts to reduce Third World debt. ``President Bush has rightly singled out international poverty as a priority for U.S. foreign policy and identified AIDS, debt and lack of education as key obstacles for development,'' it said in a statement after the summit. Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, gave the newcomer high marks for his performance. ``We appreciated his sincere, frank manner,'' Berlusconi said at the final news conference. ``It is nice to deal with somebody who calls a spade a spade. He had quite a good deal of success. He conquered the leaders with his frank and open manner.'' Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair seemed to be lobbying fellow Europeans for understanding for Bush's point of view. He also urged more dialogue on Bush's missile defense plans, which the French have criticized, the Germans are cool on and the Russians fear could trigger a new arms race. ``People recognize that President Bush is right to raise the issue of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,'' he said. ``We have to find new and imaginative ways of dealing with this.'' Shortly after he spoke, Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to talks on a new strategic arms relationship that would link discussions of offensive nuclear weapons cuts and defensive systems. ``We already have some strong and tangible points of agreement. We will shortly begin intensive consultations on the interrelated subjects of offensive and defensive systems,'' said a statement after their bilateral meeting following the summit. Despite differences over the Kyoto accord and a wait-and-see approach to his missile plan, Schroeder stressed his satisfaction with Bush's warming." So, in truth it looks like a win-win for Bush to me. One can never trust the liberal "spin." It is usually always wrong or else disproportionately hysterical.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 12:06:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: More from the traitorous democrats. Daschle now says he's sure others (meaning Democrats) on the Intelligence committee may be susceptible to blackmail efforts based on Condit-like allegations. In speaing with Tim Russert, Daschle said many others could be subject to blackmail efforts. During President Bill Clinton's 1999 Senate impeachment trial, then-Senate Minority Leader Daschle struck a deal with his Republican counterpart Trent Lott not to investigate evidence that Clinton had been blackmailed by foreign intelligence services who are believed to possess recordings of his phone sex sessions with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. This is the exact reason why no DEMOCRAT should ever be allowed to hold any position of power in this country. Run all sick perverted liatrs out on a rail. NOW!!! POW!!!
Pete�
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 11:54:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Looks like I've stumbled onto a vanity page with one lunatic ranting to himself.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 22, 2001 at 09:55:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Great lesson in punctuation, coward anon. For a liberal. Ha!
Pete�
- Saturday, July 21, 2001 at 21:59:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 21, 2001 at 15:32:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wonder if Cliton is out getting his daily lap dance dose in....
Pete�
- Saturday, July 21, 2001 at 13:00:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, another day aglow in non-liberal land. tra la la...
Pete�
- Saturday, July 21, 2001 at 11:12:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: The CIA believes Israel's Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has decided to launch a retaliatory full-scale attack on Palestinian-controlled territory if there is another suicide bombing attack, several former Agency and other U.S. intelligence officials said. Some intelligence sources said they expected the Israeli attack probably within a matter of days. "There's no question that he's going in," said a former CIA official, referring to Sharon. The question for these sources was when. They think the Israelis would wait until after the summit of the Group of Eight industrialized nations in Genoa, Italy. The summit ends Sunday. According to these sources, Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat was already engaged in talks with Syria about relocating Palestinian leaders to that country. One former CIA official, still active in the region, said he believed that Sharon would wait for the next in the recent wave of car-bomb attacks before launching "a full-scale assault" designed to drive Arafat into exile and destroy the PA. "You'll have public outrage, you'll have high morale among the Israeli military -- it's the perfect time," the official said. However, senior Israeli officials, including Sharon himself, have insisted that troop movements this week were intended to strengthen Israel's defensive position. Israel's Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Melchior made this point in Washington Thursday. Reports of an impending all-out Israeli attack have come as relations have worsened between the Israeli government and the CIA. CIA Director George Tenet negotiated the cease-fire aimed at halting the seemingly endless violence in the West Bank and Gaza. The CIA has been at the center of the Bush administration's efforts to stop the fighting between Palestinians and the Israeli Defense Forces that has claimed more than 600 lives, most of them Palestinians. But the cease-fire has all but collapsed, and observers point out that its collapse could be seen as a CIA failure. A State Department official said, "The situation does not look good," and "We are all watching it," but he would not go so far as to confirm the impending attack. He also added that the Hadassah chain of hospitals in Israel "has been ratcheting up" its medical preparations. Asked to comment, a State Department official said only: "You're getting into the area of sensitive foreign intelligence. We have no comment on intelligence operations." As United Press International reported exclusively on June 12, Israel's military was poised to carry out a huge, full-force invasion that would involve two infantry and paratroop divisions, an armored force, plus large numbers of U.S.-supplied F-16 and F-15 jet fighters and Apache helicopter gunships that would attack the West Bank and Gaza including the major Palestinian cities of Ramallah, Qualqilya, Jericho, Tul karm, Nablus, Jenin, and Bethlehem. Portions of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip would be captured and held for an indeterminate length of time. Under that plan, the Israeli forces would also capture and kill any members of Hamas, Hezbollah, the Islamic Jihad or other organizations defined by Israel as "terrorist." A "wanted list" has already been drawn up by Israeli intelligence services and approved by Sharon, according to a U.S. administration official.
we can all thank the clitons for this mess
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 19:16:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: If he's a Democrat, he's a hypocrite. End of story.
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 14:38:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: As a firestorm broke over the Lewinsky affair, Condit told Bill Clinton that �you can�t get to closing this issue without getting all the information out there.� He observed that �the fact is the information is going to get out eventually, anyway.� And he was one of a handful of Democrats who voted to open impeachment proceedings � a process which, if ultimately successful, would have removed the president from office. His advice to Clinton and his vote at the time no doubt buttressed his already overwhelming popularity back home. Now that the shoe is on the other foot, in making his own early departure, Condit could spare further embarrassment to both his understandably troubled constituents and to fellow members of the oft-criticized institution in which he serves.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 14:37:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Here's our President's recent news: "One [London] child asked him [Bush] what the White House was like. �It is white,� the President replied." Now that's as celar and unambiguous as any President has been in a long long time! (ahem) ;-)
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 14:27:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Condidit's Brother: http://www.foxnews.com/images/31864/1_21_100_condit_darrell.jpg
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 13:28:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. (AP) -- A dead chipmunk at Lake Tahoe has tested positive for bubonic plague. Authorities say it's important to alert area residents and visitors.
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 13:19:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Christmas! Was this guy's life the basis for Stanley Kubrick's "Eyes Wide Shut" or what? Scumbag Democrat.
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 13:16:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, a "pattern of deceit." The hallmark of a Democrat.
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 13:14:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Daring to dream again" - On July 20, 1969 32 years ago today America's position as the unrivaled champion of dreaming and daring was affirmed in a way that, even now, quiets doubters of American resolve. On the strength of a simple vision held by successive presidents and Congresses, supported by an army of can-do engineers and an American public that concentrated less on the "me" and more on "us," less on the "now" and more on intergenerational goals, this blessed nation placed three men in orbit around the moon, and two on the lunar surface. I was one of those two. In that moment, mankind was, as Richard Nixon succinctly declared, "truly one." From John Kennedy to Lyndon Johnson and then to Nixon, the torch of daring and of human space exploration was bravely passed..... http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20010720-84967582.htm
Buzz Aldrin
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 10:16:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Smith: Condit wanted multiple male partners [Mistress says congressman fantasized about 'bunch of guys' during phone sex] WASHINGTON � Anne Marie Smith, the United Airlines flight attendant who claims to have had a yearlong fling with U.S. Rep. Gary Condit, charges that the congressman talked about other men during phone sex, according to her lawyer. Washington police investigating the disappearance of intern Chandra Levy, who also was seeing Condit, know about the disturbing phone conservations, the lawyer says, and are looking closely at anyone Levy might have been involved with through the married California Democrat. Levy has been missing since April 30 or May 1, and police have not ruled out foul play. Smith, who was based in San Francisco before recently going on leave, had several long-distance phone conversations with Condit over the past year in which Condit allegedly urged her to participate with him in sexual acts with "other guys," her lawyer James H. Robinson said. "What was really unusual was his phone sex, in which he would talk about his sexual fantasies," Robinson told WorldNetDaily. "He said he had friends who he wanted to get involved in strange things." Robinson says he doesn't know to which "friends" Condit was referring, saying only that they were male friends. He said Condit once intimated to his client over the phone: "I have a fantasy about a bunch of guys and one woman � you." Robinson says that Smith suspected that Condit may have engaged in bondage-and-discipline activities at his Adams Morgan condo. On one visit to his condo, Smith noticed "neckties tied together that were tied to the feet of the bed and shoved underneath the bed," Robinson said. "They looked like they'd been there awhile." When Smith confronted Condit about the ties, he joked it off, Robinson said, saying "Oh, oh, honey, I was just thinking about doing that with you." "She didn't believe him," Robinson said. Also, he notes that Condit had many Hell's Angels friends, some of whom are ex-convicts. Smith and her lawyer have accused Condit of pressuring her to sign a false affidavit in the Levy investigation, and have provided evidence to the U.S. attorney's office here. Suborning perjury is a felony.
what, no cigar dildoing?
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 09:52:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: SPRINGDALE, Ark., July 20 (UPI) -- An Arkansas man who wrote a controversial, unauthorized biography of George W. Bush committed suicide in a hotel room, apparently by taking an overdose of two prescription drugs, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported Friday. James Howard Hatfield, 43, of Bentonville, wrote "Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of an American President," in 1999. The book alleged Bush's father covered up a cocaine arrest in Houston, but the Bushes and Houston court officials said the report was false. After the book was published, it was reported that Hatfield had been convicted in Dallas of hiring a hit man for a failed attempt to kill his employer with a car bomb in 1987. Hatfield denied he was the same man, but records confirmed that he had served five years in prison for the crime. St. Martin's Press recalled about 70,000 copies of the book after the disclosure of Hatfield's criminal record, saying it could not trust him.
wish more liberal ilk would follow suit
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 09:34:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: WUSA also reported that police had determined a California minister's story about an affair his daughter had with Condit was a fabrication. Otis Taylor said two weeks ago that his daughter had a two-year affair with the congressman, but police sources told the TV station that the minister has admitted he made up the tale. His motive was unclear.
motive=dumb N.
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 06:26:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Pol Threw Out Watch Case � TV Cops probe Virginia tip" WASHINGTON Just hours before cops searched Rep. Gary Condit's apartment here, he dumped a case from a watch given to him by yet another girlfriend in a trash can miles away, a Washington TV station reported last night. Police sources said the watch wasn't a gift from missing intern Chandra Levy, according to WUSA-TV. Investigators now are concerned Condit may have disposed of other items that could help in the investigation of Levy's disappearance, the station said. The U.S. attorney's office was reviewing the incident to determine whether Condit obstructed justice, the report said. Investigators were tipped off when an unidentified man told them he saw a man he recognized as Condit dump the case at a unidentified location in northern Virginia. Police told the station the incident occurred "two or three hours" before they searched his condo. Detectives traced the case to the store where the watch was sold and to the woman who bought it. She was not identified. One investigator was quoted as saying the watch case may have no bearing on the Levy case, but its disposal "shows a pattern of deceit."
condit=scumbag
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 06:25:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Big star party at the observatory tonight. Mr. Peebody has even offered to flip off his mercury vapor pole lamp. Scheduled sights for the observatory's 12.5" are as follows: 8-9 Earth (Happy Hour); 9-11 Mars; 11-12 Pluto; 12-1 Ceres (asteroid), 1-2 Neptune; 2-3 Uranus; 3-4 Comet Linear; 4-5 Saturn & Jupiter; 5-6 Venus (& Mercury?). Forcast is for clear skies overnight. Folks coming from miles around.
Glint
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 05:56:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wow, the stars were fantastic tonight. Scorpio was fine and the dipper! Such a treat! Moulin Rouge ought to be out soon on video.
Pete�
- Friday, July 20, 2001 at 00:10:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, Pete, I haven't seen it yet. Tried to see Pluto but the haze was a little too thick. Saw Mars, Uranus, and Neptune though. Tomorrow night I'm going to try and see all 9 planets plus Ceres, the largest asteroid and the first one to be discovered 200 years ago in 1801, and as an added bonus Comet Linear.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 22:02:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: She ought to know? Of course, with a liberal, you either get this or you get the liberal male. Which would you prefer? Any rational person would choose neither.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 19:23:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: "This is what happens when you allow women to think about public policy."
go anne go
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 19:22:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: WHY are feminists the principal lobbying group for Congressmen Who Had Affairs With Missing Interns? In the case of missing intern Chandra Levy, they're not even covering for a president who will save their precious Roe v. Wade. Indeed, Rep. Gary Condit has been so successfully portrayed as a "CONSERVATIVE RIGHT-WING Democrat" that it would probably be safe even for Dan Rather to mention the story on CBS News. Really clearing the way for Rather, Condit was apparently a member of a congressional Bible study group. (Can anybody make heads or tails of this commandment?) The feminist enthusiasm for Condit goes something like this: Feminists have always stood for freedom of "choice" (unless it involves something other than abortion, adultery or sodomy), and isn't it wonderful that Chandra Levy was able to choose to have an affair with a married man? Congratulations, Chandra! If you think I'm making this up, here is what Gloria Jacobs, editor of Ms. Magazine said about Chandra on Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor": "I think the idea is that what feminism always wanted for women is the right to choose their partners, their own sexuality, whether they're young women or older women. ... I think it's really that one would have hoped that as women had more access to power that this wouldn't be the way they would have to go about it. But everybody makes their own choices." Feminists are actually trying to claim credit for the dumb decision of a girl who is now missing. Anyone who sees a connection between Chandra's choice of sexual partners and her disappearance is probably the sort who thinks promiscuous sexual behavior has some metaphysical link to venereal disease, abortion and divorce, too. If rumors are correct that Chandra was pregnant, a very broad definition of the "right to choose" could be at work. Another triumph for feminism! It wasn't just the Ms. magazine editor. The airwaves are lousy with liberal women putting in a kind word for adultery these days. On Fox News Channel's "The Edge With Paula Zahn," Eleanor Clift said: "Congressman Condit, so far, is guilty of having extramarital affairs, and that is something that a number of congressmen are probably familiar with." On "The O'Reilly Factor," Geraldine Ferraro said: "If every member of Congress or every public official in Washington were to resign because they've been having an affair, dear God ..." On "CNN Late Edition," Rep. Chris "Rape Is Not Impeachable" Shays, "R"-Conn., said: "I mean, if infidelity is a test, there would be a number of members of Congress that should resign." I love the idea that a mass exodus from the U.S. Congress would constitute some terrible tragedy. How could we ever replace these Titans! But what's with the neurotic compulsion to assert that half of Washington is committing adultery? How do these girls know what's going on in other people's "zones of privacy"? There has been only one serious sex survey ever conducted in America, released in 1994. (Time magazine called it "the first truly scientific survey of who does what with whom in America.") Using peer-approved methods, a team of researchers at the University of Chicago surveyed thousands of respondents over several years. They concluded that 75 percent of married men and 85 percent of married women have never been unfaithful. By contrast, Alfred Kinsey's purported "study" in the '40s concluded that 50 percent of men cheat. The reason his study is discounted by scientists -- but revered at Playboy magazine -- is that his sample group consisted of prostitutes, prisoners and inmates in mental institutions. I can understand why I would want to lump members of Congress in with this crowd, as a measure of my esteem. But why do liberals want to make that argument? They're the ones who think we should be sending more of our money to these clowns. What are the feminists up to? I put the question to a leading scholar of feminism, the author of the Encyclopaedia Britannica entry on "feminism." She explained that 30 years ago what bugged feminists was that men had affairs and everyone thought it was cute, whereas women had affairs and they were sluts. It wasn't the immorality but the double standard that had them hopping mad. And there are two ways of eliminating a double standard. Since feminists figured they couldn't change men, their goal was simply to even the score. So in a maniacal pursuit of equality -- we've fully transitioned into my analysis now -- these querulous little feminists stripped women of the sense that they can rely on the institution of marriage and gave men license to discard their wives. But at least women can choose to be pigs now, too! This is what happens when you allow women to think about public policy. It's also what happens when you start assuming the whole country has the mores of prostitutes, criminals, mental patients and, evidently, congressmen.
go anne go
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 19:11:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Glint, have you seen Moulin Rouge yet? You may really like that flick.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 18:30:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Uh...Uh...Another message is coming through my speakers in the voices of Judas Priest. It seems that Gary Condit, finding himself and Bill Clinton in Washington -- a city awash in interns -- talked it over and said "Let Us Prey" and after leaving capitol hill morphed into "The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)" while "Living After Midnight" only to discover that "Love Bites."
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 18:10:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Fine with me so long as they are all socialist heads. They are pretty fatty, so that might be a problem.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 18:09:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, as far as this Condit mess is concerned, according to my Judas Priest CD, some "Heads are Going to Roll."
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 17:49:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: We would guess most Americans would think that obstructing a police investigation would be sufficient grounds to question a Congressman's fitness for office. But surely not least of the debilitating ethos of Washington these days is the way it defines issues. Members of Congress, after all, are elected to serve their people, not lord over them. If we had as much debate about the responsibilities of our elected leaders as their rights, ours would be a healthier political class. In Mr. Condit's case that is particularly telling. Condit spokeswoman Marina Ein rebuffed questions about resignation, telling reporters that "any decision by Mr. Condit about his Congressional seat should be addressed by Congressman Condit's constituents." Well, yes and no. Certainly people are the ultimate arbiters of their representatives. But institutions too have their rules, and if Congressman Condit lied to police and pressured a former girlfriend to commit perjury on his behalf, it strikes us that the House Ethics Committee might have something to say about his future. Like Mr. Clinton, who expressed his fears to Monica Lewinsky that their calls were being taped by a "foreign embassy," Congressman Condit is also vulnerable to blackmail. A Congress that was as serious about its Members' obligations as it is their perks would at the least require him to forfeit his membership on the House Intelligence Committee, which Rep. Condit himself described in the press release announcing his appointment as concerned with "very sensitive issues of immediate and long term national security." Not to mention a Congressional staff that, far from working to serve the interests of the people of Modesto, is today a vehicle serving only Rep. Condit himself. We continue to hold to the view that beyond issues of criminal liability, the trust the people repose in Congressmen means they owe something more -- to their office, to the process of justice (not least in police investigations), to the people they are there to serve. Whatever the fate of Chandra Levy, America can have every confidence that Gary Condit's rights will be ably looked out for by Abbe Lowell, the lawyer who so skillfully defended Bill Clinton. In a political age where character is a luxury, where's the voice insisting on Mr. Condit's responsibilities?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 16:22:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: I think it is very telling (in a psychologial profile sort of way) that Condidit is the middle of an older brother who is a cop and a younger brother who is on the lam as a fugitive from justice. Perhaps Condit has a bit of both. Perhaps the guy is schizophrenic. Perhaps the guy is loopy. Perhaps the guy can't figure one thing out for the other. Perhaps the guy can't figure out his politics. What we do know is he is an elected DEMOCRAT. Nothing else matters, because that sums it all up. Idiot.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 16:19:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: ``"I ride the Harley every chance I get," Condit said, sitting at his desk one wintry day in light boots and blue jeans, looking like he just pulled out of his toe clips.'' Perhaps that explains why I was compelled to buy a Judas Priest CD at lunch. Subliminal messages coming from the news sources, ala "Breakin' the law - Breakin' the law". Guess the Condit connection is this, "If any band is responsible for contributing S&M imagery to the heavy metal genre, it's Judas Priest." Or perhaps it was their being "a British heavy metal band that has long been associated with black leather and motorcycles."
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 15:23:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: As for the 14:26:40 coward, I happen to find Jews most appealing, as a matter of fact. Hitler was a socialist nationalist, an enemy of the capitalistic system by admission, same as you birds without the admission (at least the creep was honest enough to admit it, your failure to do so allows you to retain your slag pile sewer status beneath the concentration camp).
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:57:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Look, coward anon 14:18:04, by definition, any Democrat (as Condidit) is a hypocrite.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:55:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.house.gov/gcondit/San_Francisco_Chronicle.htm
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:30:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sorry, Anon, but you've been duped by the Communist Board of Socialist (CBS) News. Actually, rather than "starting at ground zero" as your parroting of Dan Rather claims, in reality "There is no change in the status or the direction of the case. The D.C. police are still the lead investigators" according to FBI spokesman Steven Berry. So your lame attempt to further the distorted news CBS is famous for is hereby busted. Also, see the following http://www.nydailynews.com/2001-07-19/News_and_Views/Beyond_the_City/a-118845.asp
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:28:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete sounds a bit like that socialist Hitler. Just substitute jew for liberal; same thought process.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:26:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: The FBI has criticized the DC cops for focusing on Condit and is beginning its own investigation from scratch. Anyway, it seems to me the only members of Congress who HAVE criticized the scumball are Democratic women. Except, of course, for 'Bortion Bob Barr who suffers from tertiary syphillis.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:20:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Excuse me, but Condit has always been a big supporter of the GOP's social agenda. He fits right in with the hypocrites.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:18:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: "In fact, authorities knew not only of Condit's affair with the missing intern, but also of his alleged affair with a flight attendant long before she came forward with her story." Therefore, Condit's earlier denials made him look like a suspect and detracted from other investigatory priorities. Scumbag Democrat. Typical. The usual sh*t from these scum.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:16:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: several senior Democratic staffers now say Members are privately grumbling that Condit has become a distraction for the party and that he should think about resigning. "Members are saying that's what he should do," said one top Democratic aide. "They wish he would, but it's not like anybody is saying that directly to him. It's still his decision."
leave it to these scumbags to appear only after all the fire has burned the wood and when the stakes do not really affect their "agenda" /demonrats are traitors!
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:13:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: 13:33 demonstrates why one can never ever trust a liberal. Sickness. POW!!
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 14:07:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, he cracked because he always went to church 4 days a week when he was growing up in Oklahoma. Upbringing always trumps sin.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:40:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, I see. The aunt had inside info. Or, at least says she did. No wonder the Baptist cracked.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:38:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Add to that, showing little apparent thoughtfulness. The Court of Public Opinion is never out of session and I don't care if this guy ends up getting ten times the pussy he used to get. How can that ever compensate for the disgust voiced by assorted independent ghosts on web pages populated by at least 11 people?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:37:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, Condit screwed himself by lying to investigators and to the family. Word leaked out via the Levy aunt, who had insside information (ahem!) about Chanra's bestiality with the congresscritter.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:36:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good point about the wife and brother. Do you suppose they conspired with Clinton to do...whatever it is that has probably been done? I mean, the girl is dead and didn't she used to be alive? I mean, before this Condit character got framed. My question is, why hasn't Condit been charged with obstruction of something? Another question is, why did Condit ever say he was shtupping the girl? Didin't that just open him up to this charge that hasn't been made regarding obstruction? Wouldn't he have been better off just continuing to deny, especially given the fact that the babe sleeps with the fishes and will never fuck again? Who cares what the yenta aunt says, Condit screwed himself by admitting to the affair. On the other hand, maybe he was just bragging. Either way,t his guy faces serious jail time for the charges that have been brought against him. You know, obtructionism and pissing off an airline stewardess.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:33:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: "What about Condit's wife? Why isnt' the media on that angle?" - Anonymous. I'm glad someone else has seen this too. She had both motive and opportunity.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:21:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: *****THE SAGMEISTER NEWS WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2001***** _____________________ . . . As the search for missing intern Chandra Levy continues, the Fair and Balanced FOX News Network brings up-up-to-the-minute news coverage of what has become an obsession in their quest to keep the public informed and aware that Congressman Gary Condit is yet another Democrat who got caught with his pants down . . . Hello . . . . . . I'm Patty Anne Downes, sitting in FOX News studio here in Washington DC with Mary Sue Upps, where we will bring you the Upps and Downes of this story that is taking the country by . . . Upps: . . . It certainly is, Patty Anne . . . . . . . This is taking the country by storm . . . I was just telling Eula Faye Browne who interviewed Barbara Lee Olson who said that she thought Bill Clinton might be involved in all this and that this is a period when . . . Downes: . . . I hate to interrupt you, Patty Anne, but Misty Mae Marvel of the Condit/Levy news team has just handed me a bulletin . . . Congressman Condit is even now sitting in his seat in Congress participating in an Agricultural Meeting--we are bringing you pictures of him--look at that guilt-ridden face . . . how can he . . . but, this word just in--speaking of period--we are informed by a neighbor who lives in the same building as the janitor who lived next door to Chandra's paperboy that Chandra was NOT pregnant . . . have you got that folks? . . . This newsboy who regularly delivered to Chandra says that, contrary to reports, Chandra was NOT with child and . . . that . . . . . . Upps: THAT IS news . . . because Shepard Smith just reported that rumors were that she was, as told to him by the cleaning woman who regularly . . . and now Misty Mae says Chandra had purchased a package of Midol a week before she . . . . . . Downes: Yes, I have had this verified . . . . . . the stock clerk at the pharmacy where Chandra ordinarily bought her Super Tampax told the girl that assists the clerk that assists the pharmacist that Chandra was indeed having a period and purchased this . . . . . . and we have checked the logs of the taxi company that ordinarily picked her up and the driver says she popped a Midol while in the cab on her way to purchase this personal . . . Upps: SUPER TAMPAX . . . that would indicate a heavy flow . . . which means that the blood on the Venetian blind slat that was found in Condit's apartment . . . Downes: . . . was splattered menstrual blood as she was pulling Condit's . . . Upps: Well, I heard that Condit preferred kinky sex . . . but sex when a woman is on her . . . Downes: Exactly, but . . . we want to remind all of you viewers that this is mere speculation . . . and the word that we have that Condit habitually indulged in menstrual sex with various women and especially with Chandra when she was on her . . . it's just as Barbara Olson says that Clinton . . . Upps: Right . . . we don't want to plant any false ideas in those minds out there . . . but Bill Clinton you know was always out for blood and . . . Downes: . . . Of course, Chandra could have been killed during rough sex . . . I mean after Clinton helped Condit tie her up and . . . maybe he used that Tampax to . . . Upps: . . . But this is speculation? . . . You don't have any proof that . . . ? . . . Well . . . Downes: . . . Barbara Olson, who is the wife of the Solicitor General of the United States, said on Chris Matthews program "Hardball" that of course Gary Condit is another Democrat murderer like Bill Clinton and . . . did you know Condit even rides a motorcycle? . . . and has a leather jacket and that one time he was observed actually making love on that cycle . . . without a helmet . . . or any protection . . . Upps: . . . Just a second . . . this bulletin just in from our reporter stationed at the gas station and piano bar outside of Modesto . . . . . . Chandra Levy's parents have just returned from a music festival where they ate 6 hot dogs, drank 2 Cokes, visited the Port-a-Potty three times and then left in their Chevy van for . . . home where they stopped along the road for Mr. Levy to . . . Downes: . . . He have too much Coke? . . . Isn't it wonderful how life just goes on as usual for these brave people? . . . That WAS news, Mary Sue . . . it's all these little everyday things . . . I wonder if they were informed of the bones they found at the Klingle Mansion at Rock Creek Park where the crime scene was all roped off and . . . uhhh . . . this just in . . . they DID find a discarded Tampax at Piney Branch Park . . . that would signify that . . . Upps: . . . Was it SUPER TAMPAX? . . . . . . Just a second . . . we have a man on the scene in Modesto . . . standing right outside the Levys' house . . . hellllo . . . Shepard Smith . . . is that you? Smith: This is Shepard Smith bringing you FOX's Fair and Balanced News . . . here in Modesto . . . where people are really upset with their murdering blood-thirsty Democrat Congressman . . . we are just about to interview Ms. Levy, Chandra's mother, who is trying bravely to go about her regular routine as she . . . here she is now . . . Ms. Levy, how do you feel about the bones that were found in Rock Creek Park . . . and the blue Nike tennis shoes and the box cutter knife that were discovered at Piney Branch Park? . . . Does that help you at all? . . . and can you verify that Chandra used SUPER TAMPAX . . . or that other kind with wings . . . because the sniffing dogs have found a . . . . . . Levy: We are trying to go about our daily routine . . . sometimes laughing . . . sometimes cryng . . . sometimes depressed . . . but all the time hopeful that . . . this is a period . . . Upps: . . . Pssst . . . Misty Mae . . . do you suppose Ms. Levy is still having her . . . Downes: You heard it here first on FOX . . . . . . To be continued . . . . _____________________ *****The SAGMEISTER Weather***** Super . . . *****The SAGMEISTER Traffic***** Heavy flow . . . *****The SAGMEISTER Sports***** Condit not playing ball . . . . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ *****THE SAGMEISTER NEWS QUESTION OF THE DAY***** Do you think FOX News is Fair and Balanced . . . ? Answer: . . . Seems they have a bone to pick . . . . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ *****THE SAGMEISTER REPUBLICAN HORRORSCOPE***** WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2001 You complain that your girlfriend is putting a cramp in your relationship . . . . _____________________ . . . God Bless America and give us a clue . . . SAG http://www.iei.net/~sag/
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:12:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Now the media is trying to link Condit's brother to the case. Their reasoning....he's a criminal. What about Condit's wife? Why isnt' the media on that angle?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 13:01:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course, the liebral cannot understand that the inquiry is not what the cops would have done differently. That is the dodge ball. The fact is the guy lied to them in two interviews, then finally admitted it many weeks after the initial investigation began. The issue of whether it did or did not or how it did or did not is not relevant. The fact is he lied and this was contrary to the ongoing investigation. Materiality in obstructing justice is not the point. The fact that he lied to investigators is. Get a clue. Once you figure this one out, may be you can then tackle the next big bozo maneuver (a la Cliton) of trying to get his other mistress to lie and also get her to submit a false affidavit.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:46:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete was an independent. It said so on his voter registration. Hitler was a classic socialist, although Harlan St. Wolf has presented quite a strong (unanswered) rebuttal. Maybe Hitler is still in play.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:40:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: So, Clinton was not a conservative because of health care and gays in the military? This is confusing. Seems to me Bush can't be a conservative either until rolls back the clock on health care and has military gays flogged. Of course, Giuliani isn't conservative either, but Condit is. Newt was a liberal, sort of. McCain is too. Lieberman is a conservative, sort of. Feinstein voted for the tax cut. She's a conservative except for the gays in the military thing. Hitler was a flaming leftist.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:38:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: I sure hope Condit isn't guilty of anything, because that would be so horrible if he knows where she or her body is, and he's just making the family suffer for months and months and making us suffer, having to see Chandra Levy's face plastered over every news medium. Then again, since he's suffering just as bad, career over, marriage at least in trouble if not over, loose-lipped women running rampant, and his so-called friend "missing," I can't imagine he's so psycho that he'd put himself through this. // I'm going to Harvard Extension, but t'won't be a problem getting in.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:05:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'd fire my lawyer who told me to keep quiet, if I were Condit. I hear this protective strategy was the lawyer's idea.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:03:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: How long will this go on? Can the media beat OJ's record of non-stop coverage?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 12:00:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: To what degree should the court of public opinion destroy Condit's life without evidence, an arrest and a trial in the extinct system of U.S. justice?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 11:58:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Court of public opinion? Look, all this holier-than-thou son of a Baptist minister has to do is convince the majority of the hicks in his district that he's the man can bring in the pork. What does he care about the opinion of a ghost in Hawaii?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 11:15:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Obstruction of what? Again I ask, what would the cops have done differently had the scumball told them the cunt was spreading her twat? His statement that he was a "close friend" caused them to do...what differently? As far as tampering with a witness: A WITNESS TO WHAT? Oh, and WHAT affidavit? Has anybody actually seen this affidavit or are we relying on the word of the cunt stewardess who is shocked -SHOCKED!- to find the scumball was three-timing, not just two-timing?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 11:10:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh the phrase "pre-lop-lop" was in reference to the earlier posted article about chopping off breasts before they have a chance to get cancerous. Obviously you still have yours. 8-P
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 10:54:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: So you got in or you hope to get in? Say hi to Dunster House and teh Charles River from the bridge for me. By the way, Ted Kennedy, in true Democrat lie and dodge style, tried to avoid the whole episode while his pals tried to find a scapegoat. That woman was in the water from about 11 pm until 7 am until any authorities were even told she was in the drink. For his part, Kennedy stealthily went back to his apartment, changed his clothes and acted as if nothing had happened until his co-conspirators in teh cover up pals got hold of him and said the fix could not be in. Only then did he start flustering about on the issue of the body in his car. Typical Democrat. Proven over and over and over again. Never trust a Democrat. End of Story.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 10:29:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Have you heard from Papi's family at all?
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:36:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pre-lop-lop? I'm sorry, I have a headache, and I'm trying to figure out what that means. I didn't think I had taken any pictures in Cannes. My friends have other, more risque shots, but they'd really kill me if I showed those to anyone.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:31:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: The pre-lop-lop pictures, of course, at the clothing optional beach. You're right about the tan lines after all.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:27:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Chandra's kind of got that Sephardic Jew look, like Minnie Driver. Of course, Minnie Driver's way more empirically attractive.
Whatever'
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:26:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Which one at the beach? You're already looking at them?
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:22:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Chandra is a nice name, I knew a girl named Chandra. Indian girl. I used to hang out with her and the Indian/Asian crew my freshman year of college. Chandra Levy isn't so ugly, she's just got that really Jewish look, which isn't ugly, just different. Plus, she has nice hair.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:21:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: "I'm going to send you the URL of the pictures we took in France and Italy, see which ones you like." - Whatever. Those ones of you and your friends at that one beach are pretty good. You're the perkiest one.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:21:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thank you, thank you. I'm still working though, just taking classes there, for the next year. Figure it won't be hard getting in, although I should really go to MIT.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:20:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: I sent it.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:19:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Congrats on getting accepted into Harvard! Guess the down side of that is that you won't be coming to College Park next year after all? :-( The intern's name is Chandra, a name that was at one time on the short list baby names for the eldest daughter. As I recall Chandra was the name of the Indian (not whoop! whoop! -- the dotted forhead kind) Moon goddess.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:18:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi Glint!! I'm so sorry I hadn't responded to the other email you had sent, it's been a whirlwind. I'm going to send you the URL of the pictures we took in France and Italy, see which ones you like.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:15:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Chandra, that's right. My thing is, hello, Chandra, I assume you were alive and lucid during Monica Lewinsky. Sweetheart, did we not learn that when you bang a married politician, shit tends to get fucked up? Your reputation gets flushed down the toilet? Hello? McFly?
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:14:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: I've observed some of my friends and relatives fighting breast cancer. If I had information that I was genetically a high risk then I might choose a lop lop route rather than going through the chemo, radiation treatment a breast cancer patient most often has to go through after being diagnosed with this disease.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:11:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Coppertone's back! Get out the champaigne! Look, she's coming around - GW's "not so bad" after all. Too bad John departed believing that he was just a snippy shrub.
Glint
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:08:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, plus I was watching TV, and they had a commercial for "Entertainment Tonight," in which this woman claims to have the key to the Shoshana Levy (or whatever the hell her name is) Mystery, in that this woman "talked to [Shoshana or whatever's] spirit." How fucked up is THAT?! I mean, the poor family's still trying to keep hope alive, that she's not dead, and this woman "talked to her spirit?!" I'm sure the girl's dead, I just think this so-called psychic was in poor taste. Anyway, Condit did it. What happened is homegirl was screwing him, she came at him, talking about how she was going to tell his wife or the press, and he had her taken out. Plain and simple.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 09:06:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: So, I know this is old news and stuff, but I figure that Gore didn't want to be President. I mean, the guy had supposedly been groomed for the job all his life, he was Vice President during one of the most prosperous times in American history, and all dude had to do was NOT snort, hem and haw during the debates, and stick to whatever piece of personality he had, and he would have been in there. But no. Must have caved under the pressure. Yeah, Shrubbie's kind of an asshole, but he's not so bad. Just waiting around until 2004, I guess.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 08:54:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi guys!! Long time, no see!! I got your email yesterday, Glint, and I shed a little tear, so I said, lemme stop being all distant and stuff. Guess what? I'm going to Harvard in the fall, isn't that wonderful? Plus, I've been jogging and things, trying not to be too sedentary.
Whatever
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 08:44:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: Breast removal 'saves lives' BY JIM RITTER HEALTH REPORTER Scientific evidence is mounting in support of a radical way to prevent breast cancer in high-risk women--remove both breasts before cancer strikes. A study published in today's New England Journal of Medicine compared two groups of women who have breast-cancer gene mutations that put them at very high risk for breast cancer. Among a group of 76 women who had what are called prophylactic mastectomies, none developed breast cancer after three years. Among a second group of 63 women who did not have their breasts removed, eight developed breast cancer after three years.
Lop! Lop! <take off two and call me in the morning!>
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 07:18:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Wonder how many other congressional members might be closet cretins." (Anonymous. - Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 21:06:40)
See Below
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 06:40:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Lizzie Borden got hold of an ax and, as the children's rhyme goes, gave her mother 40 whacks. "And when she saw what she had done, she gave her father 41." It was actually 18 whacks for the mother and 11 for the old man, but who's counting? In spite of overwhelming evidence, she was acquitted of the crimes. Not too far from Fall River, again in Massachusetts, 67 years later, Ted Kennedy gave Mary Jo Kopechne an automobile ride, drove off a bridge at Chappaquiddick, left her trapped in his car beneath the river and raced back to the Kennedy compound to telephone his lawyers, public relations people and family troubleshooters. While he telephoned, she died.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 19, 2001 at 06:37:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Very low blow. G'nite.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 23:25:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: You ought to know.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 22:59:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe there's even some cretinettes.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 22:04:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Lots. Guaranteed with demonrats.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 21:45:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.courttv.com/news/2001/0717/condit_ctv.html
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 21:09:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: You could be right. It's in the Court of Public Opinion that I've heard the word murderer. Wonder how many other congressional members might be closet cretins.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 21:06:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Otherwise, in the Court of Public Opinion, he's toasted. Common for these scum demonrats.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 20:49:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, has someone said the bird was guilty? No, but he has engaged in actions which would lead to a conviction based on the allegations of obstruction (lying to police about his affair) and witness tampering (seeking false affidavits from another mistress and asking her to lie). It just never ends with these cretins.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 20:48:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: I guess I had it backwards. Innocent until proven guilty is not how the law works. An individual suspected of murder is actually guilty. He has to prove his innocence. Unless he is able prove his innocence he can be called a murderer.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 20:47:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sometimes one is seen as a pathetic shadow. I think I recall a few posts using the word pathetic. Although, maybe poster/posters didn't use the word shadow.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 20:29:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Until then he's innocent until proven guilty (of murder). Isn't that how its supposed to work in this country?" Depends on what country you're hunt 'n' pecking from. In America you don't have to be proven guilty of murder to be found guilty of obstruction. The two are unrelated, just like Clinton's pecker lungers in the oval office sink is unrelated to his perjury that brought on his impeachment like an anvil on the coyote's head.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 20:17:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Duh, but one needs to investigate and assert claims and allegations. That usually is what is done to start the ball rolling in order to prosecutre and find a person guilty. Unfortunately, the facts ahve to come before the conclusions as a matter of common sense and logic in any event. You moron liberals, in typical fashion to suit your evil agendas, want to say, gee, no one can say anything bad about anyone until after he's found guilty. In the real world what happens is the allegations and investigation and efforts to find out if the bird is guilty or not has to precede the finding of guilt. When you file a claim there is a qualified immunity about anything said in teh case which is intended to lead to the discovery of the proof of the offenses alleged. Yet, apparently not for you liberals on any issue which threatens a liberal agenda. Shadows. Shadows on the cave walls are apparently what you are all looking at now. Flicker.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 18:35:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: If he's guilty I hope they nail him. Until then he's innocent until proven guilty (of murder). Isn't that how its supposed to work in this country?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 17:48:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good example of conservative thought.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 17:41:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Just like when they flipped out and started saying Clinton was a conservative after all because just look what he did to health care and gays in the military. Their knees are just itching to jerk, Pete.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 17:31:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Only a liberal mind could conjure such complete nonsense. Par.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 16:20:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Conservative thought has him murdering the intern whether there's evidence or not. So much for innocent until proven guilty. Speaking of murder, not sexual exploits.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 16:17:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: And this is what they call liberal thought? Brother.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 15:34:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oooh, he lied to her parents! When? And -gasp!- he didn't tell the cops he was doing the broad! If he had, the investigation wouldn't have been impeded and this whole thing would be wrapped up. See, the fact that he was doing the broad was crucial to finding out where she went. He threw the cops off by saying she was simply a close friend. How were they to guess he might have been doing her when he said that wasn't true? He needs to be brought up on charges of overestimating the intelligence ot the cops. Another right winger bites the dust.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 15:20:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thank goodness it's a Democrat caught with his cookie the jar otherwise we'd have to listen to the yammering likes of Conyers, Waters and jackass Jesse.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 13:47:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: The only difference between Rep. Gary Condit and our own Blue Dog Democrat from Austin is that the former has to stalk his women first before they turn up missing until found face up at the bottom of a stream.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 13:18:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anonymous is right again. Condit's the victim and deserves a pass on this one. He didn't mean to lie to the police and her parents. It just happened. It could have happened to anyone. Everybody lies and denies tawdry relationships. Just look at Bob Livingston. He fought tooth and nail and refused to step down.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 12:39:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Poor, pathetic asshole ghost.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:32:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why does Condit have any obligation to "be thoughtful" about anyone? Is that his crime, not being "thoughtful?" In fact, the guy claims that he IS thoughtful about her. He's lost a piece of ass at the very least. Look, shit heads, the chick is missing and Condit used to fuck her. There were others, but so what?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:31:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Come on Pete, anonymous is right. Condit has been cooperating fully, right up to anticipating any affidavits that the police might eventually ask for. He's been very thoughtful of Chandra throughout the investigation.
brooklyn bridge
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:25:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: How did he impede the investigation? Do you mean to say you're so dense that you believe, when Condit, a 53 year-old letch, told the cops this curvy, but ugly, 24 year-old tramp, was his "close friend," the dim bulb cops sighed and said, "That does it, he wasn't balling her. There goes another lead, boys." Come on, ghost, get real. If the late, lamented Pete hadn't croaked even he, with his paralegal training, would tell you you're full of shit. Condit will never be charged with impeding an investigation because he didn't do that. He will never be charged with suborning perjury because he didn't do that. He's just your garden variety holier-than-thou conservative pervert.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:22:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course, switcheroo to the "cops." No, birdbrain, Condit had the obligation TO TELL THE TRUTH and NOT impede the investigation. Got it? Idiot!
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:17:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: So, ghost, what would the cops have done differently in their "investigation" had this miserable hypocrite conservative admitted he had an affair with the Jewess? How did his statements "impede" the investigation, especially given the fact that the mother and aunt already knew about the affair and had presumably told the cops? Also, that famous affidavit stated, at the top, "Please feel free to delete or correct any statements contained in this affidavit." So, ghost, what does any of this have to do with the disappearance of the hussy?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 11:07:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: No dude, anon, Condit had three interviews with police in their ongoing investigation. It was only in his third that he admitted to having a sexual relationship which was the area of inquiry he had repeatedly denied to that point. This, my socialist liberal bird feathered brain, is what is known as impeding an investigation aka obstruction of justice. Add to it, the fact that he also tried to get his other mistress (the airline stewardess) to deny their affair and sign an affidavit denying their affair. I mean, come on! When will you liars ever wake up to the reality of what your scumbags are doing!!!!! He is just another liar democrat attempting to pull the wool over everyone's eyes.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 10:56:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Hardly
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 09:37:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Would that be 'Bortion Bob Barr, the perjurer?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 09:11:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: (Washington, DC) Judicial Watch, the public interest law firm that investigates and prosecutes public abuse and corruption, applauds today�s action by Congressman Bob Barr in calling for an ethics investigation of Gary Condit. True to form, Congressman Barr is the only elected official in the House of Representatives who has put principles ahead of politics and called for an inquiry. Judicial Watch looks forward to the House Ethics Committee now getting about its business in expeditiously investigating this serious matter.
JUDICIAL WATCH <[email protected]>
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 09:02:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: NEW YORK (AP) - The former president of the New-York Historical Society apparently got the history of presidential impeachment scandals a little mixed up Tuesday night. Betsy Gotbaum introduced former President Bill Clinton as Richard Nixon at a $125,000 fund-raiser for the society, according to The New York Post. The audience of 325 gave Clinton a standing ovation and groaned when Gotbaum, a Democratic candidate for public advocate, made the error, the paper said.
Glint <gotta see the humor>
(even the Dims can't tell the difference tween the two), - Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 08:23:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: NEW YORK (AP) - The former president of the New-York Historical Society apparently got the history of presidential impeachment scandals a little mixed up Tuesday night. Betsy Gotbaum introduced former President Bill Clinton as Richard Nixon at a $125,000 fund-raiser for the society, according to The New York Post. The audience of 325 gave Clinton a standing ovation and groaned when Gotbaum, a Democratic candidate for public advocate, made the error, the paper said.
Glint <gotta see the humor>
(even the Dims can't tell the difference tween the two), - Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 08:22:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Series-SkipperTM: There's a Scandal in Here Somewhere! By Mickey Kaus -- Series-Skipper� is a service from kausfiles that lets readers avoid long, worthy newspaper series. (For more on the rationale for Series-Skipper�, click here). Last Sunday's New York Times investigative report on Florida overseas ballots wasn't a series, but at 397 inches in length (counting graphics), with three sidebars and input from 24 reporters, it could have been! In response to overwhelming demand from civic-minded consumers who do not want to actually read this important story, kausfiles has extended the reach of its proprietary Series-Skipper� technology. Story: "How Bush Took Florida: Mining the Overseas Absentee Vote," David Barstow and Don Van Natta Jr., New York Times, July 15, 2001. What did the reporters do? Looked at all 3,704 overseas absentee ballot envelopes that came in after Election Day. About two-thirds of the votes they contained were eventually counted. What the reporters couldn't do: Figure out which candidate got the votes in which envelopes (because the ballots were separated from the envelopes they came in.) Initial, startling pro-Gore fact: If those late-arriving overseas ballots hadn't been counted--and the Election had been determined only by the votes received on Election Day--Gore would have won by 202 votes, according to Florida's official Katherine-Harris approved returns. The late ballots (which under Florida law could be counted if they arrived by November 17, as long as they were filled out on or before Election Day) changed the outcome when they went for Bush by a margin of 739 votes. "Billboard" summary of article: "Under intense pressure from the Republicans, Florida officials accepted hundreds of overseas absentee ballots that failed to comply with state election laws. ... The flawed votes included ballots without postmarks, ballots postmarked after the election, ballots without witness signatures, ballots mailed from towns and cities within the United States and even ballots from voters who voted twice." Background the Times doesn't give you: Salon writer Jake Tapper's Florida book, Down & Dirty, reported a conference call in which Bush "operatives" discussed committing voter fraud by getting soldiers to actually vote after Election Day. Tapper's anecdote was thinly documented--it came from an unidentified "knowledgeable Republican operative." Only one participant in the call was named, and the participant who uttered the key incriminating remark was not identified. Nor was it clear that the call actually resulted in any action being taken. But Tapper's account prompted a great deal of speculation regarding late overseas ballots: Had the Bush forces won Florida by illegally drumming up votes after the election was over? Given this background, what should arguably be the real "billboard" paragraph? "A six-month investigation by The New York Times ... found no evidence of vote fraud by either party. In particular, while some voters admitted ... that they had cast illegal ballots after Election Day, the investigation found no support for the suspicions of Democrats that the Bush campaign had organized an effort to solicit late votes." Even without organized voting fraud, did the 'flawed' overseas ballots by themselves decide the election? Almost certainly not. Bush's official winning margin was 537 votes. There were only 680 'flawed' late ballots actually counted. Bush would have had to carry those ballots by a margin of 609 to 71--or almost 90% to 10%--for them to have changed the outcome. (Bush won the late overseas absentees, overall, by a 65% to 35% margin.) The Times cites a Harvard "expert on voting patterns and statistical models" who estimates that discarding the 'flawed' ballots would have reduced Bush's margin to 245 votes. Still, this partial reduction in Bush's margin could have made the difference in combination with other potential troves of votes that arguably should have counted for Gore, such as the 176 votes from Palm Beach that were not included in the official tally, or the various batches of Gore "overvotes" found in media recounts. Problem with thinking that the flawed ballots made even that much difference: Many of the flaws in the 680 questionable ballots were technicalities--such as the failure of a voter to include an address along with his signature. Gore generally argued that Florida should "count every vote" regardless of technical defects--an argument in which he was backed up, as the Times notes, by the Florida Supreme Court. Many of the "flawed" overseas ballots represented legitimate, clear expressions of voter intent and probably should have been counted.................[etc. etc. etc.] (http://slate.msn.com/code/kausfiles/kausfiles.asp?Show=7/17/2001&idMessage=7994)
Glint <QED - Bush got more FL votes; Gore wanted all [Gore] votes to be counted>
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 07:17:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: O.K. >> "Strange Lights 'I Think We Witnessed Some Type of Miracle'" C A R T E R E T, N.J., July 17 � UFO Sighting in New Jersey -- Something dazzled the people of New Jersey this weekend. Something bright, high in the sky. -- http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/ufo010717.html
Glint
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 06:35:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Proking, porkig, what's the difference. A twat was spread.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 18, 2001 at 05:56:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: I get it. Condit obstructed an investigation. How? Because he said he was merely the woman's good friend? What would the police have done differently if he admitted they had been proking? Now the mother and aunt say they knew about the affair. Did they tell the cops? If not, did they obstuct the investigation? The only way the cops could even check the guy's appartment was because he let them. They never could have gotten a warrant. He gave them his DNA for all the good that does them. Condit is guilty of bible-thumping hypocrisy and deserves the same scorn previously reserved for the likes of Hyde, Livingston, Burton and Gingrich, his political allies. The disappearance of the whore is an entirely separate matter. That is, unless on of the resident blue-noses has a better spin. Let's hear it, shit heads.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 23:20:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Seems the only appropriate letters these dudes don't share in their last names are LSD. Fits. Psycho-Demonrats on parade.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 22:22:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Like with Clinton, with Condit it isn't a matter of sex. Or murder for that matter. He's been revealed as a liar and quite possibly a criminal for his evasions in the face of the ongoing search for the missing woman. The guy has stuck his foot in a warm pile of shit and instead of bowing out he's tracking up the place.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 19:54:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: It isn't similarities to Jewel as much as it is the DCPD similarities to the FBI. They are using the media, because they have nothing. Condit is not a suspect, the media repeats this .....while making him the number one suspect.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 19:53:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Whahhh?
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 18:11:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thankful Reagan still has a pulse. That's might be part of the reason why Nancy is backing embryo stem-cell research.
go, nancy, go
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 18:02:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, calling Condit a Jewel-like scapegoat can only be the work of a severly deranged socialist liberal apologist for sick perverts. Look, the guy had an adulterous affair with an employee intern for God's sake. When she disappeared, he obstructed the investigation by lying about his relationship. To complicate matters he used the old Bill Cliton intimidate the witnesses and seek false affidavits. Tell me exactly WHERE, ANYWHERE, WHERE Jewel did any of this? Nowhere. This demonstrates why the scum of liberal thought is traitorous, destructive and antisocial. They are the true enemies of America.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 17:52:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: I like this one better (more insidiously spooky): http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2001/07/15/MN193825.DTL&type=printable
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 17:46:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://historynewsnetwork.org/articles/article.html?id=149
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 17:33:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, anon, conjures up images of a liberal mind. At least Reagan still has a pulse. Can't say the same for you birds.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 16:27:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: The humor of Katherine smacking her head on concrete. Almost as humorous as when the Bichon Frise was thrown into traffic. Did he land on his head also?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 14:35:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Meanwhile, Katherine Graham and Ronald Reagan both scored flat lines on their latest brainscans.
talk about funny!
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 14:09:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: But you've gotta feel sorry for her because in the meantime she has to overcome her vanity and bite her lip while the DCPC continues releasing unflattering and utterly laughable composite images of her. Their tactic of using sloppy artists for flushing her out is pure genius as well!
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 14:08:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Think about it as a magnificent strategy, Glint. The Levy woman is brilliant. Not only is she an emotional wreck from the stupid decision to bed with a married employer on the public dole, but she had to be scared because he was after all Democrat in the Cliton mold (those cretins do not go down nicely). What better tactic than to go hide out in some remote cabin with a radio for coverage and let her disappearance do the talking for her by the media onslaught. Then when she surfaces, she can claim emotional distress and shame, but she will have accomplished all her other goals. Ah, the beauty of a liberal mind. Boy, there truly is a new lesson at every inane turn and twist of that maze of synaptic disjunction. Oh, the horror. The Order. The horror. The ...
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 13:53:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Katharine Graham, 84, who led The Washington Post Co. to prominence in the world of journalism and business and became one of the most influential and admired women of her generation, died today at St. Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise, Idaho. Her death resulted from head injuries suffered when she fell on a concrete sidewalk last Saturday.
Glint <gotta see the humor>
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 12:54:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: "In fairness, the female is also adept at using raging testosterone to further her goals" - Anonymous@11:18:36. Especially if her goal is to become a missing person. <> Yo, Pete!
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 12:29:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: A new CNN/USA/Gallup poll tests the true depth of the communist/socialist demonrat fringe: "While seven out of 10 Americans accept Bush as president, 15% say they do not accept Bush as the legitimate president now, but might in the future, and 11% of the public says they will never accept Bush as the legitimate president." Seems the true blue die hard scumbag socialists are only a feeble rabid sick 11% of the "population." I'd call them the subhuman sewer rat-clone wanna-bes.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 11:21:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sexual misconduct. It only happens on one side of the congressional aisle? Each side having members guilty of raging testosterone not held in check. Doesn't matter if a few of them look rather wimpy, they appeared to be raging testosterone, power driven men. The female being part of the equation in their drive for power. In fairness, the female is also adept at using raging testosterone to further her goals.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 11:18:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, yes, in a "liberal" sense, I see your point. Thanks for the further lessons in Liberal Inanity 101. Mahalo.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 10:35:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's Johnny! ;-)
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 10:33:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: I think Harlan has a point. In the end, Hitler did the only honorable thing he could. He saved his country the embarassment of a public trial by "resigning" himself. Since when has a Liberal ever done anything close to honorable? Yes, in the scheme of things, Hitler comes in with more honor than his more Liberal ilk.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 10:02:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wasn't Hitler shacked up with some broad named Eva Braun? Now if that isn't the mark of a loose moraled Liberal, then I don't know what is. Then there's the VW bug connection. Case closed.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 09:30:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: For the last time, Hitler was NOT a liberal by any means! I'm sick and tired of Pete and his socialistic brethren trying to claim Hitler as one of their own! The only important word in the National Socialist Party is NATIONAL! Hitler was an ultra-conservative nationalist, something in horribly short supply in today's America. Now, I'm not saying Hitler was perfect, or everything he did was right. In fact, IF the Holocaust actually occurred (a BIG if considering census records,) I would have to say the man went a bit too far. However, his heart was in the right place. Hitler despised socialism and properly identified the Jews as the biggest purveyors of socialist "thought." Find one of your own to claim, liberals! Leave Hitler out of it!
Harlan St. Wolf
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 08:23:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: For Lincoln, ancient cure worse than his malady Depression treated with mercury pills By Jeremy Manier Tribune staff reporter July 17, 2001 - Before Abraham Lincoln became president, his Illinois friends and colleagues noted that the lanky lawyer was prone to sudden mood swings and angry outbursts--one story claims he grabbed a bystander at a political debate, lifted him up by the collar and shook him violently. Now researchers believe those flashes of temper may have been symptoms of mercury poisoning, brought on by a common remedy for depression. A study published Tuesday gives a new perspective on a president revered for his calm and focused leadership through the historic crisis of the Civil War. That steady temperament appears to have emerged only after Lincoln stopped taking the pills that his law partner William H. Herndon described as "blue mass." Several historians have recorded that Lincoln took the pills, which were as widely used in the 1800s as Prozac is today, said Dr. Norbert Hirschhorn, a New York medical historian and lead author of the study. But many Lincoln scholars appear not to appreciate the dangers blue mass posed. Hirschhorn and researchers at the University of Minnesota used a common 19th Century formula for blue mass to re-create the concoction, which contained about 65 milligrams of elemental mercury per pill. They found that a typical regimen of two to three such pills each day would have exposed Lincoln to mercury levels nearly 9,000 times what current federal rules allow. In addition to outbursts of rage, the researchers believe the mercury Lincoln ingested may have caused insomnia, forgetfulness and possibly a hand tremor. One historical account suggests he quit the blue pill regimen about five months into his presidency because it "made him cross." "He stopped taking this medicine at the most crucial time in our history, when we needed his saintliness the most," said Hirschhorn, whose study appears in the journal Perspectives in Biology and Medicine.
Glint <today's lesson in history>
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 07:27:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: How refreshing, a non-Liberal judge (or perhaps a true liberal judge) who rejects the P.C. pro-abortionists: WICHITA, Kan. � A judge overruled the city Monday and said abortion opponents can hold marches this week outside the clinic of one of the few doctors in the nation to perform late-term abortions. The ruling came as hundreds of demonstrators, in town for a renewal of the Summer of Mercy anti-abortion protests that crippled Wichita a decade ago, took to the streets to demand an end to abortion. They read Bible verses over a loudspeaker as they marched through downtown with a police escort. AP Judge Thomas Marten ruled that the city improperly denied the demonstrators' group, Operation Save America, a parade permit for marches near the clinic of Dr. George Tiller. Tiller's clinic was bombed in 1985 and he was shot and wounded in 1993, two years after the first Summer of Mercy in Wichita. During those 1991 protests, anti-abortion demonstrators besieged Tiller's clinic.
Glint <bombs away!>
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 07:22:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Investigators have begun eyeing Condit's personal finances. FBI agents are already probing Smith's account that Condit urged her to lie about their relationship, an allegation that raises questions of obstruction of justice. Authorities have examined some of Condit's campaign expenditure records and are considering whether to request access to his bank and credit accounts, said a source familiar with the probe. Seems like alot of California housewifes have given their grocery monies to the good ole boy. Hello..Swiss Bank Account!
gumshoe
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 07:10:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: This just in: AMERICAN INDIANS HAVE NO DESIRE for a national Indian leader � a la Jesse Jackson and Black Americans.
Glint <hooray for the American Indians - let's hear it!>
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 06:58:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: The answer to yesterday's satellite image quiz at 12:21:10 is Fisherman's Wharf.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 06:51:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Man, things really start adding up when you're a lyind Liberal DemocRAT who can't keep his pants zipped up or open his mouth without lying and dissembling like their beloved creep, the Big HE>>> Condit facing bills in inquiry with few resources New York Times July 16, 2001 12:00:00 WASHINGTON - Rep. Gary Condit, D-Calif., caught in the middle of the controversy surrounding the disappearance of the government intern Chandra Ann Levy, has few financial resources with which to deal with the personal and political crisis building around him, his congressional financial disclosure records show. Condit is facing big expenses for his team of lawyers and public relations advisers and it is unclear what resources he has to pay them. Condit reported no outside income besides his $145,100 congressional salary in his most recent disclosure statements, which are required of all House members, the records show. The statement, filed in May, listed no outside income and no stock holdings or other assets for him or his wife. It shows that he holds a credit line at a major commercial bank of $50,000 to $100,000. Separate public records show that Condit owns a home in Ceres, Calif., in his congressional district near Modesto, and a condominium apartment in Washington, which has had banks of television cameras focused on it for weeks. In 2000, the California home was assessed for tax purposes at $124,000, while the Washington apartment, in Adams-Morgan, has a market value of about $90,000, records show. A spokeswoman for Condit, Marina Ein, said Condit "lives very modestly." It is not clear how Condit will pay Ein, or his lawyer, Abbe Lowell. (more at http://www.arizonarepublic.com/arizona/articles/0716conditmoney-ON.html)
Glint
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 06:37:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: It seems as if Gary Condit has been chosen as a target to destroy. But, would have a motive to do that? Or who would benefit the most by getting rid of Condit in the next election? Would the Democrats target one of their own members? Would the Republicans try to destroy a conservative who generally votes with them? Would the Bush Administration cut down on of the co-founders of the "Blue Dog Democrats" a group of moderate to conservative Democrats that have made it possible for the president to get his tax cut passed. It all seems like a political attac, the group with the most to gain by destroying Condit would be the liberal Democrats - especially if they could make it appear that it isn't a political attack. If the Blue Dog Democrats can be discredited, who do you think would appear to be incapable of governing???
gumshoe
- Tuesday, July 17, 2001 at 06:17:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Look, Ahab, you boneheads are all cave dwellers. The shadows give you away. Oh, and teh stench of the sewer.
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 22:30:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete is confused. He doesn't always know when the original cave dweller appears.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 19:26:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Dear Abby, My husband is a lying cheat. He tells me he loves me, but he has cheated our entire marriage. He is a good provider and has many friends and supporters. They know he is a lying cheat, but they just avoid the issue. He is a hard worker but many of his coworkers are leery of him. Every time he gets caught, he denies it all. Then he admits that he was wrong and begs me to forgive him. This has been going on for so long, everyone in town knows he is a cheat. I don't know what to do. Signed Frustrated ************** Dear Frustrated: You should dump him. Now that you are finally a New York Senator, you don't need him anymore. Signed Abby

- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 18:58:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's your cave wall, doppelganger. Take a sedative.
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 18:53:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: The ghost seethes. Seethe, ghost, seethe.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 18:35:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Here comes the usual leftist slime effort to demonize the person who has the audacity (whether alive or not) to challenge the Socialist regime: Salon.com "July 16, 2001 | WASHINGTON -- From the moment Chandra Levy went missing in early May, lawyers and spokesmen for Rep. Gary Condit, D-Calif., have often seemed more intent on sinking their boss deeper into hot water than helping him out of it. Monday was no exception. In an apparent effort to push the media focus off Condit, the congressman's spokeswoman, Marina Ein, is pointing reporters toward a resident of Levy's apartment building who, according to Newsweek, has four arrests for assault. And she also speculated that Chandra Levy has her own sordid sexual history. In a Monday afternoon interview with Salon, Ein implied that Levy has a history of frequent, casual sexual encounters that might in some way be tied to her disappearance. "What about the fact that Lisa DePaulo is working on this article for Talk magazine," Ein asked rhetorically, "and it turns out Chandra Levy has a history of one-night stands?" What about it, indeed? Ein's reference is to Talk magazine's article on Condit and Levy -- an article written by Talk's Lisa DePaulo and set for publication in early August. DePaulo, who has been at work on the article since the case's earliest days, declined to comment. But Talk Editorial Director Maer Roshan called Ein's remarks "an odd characterization. The story goes into both of their backgrounds. To reduce it to Chandra's one-night stands is both wrong and untrue." Another source familiar with the article also believed Ein mischaracterized its contents. "If there's anyone's background who's going to get talked about in the Talk article," says the source, "it's Gary Condit's." A source close to the Levy family said of Ein's characterization: "That is absolutely not true." Over recent weeks, Condit has had a series of what at first seemed like public relations coups wither away into disaster under the weight of media dissection and subsequent revelations. First came the threats of libel suits from Condit's lawyer in mid-June, when reports came out that Condit had told D.C. police that Levy had spent the night at his apartment. The threats seemed to still press curiosity -- until it was clear Condit was only disputing that he had ever made such a statement to D.C. police, and not that it actually had happened. More recently, there was the D.C. police's apparent exoneration of Condit after his third interview on June 6, which Ein described as a "home run," to the shock of many observers. And then, just two days later, the police had ramped up their efforts to investigate Condit. Ein's statement on Monday, calling into question Levy's character and sexual habits at the very moment the city's Metropolitan Police are scouring Washington's Rock Creek Park for her body, may be the most eyebrow-raising tactic yet from the Condit team. It's the kind of hardball ploy you'd expect to find in the heat of a political campaign -- but not in a missing-person case involving a politician who officially isn't a suspect. " Scumbag Democrats. Just like Clinton.
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 18:16:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Did you birds read about the SV40 monkey virus in polio vaccinations from 1955-1962? Do we trust our government?
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 15:23:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: The pot calling the kettle black.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 15:18:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: "It is becoming increasingly apparent Congressman Condit's actions have obstructed an ongoing police investigation. For this reason, I believe he should resign rather than bring further discredit on the House of Representatives. If Congressman Condit resists resigning, Congress should take steps through the precedents of the House of Representatives and the rules established by the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct." Bob Barr, a former federal prosecutor, represents Georgia's Seventh District. He serves on the House Financial Services, Judiciary, and Government Reform Committees.
go bobby go!
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 14:01:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: So Condit's attorney says he'll submit to a polygraph, and DC's indiginous Police Chief says they'll take him up on it, but now Condit is backpeddling, like lying Democrats are so often known (yea expected) to do>>> Washington - DC police chief Charles Ramsey says it's unlikely Congressman Gary Condit will take a police-administered lie detector test. Ramsey made his remarks in appearances on the network morning news programs. An attorney for the California congressman offered the polygraph test as a way to clear Condit of suspicion in the Chandra Levy case. Several reports have linked the two romantically, and Condit has been interviewed three times by police. On Friday, Condit's attorney said he had taken -- and passed -- a privately administered polygraph test. Ramsey says police were trying to schedule their own polygraph exam but were repeatedly told the congressman was too busy to take one. Ramsey now says -- quote -- "obviously that wasn't true." He's also skeptical of the test's results because the questions weren't based on facts gathered by police. But Ramsey admits police don't have grounds to compel Condit to take another test. He would have to volunteer to sit for it, and Ramsey says he doesn't appear willing to do that.
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 13:09:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: IT MAY BE tawdry, ghoulish, distasteful and voyeuristic. But the story of the vanishing 24-year-old intern has provided Washington, in the words of one member of Congress, "a lazy man's summer beach novel." As police search for Chandra Levy and Democratic Rep. Gary Condit tries to salvage a morsel of dignity, here are some lessons we can draw from Washington's response: Republicans are learning. There is a reason that Georgia Republican Bob Barr is the only House member stepping forward to demand Condit's resignation and it has little to do with the number of men on Capitol Hill with their own intern problems. Hypocrisy has never been an obstacle to rhetoric. Republicans learned something from the Clinton saga. Shut up. They never forgot that the only prominent officials to lose their jobs over Clinton's infidelities were Republicans -- Speaker Newt Gingrich and speaker-to-be Bob Livingston. They came after Clinton with their guns blazing and came back, in the words of one GOP strategist, "with body parts missing." Barr is the exception. The ubiquitous conservative from the Atlanta suburbs is a political version of the determined knight in Monty Python's Holy Grail -- the one who didn't let the loss of his limbs curb his fighting spirit even when he was reduced to a bloodied torso writhing pitifully in the dirt. Republicans may not be able to resist the target forever. But for now they have shown uncharacteristic discipline. Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus. Who was the first member of the House to go on the record to condemn Condit's behavior? Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Walnut Creek, Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer all challenged Condit's handling of developments, and Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, expressed her disappointment. Male members were far less critical and more apt to blame the media for its obsession with Condit's private behavior. The gender gap is not absolute. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, has been among Condit's most vocal defenders. But the incident is another reminder of how Congress has changed now that women are filling its ranks. Fears of a liberal media conspiracy live on. Conspiracy theorists, at least those who have cable TV, couldn't exactly argue that the media were sweeping the Condit affair under the rug. But they did argue that journalists were going out of its way to cover up Condit's party affiliation. According to the Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog group, the networks have ignored Condit's party affiliation 92 percent of the time. "Normally a 'Republican' or 'Democrat' label is presented nearly every time a member of Congress is cited," alerts the organization. "But since May, the three broadcast networks have practically erased the 'D' from Condit's political identity, detaching the scandal-plagued politician from the rest of his party." Politics makes strange bedfellows. Who joined Barr in calling for Condit's resignation? The left-leaning, solidly Democratic New Republic magazine, which concludes in this week's edition that no matter what comes of the search for Levy, "it will not change the fact that the congressman undermined the search for a missing woman because he was too selfish or too cowardly to tell the truth. For that alone, he deserves our contempt. And he should step down." This from a magazine that savaged Barr for hypocrisy and obsessiveness in his quest to drive President Clinton from office. Obituaries make for nice headlines Watch cable television for 10 minutes and you will hear someone explain how Condit's career is over. Kaput. And what if it turns out that the story of Condit and the 18-year-old girl (who denies ever meeting the congressman) turns out not to be true? What if Levy is found (dead or alive) and it becomes patently obvious that Condit had nothing to do with her disappearance? What if Condit is able to explain how his silence was a noble, yet grossly misinterpreted attempt to keep the investigation focused on Levy? What if cable television finds another story between now and election day? Don't forget that despite the chattering class's insistence that Clinton was dead at the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal, he may well have won a third term if the Constitution had permitted him. Of course, political comebacks make for good headlines as well.
go mark go!
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:54:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: That backyard image doesn't come out with that address.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:51:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, it looks like the left has left the battle field. Looking back at Clinton they know how this Condit thing can blow up in their faces if they go out on a limb to bluster. No sacrificial Ken Starr this time.
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:43:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'm o.k. You're o.k.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:40:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: That cinches it. Levy's dead. Otherwise she would have come back to stop any more police composite sketches of her from being published. Condit's toast.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:38:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: girlhttp://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/0107/levy.composites/gallery.levy.3.jpg
dream girl part 2
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:36:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: girlhttp://www.cnn.com/interactive/us/0107/levy.composites/gallery.levy.1.jpg
Gary Condit's dream
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:36:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oops, trucated the link. Try this left coast view from the left coast: http://www.terraserver.com/get_images3.asp?scale=13&image_id={22F0D99F-64AD-11D5-9990-00508B8FA202}&theme=101
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:21:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, Pete. Spying works upward as well as downward. Here's a view from the back yards of one of this page's Liberal hacks. Anyone recognize it? get_images3.asp?scale=13&image_id={22F0D9AB-64AD-11D5-9990-00508B8FA202}&theme=101 (hint: Eddie G. should know it well.)
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 12:19:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: people useta come from miles around, like the fella who'd always loosten up the straps on dem fancy spotless hikin' boots while he sat slack-jawed listenin' all spellbound to the old woman, tryin' ta learn all th' tings dat she knew. she captivated him with the legend of the stars, dat mysteriously only would appear at night. She showed him how she could give her old skanky dog a can o' KenLration and he would pinch a loaf several hours later. The paperworker always left her holey-roofed hanty utterly amazed, clutching one of the authentic dried doggie souveniers from the gift shack in his teeth like a Macanudo.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 11:14:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Infidelity is always unacceptable," said Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.). "If these allegations are true, obviously, he should resign."
Why?
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 11:13:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Christ, Glint, you are famous! But are you also helping Saddam? Hmmmm....
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 11:02:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sorry Liar anon, Hitler never believed in collectivism of a communist regime. He also never called his party the National Communists. No, it was the National Socialists. (aka modern day Democrats).
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 11:00:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: people say dat all dem statues around tupelo don't cotton much to da weather on account o' them always a cryin' whene'r it rains.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:49:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Paddling upstream frantically trying to get to the fertility clinics.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:48:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: ya see, uncle bub likes using stubb's wooden legs for paddles. sure, cuzin bitches and moans but deep down he likes da way dat da lazy sun feels on his bare skin stubs down on da bayou. it feels purty.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:46:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Those arent terrorists. That's cuzin stubbs and uncle bub in their fishin' boat cumming down the Misssissippi. Theyz a frantically paddlin tryin' ta keep ahead o da barges.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:42:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: We'll be able to stop all those big incoming missiles. Just not terrorists in teeny tiny boats.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:35:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Just in case you forgot: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/daily/feb99/satellite20.htm
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:31:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: According to today's Washington Post in "Interceptor Scores a Direct Hit on Missile" president Bush is calling for $8 billion in funding for missile defense in fiscal 2002. If only I hadn't allowed the security clearance to expire. Here's a link to the story: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A59450-2001Jul13.html [You might recall that a couple years back the reporter once visited the Glint compound to observe secret spy satellites from the backyard. The observing session was later revealed in a page 1 piece.]
Glint
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:27:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: That would make him a communist, not a socialist. Hitler was a commie.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:18:04 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hitler was an avowed socialist who wanted to nationalize property and expand government control. He was a self stated "enemy of capitalism." There is no difference between this sickness and the sickness which passes as a DemocRAT today. POW!!!
Pete�
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:13:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, Glint, you should be thankful. Who knows what further horrors might have been visited on the Breightly household if Clinton and Gore were I-N.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:09:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good afternoon. Did you hear about this Hollywood big shot who played with fire and got burned? It's funny on many levels -- Cher even pokes her slice'n'diced nose into the story: Donor Sues Clintons for Not Giving Pardon - It was an A-list evening in Los Angeles. Brad Pitt and John Travolta were there. Wolfgang Puck took care of the food. Cher and Melissa Etheridge sang for the guests. The guests of honor: President Clinton and the first lady. The star-studded gala last August was designed to raise money for Hillary Rodham Clinton's Senate campaign and the Democratic Party. The person who says he was footing the bill, a Hollywood promoter and Internet millionaire named Peter Paul, had a different agenda. Since he did not end up with what he wanted from the Clintons, he is suing them in California state court. Paul says the party cost him more than $1.5 million. His expenses included the cost of the invitations, the tents, $68,000 for Puck to do the catering, and $30,000 for Cher's airplane. "There were lots of things to pay for," he says. Paul claims he paid for the party because he had an arrangement to buy influence at the White House to help his now bankrupt Internet company and also to try to obtain a presidential pardon for charges of stock fraud. Now, in a remarkable reversal, Paul says he wants some of his money back because the Clintons double-crossed him. "They took the money � They promised to do certain things," says Paul. "They reneged on their promise." [blah blah blah...] Though Sen. Clinton and her staff now act as if she barely knew him, home videos show Paul co-hosting a private lunch for her at the swanky Beverly Hills restaurant Spago. In the video, Paul and his wife sit next to Hillary Clinton and appear to be friendly. At one point, Hillary can be heard telling Paul that she has stopped using e-mail due to various investigations. [Blab blab blab...] Paul says he felt he had no choice but to go along with the party line. "If you'd just paid $2 million to have a relationship with some people," he says, "you're not going to turn around and call them liars in The Washington Post." Paul was particularly hesitant to speak out against the Clintons because he wanted a presidential pardon. According to Paul, Ed Rendell, then the chairman of the Democratic Party, was working on getting the pardon. [yada yada yada...] But the pardon never came. Paul claims that Rendell called him a few weeks later and asked for a contribution for the National Constitution Center, to which he responded, "Come back to me when you can give me some answers about what I'm interested in." Paul says that was the end of his contact with Democratic Party officials. Possible Courtroom Sensation Last week, Sen. Clinton would not even say if she recalled meeting Paul. She said she didn't want to talk about his allegations because his lawsuit is being brought by a group called Judicial Watch, which in the past has brought numerous lawsuits against the Clintons and members of the Clinton administration. "I'm just not going to comment on it," she said. "It's not anything that I'm going to have anything to say about � it'll just work its way out." If the judge allows it, Paul says he will call as witnesses every one of the A-list stars he invited to the big party he threw for the Clintons last year.
Glint <every night I thank my lucky stars that clinton & gore are O-U-T out>
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 10:01:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Simmer down kids. Bob Barr is on the case.
'nuff said
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 09:57:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe Condig can team up with OJ and go searching for "the real killers"� . Out on the links.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 09:34:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Amid protests from Democratic Members and senior aides, House Judiciary ranking member John Conyers (D-Mich.) said Thursday that he has moved to curtail the television appearances of his longtime senior aide, Julian Epstein, demanding that he no longer discuss Rep. Gary Condit's (D-Calif.) ongoing intern controversy on the air. But in apparent defiance of that request, Epstein took to the airwaves again Thursday night, speculating about the nature of the evidence retrieved by police from Condit's home and the lawmaker's possible legal jeopardy. "I think that Mr. Condit has created this jamboree that we are in - that is looking now at his private life - because of the denial [of an affair with the intern], because of his improper conduct," Epstein told a national audience on CNN's "Larry King Live." Some Democrats were furious. "It is not merely inappropriate for a House staffer to be commenting on television about [Condit's predicament] - it is borderline outrageous," said Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.), a member of the Judiciary Committee.
music to my ears - i've missed the tortured sound of their SQUEALING!
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 09:21:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Mr Condit has embarked on what would be two months of lies, big and small. Aside from lying to the police, he also lied to Chandra's parents about the date on which he had last spoken to his "good friend", subsequently justifying it with the Clintonian explanation that he had thought the Levys meant "in person" rather than "on the phone". In another Clintonian touch, Mr Condit had his lawyers draft an affidavit for Anne Marie Smith, the "flame-haired flight attendant" with whom Gary was two-timing Chandra - or three-timing if you take his wife into consideration, denying that she'd had an affair with the congressman. Miss Smith declined to sign and instead went to Fox News. None of this would be known to the world had Miss Levy stuck around. So, if, as Mr Condit insists, he had nothing to do with her disappearance, you can understand why the four-flushing, seven-timing, eight-lines, press-*9-for-necktie-sessions Democrat looks increasingly peeved as the camera crews dog his appearances in the Capitol. Of all the interns in all the apartments in all the District of Columbia, why did his have to disappear? Why couldn't The Mystery Of The Missing Mistress have starred, say, fellow stickman Jesse Jackson? Though there's no stained dress, they did find a stained pair of trousers with a noticeable red spot, which the congressman's ferocious high-rent lawyer, Abbe Lowell, refused to let them impound. Possibly it is an old ketchup stain arising from Mr Condit's small part in the 1978 film Attack Of The Killer Tomatoes. Indeed, the only thing to be said in his favour is that Mr Condit is behaving so guiltily that, if this were a Hollywood movie, he'd be the guy you assume did it until five minutes before the end, when, in a stunning courtroom coup de theatre, Perry Mason reveals that the popular Democratic congressman was, in fact, framed by an embittered Republican opponent. Real life is duller: the obvious suspect is usually the guy who did it. If he's not a killer, there's a prima facie case of obstruction of justice and subornation of perjury. As we know from impeachment days, for Democrats such piffling offences don't "rise to the level" of high crimes. With Bill Clinton, the defence was that it was only about sex; but, with Mr Condit, it's not only about sex, it's about possible murder: Monica Meets OJ, in tabloid-speak. Yet, throughout two long months of obvious lying, Democrats have been in full Clinton mode, or, as the House Democratic Leader, Dick Gephardt, told AP: "Gary is co-operating in every possible way with the police investigation. He's doing what he's been asked to do."
via lindatripp.com
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 09:12:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: One mistress was the 18-year-old daughter of a Pentecostal minister and gardener from Modesto, California, in Mr Condit's home district. The congressman may have sired a child by her. The dates match and, on the birth certificate, the father's name is "withheld". During his stint in the California State Assembly, he was known as "Gary Condom" and was such a prodigious legover maestro that female staffers planned a "Condoms for Condit" fundraiser to ensure that he would at least be able to practise "safe sex".
my, what a surprise
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 09:00:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: IF Gary Condit didn't kill Chandra Levy, he's the unluckiest adulterer in Washington. Until April, he was just another horny congressman, cheerfully nailing - as with many, if not most, of his colleagues - one of the town's vast herd of obliging interns. Gary Condit: has had at least seven other mistresses Not his own intern, perish the thought, but some other fellow's: after all, three years ago, when President Clinton ran into a little difficulty intern-wise, Congressman Condit was one of the few Democrats to vote for the impeachment inquiry, so it was important for him to set an example and only screw around with young federal employees not directly under his authority. Anyway, there he is, getting it on with this year's curvy Jewish Californian intern, who thinks he looks like Harrison Ford.
typcial Clitonian "is is" Democrat <"I did not have sexual relations with any underlings">
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 08:57:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: WASHINGTON - Rep. Gary Condit told cops he can't remember if he had sex with Chandra Levy the last time he saw her - but he did recall repeatedly offering to help her find a new job, a new report says.
typical spew from a Democrat - party of liars and deceitfulness
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 08:54:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Fire is a liquid.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 08:27:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hitler was a liberal.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 08:21:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: The last thing Chandra Levy reportedly looked up on her computer before turning it off and vanishing completely was directions to a popular landmark in the capital's Rock Creek Park. The rendezvous point for park strollers is about 2 miles from Levy's apartment and 1 mile from the condo of her married 53-year-old lover, Rep. Gary Condit, whom she often visited. Washington Police Chief Charles Ramsey and Billy Martin, lawyer for the Levy family, revealed the intern told her family that her congressman lover was so secrecy-obsessed that he ordered her to leave behind all personal identification when she visited him. "There appears to have been some concern that, if stopped, he did not want her to be identified," Martin told NBC's "Meet the Press." He noted that if Levy was meeting the California Democrat the day she vanished, it would explain one of the most enduring mysteries in the case: why she left behind her driver's license and credit cards. "It's consistent with what we believe to be the procedure she used when she was visiting him," Martin said. Both Ramsey and Martin said they believe the missing intern was probably lured from her house by someone she knew. Ramsey called the missing 24-year-old "a pretty cautious woman." Condit has told police his last contact with Levy was by phone two days earlier, on April 29. Condit and his staff drew up a time line of his activities, showing that on the crucial evening of May 1, he was having drinks with a reporter at a restaurant called Tryst. In one of many bizarre twists, the time line was leaked to ABC � the only news organization that would know the meeting actually took place May 2 because it was an ABC reporter who met with Condit at Tryst.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 06:34:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: WASHINGTON �� The Pentagon's successful missile defense test bolsters President Bush's hopes for building at least a rudimentary defense against ballistic missile attack on the United States and its allies by 2004. The destruction of a mock warhead in space by a missile interceptor launched from Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands was an important step for the Pentagon's missile defense effort, but must be followed by more successes in more frequent and more realistic tests, officials said. The success late Saturday night followed TWO DRAMATIC TEST FAILURES DURING THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION.
nuff said
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 06:13:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Monday, Israeli police found the bodies of two Palestinians in Jerusalem less than a mile from the stadium where the Maccabiah games - known as the world Jewish Olympics - were to open later in the day. Police said the two were apparently assembling a bomb for a terror attack, but the device exploded prematurely.
knee-slapping news
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 06:04:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Liar Dimocrat's interpretation of a youthful indiscretion: A 20-something intern.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 16, 2001 at 06:02:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: So as I understand it, Sen. Trent Lott is advocating exile for Mr. Newt because of his (Mr. Newt's) missus? Or is he already exiled? what about Barr? Has he registered his fetus? Yet?
Stanley Milgram <there is no surplus and now theres an arms race. god we're good.>
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 19:27:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: How about that. Infidelities, a 5 syllable word.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 17:51:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, Bob Barr would be gone for one. Nevertheless, Condit needs to go. It would be a good opportunity for a moderate to replace a conservative in the House.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 17:42:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: If every member of Congress resigned due to marital infidelities, how many empty seats would there be?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 16:43:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Poor pathetic retard.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 16:04:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: Infidelity...spell checker might be around.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 15:31:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wouldn't think Bob Barr would suggest Condit resign due to membership in the Infedelity Club. He would have to take a stand on the criminal investigation interference.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 15:19:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., calling for the Democrat to resign if he did have an adulterous relationship with the young woman. �Infidelity is always unacceptable but particularly when you have an elected official involved in a position of trust with a young girl, an intern,� Lott said on �Fox News Sunday.� �If these allegations are true, obviously he should resign, and if he doesn�t, the people of his district probably will not re-elect him.� Lott is the second lawmaker to call for Condit�s resignation. Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga., a former prosecutor, said last week that Condit should quit because he interfered with a criminal investigation.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 14:35:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Give what a try? Now you are becoming completely incomprehensible. Even without many syllables.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 14:19:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Aw c'mon. Be a sport and give it a try. If you work hard enough you may never have to take another breath.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 14:01:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good, you are up to two syllable words now. Maybe there is hope for you. I'm not holding my breath. Doppelganger.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 13:43:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Airbag.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 12:47:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Windbag.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 12:46:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course, how could I forget, there are no bags hanging on cave walls. For your edification, I was actually referring to the sixth known definition, which, when taken in its proper context (as you obviously missed), means: "6 : something one likes or does regularly or well; also : one's characteristic way of doing things" Clueless socialist.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 11:33:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bag?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 15, 2001 at 06:37:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sorry, tossing ghosts is not my bag. You got me confused with your socialist brethren or brethrenette.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 20:49:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: But he said he wasn't casting aspersions when making those remarks. He was only trying to prove a point. By throwing back at a so-called vile socialsit words she never spoke in the first place.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 19:12:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: How can I recall something that never existed. Talk about ghosts! Sheesh, these liebrals will never grow a brain. Too much shadow watching. Losers.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 19:09:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete's Ghost seems to want to rewrite history and reject the language of the once-living Twat Boy, Pete�. Don't you remember, Ghost? Don't you remember Twat Boy's delicious satire? Don't you remember his journey into the Land of Tourette? Do you forget or are you ashamed? Fuck you, Ghost.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 18:45:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, Jasmine, and neither does this cowardly foul clop socialist.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 18:37:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Spread that twat, Jasmine, you cunt. Pete's got a big one cumming. If it's pussed over or sewn shut, your foul mouth will do just fine. Welcome aboard.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 17:45:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gary Condit offered a reward for information about another missing young women in 1990 or 1991. Does anyone remember this?
Jasmine <[email protected]>
Spring Lake, MI USA - Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 16:28:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Contradictions, inconsistencies. Isn't it that other anonymous who is inane, full of inconsistencies?
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 13:11:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gerard Daigle, 80, lost a pint of blood and required stitches after his cat Touti, a diminutive roughly meaning Tiny, launched a frenzied attack after Daigle, who was giving his pet parrot a shower, inadvertently sprayed the cat with water. "I have never seen anything like this in all my career," said Guy Theriault, an animal control officer in Trois-Rivieres, Quebec. "It was a real carnage: there was blood all over the place � on the the ceiling, the floor and the walls. The cat was really traumatized by the water," Theriault added. The animal control officer said Daigle was saved by his 81-year-old wife who wrestled the cat away, only to have it turn on her. "The cat wanted to eat her, too," one newspaper quoted Daigle as saying. The couple managed to chase the cat into the bedroom and slam the door. Police responded in force because they thought they were dealing with a domestic emergency. It is not known why Daigle was giving his parrot a shower.
Bootsie?
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 11:57:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, I see, you going anonymous is virtuous. Sure sounds like a cowardly nameless liberal to me. Of course contradictions and inconsistencies define you. Pucker up.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 11:46:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wrong coward, Pete. I'm the one who doesn't believe you died, that you just got ground into dust by the mighty House of Meat (aka Your Daddy.)
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 11:44:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'm also puzzling over which is worse. Emptiness or being full of vile bile.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 11:39:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why wouldm you puzzle about Gary? The fact that he is a democRAT, says it all. And for the alter cowardly anon, interesting that you think ghosts can turn to dust. Inherent contradiction in your inanities. As usual. POOF!
Pete�
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 11:28:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: First House of Meat grinds Pete into dust and now Anonymous has him spooked. Hasn't been this good around here for months.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 14, 2001 at 10:53:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Don't get so uptight. I was only puzzling about Gary.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 22:49:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why? Sounds like you already defined them. A known quantity. Not like the lying, deceiving, shifty liberals. It is amazing how you scumbags ignore 75% of the effort that allows you to live free in this country. It was not founded by socialsits like you traitors, that is for sure.
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 22:42:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: Perhaps it's born-again upstanding Pentecostals that should be scrutinized instead of liberals.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 22:33:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: That reminds me of Choo Choo Charley's theme song: "Once upon a time there was an engineer Choo Choo Charlie was his name, we hear. He had an engine and he sure had fun He used Good & Plenty candy to make his train run. Charlie says "Love my Good & Plenty!" Charlie says "Really rings my bell!" Charlie says "Love my Good & Plenty!" Don't know any other candy that I love so well!
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 21:47:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Shadows on the cave walls. Students, parents who have said "Thank you. You made a difference." There's nothing of more worth that a delusional cave dweller could ask for.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 18:31:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wonder if Maureen Reagan even knows how to spread her twat for the big one cumming anymore. Probably best just to have it sewn shut for all it matters now. Smart. And final.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 17:21:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: The ghost retains the rapier-like wit of the late lamented Pete. Good. And plenty.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 16:11:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, delusional cave dweller. Fits. And starts.
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 14:09:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: But no telescope to peer into other's affairs.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:52:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Mine is a designer cave. It has windows. And imaginative shadows.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:48:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: The more I read and hear about what passes for the socialist mind, the more I reconsider my objection to guns. I mean, liberal mentalities are the primary reason guns exist. Look at the history of worldwide socialist destruction.
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:41:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: No anon, that's your mirror. Windows do not exist on caves. Or else you ahve one truly imaginative shadow.
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:40:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: And all this time I figured Clinton was behind the deaths and disappearances. Now I find out it's Condom. At least we know it's not Maureen or Ronald Reagan. This kind of thing takes brains.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:34:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Caves can be acceptible. Depends on the decor. At least mine has a window.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:02:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: What about me and my connection?
Caity Mahoney
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 13:01:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is there a connection between the disappearance of Joyce Chiang, Christine Mirzayan and Chandra Levy? ....... "The basic line went something like this: People just don't vanish from the middle of Dupont Circle. Not on a Saturday night at 8:30 p.m. Sure it was cold, but it was Connecticut and R, for goodness' sake. It just didn't make any sense. And if the FBI couldn't solve this sort of mystery right in its own back yard, then who could? Meanwhile, Chiang's family and countless friends continued to canvass the city, posting fliers with her radiant photo and talking with anyone who would listen. Week after week, without fail, they held candlelight vigils in Dupont Circle; these ceremonies, led by Roger Chiang and organized by her friends, sometimes counted more than a hundred strong. Their efforts helped to comfort them and nurture a glimmer of shared hope, but did little to help solve the case. Then the tide did what no law enforcement agency or loved one's prayers could accomplish. On April 1, a canoeist was paddling down the Potomac River south of Belle Haven Marina in Fairfax County. He lives in a riverside subdivision�his back yard is on the water�and his solo excursions have been a daily ritual for years, no matter what the weather. He usually hugs the shoreline to get a look at the wildlife, particularly the birds. Sometimes he comes across the carcass of a sheep or a deer that has washed down from Roosevelt Island or some place above Washington. He wonders what mishap�falling through frozen ice? a flash flood?�has sent the animals to their final resting place on the banks. This evening, something else caught his eye as he drifted along a remote stretch of rip-rap rocks that buffer the upscale Arcturus neighborhood from the river below. At first, he thought it was one of those dummies used to train emergency workers for rescue missions. As he drew closer, though, he realized it was a body snagged in the boulders just above the lapping low tide. Fully clothed down to a pair of black shoes, the body lay face down in the rocks. The head appeared bald. Though badly decomposed, it was still intact�no outward signs of trauma�though the canoeist didn't draw closer for further examination. From what he could tell, it had probably been submerged in the chilly water before the tide finally exposed it. The lack of hair meant that it had probably been in the river for a long time. (Among many striking features, Chiang boasted a mane of lovely, shoulder-length black hair. She had a habit of twirling the long strands.) Judging from the petite body, especially the small hands and shape of the hips, he guessed that this was the corpse of a woman. It took authorities nearly two weeks to make a positive identification. Dental records proved inconclusive, so they had to rely on DNA testing to confirm that this was the body of Chiang. After that delay, the medical examiner's office took another month to announce that the body was too badly decomposed for them to determine a cause of death. There was a clue of sorts: Chiang's ATM card found tucked in her knee socks. Authorities had detected no action on her bank account; robbery had apparently already been ruled out as a motive. For the most part, though, the discovery of the body only deepened the mystery. Now, six months after she disappeared, and four after her body was found, the case is at a full stop. Because the way Chiang died remains unknown, authorities have not officially declared her death a homicide. In the MPD's Crime Solvers Web site, the case is dubbed a "death investigation." Random violence, suicide, death by misadventure�nothing can be ruled out. A Joyce Chiang Task Force has been formed; its appeal to the public hints that she probably didn't leave Dupont Circle of her own accord: "Anyone with information about the disappearance of Joyce Chiang, or anyone who may have been the victim of an attempted abduction in the Dupont Circle is asked to contact the FBI." The MPD is notorious for its backlog of unsolved cases, from theft to murder. One unsolved slaying bears some resemblance to the Chiang case: Last summer, a 28-year-old intern at the National Academy of Sciences was found in some woods off Canal Road near the Georgetown University dorm where she was staying. Christine Mirzayan was walking home from a barbecue at 10:30 p.m. when someone snatched her off the street. Her partially clothed body revealed how she died: severe blows to the head after an apparent sexual assault. Like Chiang, Mirzayan was the daughter of immigrants�in her case, parents who fled Iran after the shah's downfall. Like Chiang, she was a pretty�some might say exotic-looking�young woman with a bright future. Her fianc� came to Washington to claim her body. Her killer has never been found. " The basic line went something like this: People just don't vanish from the middle of Dupont Circle. Not on a Saturday night at 8:30 p.m. Sure it was cold, but it was Connecticut and R, for goodness' sake. It just didn't make any sense. And if the FBI couldn't solve this sort of mystery right in its own back yard, then who could? Meanwhile, Chiang's family and countless friends continued to canvass the city, posting fliers with her radiant photo and talking with anyone who would listen. Week after week, without fail, they held candlelight vigils in Dupont Circle; these ceremonies, led by Roger Chiang and organized by her friends, sometimes counted more than a hundred strong. Their efforts helped to comfort them and nurture a glimmer of shared hope, but did little to help solve the case. Then the tide did what no law enforcement agency or loved one's prayers could accomplish. On April 1, a canoeist was paddling down the Potomac River south of Belle Haven Marina in Fairfax County. He lives in a riverside subdivision�his back yard is on the water�and his solo excursions have been a daily ritual for years, no matter what the weather. He usually hugs the shoreline to get a look at the wildlife, particularly the birds. Sometimes he comes across the carcass of a sheep or a deer that has washed down from Roosevelt Island or some place above Washington. He wonders what mishap�falling through frozen ice? a flash flood?�has sent the animals to their final resting place on the banks. This evening, something else caught his eye as he drifted along a remote stretch of rip-rap rocks that buffer the upscale Arcturus neighborhood from the river below. At first, he thought it was one of those dummies used to train emergency workers for rescue missions. As he drew closer, though, he realized it was a body snagged in the boulders just above the lapping low tide. Fully clothed down to a pair of black shoes, the body lay face down in the rocks. The head appeared bald. Though badly decomposed, it was still intact�no outward signs of trauma�though the canoeist didn't draw closer for further examination. From what he could tell, it had probably been submerged in the chilly water before the tide finally exposed it. The lack of hair meant that it had probably been in the river for a long time. (Among many striking features, Chiang boasted a mane of lovely, shoulder-length black hair. She had a habit of twirling the long strands.) Judging from the petite body, especially the small hands and shape of the hips, he guessed that this was the corpse of a woman. It took authorities nearly two weeks to make a positive identification. Dental records proved inconclusive, so they had to rely on DNA testing to confirm that this was the body of Chiang. After that delay, the medical examiner's office took another month to announce that the body was too badly decomposed for them to determine a cause of death. There was a clue of sorts: Chiang's ATM card found tucked in her knee socks. Authorities had detected no action on her bank account; robbery had apparently already been ruled out as a motive. For the most part, though, the discovery of the body only deepened the mystery. Now, six months after she disappeared, and four after her body was found, the case is at a full stop. Because the way Chiang died remains unknown, authorities have not officially declared her death a homicide. In the MPD's Crime Solvers Web site, the case is dubbed a "death investigation." Random violence, suicide, death by misadventure�nothing can be ruled out. A Joyce Chiang Task Force has been formed; its appeal to the public hints that she probably didn't leave Dupont Circle of her own accord: "Anyone with information about the disappearance of Joyce Chiang, or anyone who may have been the victim of an attempted abduction in the Dupont Circle is asked to contact the FBI." The MPD is notorious for its backlog of unsolved cases, from theft to murder. One unsolved slaying bears some resemblance to the Chiang case: Last summer, a 28-year-old intern at the National Academy of Sciences was found in some woods off Canal Road near the Georgetown University dorm where she was staying. Christine Mirzayan was walking home from a barbecue at 10:30 p.m. when someone snatched her off the street. Her partially clothed body revealed how she died: severe blows to the head after an apparent sexual assault. Like Chiang, Mirzayan was the daughter of immigrants�in her case, parents who fled Iran after the shah's downfall. Like Chiang, she was a pretty�some might say exotic-looking�young woman with a bright future. Her fianc� came to Washington to claim her body. Her killer has never been found. The basic line went something like this: People just don't vanish from the middle of Dupont Circle. Not on a Saturday night at 8:30 p.m. Sure it was cold, but it was Connecticut and R, for goodness' sake. It just didn't make any sense. And if the FBI couldn't solve this sort of mystery right in its own back yard, then who could? Meanwhile, Chiang's family and countless friends continued to canvass the city, posting fliers with her radiant photo and talking with anyone who would listen. Week after week, without fail, they held candlelight vigils in Dupont Circle; these ceremonies, led by Roger Chiang and organized by her friends, sometimes counted more than a hundred strong. Their efforts helped to comfort them and nurture a glimmer of shared hope, but did little to help solve the case. Then the tide did what no law enforcement agency or loved one's prayers could accomplish. On April 1, a canoeist was paddling down the Potomac River south of Belle Haven Marina in Fairfax County. He lives in a riverside subdivision�his back yard is on the water�and his solo excursions have been a daily ritual for years, no matter what the weather. He usually hugs the shoreline to get a look at the wildlife, particularly the birds. Sometimes he comes across the carcass of a sheep or a deer that has washed down from Roosevelt Island or some place above Washington. He wonders what mishap�falling through frozen ice? a flash flood?�has sent the animals to their final resting place on the banks. This evening, something else caught his eye as he drifted along a remote stretch of rip-rap rocks that buffer the upscale Arcturus neighborhood from the river below. At first, he thought it was one of those dummies used to train emergency workers for rescue missions. As he drew closer, though, he realized it was a body snagged in the boulders just above the lapping low tide. Fully clothed down to a pair of black shoes, the body lay face down in the rocks. The head appeared bald. Though badly decomposed, it was still intact�no outward signs of trauma�though the canoeist didn't draw closer for further examination. From what he could tell, it had probably been submerged in the chilly water before the tide finally exposed it. The lack of hair meant that it had probably been in the river for a long time. (Among many striking features, Chiang boasted a mane of lovely, shoulder-length black hair. She had a habit of twirling the long strands.) Judging from the petite body, especially the small hands and shape of the hips, he guessed that this was the corpse of a woman. It took authorities nearly two weeks to make a positive identification. Dental records proved inconclusive, so they had to rely on DNA testing to confirm that this was the body of Chiang. After that delay, the medical examiner's office took another month to announce that the body was too badly decomposed for them to determine a cause of death. There was a clue of sorts: Chiang's ATM card found tucked in her knee socks. Authorities had detected no action on her bank account; robbery had apparently already been ruled out as a motive. For the most part, though, the discovery of the body only deepened the mystery. Now, six months after she disappeared, and four after her body was found, the case is at a full stop. Because the way Chiang died remains unknown, authorities have not officially declared her death a homicide. In the MPD's Crime Solvers Web site, the case is dubbed a "death investigation." Random violence, suicide, death by misadventure�nothing can be ruled out. A Joyce Chiang Task Force has been formed; its appeal to the public hints that she probably didn't leave Dupont Circle of her own accord: "Anyone with information about the disappearance of Joyce Chiang, or anyone who may have been the victim of an attempted abduction in the Dupont Circle is asked to contact the FBI." The MPD is notorious for its backlog of unsolved cases, from theft to murder. One unsolved slaying bears some resemblance to the Chiang case: Last summer, a 28-year-old intern at the National Academy of Sciences was found in some woods off Canal Road near the Georgetown University dorm where she was staying. Christine Mirzayan was walking home from a barbecue at 10:30 p.m. when someone snatched her off the street. Her partially clothed body revealed how she died: severe blows to the head after an apparent sexual assault. Like Chiang, Mirzayan was the daughter of immigrants�in her case, parents who fled Iran after the shah's downfall. Like Chiang, she was a pretty�some might say exotic-looking�young woman with a bright future. Her fianc� came to Washington to claim her body. Her killer has never been found. http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/archives/cover/1999/print_cover0730.html
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 12:36:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gee, that is really a low blow by this lousy coward anon. One of the greatest men of this era being spit on by one of the lowest low life socialists. Gee, a new low for fornigate. //Oh, and by the way, I live on food, not rock. Get a clue. For once!
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 12:09:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: The brain is the most vulnerable organ among the Reagans.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 11:53:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maureen Reagan's cancer has spread to her brain. Isn't she the legitimate daughter?
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 11:00:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: He "lives" on a rock, if a ghost can actually live.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 10:54:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, Glint, 10X30IS. They are just the ticket for my next jaunt to Kenya later this summer. Some fun.// By the way, anon, I do not live in a cave, so your request to exchange views of our respective caves appears to have confirmed that you, however, do in fact live in a cave. Clueless.
Pete�
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 10:26:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: We get tons of nutball mail but buried in the junk have been some fascinating facts that check out. Brace , this case is about to take an ugly, ugly turn. The feds know about it, people like Isikoff at Newsweek and Niles Lathem and Steve Dunleavy, among others, at the New York Post know about it, the Levy's have known about it all along which may account for their slightly loopy presentation of themselves and loathing of Condit. Pretty soon you will know about it and it won't be pretty. The Weekend Roundtable will be on the board at midnight and here's a hint. It's about something you hated in your life.
a net news site
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 08:53:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: I meant "I'm hoping that someday when the price comes down they'll have 80-100 millimeter models available" - not "80-100 models"
Glint
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 08:26:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: "...we pulled out the new image stabilizing Canon bimoculars" - Pete. Wow, I'm so jealous, Pete. Which magnification & size did you get (the 10x30, 15x45, or 12x36)? I'm hoping that someday when the price comes down they'll have 80-100 models available. I have a pair of Celestron 11x80s (unstabilized). The exit pupil is so huge (80/11= 7+mm) as to be a waste of useful light for most human eyeballs. For stabilization I have a nice walnut and brass tripod/mount that lets you stand under it and look straight up. It was made (and sold) by a friend. Nice work. My pride and joy is a smaller pair of 10x50 Fujinons that I picked up in St. Thomas. Razor sharp. Used them to get my first glimpse of the space shuttle Atlantis' rising astronauts cumming all over the horizon yesterday morning while they were blasting off. <> "Scorpio's tail was rather spectacular" - Pete. There are two lovely naked eye star clusters near Scorpius' stinger -- M6 and M7 (M=Messier). <> Speaking of razor shart, did you read that Coulter piece below? Youch! She loves spanking the Dems. But we know they secrectly like being outed.
Glint
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 08:24:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: "...we pulled out the new image stabilizing Canon bimoculars" - Pete. Wow, I'm so jealous, Pete. Which magnification & size did you get (the 10x30, 15x45, or 12x36)? I'm hoping that someday when the price comes down they'll have 80-100 models available. I have a pair of Celestron 11x80s (unstabilized). The exit pupil is so huge (80/11= 7+mm) as to be a waste of useful light for most human eyeballs. For stabilization I have a nice walnut and brass tripod/mount that lets you stand under it and look straight up. It was made (and sold) by a friend. Nice work. My pride and joy is a smaller pair of 10x50 Fujinons that I picked up in St. Thomas. Razor sharp. Used them to get my first glimpse of the space shuttle Atlantis' rising astronauts cumming all over the horizon yesterday morning while they were blasting off. <> "Scorpio's tail was rather spectacular" - Pete. There are two lovely naked eye star clusters near Scorpius' stinger -- M6 and M7 (M=Messier). <> Speaking of razor shart, did you read that Coulter piece below? Youch! She loves spanking the Dems. But we know they secrectly like being outed.
Glint
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 08:24:24 (EDT)
My two cents are: He was better when he was alive, Anonymous. You missed it. The open letters, the pussy-eating boasts, the third level poem he'd been working on for twenty year, the tantrums,t he object lessons, the reverse psychology. Pete was really...something when he was alive.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 13, 2001 at 07:35:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: As interesting as your illusion that this poster has ever claimed to be able to "see" what you're doing. Have no idea what your cave is like even though you "apparently" see trees waving in mine. Although I have observed how some others have seen you. Interesting indeed.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 23:04:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, I think in a moment of ironic lapse, you actually used "is" correctly in a sentence. Even though it was clouded by your "agenda." Typical.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 23:03:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Interesting that you continue to claim to "see" me and what I am doing. Trust me. It is all an illusion. It is the byproduct of a fevered socialist mind gone to seed. I suggest you brush your cave, first. Broad strokes. IS.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 22:46:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'd be willing to compare my cave to your cave and see if yours "is" any more virtuous than mine. Seeing that you paint with a very broad brush.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 21:45:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ann Coulter The Democratic dream team: Clinton-Condit in 2004 http://www.jewishworldreview.com -- WE won't be certain that Congressman Gary Condit is guilty until Alan Dershowitz defends him. But the possibility that Condit wasn't involved in the disappearance of intern Chandra Levy grows more remote with each passing day. And not only because of who's already defending him. Because you can't turn on the TV without seeing breaking news on the Levy investigation, this is like explaining who "John Kennedy Jr." was, but: Levy is the 24-year-old graduate student from the University of Southern California who had just finished her internship with the federal Bureau of Prisons and was about to head back to California when she vanished without a trace from her apartment near Dupont Circle on April 30. The longer Levy remains missing, the more likely it is that she will not emerge alive. She didn't fit the profile of a runaway (and runaways tend not to leave their purses behind). There is no ransom note. If Levy has been the victim of foul play, chances are overwhelming, from a statistical point of view, that she was the victim of someone she knew. It's been two months and the police still haven't found a body. Suicides don't hide the body, random street criminals don't hide the body, even serial killers tend not to hide the bodies. Police dogs have searched nearby jogging trails, and Levy's running shoes were in her apartment. If she were involved with someone, the possibility that that such person is involved is even higher. If she were involved in an adulterous relationship with a married man, the odds again increase. If she disappeared during a period when the married man's wife suddenly came to town, the odds increase further. Levy was having an affair with Rep. Gary Condit. His wife arrived in Washington days before Levy disappeared. Supplementing this mounting suspicion is Condit's practice of acting guilty. Even as the days grew into weeks and weeks grew into months with no sign of Levy, Condit kept lying about the affair. We learned in the Clinton era that affairs are "private family matters" and "everyone lies about sex." But this was beginning to look like a murder investigation. So it was odd that Condit still engaged in Herculean efforts to conceal his affair. (He must have thought he was being pretty smooth, but everyone knew anyway. As a rule of thumb, whenever a congressman calls an intern a "good friend," he's having sex with her.) If the affair and Levy's disappearance are unrelated, why would Condit persistently lie about the affair? After issuing preposterous denials for two months, Condit finally did the honorable thing and owned up to his relationship with Levy -- right after Levy's aunt went public with the affair. Condit also lied to Levy's parents about when he had last spoken with Levy, later giving the Clintonian explanation that he meant "in person" as opposed to "on the phone." Maddeningly, the police are refusing to cough up the details of their investigation to an inquiring press. But the FBI was sufficiently interested in Condit to contact his other mistress soon after Levy disappeared. The other-other woman, flight attendant Anne Marie Smith, knew nothing of Levy (for reasons pertaining to the logic of mistresses). Thus, early in the investigation, something led investigators to stray beyond acquaintances of Levy to acquaintances of Condit. When Smith told Condit that the FBI had called, he promptly attempted to suborn her perjury. (Another proven method of looking innocent.) According to Smith, Condit informed her that she didn't have to talk to the FBI. He then had his lawyers draft an affidavit for her denying the affair. Condit, evidently, does not like mistresses who talk. Smith refused to sign, and took her story to Fox News Channel. Condit responded to the subornation charge with more Clintonian dodges. He swore up and down, in 17 different ways, that he had told absolutely everyone to tell the truth ... about Levy's disappearance. Thus, he "denied" asking Smith to lie about the affair by saying he had instructed her to tell the truth about Levy's disappearance (something Smith manifestly knew nothing about). Condit's attorney on the affidavit later explained that it was only a draft affidavit and Smith had been encouraged to edit anything that was incorrect. (Like changing the part about not havingan affair with Condit to havingan affair with Condit.) But Smith's most intriguing piece of information was that Condit told her on May 5 or 6: "I'm going to have to disappear for a while. I think I may be in some trouble." Levy's parents didn't tell Condit their daughter was missing until the evening of May 6. If Condit told Smith he was in trouble before being informed of Levy's disappearance, he's lying about more than the affair. At least there won't be a DNA-stained dress. Maybe politicians are capable of learning from the mistakes of others.
go anne go / never surrender to these thieving scumbags.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 21:05:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Apparently they do in your cave. Depending on which way "is" is.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 21:01:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh sure, and trees sway to make the wind.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 19:13:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Actually, I think blinders actually help conservatives add them. No sideways diversions. Perhaps that explains the squirrely, shiftly, liar democrats: they need blinders! That's the ticket! Laughingly stalking E*vile blinderz!
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 18:40:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: You know how conservatives like to keep score. Except they have blinders on when adding up their own.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 17:23:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: But they all seem to be conservative.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 17:15:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Each party has its own cache of virtueless individuals.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 16:54:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where's the evidence of such a thing as a party of virtue?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 16:49:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, especially if it's his own blood.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 16:31:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: How are they going to get Condit with pin drops of blood when they couldn't get OJ with buckets of blood plus a body. An almost decapitated body.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 16:29:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why is always the conservatives who are fucking around?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 16:23:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Authorities have information that Chandra told at least one friend that she was pregnant -- and she said the baby was Condit's," cites a Justice Department source: "A friend told investigators Chandra said she was pregnant. The FBI and Washington D.C. police have subpoenaed her medical records. One investigator told me: 'We believe Levy was pregnant!' The source also added, "The FBI does believe her disappearance is a 'love crime.'" The source says that at least 5 women were romantically involved with Condit are now afraid of him, and are keeping a low profile. A cousin of Chandra's, Michael Maistelman, says that stewardess and former Condit lover Anne Marie Smiths's accounts of being followed "closely parallel" those told by Jennifer Baker, a former Condit intern and the person who introduced Levy to the congressman. "Jennifer is getting the same kind of phone calls and is convinced she's being followed," said Maistelman, who helped the Levys get the FBI involved in the case. According to a source at Justice, investigators "have records indicating someone used Chandra's computer the day after she was last seen on April 30, and that her cell phone had also been used on May 1." "Her computer was definitely logged on with her password."
just like all the other demonrats in the cliton mold
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:43:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, a few token ones from those defamed and never defended by their party. See, the rub is the virtueless criminals known as democrats defend and enable their scumbags. Not so with the party of virtue. Any politician found lying or deceiving or dishonest - of any persuasion - should resign IMMEDIATELY. And should never be defended by the political agenda mongers.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:40:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: During a four-hour search of Mr. Condit's fourth-floor apartment in the 2600 block of Adams Mill Road NW, crime-scene technicians took samples from one drop of blood in plain sight in the bathroom and from specks detected with special equipment in the living room, one source said. The sources characterized the blood as "very minimal" or the size of "pin drops." One law enforcement source remarked on the absence of a computer in the apartment and the cleanliness of the residence. "It has been cleaned all over and was pretty neat," the source said.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:38:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: What about OUR mistresses
H. Hyde, D. Burton, N. Gingrich, B. Livingston
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:34:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, I see someone was questioning my source for the higher approval ratings. Well, aside from the washington Post article cited below, here's todays' Communist News Network/USA Today poll (slanted towards Demonrats of course): "07/12/2001 - Updated 04:55 PM ET Bush's approval rating rebounds By Richard Benedetto, USA TODAY WASHINGTON � As President Bush approaches the six-month mark in office, a new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll shows his slipping job-approval ratings on the rebound. After hitting a personal low of 52% approval two weeks ago, Bush climbed to 57% this week, his best number since late April, largely on the strength of high personal scores and solid support for his work on tax cuts and education. At the same point in his presidency, Bill Clinton's approval rating was 45%." OH Happy Days. The Socialists are in full bore RETREAT!! Tally HOOOO!!!!
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:32:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: John Gibson, on Fox News, read an e-mail from a young lady who was suggesting that there be a Million Mistress March on Washington. It was a hoot. She recommended that all previous mistresses of Congresspersons show up wearing a banner - a la Miss America - listing the "perpetrator", his state, dates of the affair, etc. and that they march on the Capitol. I suspect that, if it ever happened, it would exceed the participation of the latest Million Mom March.
Only Democrats need apply
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 15:27:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Actually, Glint, you're right. we pulled out the new image stabilizing Canon bimoculars and saw a LOT of stars that were not visible otherwise. Also, Scorpio's tail was rather spectacular. Though the night sky really isn't anythint like what it used to be when Jupiter and Saturn were front and center, or even when the moon was up there. Somewhere. Fun, though. Gotta get my gps thingy hooked up.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 14:51:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: You can blame Cliton and his sick failed socialsit policies and being asleep at the switch for the oil crisis. That and the usual turndown in any business cycle. You can also blame the lies of socialsits who want to distort Bush's efforts to unwind the madness of the socialsits. The good news is this will all be done and over by next elections. Oh happy days. You turds are toasted. PEW!!
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 14:49:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: I guess if it's true about Levy we'll have to stop calling him "Harry Condom."
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 14:25:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: XXXXX DRUDGE REPORT XXXXX THURS JULY 12, 2001 15:49:00 ET XXXXX NATIONAL ENQUIRER: CHANDRA LEVY WAS PREGNANT; HER COMPUTER, CELL PHONE WERE USED DAY AFTER SHE WENT MISSING The NATIONAL ENQUIRER is reporting in its July 24 edition set to hit newstands on Friday that missing intern Chandra Levy was pregnant with Congressman Gary Condit's baby!
ho boy!
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 14:20:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: "She was underwhelmed with Mars" - Pete. Then show her something else. Sagittarius should be getting up pretty high in Hawaii along about midnight or so. The Lagoon Nebula (M8) is visible in binoculars and is the lower of two squiggly line symbols just above the spout of the "teapot" asterism in this rough chart: (a) http://members.fortunecity.com/starpoints/images/sagittarius.jpg. The other squiggly symbol represents the Trifid Nebula (M20). Here is an image showing both nebulous objects together: (b) http://members.fortunecity.com/starpoints/images/m8-m20s.gif. Of course no color will be visible. The dark lane that gives the lagoon its name is visible in the following: (c) http://members.fortunecity.com/starpoints/images/m8.jpg. Here's a pic of just the Trifids: (d) http://www.areacom.it/arte_cultura/warworld/poster/daytrif.jpg.
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 13:24:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wish I could say the same for my portfolio.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 13:14:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Bush is his father's son. Jobless claims are at highest level in nine years.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 12:59:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thought only cave dwellers could speak of illusions.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 12:54:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) - President Daniel arap Moi has urged Kenyans to abstain from sex for at least two years to try to curb the spread of AIDS, newspapers reported on Thursday. Moi was speaking after the government announced plans on Wednesday to import 300 million condoms to fight AIDS, a move which has drawn criticism from religious leaders. "As a president, I am shy that I am spending millions of shillings importing those things," Moi told a meeting of the Pharmaceutical Society of Kenya on Wednesday. As a further preventive measure, Moi pleaded with Kenyans to refrain from sex "even for only two years," saying that was the best way to check the epidemic. Kenyan Health Ministry experts estimate that 700 Kenyans die every day of AIDS, and a further 2.2 million are infected with HIV in a population of 30 million. The plan to import condoms ran into swift opposition from religious leaders who believe the government should be promoting abstinence more actively. "Importing such a huge consignment of condoms implies that the government sanctions promiscuity," said the Catholic Organization the Kenya Episcopal Conference in a statement. "The church is saddened to know that our government has given in to donor pressures clearly aimed at commercialising AIDS at the expense of the lives of our people," it said. The Secretary-General of the Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya, Sheikh Mohamed Dor, said the country was "committing suicide" importing so many condoms, a move he said would encourage young people to experiment with sex. Ultimately, he said, the young would abandon the condoms and have unprotected sex. "This will just increase the number of cases of AIDS," he told Reuters. WAKING UP TO THE CRISIS While some Kenyans on the streets of the capital Nairobi applauded Moi's call to abstain, others said they would continue to have sex and would not use condoms. "It's like eating a sweet with a wrapper, you cannot do that," said taxi driver James Karijoki. "You have to have sex, those who will die will die, and whoever does not get AIDS, then good for him," he said. But others said as the death toll mounted from AIDS, growing numbers of men were increasingly willing to use protection. "It's kind of hard to tell guys to keep off, so this measure of bringing in more condoms into the country is a pretty brilliant idea," said Wangui Wambugu, a young woman strolling down one of the main shopping streets. After a slow start, Kenya's government is finally beginning to wake up to the scale of the disaster confronting the East African country as a result of AIDS. In late 1999, Moi declared the epidemic a national disaster and set up a National AIDS Control Council. Last month, Kenya's parliament became only the second in Africa to pass legislation which would allow the country to import and manufacture cheap generic medicines. Moi also called last month for the death penalty for people who knowingly infect others with HIV/AIDS, to deter men from passing the disease to vulnerable younger women.
didnt pete say he was going there again?
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 12:46:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/iprs/20010711/cm/ten_commandments_sponsor_finds_demons_chasing_him_1.html
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 12:23:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: >>I thought i could see a little wispy blue/white at the top, more yellowish on the middle and reddish/yellow on the bottom of this small ball. But maybe it was all an optical illusion.<
Jim Kirkpatrick
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 12:08:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: See, even the cowardly socialsit admits I cause no pain. Or is that just another lie? You never know with these traitors. // Anyway, Glint, I had this very nice lady over last night to star gaze. She was underwhelmed with Mars. I thought i could see a little wispy blue/white at the top, more yellowish on the middle and reddish/yellow on the bottom of this small ball. But maybe it was all an optical illusion. Anyway, having another woman eye my pieces was a bit too disconcerting, especially since she used to model for Ford and it 5'10". Yo!
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 11:15:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Whatever strikes your fancy.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 11:13:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Will that be before or after the morning pinch?
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 11:06:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: Get up early enough next week and you can have morning coffee with Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn as they emerge from glare of sun in the eastern sky.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 10:59:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: And when might the time be ripe (ahem!) for pinching said loaf? Why, when I get one of these, of course: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_1433000/1433904.stm
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 10:16:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ate a bagel with cream cheese at 7:00 (post-loaf.)
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 10:15:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, smart ass, the full story was that last night I went to a nature center and gave a talk. Then I eyeballed Mars and other sights through some telescopes. After that we went to a Karioke bar. Came home, went to bed. Got up at 5 and watched the shuttle blaze overhead. Showered, and went out for breakfast before heading off to see the client. Haven't pinched loaf one yet. Waiting for the right moment.
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 10:14:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Woke up about 5:30. Pinched a loaf at 6:30.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 09:58:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: Rolled out of bed at 5 a.m. turned on the Clinton News Network and watched the space shuttle Atlantis lift off at 5:04. Slipped on some sandals, grabbed binoculars and a tripoded videocamera and strolled leisurely up the hill. Right on time there it was in the southeast, heading northward on a course nearly parallel with the horizon. There was also a striking celestial triangle created by Venus (on top), Saturn, and Aldebaran. Moon was up, a little fatter than 3rd quarter. Noticed last night that the tops of my feet have a poison ivy reaction on them. Think it's from walking back and forth to the observatory through the dewy grass. <> Guess I'll be getting an early start on the old Summer job today.
Glint
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 03:23:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Not really.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 00:53:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: But he knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. Maybe he's The Shadow.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 22:39:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Rube anon hummer." Gosh, Tubby must have a packet sniffer. Or maybe he's using his ear for language, his close tracking on individual nuances of expression. It's eerie how he can zero in on the exact half of a continent like that. Next thing you know he'll be able to tell that a post is from somewhere between Manitoba and Cuba, and have proof that it's really from Teresa. Pete, how is it that you amuse me so? I never broke the carapaces of turtles when I was a child, nor tore the tails off lizards, or the wings off flies. What it is about you that makes ridiculing you so pleasant? Is it the relaxation? The knowledge that no pain will be inflicted in return? The scientific observation of your knee-jerk response and the regularity of your synapses? It is a mystery, but an enjoyably shallow mystery. Who really gives a fuck? Kick back and enjoy it. Enough of this morbid contemplation.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 22:03:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Spoken like a true cave dweller.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 21:11:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: There is no real. It's all an illusion.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 20:49:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: Look, Rube anon Hummer, I am posting what I see. At least I am looking at the real McCoy and not the shadows on the cave walls. Nice to see you, though. What the cripes happened to the Giants this year? Sheesh! Must be reading too much socialist propoganda. No incentive.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 20:37:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: If Jim Jones were still alive, he too would run a newpaper to balance out Moon's.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 20:09:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good stuff today. You folks outdid yourselves. Kudos all around! The best was scholar Pete's astounding paste from the Washington Times with the quotation "People just throw out statistics. Where do they get this stuff? It's basically a guess," followed a few lines down by the Times's basic guess that this somehow led to the inaccurate televised declarations that Al Gore had won the state, narrowing the race by discouraging some George W. Bush supporters from voting in parts of Florida where polls still were open. What is the deal with this newspaper? Is this the Sun Myung Moon rag? Poor vapid Pete proudly pastes it as more evidence of the misdeeds of lying socialists.... I'm beginning to wonder if the stout fellow understands what a socialist is. Beginning to wonder whether he is the savvy character he claims to be. Yo, Pete, Once the numbers get out, they have a life all their own. People who have an agenda can use them in ways that serve them or to make a point. Be on guard! Don't believe every glad-handing Moonie. Be slick, Pete. Without your slickness you are just another rube, quoting the Washington Times.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 19:58:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: ONLY CAPITALISM CAN SAVE THE WORLD. There are a few stories out there that may seem unrelated at first glance, but are actually part of a single trend. The trend is to undermine our way of life. Because education is so woefully inept in this country, the vast majority of us don't realize this or understand even the most basic underpinnings of a capitalist system. Worse yet, some of us think capitalism is the problem and socialism is the solution. Take the recent New York Times story reporting that 401(k) investments are losing money for the first time in twenty years. Now when you're losing money, and somebody says that the same government that spends $2 trillion a year can't "afford" a tax cut because it's too risky, at some point your own experience has to tell you that that's a crock, doesn't it? When is the collective knowledge of Americans in the market going to rear its head and just laugh at the Daschles and Gephardts of the world who sing the siren song that big government can solve all our problems? The greedy desire for tax dollars has gone so far in some places, they're taxing cars and space itself. Drivers in London will have to pay seven pounds a day to bring their cars into central London as part of a plan aimed as reducing weekday traffic. The fee, announced yesterday, goes into effect January 2003. London Mayor Ken Livingstone, who has made the toll a priority, said that the 282 million pounds it's expected to bring in annually will be used to improve the city's ailing public transportation system. Toll evaders will pay a 112 pound fine. Now, does anybody see the inherent contradiction here? They're going to tax everybody seven dollars a day if they drive in. The purpose is to force them not to drive in so that they use public transportation. So how is he going to raise 282 million pounds? You're going to count on people driving in and paying the tax, are you not? Of course! And how is London - the setting of George Orwell's 1984, by the way - going to enforce this law? A network of cameras will be used to check license plates to make sure drivers have paid the toll! This London tax scam reminds me of what Jim Florio tried in New Jersey. He raised all these taxes and fees and tolls on vehicles, and guess what happened? People just went to Pennsylvania to buy their trucks. They had to repeal the tax. It's like the yacht tax, which no one cared about because they thought it would hurt the evil rich. But the rich simply bought their yachts off shore. The only people the tax hurt were Joe Sixpacks who built the ships. In other tax news, the Drudge Report posted a Los Angeles Times story which reads, "Los Angeles County officials, realizing that there is no tax collector in outer space, hoped to fill the void." They want to tax satellites in space! Is this not incredible? In this story, they quote a guy who's "vice president of taxes" for Hughes Electronics. Don't laugh. There are companies with tax burdens so convoluted, that the IRS has got an office in their place of business! What more evidence do you people need of the purpose and role of the people in government? They just can't get enough. It's just mind boggling. I get up every day and read the stuff in the news, and I am continually surprised. I think every day that I can't be shocked, but I always am. This stuff is a slow march to socialism, and we're on this road while nations of the world are clamoring to learn the ways of free-market capitalism. So the question is this: when are we going to stop apologizing for capitalism and realize that it's we who lead and feed the world, and those who follow the model of the Marxists that drag it down? The more that capitalism is spread across the globe, the more it works. Contrarily, when capitalism has been denied to countries like Bangladesh, the Sudan and Ethiopia, we have people starving to death because the government keeps the food for itself. I've often said that the problem in the world is not the unequal distribution of resources. It's the unequal distribution of capitalism. You get capitalism to all these countries that no longer have any freedom whatsoever, and get out of the way after it's introduced for a while. You won't need people begging or demanding anybody else for money. They'll be producing their own.

- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 16:21:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Either that or you worry about the chilblain....
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 16:11:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, knave hummer, stop yer bellyachin! "How absolute the knave is! we must speak by the card, or equivocation will undo us. By the Lord, Horatio, these three years I have taken a note of it; the age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the courtier, he gaffs his kibe." -- William Shakespeare's Hamlet, Act V, Scene 1
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 16:10:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, 13:39, still have not seen any poll, vote count or theft tally which shows Gore was ever ahead. So, in a Democracy, even one vote wins. Even if we were still counting and the head of the Senate was temporary Prez (in other words, no tax cut and other nice wonderful things that have happened since Bush won], Gore would not win and has not won. Get a grip. Reality is real. Unless you are a lying thieving evil* socialist.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 15:55:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: I'll bet he's a socialist. Aye!
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 15:52:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: MONTREAL - A couple whose 19-year-old son was crushed to death by a Coke machine as he rocked it to extract a free can has filed a $1-million lawsuit in a Quebec court accusing the soft-drink company and the vending machine manufacturer of "gross carelessness." Kevin Mackle of Etobicoke, Ont., was discovered in December, 1998, pinned beneath a toppled machine in a residence stairwell at Bishop's University in Lennoxville, Que. A coroner's investigation concluded that after a night drinking beer to celebrate the end of exams, Mr. Mackle was trying to shake a soft drink loose when the 420-kilogram machine tipped over. An autopsy found he died of asphyxiation and had a blood-alcohol level slightly above the legal limit for driving.
get outta the gene pool, sucka!
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 14:03:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: 56% of the Supreme Court Justices approve. That's the only poll that matters.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:39:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Jonah hits a home run with this line: "...Where the hell are the Democrats? When an unmarried Clarence Thomas was accused of asking an unmarried employee out for a date, Democratic congresswomen and their activist sorority stormed the Senate shrieking with sophomoric smugness, "You just don't get it!" Well, alas, those harridans lost their bite defending President Clinton's intern-mentoring...."
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:38:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete's just trying to undermine our faith in Bush by citing these phony socialist polls that would have us believe the President is limping along with support in the 50s. It won't work, Pete! We're on to your tricks. We don't believe the polls. Not since they used to show Klintoon at 70% approval even as America was demanding his removal from office. Be gone!!!!!!!!!!!!
Harlan St. Wolf
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:25:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nice try, golem. Name the poll.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:18:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Chandra, You Big Lug!" http://www.nationalreview.com/goldberg/goldberg071101.shtml
go johah go!
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:17:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pardon me but I am curious as to whether the fine men in blue of the Washington D.C. police department remembered to pump Gary Condom's rectum with a broomstick during last night's searches. Could someone please confirm this for me. Thank you very very much and may God bless.
Abner Louima
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:10:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: The one that came out today, or do you not read, Socialist?
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:06:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: Name your poll, Ghost, or shut your pie hole.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:03:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: You are behind the times, socialist. It is July 11.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 13:02:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gallup/CNN/USA Today Poll and The Gallup Poll (6/28-7/1): 52% approval for Bush.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:58:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: More evidence of media manipulation b y the liar socialists: "Widely quoted assertions that black voters cast 15 percent of Florida's ballots in the 2000 presidential election are wrong far beyond any acceptable margin of error, The Washington Times has learned. Official computerized reports obtained by The Times, identifying each voter by name and race, contradict claims that turnout by blacks has increased by more than 50 percent since 1996. Contrary to all reports, black voters on Nov. 7 constituted 10 percent of Florida's turnout -- 610,616 by actual count, as opposed to estimates that routinely top 900,000. Simply achieving the widely reported 15 percent share of the turnout of 6,086,109 would require that an unheard of 97.7 percent of all black registered voters had gone to the polls. "People just throw out statistics. Where do they get this stuff? It's basically a guess," Clayton Roberts, who heads the Florida Division of Elections, told The Times before the full file was assembled. The actual 10 percent black share of the votes cast on Nov. 7 rose only slightly from 1996's official record, when blacks cast 9.5 percent of the 5.4 million votes. Among other serious consequences, the mistaken 15 percent estimate helped lead to the inaccurate televised declarations that Al Gore had won the state, narrowing the race by discouraging some George W. Bush supporters from voting in parts of Florida where polls still were open. The narrowness of Mr. Bush's lead nourished hopes that the Florida result could be reversed by recounts in precincts dominated by minorities. The mistaken 15 percent estimates originated on Election Day with Voter News Service (VNS), a media cooperative. It quickly was adopted as doctrine by reporters and by voting analyst David Bositis at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (a liberal think tank)even though VNS national numbers never showed a broad surge in black turnout. "Our Florida estimate was at 15 percent of the turnout. In 1996, it was 10 percent. It wouldn't surprise me if they were both actually at 12.5 percent," VNS statistician Murray Edelman said in an interview before The Times obtained precise data. "Once the numbers get out, they have a life all their own. People who have an agenda can use them in ways that serve them or to make a point," said Mr. Edelman, who is editorial director for VNS.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:48:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: By the way, Bush's approval ratings are back up to 58%. Notice how the liar conspiracy of the liberal media never mentions this? Significant inroads in minorities. So much for the Evil Socialists' race cards. Time to shuffle and trump the demonrats. Their days are over. Done. Toast. Kaput.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:43:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Working on a BS degree while Hummer was in Lincoln sounds like a good defense to me. Fire first, ask questions later (especially in a genetic quest). Tally ho!
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:40:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: ...The real punchline was this: "Police officers ... fired more than 20 rounds at each other ... Nobody was hurt." Real sure shots I'm sure.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:32:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Kind of makes the Keystone cops look like a precision drill team >>> SEATTLE (AP) Police officers in two cars fired more than 20 rounds at each other after mistaking each other's vehicles for a stolen patrol car. Nobody was hurt. Police spokeswoman Pam St. John said it happened Tuesday when a bicycle patrol officer in downtown Seattle reported seeing a stolen patrol vehicle. A police car pursued it, but lost sight of the stolen vehicle after stopping briefly at an intersection to check for other vehicles. That's when the other police car pulled up and, mistaking it for the stolen police car, rammed it. The officers inside thought they were being attacked and started firing. Three officers two in one car and one in the other fired more than 20 rounds before they discovered the error, St. John said. Zachary Davis, 18, was arrested after he returned the stolen car to a police parking lot, said police spokeswoman Pam McCammon. Davis was jailed for investigation of auto theft, eluding police and impersonating an officer.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:30:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: A lengthy visit to Lincoln would be overwhelming? Or perhaps just whelming.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:16:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes Pete, the metric screw-up on Mars Climate Orbiter (MCO) and the mysterious follow-on failure of Mars Polar Lander (MPL) occurred somewhere along the JPL / Lockheed-Martin axis. The 1993 Mars Observer (MO) loss on the other hand was blamed on either leaky plumbing or a failed oscillator. MO was built by GE who felt they had won a coup by landing a contract for an interplanetary mission on the east coast. [By the way, I made several trips to Martin Marietta's Denver facility in the early 1980's while working on an Air Force bird. That plant not only built both MCO and MPL but they also produced the pair of Viking landers that touched down successfully in 1976. I wasn't involved in Viking (thus it was a success) because I was busy trying to survive outside the collegiate bubble while working on the B.S. degree in the years leading up to when Ho-Hum was underwhelmed by his brief visit to Lincoln.]
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 12:09:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, it looked as much. Poor Mo. I do recall your stint with the Mars troupe and something about them screwing up with not converting from metric or something in the calculations. That guy gets an F-.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 11:06:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, those images of Mars that show the extent of the dust storm were apparently made using the Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES) aboard NASA's Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft. Here's an explanation from their web site (posted at 06:27:59): >>> TES is both an instrument and a technique. The Thermal Emission Spectrometer is a scientific instrument that first flew aboard the Mars Observer spacecraft. Following the loss of that spacecraft, TES was rebuilt and launched along with five of the original seven Mars Observer instruments aboard the new Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft. The purpose of TES is to measure the thermal infrared energy (heat) emitted from Mars. This technique, called thermal emission spectroscopy, can tell us much about the geology and atmosphere of Mars. TES data will provide the first detailed look at the composition of Mars. <<< [BTW, I worked on contract for the ill-fated Mars Observer (MO) program at its factory in NJ in 1990. Each time I look at Mars I wonder where MO right then.]
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:46:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: WOW! Now that's a picture of Mars! Is there one for Saturn?
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:44:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: What, no rubs today?
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:37:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, check this out and let me know if it's the photograph you were talking about the other day: http://www.space.com/php/multimedia/imagedisplay/img_display.php?pic=h_hubble_marsop02_02.jpg By the way, in the caption for the image that appeared in the local paper they had misidentified the clouds as the dust. The cloud formations creating the "polar hoods" I find to be most visible with a lt. blue (W80A) filter.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:35:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, dope, that was Matilda.
Pete�
au - Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:31:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: Jamaica??? Nah, I hardly even knew her.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:20:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi Glint, that Mars site must be using more than filters. It looks infrared or the sort of imaging for vegetation on earth. All I see is a whitish/yellow ball about 1/2 a centimeter across.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:19:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Gee, Whatever, it looks like Jamaica is imploding. Socialsits? Gotta be.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 10:15:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: JUDICIAL WATCH FILES COMPLAINT AGAINST D.C. POLICE CHIEF RAMSEY: Charges Dereliction of Duty and Preferential Treatment Toward Politician Condit --- (Washington, DC) �It is apparent that Chief Ramsey and his D.C. Police Department, after failing to declare Congressman Condit a suspect and waiting 11 weeks to conduct a search of his condominium, among other matters, laid off Congressman Condit based upon a fear that thoroughly investigating a politician who serves in the House of Representatives � which not coincidently funds the D.C. Police Department � is not good for one�s career,� stated Judicial Watch Chairman and General Counsel Larry Klayman. It is also obvious that Chandra Levy was abducted, most likely by PROFESSIONALS. Her complete disappearance underscores why swift action was needed early on in the case. D.C. Police Department, by its inaction, has increased the likelihood that Chandra Levy, if she is ever found, will be found dead,� added Klayman.
Judicial Watch <[email protected]>
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:47:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: P.S. I like that idea, Harlan - Comdom it is. Of course I also am fond of Hitlary, Slick Willie, and BJ.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:42:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: If the weather is expected to be clear in the morning I'm going to set my alarm clock to get up and try and observe the pre-dawn launch as space shuttle STS-104 arcs up the coast over the Atlantic ocean. Won't be able to use the observatory unless I can talk someone into getting up with me. The rapidly moving spacecraft would require two persons to track - one at the telescope and another rotating the dome and keeping the slit positioned. <> Enjoying my Summer job. We were New York Post's "site of the week" on June 24 - the day before I started hacking on it. Pete, I'll e-mail you the URL; perhaps you'll find it useful.
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:40:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why don't we call him Gary Condom? It's so obvious. It's even better than Demoncraps and Klintoon and Hitlery.
Harlan St. Wolf
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:35:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Authorities are investigating Rep. Gary A. Condit on charges of witness tampering and suborning perjury in trying to persuade a flight attendant to deny their affair in the Chandra Levy investigation, a law enforcement source told The Washington Times.
Police probe Condit in Levy case
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:19:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: I dusted for fingerprints on used condoms at Condit's apartment last night.
D.C.P.D.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 09:04:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: I also dusted and did the windows. Speaking of dust.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 08:27:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: I mopped the floor last night.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 08:26:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good morning. Did John ever mention the name of that restaurant he used to hang out at every morning at 7a before he started the chemo? One of these mornings I'd like to take a road trip up there. Perhaps during the next unemployment opportunity. <> Cracked open the dome last night. First time in 8 days according to the log. Observed Martian Longitude 350. Completely bland and homogenous from limb to limb with the orange (W21) filter at 397x. Must be a whopper of a dust storm up there. The blue (W38) filter is supposed to be good for viewing dust storms - but I don't have one. I tried a green (W58) and then stacked a lt. blue (W80) to try to reduce some of the yellow. Stacked a third filter, lt. blue (W82), but nothing could be discerned. Here's a link to someone else's dust storm imaging: http://tes.la.asu.edu/
Glint
- Wednesday, July 11, 2001 at 06:27:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good rubs.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 20:28:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Damn. He hit the sand trap.
Pete's caddie
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 20:11:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: It just goes to show that all you DemonRATS are liebral liars. Par for the course. FORE!
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:57:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Next.
Pete's Case Worker
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:55:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: I don't think I ever could have loved a son who groomed his hair with toothpaste.
Pete's Biological Dad
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:54:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Whew!
Pete's Biological Mom
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:52:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Fucking yackity-yack artsy-fartsy frigid bitch.
Pete's Adopted Dad
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:52:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete was a good boy. He just never stood a Chinaman's chance. It was probably genetic.
Pete's Adopted Mom
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:50:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why all this fuss about a dead man? Who cares about the size of his penis? Who cares about his brain-power, or his way with words? He is dead now, and with the worms. Who cares if he was dyslexic, or if he lied about himself to strangers? It is all gone now: the wizened brain, the undersized penis, the homosexual tendencies, the lard and the attempts to sweat the lard off, the moronic posts, the open letters, the lack of balance, the pathetic self-agrandissement, the pride in meaningless childhood triumphs and who he sat with at the DAR benefit, the too-cute words and phrases, the self-loathing.... It is all gone-- the melting snows of yesteryear. Once this man carried not only forty extra pounds, but a full tray of Denny's patty-melts and cherry Coke. Now he is a moldering corpse, now there is no tortured soul, his consciousness is ended, and with it his pain. Let him lie beneath the dirt, unheeding of the gleeful liebrals cavorting on his tombstone.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:44:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wish people would stop deriding Pete. He tries hard, even if his penis is puny, bent and pencil wide. Just like the virility of his right-wing agenda. He is on fire because of the way many women, myself included, have baited him daily with their pussed-over and sewn-shut twats, and with their foul mouths that would do just fine. If he could only find his way to the toilet, I know that he would find the long rods and dark tunnels that are the object of his quest. Leave him to sort it all out for himself!
Teresa
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:29:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why doesn't Pete ever comment on this Slobodan deal? The liebral socialsits are trying to railroad Slobo, claiming that he shouldn't have ordered his boys to line people up in front of a ditch and shoot them into it, men women and children. Doesn't anyone realize that the man was just trying to deal with terrorists and international drug smugglers in his own restrained way? I suppose that Pete is going to abandon Slobo and everything he stands for, now that his arch enemy Cliton is out of the picture. Some friend, Slobo is probably saying to himself right now. Some fair-weather friend. He used me just to get at the liberals.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:19:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete, if he exists, is Nurdus americanus, degraded form, anonymous. This is a guy who, as a young adult, memorized the wines recommended by Playboy Magazine and tried to impress girls with the way he had with the sommelier. This is a man, a grown man, who once tried to impress an anonymous internet group with the news that he knew Fess Parker. The guy claims he has professional credentials, and makes up labored stories to prove it, a man so insecure that he won't even hint at what he does for a living to people who don't even know who he is. Is he an airline steward? Naw, the guy has never been anywhere-- an airline steward would be traveled, and know a little about the world. Is he a third-grade teacher? Naw, a third-grade teacher would know the rudiments of grammar and orthography and arithmetic. Is he a clerical assistant? Naw, a clerical assistant would have to be able to keep simple facts straight in his head, and put things in remembered drawers. Is he a fry cook at Denny's? Could be. He might possibly be able to memorize that menu, after a decade or two peeling spuds. Is he a radio fan, a television fan, a subscriber to People, a man who listens to Neil Diamond? Probably, but nothing is for sure. Let's just say that he's the one who calls himself Pete, a man of little worth, and leave it at that.
House of Meat
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:13:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wonder if the Pete character ever feels out-gunned? Probably not. But maybe it does. That would explain why it no longer offers analytical essays on romanticism and classicism, nor reprints its poem about the autumn moon. Seems that all it says any more is liebral liar pants on fire hanging on the telephone wire. At least Glint describes his home life and his jocular interpretations of 19th-century sucking chest wounds.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 19:01:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: So, what you are saying, anonymous, is that this Pete character, if it exists, is a real goober? Amen that, Jackson.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 18:58:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: And here's Pete, mixing himself up in his analogous cement mixer, "voting to impeach Cliton is par for the liebral course," and voting against it is also par for the liebral course. Pete is the expression of a whole demographic category, the kids who didn't get enough Ovaltine as toddlers, sucking down poi-sickles or hush puppies or scrapple snacks, and whose puberty coincided with the self-invention of the Nazi talk-show host, the poor little fellas never stood a chance. Sees words, the essence of a Church of Kommunication, the way a fat-assed talk-show host or a cynical Senate Minority Leader of the early '80's might see them, twisted and meaningless, going for the cheap shot, obfuscating, denigrating, denying life and agressive altruism and the sweet promise of secretly fucking in darkened corridors. Q: Why is this stupid, ineffectual, mean, haole fatboy with the copper raingutter fetish of any interest at all? A: You call this interest? I thought it was toe exercises, same as kicking a dead dog. The socialist garbage crew keeps taking away all the real dead dogs in the 'hood.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 18:55:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: The reminder about the impeachment vote is a sort of devious way of pointing out to you poor yahoos that your arrangements about how to look at the world have certain, er, drawbacks. Yes, Condit ran as a Democrat, but no, he is not a liberal, not even a socialist, except in the way California Central Valley Republicans are socialists, which is primarily by wanting cheap government-subsidized water for agribusiness, tax breaks to attract business to their districts, loose development regulation to subsidize the construction industry, and whatever pork-barrel projects promise to leverage a dime for their buds at the club. As I say, he seems to have a throbbing Democratic dick, of whatever size and geometry it pleases Pete to imagine, and a tolerant Democratic approach to ugly Jewish pussy, but scratch any true Republican and you'll find the same, underneath the sermonizing dour attentiveness to the prejudices of wizened spinster voters in Middle America, and to the Glints of the world, comfortable with the down-home corncobs up their asses. Oh my thin-screen monitor, oh my many woofers, oh the sorrow and the pity of the undermining of the legal system by Presidents weaseling their way through political smear campaigns! Just keep the streetlights shrouded and the niggers out of Cornbelt County and body fluids off the garments of our interns, and I'm all right, Jack. I'm outside-- I say-- I'm outside the bubble, son, and I'm all right.
House of Meat
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 18:42:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: Actually, voting to impeach Cliton is par for the liebral course. The only true action of a Democrat is hypocrisy. So, either the affair is irrelevant and Condit voted to impeach for Cliton's violationjs of law, or the law does not matter and Condit voted to impeach for his sexual dalliances of which Condit also partook. See, it makes perfect sense when it is shown that condit's actions, no matter how you slice it are all Democrat: liar, hypocrite and Evil socialsit. End of Story.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 18:35:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oldest daughter is at drivers education. Going to the pool with the younger one. Later...
Glint
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 17:09:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: The Sony LCD thin screen has two built-lin stero speakers, not that I need them. All of my music CDs seem to have migrated to a juke box attached to the entertainment center. The only ones I have out is a Scott Joplin disk in the car (to sooth me in heavy traffic) and a Simon & Garfunkel greatest hits one here on the computer. I patched the CD-Rom output out one of the kids' Macs pair of speakers. Lots of sage, rosemary & tyme on my hands.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 16:57:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thanks for reminding me about Condit's pro impeachment vote. Guess it just goes to show that no good deed goes unpunished among your own Liberal ilk. <> Cool! My new thin screen Sony LCD monitor arrived last night. With the new computer's arrival still a week away, It's hooked up to the old OS/2 - Linux system and is running like a scalded dog. Speaking of scalded dogs, I wonder what the weather's like in Austin. Yelp! Yelp!
Glint
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 16:51:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, anon*, that was my tongue.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 16:43:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Memories of some of the postings. Although....no, no, not that I can remember.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 16:26:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Always with the knee-slappers! Is this guy Pete a yucks machine or what? Such a joker! What a sense of humor!
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 16:25:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: How descriptive. Brings back memories.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 15:22:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, puny, bent and pencil wide. Just like the virility of your socialist agenda.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 14:31:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: My theory is that when Condit voted to impeach, he was trying to draw fire from Clinton and save the legacy. On the other rub, he may have been just a Republican with a Democratic dick.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 14:07:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: While the TV reporters and pundits are all watching Condit, Clinton may scamper away without so much as a slap on the wrist. Evil, these liberals.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:58:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: I think this Condit character is falling on his sword to distract media attention from the Pervert-in-Chief. I wouldn't put it past the lying, distorting, liberal DumboRATS.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:56:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: WASHINGTON (CNN) - Washington police want Rep. Gary Condit to take a lie detector test in connection with their investigation of the disappearance of Chandra Levy, a top department official said Tuesday. Levy's family said they wanted the test, and Condit's attorney, Abbe Lowell, said Monday night that he would "discuss" such a request if police asked for a polygraph. But Lowell questioned the value of such tests. Monday night, Lowell offered Condit's cooperation on a wide range of issues, including an offer to give investigators access to Condit's apartment in W ashington. District of Columbia police will take Condit up the offer, a police source told CNN.
look what the revelations about condit's behavior has done to the stock market today
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:56:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: And yet our mockery of a legal system couldn't bring the man down! He strode out with an armful of John Adams's office furniture! Walked off with a pocketful of wing rivets off of Air Force 1! Thank heaven we've got W in office, no matter what price 26% of Americans think the black man must pay.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:54:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-California, said Tuesday she called Rep. Gary Condit "a few weeks ago," urging him to come forward about his relationship with missing former intern Chandra Levy. "I thought he should go very public with it, that I thought he should step forward and say whatever it was they had between them," Feinstein told CNN. When asked if she was disappointed that Condit did not take her advice, Feinstein replied, "Yes." Feinstein said she has not yet decided whether to contact Condit, a California Democrat
the libs are playing him like a fiddle
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:53:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's also lying about subourning perjury from witnesses about blow jobs, hiding material evidence under the secretary's bed, hostile work place gropings, and felineticide. Get it straight.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:46:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: You know, I realize that Americans are not quite as bright as they used to be - an organized effort by the Left has made it so. Never-the-less, I am dumbfounded over the results of the current Harris-Excite poll, which reveals that 26 percent of the sheeple apparently believe that Dubya's actions thus far are somehow injurious to Blacks. I believe that we have become a nation of idiots, and this poll proves it, in my opinion.
Jim Kirkpatrick
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 13:40:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: I finally see it! It's not about the blowjobs, It's about lying about blowjobs. Talk about your rubs!
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:55:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, h-child, it will be even better than People or Us. Maybe John Tesh will be the M.C. Pete will have his first orgasm of the new century.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:46:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: This is a put-on, right? These Pete and Glint characters are caricatures of dumb right-wingers? Overdrawn morons, right?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:44:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Many Hollywood stars, including Barbra Streisand, Cher, Brad Pitt and others are witnesses to Mr. Paul�s largess and will be called to testify..." Now that would be rich, nutcase loonballs like Streisand the dick-nosed in the witness chair. Summonses should be issued abroad for Cher and Baldwin at their respective promised lands of foreign retreat. Such fun that will be for all.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:40:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: By the way, where have you been coward anon? Slurping?
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:35:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Leave it to a socialsit to distort. That is the reason we need a war to eradicate this filth. POW!!!
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:29:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Look, anon, you've got to hand it to Pete for including two diametrically opposed arguments in favor of an unrelated point in the same post. The guy has talent.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:24:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Once again, Pete sees through to the heart of the matter.... Wha???
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:21:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: This just in! Larry Klaymoan doesn't like the Clintons! Stop presses!
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:20:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: You know, Glint, I thought this was all a scam setup by the liar socialsits. Look at it this way. This guy is small potatoes to the liar socialsits. It gives them a stage or an opportunity to lie and dodge and condemn this pagan martyr so they can attempt to retake the high* ground. This should not be allowed. Every single one of these scumbag hypocrites ought to be made to eat crow for defending Cliton for the same crap and also for not seeking Condit's resignation now for lying "to the American people" and for trying to obstruct justice. But we'll see how these scumbags are playing it now. They think they are going to take the high* ground by chastising this sacrificial lamb to the altar of socialsim and claim that what he did was "abominable" and he should probably resign. See, it is all about the dishonest agenda of these scum. They articulate anything to suit their purposes, including calling this vile socialist a conservative. What a load of BS from these traitors. Never surrender.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:17:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Who, me? Cause people to lose faith in the legal system? But I'm the GOOD guy!
Kenneth Starr
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:15:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: ABC�S �20/20" TO AIR STORY ABOUT ILLEGAL HILLARY CLINTON FUNDRAISING ---- (Washington, DC) Judicial Watch, the public interest law firm that investigates and prosecutes public abuse and corruption, has been cooperating with ABC News� award-winning investigative reporter Brian Ross, for a story which is scheduled to be aired this Friday, July 13. The story centers around Hollywood mogul Peter Paul�s donations of over $2 million to Hillary Clinton�s Senate Campaign, which donations were never reported to the Federal Election Commission. Mr. Paul�s contributions were previously the subject of a report by renowned columnist Robert Novak entitled �Follow the Money; Probes don�t target politicians with dirty hands,� on June 28, 2001. In his column, Novak pointed out how the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, characteristically is prosecuting Mr. Paul, but not his political benefactor, Hillary Clinton, the Senator from New York. The money donated by Peter Paul went to finance a multi-million-dollar tribute to Bill Clinton during the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles in August of last year. Many Hollywood stars, including Barbra Streisand, Cher, Brad Pitt and others are witnesses to Mr. Paul�s largess and will be called to testify in a civil suit which Mr. Paul has filed in Los Angeles Superior Court to recoup his campaign contributions. In exchange for these campaign contributions, Mr. Paul expected to be pardoned of prior convictions and for Mr. Clinton to sit on his Board of Directors when he left The White House, among other perks. The expected hard-hitting ABC 20/20 story will include hard evidence of the Clintons� crimes, such as the checks which Mr. Paul wrote on Mrs. Clinton�s behalf, personal thank you letters and notes from the Clintons and their daughter Chelsea, and video showing the close relationship between Mr. Paul and the Clintons. �ABC�s 20/20 piece will once again reveal the Clintons for what they are � money-grubbing, dishonest politicians who know no bounds of ethics or respect for the rule of law. The Bush Justice Department must now take control of this matter and work with Judicial Watch in bringing the Clintons to justice,� stated Judicial Watch Chairman and General Counsel Larry Klayman.
Judicial Watch <[email protected]>
Friday, July 13, 2001, Check Local Listings (Prime Time) - Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:14:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Unknown to Glint, Condit voted to impeach. Typical sort of conservative hypocrite, in the manner of Gingrich, Hyde, Barr, Livingston. Why is it that hicks refuse to see the trail of used condoms behind their preachermen? Eternal faith in authority? Sunday-school conditioning? Pure, pin-headed midwesternism? Who the hell knows?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:13:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: I have to agree with Glint that that was one of the most insidious and unseen dong-flips of the past century. Rarely has a lady's penis-shock in a motel room been so well-hidden.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:10:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe Condit's falling on his own sword in order to boost the Clinton legacy and deflect attention away from their infamous body count to his own.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 12:06:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: These Liar Scum DemocRATs are all the same: "W A S H I N G T O N, July 9 � A flight attendant who claims Rep. Gary Condit tried to get her to lie about an affair is headed to Washington as investigators consider whether the congressman may have tried to obstruct justice in the search for missing intern Chandra Levy. United Airlines flight attendant Anne Marie Smith plans to fly to the nation's capital from Seattle to talk to federal prosecutors as part of a possible preliminary investigation, sources told ABCNEWS. Condit, D-Calif., has denied trying to pressure Smith. But she claimed last week that Condit and a private investigator working for him had pressed her to sign an affidavit denying a 10-month affair that she claims took place. Prosecutors want to ask Smith about her communications with Condit. And they are likely to ask what, if anything, she knows about Levy."
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:55:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Touche, Glint, as usual. This scum knows it too, which makes it Evil.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:35:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: H-boy, a man does have a right to stand naked as a jaybird it in his motel room. If midnight visitors don't like it, they are free to excuse themselves.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:28:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: The legal system is a tool like any other. It is no more nor less useful than anonymous phone calls to American Legion members saying John McCain was a traitor, lying about who will benefit from a proposed tax cut.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:26:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: You're oh so right. A man oughtta have a right to stick his wiener out any time he wants and ask anyone he fancies to drop down on their knee pads and kiss it. Sure, it was just a frivilous suit that didn't have any legs. After seeing how he handled that one most Americans wonder how he would have handled a real crisis.
Perl Harbour
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:20:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: My trust in a legal system where a lady who visits a man in his motel room and sees his wang can't even get a president thrown out of office is seriously undermined. What kind of legal system is it that lets a man lower his pants and cause a woman lose her ability to reach orgasm because of the shock, without any penalty? The only reason to trust it is that backed by a few million dollars in political contributions and bro-bono Nazi lawyering, you can take a case like that into some serious harassment of people you don't like. That's what the legal system if for, isn't it?
Jon Q. Doe
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:16:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ah, of course! The old cancer of the evasive answer in a frivolous civil suit. The cancer that played hob with Ms. Jones's backers' plans to harrass a political enemy through perverse misuse of the legal system. Poor Glint. Still doesn't understand that what goes down in the book is the full-moon Republicans' willingness to besmirch any institution, up to and including the Supreme Court, to ease the pain the feel from living in the modern world. A sick, feeble-minded bunch they are, from Condit to Gingrich and back again. Honor them, for they are your leaders.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 11:06:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course what the self-deluded chronically fail to realize is that it's not the blow jobs, the full blown affairs, or even the cigars. It's the lying under oath and lying during a possible criminal investigation to the authorities that have been designated by the public to, in Judge Starr's words, "determine if crimes have been committed." The lying and dodging gets in the way and undermines the public trust in the justice sytem. Like a cancer, insidious and unseen.
Glint
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 10:48:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Dreams aside, huh? Damn!
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 10:34:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Actually, all demonrats are serial killers in one way or another. This bird is living proof. Dreams aside.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 10:13:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: It IS clear that DemocRATS are more likely to defend their dirtbags in public as being great public servants despite their personal dishonesty.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 09:38:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: The difference between Monica and Chandra Levy is simple: Monica Lewinsky now makes ugly bags in New York and is a millionaire. She was in no danger of pregnancy from oral sex or cigars either. Chandra Levy is probably in a swamp or landfill as dead as can be. I think there is a clear difference between getting a blow job from a living, if slightly naive woman, and having a full blown sexual affair from a missing and presumed dead one.
deluded liberal-socialist
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 09:33:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Just when it seemed like the Chandra Levy case could not get any stranger a source in the DC Police let go with the information that Rep. Gary Condit had been involved in some way with another missing woman in the area!
source: http://www.capitolgrilling.com/
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 09:21:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: perhaps levi died from a fatal pussing of the twat. ormaybe the threaded needle was infected. if only she had learend that her foul mouth would have done just fine.
gynoscope
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 08:32:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: So what's with the connection between slutty jewish interns, knee pads, and scummy Liberal middle aged farts with two syllable last names beginning with C?
numerologist
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 08:26:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: This means maybe we can get rid of Condit and get a liberal in there. Impeach Condit! He betrayed his sacred trust! Probably got a blow job in a government facility! Came into our living rooms and lied to us! What is it with these dudes? A 53-year-old man should be BRAGGING about nailing a young chick like that, even if she is ugly.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 07:36:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: WASHINGTON, July 9 (UPI) -- The mother of missing intern Chandra Levy has urged Rep. Gary Condit to share the truth with them after Condit reportedly admitted to an affair with her daughter, reports said Monday. Susan Levy, the missing woman's mother, told reporters outside her home in Modesto, California, she wanted Condit to "come out with the truth" and tell her whatever else he might be hiding. Condit, 53 and a married father of two, told police Friday he had a sexual relationship with Levy, 24, police sources said. It was the third time police had questioned Condit, and aides had, until then, vehemently denied sexual relationship between Condit and Levy. Condit also told Levy's mother last month that her daughter was only a friend and they were not romantically involved. Claiming that Condit had not been "very truthful to me up 'til now," she asked the congressman to help the investigation by sharing with her and the police whatever he knew about her daughter's disappearance. "The family feels the investigation has been hindered because Mr. Condit took so long to tell the truth," said Levy family spokesman Michael K. Frisby. He said when Condit met with the Levy family he told them the last contact he had with Levy was on April 24 but later he told police he had spoken with her on April 29 as well. Condit's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, told reporters his client was not a suspect in Levy's disappearance, who went missing some nine weeks ago. Lowell said, "The congressmen and Mrs. Condit have been cooperative" throughout the investigation, and have offered their full cooperation with authorities to aid them in their search." Meanwhile, a United Airlines flight attendant, Anne Marie Smith, who accused Condit of encouraging her to withhold information from the FBI about an alleged sexual affair will meet with federal authorities Tuesday, CNN reported. A lawyer will accompany her.
another laughing stock who didn't have sexual relations with that woman
- Tuesday, July 10, 2001 at 06:03:14 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete who?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 23:55:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: But then Pete died, and it all passed into memory. Time healed the wounds that people had inflicted on themselves because of Pete. In a few short months, nobody even remembered that he had existed. "Pete who?", they said, puzzled by an almost invisible spark in some remote synapse, an almost insensible pang of jealousy. "Do I know someone named Pete?"
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 23:53:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: On another rub, his wit made others jealous. There was a lot of jealousy about Pete, and his innate sensitivity allowed him to see it. A less sensitive person would have thought that people just didn't like him, thought him a clueless deviate, but Pete always saw through to the jealousy people had for him. Why can't I be a big fat tub of shit like Pete, they said to themselves, green with envy. Why can't I be obtuse and ignorant? They went out on the internet, and boasted on interactive pages that their "specialty" was eating pussy, and that they had the NASDAQ tied up like a country ham. But everyone thought they were joking, and they could never shake the jealousy no matter how hard they tried.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 23:49:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: What I remember about him was his wit. So lightning quick one often missed what was funny about it. A rapier wit it was, yet there was a kindness in it, a warmth and understanding toward his fellow man. There was always an implied wink, as if to say, I'm quick with the japes, true, but I think you're OK, deep down inside where it counts. A big, fat, loveable furball, that was Pete. It is hard to believe that the other kids whaled him on the playgrounds, spit on him and kicked him in the nuts. It would have made a smaller man bitter. On that rub, at least, it would have made one bitter.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 23:43:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah right. Proof of another lie on that rub. I think the deviate jealous scum is back. What? Gave up on chaining them and stalking?
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 21:49:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: He used to write me the sweetest emails. I've saved them all.
Grace Naturlio
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 21:29:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Wow, and the liar thought we all thought he quit. Double speak is forking. Put one in it. Done.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 21:23:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, it was always hopeless. He knew that. You've got to give him the credit for accepting it, and living it large. A big man, who played the midget's role to perfection. Honor his memory.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:58:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: He should have seen a shrink. A shrink might have helped.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:55:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: In the end he was a suicidal coward.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:55:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Always le mot juste. A man whose every post was a veritable cross-word puzzle.
Gustave Flaubert
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:54:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: One of the few who realized that I started World War I. I hope he goes to the Good Place, so Adolf and I don't have to see his sneering face.
Woodrow Wilson
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:52:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: A man born three hundred years before his time. Or three hundred years after it. With him it was always hard to tell.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:51:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: If he could sniff out a truffle the way he could spot a socialist, he would have made a great truffling pig.
Francois d'Arlecket
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:49:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: He was always a thorn in my side. I'm glad he's dead.
Webb Hubbel
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:48:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: He was also a practical political tactician. He came within 50% of correctly predicting the outcome of the Michigan primary. It was a brave right-wing pundit who voiced an opinion before reading his weekly instructions to the media. Bush would have won the election if he had followed Pete's advice, and said that tax cuts will make the government grow fatter.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:46:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: He would have said, but what is alive? Is it me here now, or the end of the logistic curve, where God vibrates in the iverse harmonics of Being? He was something of a philosopher, this Pete we thought we knew so well.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:43:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: His only problem was he would never sink any capital into his mounts. Always thought it was the eyepiece, but it never was. It was the tripod, and the trade winds. I catch myself teaching him the things I know, now and then, as if he were still alive.
Glint
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:41:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: If it's the Pete I know, he came THAT close. Could have made forty million. Should have sold sooner.
Steve Case
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:38:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: A fun guy to have as a table-mate at a testimonial dinner. If it's the guy I'm thinking about.
Fess Parker
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:36:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Great big ass, little bitty peter.
Teresa
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:35:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: I remember Pete, if that's the guy. Fish handshake.
Richard Milhouse Nixon
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:34:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: He died, you know. It happened a while back, nobody knows exactly when. His ghost has been flitting (no pun intended) around the internet since then.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:33:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the guy. The eternal sophomore. Only deadly dull. Cuts his own hair. Thinks Hitler was a socialist. That's him all right.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:32:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Followed the gridlines to the edge of Time, where the vibrations are God?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:31:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: The poet, Pete? The dead-leaves-in-my-garden haiku guy? Didn't he advance to the fourth level?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:30:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: The fat, stupid, Hawaiian queer? That Pete?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:29:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete who?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:28:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where's Pete?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:27:40 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where's Pete?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:27:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: It's been said the power of antimatter is comparable to stem cells -- full of creative force and potential.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 19:14:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, I know you are ignorant about hitler and his similarities to modern day democraps, dork.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 17:32:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: They need to stop flushing those embryos down the drain and proceed with stem cell research so that Cheney can grow a new heart.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 16:29:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pete KNOWS, man. Trust him.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 16:23:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: I can't believe that there are still people who doubt Pete. He has proved to be correct in his views and prognostications and his reports of historical facts a good... er, he hasn't been proved wrong every time, beyond any doubt, anyway. I can think of lots of things he got right, for instance.... there was..... So, Pete is not infallible, but that's not cause to doubt him every time he lies or spouts nonsense. Some day he may hit on something true, by mistake. Worth waiting for, is what I say.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 16:20:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh, gosh, it was much more detailed than that! Heavens to Betsy, and here I thought that Hitler struggled with the truth, and that the menace from the east stuff in Mein Kampf superseded Pete's favorite quotation, and that Krupp and Daimler Benz and Fokker and the rest were privately-owned!
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 16:09:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: No fraud at 14:53:03, it was much more detailed than that. For Hitler says exactly what you liars do: "We are national socialsits,... enemies of the capitalistic system." No difference with you traitorous lying scumbags. We own you now, so all is well until the sewer lid pops open again.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 15:47:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Every taxi-driver owes his livlihood to Dick Cheney, dead or alive or half-dead and living on borrowed time. Who else has permitted the capitalist system to supply us with electricity and oil? Without Dick Cheney's need for an energy crisis to break Alaskan sod, we probably wouldn't even know we were in one! The damn taxi-drivers would probably be driving up to the pumps and saying "fill 'er up" as if Clinton hadn't been asleep in the switch for eight years. That's the electricy and oil switch we're talking about, Jack. The Big One.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 15:12:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: It is obvious to me that Pete's analyses are backed by lots of deep thought, and many minutes of research listening to mid-western street cranks calling into the right-wing talk shows. The guy really seems to know what greases the wheels in America, how the country REALLY works. It's eerie, the way he seems to zeero in on the truth. Look at the way he spotted the twisting eyebrows on Mara Liasson. Next year he's going to search the other channels for more of the same.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 15:05:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, the man seems a little muddle-headed to me. It's as if he doesn't know much about anything, but spouts off anyway. Is this guy a taxi-driver, by any chance?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 15:01:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: How can you say that? Don't you know that Pete speaks Economics? He's also quite an astronomer, and can call a Michigan primary like a race-track tout selling tips on horses he handicaps on the bus to the track.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:58:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: When Pete becomes King of France, nobody who does not love a "system" he foggily perceives as good will be allowed to buy electricity or oil. As the pie man said to Simple Simon, if you don't love me I won't let you see my wares.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:55:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hitler was a socialist. He said so once, just the way Mao said he was running a democracy.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:53:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: What now? It thinks useable energy and oil are somehow produced by a "system" and not photosynthesis? What tree did this monkey fall out of? It likes republics, so let's talk about the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. How about the people's democracy of China? You've got to love this turkey.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:51:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: Dodgeball from the socialist, an enemy of the capitalist system who still uses its electricity and oil. Liar hypocrite is par for your deranged course. FORE!
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:18:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, Jerry, Hitler was a National Socialist. Just like you traitorous DemocRATs. Get educated or that tabula rasa will continue to ooze spuddle.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:17:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: What in the world is it babbling about now? Use electricity and drive a car? Is it trying to make a point again?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:15:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Who is this Pete character, frothing at the mouth because people were permitted a vote? Is the guy for real? Sounds like his politics come straight from a Nazi skin flick. Not to mention dumb as a drain pipe to think that letting the people standing in line vote in one precinct swung the election. The election swung when the Republican senator made himself so unpopular he couldn't beat a stiff.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:12:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah anon, and I'll just bet you don't use any electricity or drive a car. YOU are the hypocrite. Deranged Loser.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:09:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Dick Cheney is a modern American hero. There aren't many men who would knowingly politic themselves to death to ensure the material well-being of a few oil-company CEO's and other major stockholders. Glint is exactly right in supposing it reasonable for the man to go home to the porch swing and gloat over how much money he himself has made, and not worry too much about the billionairs of the future. Let them make their money the old fashioned way, by paying off congressmen and Senators, or talking directly to old man in Kennebunkport. Give the veep a rest.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:08:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: No one "left" the polls open too long in Missouri. A democrat effort conspired with a Democrat Judge to allow late voting in a Democrat precinct after the race was declared too close to call thereby inviting more of those in that area to vote while those outside the area in Republican districts could not. Another coup by the liars known as democrats. Oh, and yes they do allow criminals, dead people and illegal aliens to vote: mostly always Demonrat, though. VooDoo!
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 14:03:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: Does this boy W look presidential or what?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 13:23:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: It appears to me that the troglodytes here are out of touch with the depth of distrust and distain for Dick Cheney in this country. Yes, he might rate slightly higher in opinion polls than Bush, but that is only because the flunky always scores lower.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 13:04:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, illegally blocked open polls or no, when a corpse beats you, it's time for a federal appointment.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 13:04:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Cheney owes it to Old Man Bush to kill himself trying to keep the boy out of trouble. Areteriosclerotic old farts raking in millions as lobbyists up and down K Street are trembling, hoping that they don't get the call to replace him when he croaks, even if they are promised free artificial hearts....
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 12:59:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Poor Glint. Doesn't realize that the point of an election is to let people vote. Dang, we left the polls open too long in Missouri and so many poeople voted that our man lost his seat!
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 12:55:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Wow, what a surprise, a dead man won't run" - Boyd. Tell it to the people of Missouri, where dead men don't only run, but they win by illegally blocking open the polls. 2004 would be a cake walk for Cheney. But if I were him I'd stay home and enjoy my $millions.
Glint
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 11:48:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Wow, what a surprise, a dead man won't run" - Boyd. Tell it to the people of Missouri, where dead men don't only run, but they win by illegally blocking open the polls. 2004 would be a cake walk for Cheney. But if I were him I'd stay home and enjoy my $millions.
Glint
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 11:47:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh yes, the usualdodge, gee the bird wasn't really a liar democrat, he was basicly a conservative republican. Sure sounds like the same ramblings of a deranged liebral mind to me.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 11:27:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Who's the yokel on here who doesn't know that Condit is a conservative, votes 100% with Republicans except on oral and anal sex issues? The probability is that Cheney won't run in 2004? Wow, what a surprise, a dead man won't run. Really scary to know that War Hero Colin Powell will run for vice president from his hammock. Democrats all over should be trembling. What is the deal with "war hero?" Used to be, to get called a war hero you had to run up a hill with a pistol and a hand grenade under fire, and take out a machine-gun nest. Nowadays all you have to do is keep the Tang flowing and and order people chase a starving Arab up to his property line and stop.
Boyd Mickley
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 11:11:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure, ypup. As if we don't know it's you.
Harlan St. Wolf
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:56:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: So what? Harlan's mouth runs with the bull al day every day.
el toro
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:47:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, Harl, I think I got that shot of you being gored in the shorts.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:19:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: say bye bye dumocraps: "The probability is increasing every day that Cheney will not run for the Vice Presidency in 2004. Expect most of the interviewees in the future to be from battleground states that Bush had a hard time winning last election cycle. This is all contingent of course on Colin Powell whose wife has insisted that the war hero not stump all over the country with a full campaign schedule. The Gulf War general has wavered in recent weeks calling the idea of a campaign for the Vice Presidency "agreeable" and indicating that he may run with a reduced schedule.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:18:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: Finished the running of the bulls just hours ago. My 17th time. Thought I'd check up on my page. Looks like the socialist vultures are at it again. Give up, Pete!
Harlan St. Wolf
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:17:13 (EDT)
My two cents are: Condit, through his attorney refuses to take lie detector test concerning the where-abouts-of missing intern Chandra Levy. The Levy family plans to hold a news conference to publically ask Condit to take a lie detector test. Where's the Clinton jerk when you need him? Working on his recently found tennis fetish? "I don't know," says a former aide. "He never watched it on TV and he certainly never played it. Maybe it's the short skirts and the grunting on the court he enjoys."
BWAHAAHAAAHAAAAHEEEEEEE
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:13:36 (EDT)
My two cents are: Seriously, Glint, sometimes I think those photos are viewed with an eye to teh dead person's ability to actually feel the gruesome injury. I just fear a shark attack. Talk about shredding you up. Lovely day today.
Pete�
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 10:11:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: "...wounds to the gut in 3-D. Photos of the dead. Any chance they're in living color?" - Anonymous@19:53:29. As a matter of fact quite a number of the stereo pairs were tinted with weak washes of color and sold. Yes, a few rotting corpses were displayed in tinted splendor. However, there seems to be some doubt as to the true color of their tattered uniforms. Were they really bluecoats? Are they truely rebs? Depends on which side the photographer is from I suppose. But would a Union photographer tint them with grey for gloating purposes or with blue for patriotic reasons? Anyhow, the originals sold as follows: for B/W were $4.50/dozen and tinted were $6/dozen. <> "By the way, Glint, did you see that pic of Mars?" - Pete. Do you mean the one taken by HST? The Mrs. also mentioned something about a Mars image in the Carroll County Times. Last night she pawed through the paper recycling and found it for me. Awesome resolution. Said the image had been tinted to match the colors that would be seen through a telescope.
Glint
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 06:12:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 09, 2001 at 05:54:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: Jealous bleedin' ittle wog bugger. Go back to yer mud hut, ya Paki bastard. Leave yer clammy golly-wog mitts off the clean 'ousemaids of Blighty.
Jocko Collingwood III
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 22:37:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: P.S. In London, am learning to enjoy carnal pleasures.
Bun Mui <No. 5 Wixton Mews, London NW 2, England>
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 22:32:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: Who is this Pete, and why is his mole dead? What is mole? Why are they jealous of? Please to answer my question. I am a student living in London for studies at the economics, but originally from Shri Lanka. Thank you very very much, so terribly delighted.
Bun Mui, matriculant, LSE
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 22:28:09 (EDT)
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Pete's Dead Mole
Astounding Facts, Pennsylvania - Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 22:22:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Moron.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 22:17:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course not.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 20:15:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Just the bedtime storybook I've been searching for. The one showing wounds to the gut in 3-D. Photos of the dead. Any chance they're in living color? You know, like the Shirley Temple movies that have been color enhanced.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 19:53:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: Red Rum

- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 19:04:40 (EDT)
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All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy. <All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy.>
All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy., All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy. All work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy. - Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 19:03:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nice imposter try, 18:18. This is the particularly virulent strain of jealous racist socialsit that we have here today. Mop up duty. Loser Extreme ^
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:35:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: A moron?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:19:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: I know you are, but what am I?
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:18:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: Guess you're right. Maybe he's been reduced to trying to impress Glint? Showing him bits from the science wire like a dog bringing a dead mole to its master's feet? Look what I found! Am I a good dog?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:15:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: But with gnat, wasnt his tactic to quote a few lines from the poetry anthology and tell her it was good? He never tried the AP science wire on gnat.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:13:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe he thinks she's lurking.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:10:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Must be. He can't try to convince gnat any more.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:10:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: It makes himself think he's deep?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:08:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why did the little moron post a newspaper article on anti-matter? Because he was a little more on.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 18:07:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: EITHER THAT OR GOD DID IT: "Looks like antimatter is not all it's cracked up to be, a group of international physicists have announced in a finding which proves there is a good reason for our universe, made of matter, to exist. The experiments set the stage for another debate, however. After bashing a stream of antimatter particles against a stream of matter particles in mile-long tubes near Silicon Valley, scientists found themselves with some left over matter that the uninitiated would not have expected. Matter and antimatter blow each other up when they meet, as any Star Trek fan knows, which has left physicists working hard to explain how our universe, made up of matter, could exist, since around the Big Bang which started things there apparently were equal amounts of matter and antimatter. The answer is that matter is a bit tougher than antimatter, at least as far as the recent experiments on a particle called a B meson are concerned, the team working at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in Palo Alto, California, announced. That confirmed results of another experiment on a similar particle that has haunted physicists for decades. ``For 37 years people have looked and they haven't found anything beyond the original one,'' said Princeton University physicist Stewart Smith, a spokesman for the group. ``Physicists now know that there are at least two types of subatomic particles that exhibit this puzzling phenomenon, thought to be responsible for the great preponderance of matter in the universe.'' The physicists drove electrons against positrons, a type of antimatter, in a 1.3 mile particle accelerator. A 1,200-ton detector, called BABAR, recorded how B mesons and their antimatter equivalents, anti-B mesons, were born and how they decayed, leaving a bit more matter than antimatter. STANDARD MODEL OF THE UNIVERSE The work fits nicely with the current view of the universe, the Standard Model, which accurately predicted that B mesons and anti-B mesons would be slightly different, or asymmetrical. ``We don't have to invent new physics to explain our results,'' Smith. Russian physicist and dissident Andrei Sakharov came up with the idea in 1967 that the universe of matter could exist because of the slight difference, also called charge-parity violation, or CP violation. Sakharov in turn was explaining results of experiments with another particle, the K meson, which in 1964 showed the same behavior as particles in the Stanford-based experiment. But in settling one debate physicists set the stage for another. The Standard Model is missing something, even if it is correct as far as it goes. The amount of matter it predicts is only about one billionth as much as exists, Smith said. ``There is something major out there that we don't know,'' he said. ``Either there is some new set of ghostly particles, maybe they are just too massive to have been produced in accelerators... or there is some completely new phenomenon that we have not been able to see that is there to have catalyzed the evolution of the universe.'' A top candidate for a bit of asymmetry might be neutrinos, another fundamental particle that has not been studied much in this regard, Smith said, but those experiments await. "
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 15:12:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Truly, you are. We will excuse you from class. Here's your dunce cap ^
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 14:59:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: A real third-rate moron.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 14:49:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Anyway, Glint, whoever that was who gave us www.rotten.com back in the day has a lot to answer to my stomach for about after viewing some of that. Ugh!
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 12:54:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: Interesting, Glint. I too have been deep into Battle for the Bundu. A great book on the forgotten campaign during WW I (yes 1) in East Africa. Really fascinating reading about the Konigsberg. These socialsits are completely whupped. When in the history of dealing with these lying scumbags have they ever been so quiet? Proves complete total annihilation. Gloat!!
Pete�
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 11:46:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Why is it that the remnant right-wingers on this page run off with their tails between their legs as soon as someone tries to strike up an intelligent political conversation?" - HoMer. Why, I had no idea such a thing was going on in my absense. You must think conservatives are omnipotent, or at least clairvoyant. Besides, I've been busy reading history books. This weekend I've read "The Civil War in Depth" volumes I and II by Bob Zeller. Subtitled "History In 3-D" the books feature stero images by Civil War photographers featuring many photos of the dead. Wounds like those produced by receiving a shell in the gut are extraordinary in 3-D. The books are on loan by my friend, the Maryland dairyman, whom I met in Mexico 10 years ago. He was right when he said, "Here's a couple of books that you might enjoy."
Glint
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 09:08:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hi, Pete, you said "I'll bet that stuff is worth a MINT!" Especially if it remains in mint condition. Of course, the dress would be worth much less if it was returned to its original condition by dry cleaning it. Of course mint condition First DNA crusts are priceless. I expect Lewinsky will sell to the highest bidder. Perhaps Ripley's will obtain it for their museum. <> Well, the socialist Pete Seger has been in town for the past couple of days playing at a folk festival in the county seat. Guess the Liberals have been streaming out of cracks in the woodwork invading us from neighboring counties, bastians of Maryland Liberalism. If only Ydog was here so we could behold his gloating.
Glint
- Sunday, July 08, 2001 at 08:53:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Poor, sick, ignorant shithead.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 21:25:19 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hey, webmaster, is this site for rent?
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 20:36:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: At least the bonehead can't hide his "Con" affiliation. The liar (er demonrat).
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 17:10:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Christ, where do they find these liebral losers. First we have Bill "bent pud" Cliton and his E*vile troll wife* Hitlery, then Al "Frankenstein" Gore with his ditz "tippered" Gore and darling rug rat muffy daughters, and now we have Gory Con-did-it. When will America ever wake up to these sick pod people liars, thiefs, and criminal socialsits!?!?
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 17:06:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: I personally would pay for nothing for anything that had to do with the sickness known as Bill, but as an agent for a Japanese investor, perhaps $1 to $2 million. The other baubles are worth less, of course.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 16:36:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Just another Democrat in the Bill Clinton liar E*vil socialsit mold: "WASHINGTON, July 7 � Rep. Gary Condit, D-Calif., has told investigators that he had a long-term sexual relationship with Chandra Levy, the 24-year-old former federal intern who has not been seen since late April, Newsweek magazine and NBC News reported Saturday. Washington police stressed Saturday night that Condit, whose aides had consistently denied a romantic relationship, was not a suspect in Levy�s disappearance."
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 16:28:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: I don't know. Pete* may be overestimating the value of cum-stained garments. True, there are those who sell (and presumably those who buy) used panties over the internet, but I wonder if this is that lucrative a market. Perhaps Pete* is a wise investor. Tell us, Pete*, how much would YOU pay for the blue dress?
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 16:26:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: You really should stop chastising yourself like that anon. Your mirror is cracked.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 15:49:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Pathetic, moronic asshole.
Anonymous.
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 15:45:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Coming" full circle (or "who owns the semen"), I thought this was appropriate for the day: "Monica Lewinsky finally has gotten her infamous blue dress back from investigators. The Office of the Independent Counsel has confirmed that Lewinsky was given the soiled navy blue Gap dress, along with a "variety of things" that were taken from her apartment during the investigation into her affair with then-President Clinton. Lewinsky's semen-stained dress was a key piece of evidence that helped Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr tie her to Clinton. Lewinsky reportedly was fighting to get the dress back, along with her other belongings. Among other gifts from Clinton that Lewinsky had turned over to prosecutors were, as listed in the Starr Report, "a hat pin, two brooches, a blanket, a marble bear figurine, and a special edition of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass." I'll bet that stuff is worth a MINT!
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 13:39:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, right. Pozrz.
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 11:30:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Heeeyyy Jeremia! You suck.
Glint
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 08:18:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: A history book? In fact, I am reading one now. Great book. The Battle for the Bundu. Not much about socialists, though. Reason enough to dream. Wonder how hummer is doing....
Pete�
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 00:57:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ahh, the actual factual voice of an inbreed pocket. Amazing how Jeremiah knows so much, from the secret identities of anonymous posters (it's you again, ypup?) to urban myths manufactured for Cleveland bus-drivers but scattering shot so a little lands in the hide of the occasional Ozark janitor's helper. Don't worry, Hummer (you ARE Hummer, aren't you?), GW will come out strong, pure fact known to any Missouri puke with time on his hands and a radio. Have any of you poor saps ever read a history book? Do you have any notion that drooling pest-control punkin-shooting Congressmen don't gel with your average historian and never come off as anything but what they showed themselves to be in life? Do you know anything at all about Andrew Johnson, or to make it a little easier, Abraham Lincoln? Poor Glint, who is supposed to be educated, doesn't even seem to know that there is a difference between an elected vice-president succeeding to the presidency and a never-elected president anointed by a criminal conspiracy. At least Jeremiah is an authentic ignoramus, a genuine American know-nothing grass-roots backwater idiot. These other guys don't have that sort of cachet.
House of Meat
- Saturday, July 07, 2001 at 00:32:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Heeeeyyyy Glint! Some things are just fact, like Klintoon WAS impeached no matter what Hummer, I mean, anonymous, thinks. Yep, Reagan had style alright. And wit, decency, honesty and knowledge of how to run the government right. Heard on the radio today that yesterday is tax freedom day. Also, that up until 1994 tax freedom day had stayed the same for several years but every since 1994 it has taken more days. Let's see, now, who was prez in 1994? Oh, yeah, the fornicator in cheat, the guy who tried to change different reporting methods in order that things looked better when he was really screwing up things worse as well as any thing with two legs. Seems that GW has inherited a failing system and is having to clean up and fix all that klintoon and algore thore up, which is normal for a dumbocrap. /////// Don't wory hummer, after cleaning and fixing that that klintoon has broken, GW will come out strong. /////// Oh, talk about fixin', how is the White House restoration and repair work coming along? How much furniture did the commie in chief and his co-conspirator get besides John Adams' desk? Should take the money out of the jackass' presidential pension. That and cut back on secret service protection until his bill is paid in full and all stolen items returned to the American people's White House and the Oval Office. At least now it can again be called an Oval Office instead of a oval orifice like when the trailer trash was there.
Jeremiah
United States of America - Friday, July 06, 2001 at 23:35:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: Come on, Meat, where would YOU be hiding if the best you could do for triumphant moments was a mushroom hamburger? Give the poor saps a break-- they'll creek out of their holes soon enough. Or at least the one with the broken spring will pop up somewhere and call you a liar socialsit.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 23:23:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Why is it that the remnant right-wingers on this page run off with their tails between their legs as soon as someone tries to strike up an intelligent political conversation? Could it be that their interest in politics was only as deep as the thrill a hick with a bad case of the corn-belt blue-nose feels when he hears that somebody had a sexual experience that didn't involve the back end of a 4-H project? Where are we going to get our future 19th-hole Republican blusterers if our native-born fascists lose the gut for political give and take as soon as a pip-squeak moves into the White House and the sex tabloids lose interest in Washington, DC? Come on, fellas.... you owe it to the memory of Joe McCarthy and the Pumpkin Papers.
House of Meat
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 23:17:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, anonymous, Reagan had the good fortune to serve in an era when substance had been replaced by style, and no threat was greater than not being able to recognize a taxi-driver from behind as man or woman. He had a certain Death Valley Days/Bonzo/GE shill style, shaved armpits and white wine with an olive, that went over well with important pockets of inbreeding across the land. Little Bush, on the other hand, has neither substance nor style, and with Cheney dying he is soon to be without a master. The poor little bugger is doomed to wander the moon-scape of his fundamental inadequacy, seeing the craters and crevasses only dimly through his wounded sense of entitlement. It is an ugly picture, and we will watch it with horrified fascination over the next three years. God knows what arteriosclerotic fossil the elder Bush team will push forward to guide the youngster.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 21:35:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: True enough, anonymous, but how do you account for the fact that Ronald Reagan was a fool, a monkey-faced moron, and deteriorating in office at that, yet a segment of the so-called intelligentsia still mistakes him for a serious historical figure?
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 21:27:53 (EDT)
My two cents are: An unfair comparison, possibly. While Harding was nothing more than a bumbling chucklehead, a genial fool propped up in front of more venal Republicans, Bush is a bumbling chucklehead who is at bottom a nasty little shit.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 20:11:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: [Harding's] liabilities were not at first so apparent, yet they were disastrously real. Beyond the limited scope of his political experience he was "almost unbelievably ill-informed," as William Allen White put it. His mind was vague and fuzzy. Its quality was revealed in the clogged style of his public addresses, in his choice of turgid and maladroit language ("non-involvement" in European affairs, "adhesion" to a treaty), and in his frequent attacks of suffix trouble ("normalcy" for normality, "betrothment" for betrothal). It was revealed even more clearly in his helplessness when confronted by questions of policy to which mere good nature could not find the answer. White tells of Harding's coming into the office of one of his secretaries after a day of listening to his advisers wrangling over a tax problem, and crying out: "John, I can't make a damn thing out of this tax problem. I listen to one side and they seem right, and then�God!�I talk to the other side and they seem just as right, and here I am where I started. I know somewhere there is a book that will give me the truth, but, hell, I couldn't read the book. I know somewhere there is an economist who knows the truth, but I don't know where to find him and haven't the sense to know him and trust him when I find him. God! what a job!" His inability to discover for himself the essential facts of a problem and to think it through made him utterly dependent upon subordinates and friends whose mental processes were sharper than his own.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 20:07:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Check, if by "our" great President Bush you mean one among what passes as a great Republican president of the Grant species onward. For insight on how the boy repeats history, check out the following http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/Allen/ch6.html
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 20:04:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Where'd my name go? That was me. Duh.
Pete�
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 17:40:51 (EDT)
My two cents are: Quite appropriate that a day before our Great President Bush's Birthday, that a website devoted to stopping the liar Socialsits has opened for business: http://www.stopdemocrats.com/ Time to stop these scumbags once and for all. Never surrender!!!
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 17:35:47 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yeah, so far, I see no count that put Algore ahead. By the way, Glint, did you see that pic of Mars?
Pete�
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 17:16:12 (EDT)
My two cents are: To be more specific, http://www.fujisan.demon.co.uk/USPresidents/plist4d.htm#impeached
Glint
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 14:00:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh yeah? Well, I got your president right here: http://www.fujisan.demon.co.uk/USPresidents/plist4d.htm
Glint
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 13:59:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, goofy glint, wouldn't expect him to appear on that list until he goes on to be unelected in the next election. At present, he still has a chance to be elected. Probably the only crimes committed here have been those of the supreme court justices, so Bush still qualifies, on paper anyway.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 13:53:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sorry, George W Bush was elected president, not appointed, Anon@11:46. Otherwise wouldn't we expect his name to appear on the following list? http://ask.com/main/followup.asp?qcat=gov_&ask=which+presidents+served+2+terms%3F&qsrc=0&ori=0&snp=jeeves&aj_ques=snapshot%3DJeeves%26kbid%3D1650984%26item1%3D1650592-1650647&aj_logid=A26E6ED796CAD2438B9D931C5F754E2B&aj_rank=1&aj_score=1.8&aj_list1=1650592-1650631&1.x=13&1.y=8
Glint
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 12:21:16 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 11:48:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: You mean that little funny-lipped guy whose Dad was president and got appointed by the pubic-hair judge? The dude who made history as the second unelected President*, after Jerry Ford? Yeah, happy birthday! Donato Dalrymple is working for Judicial Watch, going on Integrity Cruises in the Caribbean as the star guest along with Mona Charen or Ann Coulter or Phyllis Shaffley, one of those ladies. Donato's cousin, the one who jumped in and pulled the kid off the dolphin, is thick with Elian's real family and visiting in Cuba.
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 11:46:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: By the way, Happy Birthday President George W. Bush! Thank God, you are there to stem the tide of the Evil Socialsits!
Pete�
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 10:56:34 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure. Just another liberal ploy. Like Hitlery and bill. She knew. Mantlepieces. Enablers. (open your eyes)
Pete�
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 10:47:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Could you please translate that from Ghostspeak to English?
Anonymous.
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 10:35:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure. Just another liberal ploy. Like Hitlery and bill. She knew. Mantlepieces. Enablers.
Pete�
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 10:06:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: They're questioning the wrong Condit. Carolyn doesn't know anything about it. She thought Gary was with the stewardess when we were together and didn't even know my name.
Chandra
- Friday, July 06, 2001 at 05:49:41 (EDT)
My two cents are: Cozumel. Now, that's substance. Send the socialists to foreign countries. $300 per tax return ought to do it. One way.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 22:40:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: The president said our nation must come together to unite. Now, that's substance.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 20:49:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: How anyone can celebrate the birth of a nation who had the arch-liberal Thomas Jefferson among its founding fathers is beyond me.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 20:33:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is Cheney dead yet? How about MK? Who's going to hold the boy's nuts up off the hot sand? Vlad Putin? John Sununu, Jr.? Are enough guys rich yet that the Bush team can just fold up the tents and turn it over to Al Haig?
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 20:27:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: If anyone wonders why the gnome takes such a nasty view of our tofu-eating brothers and sisters, realize that how bitter it must be to have to crawl back inside the familar old bubble, just for a man's right to free beer.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 20:24:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: Haw! Quarter pound of chopped beef between two giant mushrooms! That'll show the whiney punk to show up as a guest at a 4th of July shindig!
Eat Meat and Proud of It
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 20:17:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: OK, I'm here. We now have a quorum: me, anonymous, the two dumb guys, and the one who sometimes sounds like gnat. Has the one who calls itself Pete offered to leave or stay based on a show of hands? Now is the time, as I am off the Cozumel tomorrow.
Boyd Mickley
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 19:09:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, maybe retortette would suffice. But I really don't think smarmy.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 18:06:58 (EDT)
My two cents are: OK, so what is your real point? I have seen no substance. Only smarmy retorts. Shall we call you Madame Smarmette?
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 16:51:22 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hmmm...posted by one who knew how to be very smarmy.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 16:25:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Smarmy? Hmmm...the only smarmy thing here were the failed efforts of the socialsits to attempt to find a reasonable position on anything.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 16:00:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: cigars, anyone? it tastes good!
keeper of the flame
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 14:20:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds like the coals aren't hot enough to sear the meat..
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 14:08:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: I seem to recall there are some other smarmy things down memory lane. Posted by certain individuals on this site.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 14:00:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Oh yes. Yes, we do. Thanks for the trip through memory lane.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 13:29:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Does anybody remember any of these other props: Starbucks coffee mug; ice cube; a snappy thong; tissues fished out of the trash in the oval office lavatory with lipstick and/or DNA deposits?
Glint
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 12:36:28 (EDT)
My two cents are: Of course it's yours. It makes no sense.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 11:53:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: Mine.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 11:23:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: the principal use for the Bible in Washington for the last several decades was as a Sunday-morning prop for a felonious adulterer. (Shortly before the felon finally vacated the White House in January, he switched the license plates on the presidential limousine to the pro-D.C. statehood plates bearing the words: "Taxation Without Representation.")
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 11:07:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: OK.
Pete�
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 10:25:15 (EDT)
My two cents are: like pete i don't 'eat meat' either, as in man meat. but i do love the taste of heiffer beef.
carnivorous redskin
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 10:12:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe he just doesn't eat meat, like Pete.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 10:07:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: What made him whiny is that he wanted a veggie burger, Anonymous. It's a macho thing, you wouldn't understand.
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 10:02:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: What made the guest "whiny?"
Anonymous.
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 09:24:50 (EDT)
My two cents are: When the host of last night's 4th of July shindig flapped open the grill lid in order to flip the burgers on the grill I spied some huge mushrooms -- bigger than hamburger buns. I didn't figure it out until later when some whiny guest asked for a vegie burger and he slipped a quarter pound of beef between two mushrooms and said, "Here y' go!"
Glint
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 09:00:05 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ordered a customized computer from Compaq the other night. First time in about 10 years that I've bought a Windoze machine. When I arrives I'll immediately install a boot managed Linux so I don't have to deal with any of the big Bill G's buggy code except when I want to update the resume or view a Word contract somebody emails. It's a Compaq, with a GHz AMD processor; that wasy none of my money will be going to Intel. Also ordered a flat panel monitor from Sony.
Glint
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 07:35:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Someone here once said (Monday, July 02, 2001 at 14:04:33), "you know you are pretty low when even the mob calls you trash." On the same note the Mrs. and I were watching The Godfather and II on AMC yesterday when she commented, "Seems like Brando's lawyer is the only decent person in the movie." "Yes" i said, "ironic isn't it? The lawyer is the good guy." (no offense, Pete!) <> (resuming the scroll...)
Glint
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 07:02:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Hey Glint: The BBC is reporting that scientists from the Lowell Observatory have discovered a new planet orbiting the sun past Pluto." - Pete. It was at Lowell observatory where the last major planet (Pluto) was discovered in 1930. Busy place, Lowell. <> "So are you saying tomorrow the earth is furthest from the sun?" Yes, fortunately for us in the northern hemisphere, summer occurs while the sun is farthest away. In January, when it's summer down under, the Sun is closest. "Did you know that Pluto's aphelion is: 05-Jun-1866 to 19-Feb-2114?" No, I didn't. Pluto's perihelion was in recent years. Some scientists have been fighting for a "Fast Pluto Flyby" -- a more or less direct trajecory toward Pluto to arrive there while Pluto is still relatively near the sun. The thinking is that the sun might warm it up enough for Pluto to develop a thin atmosphere which could be studied. I had an officemate a few years ago, a physicist from MIT, who was working on the fast Pluto mission proposal. <> Went to a friend's estate in fashionable Montgomery County last night for barbecue and fireworks. He had quite an arsenol. I brought along a shopping bag of my own in case he needed help, but none was required. Met an astronomy professional at the party who had come here from the Max Planke institute in Germany. He has an experiment on board the Cassini mission to Saturn. We had a few beers. He expressed an interest in visiting the observatory and also seemed keen on the idea of our astronomy club organizing a public lecture for him in Westminster. He said being able to share the science of the planets with the public is one of the things he has missed since being in this country. The thick accent makes him a little hard to understand, however, but that may have been partly due to the alcohol.
Glint
- Thursday, July 05, 2001 at 06:54:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: Here's a hint: 1. Deregulation when passed was supposed to be complemented by reduced regulations and red tape to make competition easier. 2. The Democrats in the California legislature refused to deregulate the critical link which would provide incentives for plant construction, upgrading existing plants and promoting new design build plants. 3. The democrats refused to recognize the market forces and instead coddled the enviro-whacko fringes feel goodisms to prevent the necessary deregulation on the new plants (which by the way now require essentially little regulation now). 4. The restrictive oil exploration policies of democrats in their socialsit zeal to coddle a sect of their party for vote preservation, ignored the grwoing demand in the state coupled with the huge influx of immigration allowed by a defunct President and Democratic leaders in California. Votes are more important for an unholy alliance of Democrats. 5. Clinto was asleep at the switch for 14 months while OPEC outmaneuvered his socialsit stooges which led to the current energy crisis and national growth slowdown. The Democrats are criminally inept in developing oil policy because it is not consistent with their coddled special interests who seek to ban all oil development. Query: where does energy come from? Not democrats. There is much more to this story, but it always comes back to the lies and distortions of the socialsits. Reactions akin to Hitler's like "where did you find this guy" are the precursers to the ovens and proves a mindless liberal at work. Par for the course with this kind of mindset.
Pete�
4th of July here still!, - Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 23:39:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Go Is Go!
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 20:21:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is. Yes, yes. Love it.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 13:38:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: I wonder if "Redskins" or "Braves" are from an Indian dialect? Perhaps anishinabe? Must not offend the language of the ancients. Soon, liberals will allow the use of only carefully pre-screened words that cannot offend anyone. Let's see: rock? No, that might offend gays because of Rock Hudson. Hmmm, let's see: blank? No, that might offend lesbians because they always shoot blanks. Hmmm, let's see: tree? Nope, might offend the enviro-whackos who want everyone to live under the sky and freeze to death. Let's see: at? Gee, then we will offend those who don't want to further deteriorate the horrible socialsitic bureaucracy of the public schools by ending sentences in prepositions or using it as a noun. I know, here's the perfect ambiguous ticket that no liar defender liberal can argue about. Let's just call it all "is." The Brooklyn Is's. Or the Podunk Is's. Sure not much on originality, but hey, when we can find a word that surely defies the liberal's "analytical" skills, then we know that we may be safe. For a while. Never surrender to these scumbags.
Pete�
- Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 12:24:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well, it's an unimaginable honor to be the president during the Fourth of July of this country. It means what these words say, for starters. The great inalienable rights of our country. We're blessed with such values in America. And I-it's-I'm a proud man to be the nation based upon such wonderful values.
go George go
- Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 10:48:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is your daughter still spreading her twat for the big ones cumming, Jeremiah. Or is it pussed over or sewn shut? In that case, her foul mouth will do just fine. Happy 4th.
Anonymous.
- Wednesday, July 04, 2001 at 07:05:08 (EDT)
My two cents are: Careful, I might have to call in the Feds to protect the heifers.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 23:07:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Heifers are cute because they are....cute. So attack Hillary, but leave the heifers alone.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:58:59 (EDT)
My two cents are: WHEN you read that the U.S. Justice Department could be deciding whether some public school in Maryland may keep the "Braves" as its team name, it kind of makes you wish the Indians had defeated the settlers. Last week, the Justice Department agreed to mediate a dispute over Indian team names in Maryland. The Clinton administration pioneered the cause of action, saying mascots could be creating "a racially hostile environment." It's hard to imagine a less appropriate role. If invoking "civil rights" is all it takes for the federal government to decide whether a school in Maryland can call itself the "Braves," we may as well admit that reactionary right wingers were right: Federal anti-discrimination laws really have given the federal government license to stick its nose into everything. Only a few years ago, one might have used team mascots as a slippery-slope argument. Now the federal government is investigating. We're at the bottom of the slope. When everything is a federal issue, only the powerful get to be victims. It becomes a form a bullying: Take offense at everything and then call in the Feds to protect you. And the Indians evidently have a lot of power these days. After the Clinton administration launched the first-ever investigation of a high school mascot, Deborah van Arink of the Native American Intertribal Association said: "This is a sign of, look, you're going to be in litigation and you're going to have the Department of Justice down your back. ... They've basically backed people into a corner." 'KENNEWICK MAN' AWARDED TO TRIBES Last year, Clinton's Interior secretary, Bruce Babbitt, announced that he would turn over the remains of a 9,300-year-old skeleton, "Kennewick Man," to Indian tribes for a religious burial. Scientists studying the remains said Kennewick Man seemed to be European or North Asian rather than Indian. But the tribes claimed the body was "the Ancient One" described in their "oral tradition," so the scientists abandoned their research. Just last week, a federal judge questioned the Indians' claim, noting that, strictly speaking, there is no mention of "the Ancient One" in the oral tradition. In April 1999, in response to a petition filed by seven Indians, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office revoked the trademark of the Washington Redskins on the grounds that it was "disparaging." This marked the first time the office had canceled an existing trademark for offensiveness. (The Redskins first got their name as a Boston team in 1933 when their coach was Lone Star Dietz � an American Indian.) The Indians' expert evidence in that case included two female educators who testified that the term "Redskins" implied that Indians were "violent, warlike, provocative" or "ferocious, strong, warlike and brave." 'REDSKINS' NAME IS APPROPRIATE Not to put too fine a point on it, but that's exactly why "Redskins" makes such an excellent name for a football team. There's a reason football teams are never called "the Vichy Resistance." (The French Resistance acquired most of its members after 1945.) Interestingly, there has been no mention of the separation of church and state in the Kennewick Man case, nor has the First Amendment impeded federal investigations of Indian mascots or commercial trademarks. Any group whose claims trump the Constitution ought to be required to forfeit its victim status. Americans strive to avoid giving offense. One poll, submitted in the trademark case, showed that the general population is more likely to oppose the use of Indian mascots than are Indian respondents. But offenses that multiply, popping up where there was no offense yesterday, only breed resentment. Indian coins, such as Sacagawea, are in; Indian Web sites (with tomahawks and peace pipes) are in; cigar-store wooden Indians are in � or are they out? It's hard to keep track. Not to worry: The Department of Justice will.
go anne go
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:49:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, Jeremiah, but beofre these liars ban bathtubs, I expect them to take on the soap capitalists. Liberals think heifers are cute only because they have defended Hitlery for so long. Time for some cow tipping.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:39:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: It could be worse, Jeremiah. You could have called her an old cow instead of a heifer. Heifers are kind of cute.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:27:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: One does have to appreciate satire.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:20:37 (EDT)
My two cents are: We'll have to wait and see what happens to the military after pouring money down the star-wars missile defense shield rat hole.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 22:10:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hey, Pete, check this out. It sounds like something that could happen knowing the Dumocraps. http://www.nationalreview.com/balance/balance062801.shtml
Jeremiah
United States of America - Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 21:44:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Good evening, Glint, Pete, all! Been a while, too long. Unfortunately trying to get ahead is a never ending process. Getting ready to close on an acreage (165 acres) so we get away from people a little. Need a little elbow room. Just can't stand not being able to go outside and relieve myself without having someone look into your backyard. /////// Ray Cathode, you are just as outdated as your name suggests. You, just like most of the names you mention, can't handle the facts of life. Klintoon was, and is, lower than whale crap; and that is on the bottom of the ocean. The guy, and his heifer for a wife; have no morals, no character, steals and/or destroys things of historical nature (furniture, glassware, etc.) from the American people like some stupid hick staying at a cheap motel and reduces the military to the level of slave servitude. It was a glorious day in history when the Arkansas "Clampets" left DC. I have kinda lost track, what is the latest body count connected to these idiots. How many convicts, convicted convicts even, have been pardoned by the scumbag. Our nation would just about crumbled around the "leadership" of algore. My God, that would have been the downfall of our personal freedoms. Now it is time to try to correct all the pitfalls of the Klintoon years. Lord only knows how may secrets. we lost during Klintoon. /////// Got some work to do around but I will be back.
Jeremiah
United States of America - Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 21:34:21 (EDT)
My two cents are: Not if you are also a fish. Smells like it.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 21:28:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: Did you know that it's illegal to have sex with a drunk fish in North Carolina?
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 18:33:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Did you know that Pluto's aphelion is: 05-Jun-1866 to 19-Feb-2114?
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 17:30:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: So are you saying tomorrow the earth is furthest from the sun? Or are you saying on July 4th, it is a time of the day when it becomes more so than other days? To me, it is simply Happy 4th of July. As one who can trace his roots to theose who battled it out back then, it is certainly an appropriate time to stargaze!
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 17:23:20 (EDT)
My two cents are: ZIMBABWE Mugabe threatens whites Posted Sun, 01 Jul 2001 Zimbabwe's beleaguered President Robert Mugabe has unleashed a torrent of invective against the country's white farmers and whites in general, accusing them of "hostile acts" against the government, and hinting that they would be forced to leave the country. Quoted in yesterday's state-controlled daily Herald newspaper, "Perhaps it is time we moved on, motivated by the desire to develop democracy for our people, not for the overseas audience," he hinted darkly. Mugabe accused whites of being "supremacist, arrogant and exclusive. In time, he warned, the white community should "either in reality become a part of us or part of someone else who is not here, in which case they have to join that someone." Whites had "never accepted defeat" after independence from white minority Rhodesian rule in 1980. Whites were "a community which discountenances the development of a just society predicated on principles of equality and fairness, but would rather there was a continuation of Rhodesian socio-economic system," he said. "They continue to nurture and pledge membership to the Rhodesian lobby across the world, which they use to undermine our sovereignty and to organise other hostile acts against the black majority." Whites had also enlisted. "Liberals like (South African opposition leader) Tony Leon and (British Labour Minister) Peter Hain who imagine that they run a super-continental colonial government, allowing them to superintend over sovereign African states, taunting and belittling African leaders everywhere." At the ruling party's congress in December last year, he urged supporters to "strike fear into the heart of the white man, the real enemy." Mugabe also dismissed a bid last month by the Commercial Farmers' Union to resolve the land issue with an offer of 1 million ha to resettle blacks as well as several million dollars of finance to support the resettlement programme. On Friday the government listed 2,030 white farms for confiscation, and the CFU said that 95% of the union's 4, 500 white members were now listed.
Hujambo
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 17:20:23 (EDT)
My two cents are: If I'm not here tomorrow Happy July 4th Aphelion Day.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 17:01:35 (EDT)
My two cents are: God, this inanity sounds like it could be only one of two people. One of whom was/is gnat....
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 16:56:42 (EDT)
My two cents are: Adults are being very successful in their attempt to delete childhood. Out of the crib into immediate adulthood.
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 15:22:48 (EDT)
My two cents are: A nice dissertation on capitalism: http://www.rcp.net.pe/ild/tmoc/cp1-en.htm
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 13:45:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hey Glint: The BBC is reporting that scientists from the Lowell Observatory have discovered a new planet orbiting the sun past Pluto. The world (for it is big enough to be called a world) has a reddish hue and is probably covered in ice. It orbits the Sun beyond Neptune in the so-called Kuiper Belt, a region that extends far beyond the known planets. It has a distinctly crappy name, 2001 KX76, and is thought to be larger than any of the objects in the asteriod belt. Observers remain confident that other planets can still be found in the Kuiper Belt: Dr. David Jewitt of the University of Hawaii said, "We're inching up to Pluto-It is just a matter of time until we see Pluto 2, Pluto 3 and so on." For anyone out there with acess to interplanteral travel, 2001 KX76 is currently at a distance of just over 6.4 billion km (4 billion miles) from the Sun. Its orbit is inclined by approximately 20 degrees with respect to the major planets, but the detailed shape of its orbit remains uncertain.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 13:41:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: You gay baitin me Bo-ay?!?
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 11:02:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Fairy Dust
Anonymous.
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 10:55:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Given the odds, Bush's win was phenomenal. Hitlery's was just scraping by in a wholly brainwashed State.
Pete�
- Tuesday, July 03, 2001 at 10:09:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hillary barely won or GW barely won. Doesn't matter. Close only counts in horseshoes.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 21:47:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: Ray's been fondling his cathode for too long. The liar socialsits have been trounced. Repeatedly. Name one victory in the last 3+ years? It is all retreat and counterpunch with sick, vile loser mentalities. The only thing they barely won was a seat for Hitlery in a heavily Demonratic state. That is no victory, that is crucifiction for the liars. Doomsday. Signed, sealed and delievered. Just like your long lost eulogies. You quit long ago, so we know you are a fraudette.
Pete�
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 21:34:31 (EDT)
My two cents are: Adults are just obsolete children and the hell with them.
Dr. Seuss
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 20:43:11 (EDT)
My two cents are: ABCNews and others. Can you read?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 19:47:38 (EDT)
My two cents are: We all knew it would come to this, Meat. Somebody had to deliver the death blow even if it was only to a ghost. The irony is that the late lamented Pete� and his ilk were defeated early on, right at the start, by Gann, Weasel, Eisentower, Willen, Johnny Reb, Garth Goyle, lotsadots and Nigel Bunnleigh. Sure, these characters were weak, without half the skill of you, ydog, gnat, E, Whatever, Ho-hum, Carlos, Solrac, John, Whineburger and Galumph, but they were adequate to the task. It was fun piling on for a couple of years, for the entertainment value, but the battle had already been won. Carry on.
Ray Cathode <Unwanted Pez, Bush Lite>
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 19:31:29 (EDT)
My two cents are: All unwanted conceptuses should have the right to be brought up into unwanted children and then turn into totally unwanted grown up people. Sperm too.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 19:25:10 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Clarence Thomas is a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty. OK, so he's waaaay slutty. Not to mention nutty. But aren't we all."
Waco Wight
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 19:15:26 (EDT)
My two cents are: "My client had nothing to do with the low-rent, trailer-park trash politicians who infested our country for the past eight years"
I plead the 5th! BWAHAHAHA
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 15:53:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Rita Crosby has taped interview with Condit's flight attendant girl friend who says Condit and one of his lawyer's tried to get her to sign a "false affidavit" that they didn't know each other. She says she's speaking out because she's scared for her personal safety. FoxNews is the only media she's spoken to - has turned down all other media offers.
just another demonRAT
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 15:51:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: No, ABCNews.com. Can you read?

- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 15:23:17 (EDT)
My two cents are: Poll was probably taken at Fox News.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 15:01:25 (EDT)
My two cents are: July 2 - ABCNews.com � Public support for legal abortion, a bit wobbly in recent years, has slipped back to its lowest level in polls since 1995. Fifty-two percent of Americans say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, down from 59 percent in January and almost back to where it was (53 percent) last summer. Forty-three percent say abortion should be illegal in all or most cases. Support for legal abortion has wavered by around seven points, without clear direction, in polls by ABCNEWS and others. That underscores public ambivalence on the issue: While large majorities say it should be legal in dire cases, most also have said abortions should be illegal when done solely to end an unwanted pregnancy. Religion
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 14:57:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Drug dealing, pardon pedaling. Wasn't that Ollie North?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 14:55:54 (EDT)
My two cents are: July 1, 2001 -- Members of New York's Gambino crime family are distancing themselves from the Clinton pardon scandal, calling the former president's family "low-rent, trailer-park trash." "My client had nothing to do with the low-rent, trailer-park trash politicians who infested our country for the past eight years," Rosen, Gambino's lawyer, said. Thomas Gambino, who was released from prison last year after serving a five-year term for loan-sharking, also does not want to be confused with Rosario Gambino's son Thomas, who reportedly paid Roger Clinton $50,000 in a bid to get the pardon for his father, currently serving a 45-year prison term for heroin trafficking. The money was paid to Clinton by a check issued by a telephone firm owned by Rosario Gambino's children. Unlike Clinton's other clients, the Gambinos did get something for their money: Rosario Gambino made a White House list of pardon candidates to be screened by the Justice Department. Meanwhile, Time magazine reports the federal Parole Commission tried to whack an FBI probe of the former president's drug-dealing, pardon-peddling brother. The bureau hoped to bag Roger Clinton in a sting operation, but, sources said, the commission, appointed by big brother Bill, went to the department to kibosh the case.
you know you are pretty low when even the mob calls you trash
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 14:04:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: Thanks! Hale praise from a socialist. Clearly, based on your logic, I am alive and kicking the shue-gar out of you toadies* You're welcome!
Pete�
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 13:59:01 (EDT)
My two cents are: Nice try, Pete, but we all know you're dead.
Harlan St. Wolf
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 13:36:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is Ray Cathode the cathode-ray tubes in the computer monitor? Does he know who all the anonymouses are?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 13:35:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: Are you finished spanking your monkey, 10:33:44 ?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 12:06:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: DemocRATs. A real piece of work.
Pete��
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 11:09:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: Aadvice Clinton received from Louisiana Governor Edwin "Fast Eddie" Edwards when the Gennifer Flowers scandal broke during candidate Clinton's visit to Baton Rouge. According to Tyler Bridges's new book, Bad Bet on the Bayou, a distraught Clinton asked Edwards--who had survived a few womanizing scandals of his own--how to handle Flowers's charge that she and Bill had had "a torrid 12-year love affair." "I'll tell you how to handle it," Edwards said. "I'd simply say that nobody has a torrid 12-year love affair. Twelve days, maybe 12 weeks. But nobody has a 12-year love affair." "Oh," said Clinton, "I can't say that." "I didn't think you would," replied Edwards. "But that's exactly what I'd say."
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 11:00:09 (EDT)
My two cents are: Is that cunt Harris still fucking Jeb with her open twat?
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 10:33:44 (EDT)
My two cents are: Set up pigs.
Anonymous.
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 10:32:52 (EDT)
My two cents are: Amazing what Democrats will do to attempt to recreat history and cover up their sick efforts to steal an election. At no point was Al Gore EVER ahead of Bush. Traitors.
Pete�
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 10:16:00 (EDT)
My two cents are: http://www.washtimes.com/national/20010702-87064654.htm
"Harris was warned [by Democrats] that recount was a 'setup'" <[email protected]>
- Monday, July 02, 2001 at 10:09:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: Next will be telephone prayer sex with an Hispanic priest.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 23:47:03 (EDT)
My two cents are: WHEN Bill Clinton needed an escape from Oval Office pressures he called up Monica Lewinsky for telephone sex. President George W Bush also uses the telephone to help him relax, it emerged last week: he calls a black preacher in Texas for telephone prayers. To the chagrin of black radicals and Democratic cynics, an improbable friendship has sprung up between a conservative Republican president who is keen to woo black votes and an African-American Methodist clergyman who calls himself "a Democrat at heart". Caldwell has quietly become not only a friend and spiritual adviser to the Bush family but also a staunch defender of a president who he believes has been unfairly maligned. "I think President Bush is a good man, a fair man," Caldwell said last week. "As his tenure unfolds, African-Americans will see more and more reason to support him." If Caldwell and other moderate leaders can persuade middle-class black voters that Bush deserves their support, the Democratic party's historic grip on the African-American vote may finally be broken. "If Republicans got 20% of the black vote, we'd never lose a Senate seat or a governorship again in the south," said Robert Teeter, a Republican pollster. Unlike Clinton, Bush does not play golf or dally with interns. His main source of extracurricular comfort is his Christian faith. The man he sometimes turns to for a restorative dose of prayer on the telephone happens to be a charismatic black minister who not only provides balm to the president's soul but who also works miracles for Bush's political image. Caldwell met Bush six years ago when the politician was governor of Texas and keen to encourage middle-class blacks to reduce their community's traditional reliance on welfare. Caldwell helped to inspire Bush's enthusiasm for faith-based programmes which offer government funds to religious groups that offer welfare services. The two men hit it off to such a degree that Bush invited Caldwell to lead the prayers at the Republican convention in Philadelphia last year. Caldwell praised Bush's record as Texas governor for its "sound policy and successful practice". "A lot of folk were unaware that then-governor Bush had helped the cause of African-American enterprise, that black business actually grew during his administration," Caldwell added. The suggestion that Bush might change that reputation, and in doing so secure for himself enough of the black vote to guarantee his re-election in 2004, is beginning to unnerve some radicals. Bush's faith-based initiatives have won him plenty of friends in black churches and those like Caldwell who believe a revolution is under way in African-American politics point to the president's record when he was governor of Texas. He was first elected in 1994 with 15% of the black vote; four years later he won 27%. When it comes to winning black votes, Bush seems to be running on more than a prayer.
tsk tsk tsk the liar party is just about toasted
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 21:41:49 (EDT)
My two cents are: Well good for you. Socialist.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 21:18:46 (EDT)
My two cents are: Saw A.I. today. Good flick.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 17:15:39 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, that would truly be classy.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 17:09:27 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe vampires will continue exhuming posts from the fornigate graveyard in order to try to prove that John was a turncoat before his demise.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 14:04:56 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sure do miss John this time of the year. Wish he could once again regale Glint with tales about what fireworks were like back in the day.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 13:52:33 (EDT)
My two cents are: Maybe the Bush girls will continue to entertain.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 13:45:45 (EDT)
My two cents are: Elian who?
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 12:43:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Think the one you saw as a pirate was the fisherman who dove in the ocean and saved the kid. And it wasn't Dalrymple. John probably did see the light, the real one at the end of the tunnel.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 12:25:43 (EDT)
My two cents are: Actually, Glint, I did not like A.I. There were a few amusing points or issues, but it sucked. I actually liked the love story in Pearl Harbor and since I live here, I am not all that concerned about what actuallyhappened at Pearl Harbor and seeing the actual battle scenes. What they ignored were the many civilian casualties killed when the military guns shot indiscriminately in the air at the Japanese and the shells landed in the city. The side story cahos was must more interesting that the bomb out of the harbor. That was given short shrift, but I liked the story, nonetheless even if it was mostly unbeleiveable. I can't stand Baldwin, but I love to see himeat crow and have to act a part of a real American. The male lead was also a dork, but I like he got beat to the girl initially by his pal. The story was ok. You gotta take it for what it was, and what it wasn't was a movie solely about Pearl Harbor.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 12:15:32 (EDT)
My two cents are: "Mars was rather splendid last night. Finally saw it through all the haze." - Pete. Pete. ironically one of the best times for viewing planets is through a thin haze. The haze seems go "steady" the view and reduce atmospheric scintillation which is sometimes rather severe on the clearest of nights. Although the haze might reduce the amount of light getting through, planets like Mars are bright enough so that they have light to spare. <> Funny, the little resurgence of Liberals claiming ultimate victory on this site about a week ago pittered out more quickly than it came. The claim made earlier by Cathode of an early yet permanent victory is so hollow and hiliarious that it had to have been made by an imposter. I agree that the entertainment value has gone down, but that is because the OIC is no longer finding blue dresses and the like with which to strip away the Clinton lies and then use them to flog him with. Now, that was classic entertainment of a form that won't be seen again during the current administration!
Glint
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 12:13:57 (EDT)
My two cents are: Yes, John saw the light, if only briefly, and started slamming the other liars within his conflicted sense of being a Democrat. He saw these liars for what they were, but was still deluded with the feel-goodist delusions of an era long gone when Democrats had better purpose and less power to corrupt. He was sort of line like that MSNBC talking head who flipped during the time when the DemonRATs were trying to steal the election. // The real bummer will be if the Red Sox actually pull it off this year. It would be a fitting tribute to John for them to win, though,even if he is not here to see it. Maybe he'll be smiling down from on high. But of course, this is notPC for the liar DemonRATs to consider.
Pete�
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:54:30 (EDT)
My two cents are: That's interesting. Not only did John name Bush the winner way back in October but he also correctly predicted his own future.
swag man
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:43:55 (EDT)
My two cents are: My two cents are: Its over, The Shrub is President, now what will I do? Oh hell,..........John� J - Tuesday, October 10, 2000 at 13:39:40 (EDT)
proof that john� could see the future
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:40:02 (EDT)
My two cents are: Did anyone see those pictures of Elian released last week? Who was that pirate next to him in the photos - his dad? Reminded me of Jack Nickolson and son in "Ths Shining." Cute kid, and a psychotic killer. Janet Reno reminds me of the old hag in the bath tub. <> Pete, how was A.I.? I saw Pearl Harbor while in NE. Afterwards, I said it was hard to watch any movie with Alec Baldwin in it. My Father agreed saying, "Yes, I hated to see Baldwin playing the part of Doolittle." I thought the first 90 minutes of Pearl Harbor was a complete waste of time. So were the last 30 minutes.
Glint
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:21:07 (EDT)
My two cents are: Sounds as if you're attempting to rewrite the history of John's posts. It appeared that he was a Democrat to the end. Unless you have inside information.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:21:06 (EDT)
My two cents are: Hello people. It's been a while; I've been getting up to speed with the new client. As you may know the old client of 4+ years was bought by the Brits, who turned around and sold them to the Canadians. The Canadians in turn slit the throats of the consultants the client had working for them. Now instead of working through an agency for a company that was bought by the Canadians, I am working on my own directly under contract to the Candians cutthroats. So far so good. On Friday night at 5p they rolled out and tapped a keg of Bass ale. Fridays will definitely be an "in office" day for me. <≫ It's hard to believe that John was buried at Arlington four months ago today. Things just haven't been the same without him since the socialists broke rank and fled to the hills shortly after his passing. At times like these when I miss John the most, I am comforted by this one thought: At least John lived long enough to see the impeachment of a lying despicable dishonest Liberal loonball. Redundant words, I know, but at least I think he died with his eyes open. Plus he was able to go to his reward knowing that the American people had rejected the vice enabler, the sore loser whose tantrum opened many eyes in the final months of the 20th century.
Glint
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 11:06:18 (EDT)
My two cents are: PC thinking = Pete's Conflicted thinking.
Anonymous.
- Sunday, July 01, 2001 at 09:57:10 (EDT)


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