Conservative Racists Seeking: "extremely literate conservative African-American"

Procrustes Stretched

And you say, "Oh my God, am I here all alone?"
Dec 1, 2008
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Conservative Racists Seeking: "extremely literate conservative African-American"

And they put out feelers to Larry Elder who "says that Atlas Shrugged, written by novelist Ayn Rand, is one of his favorite books." - Larry Elder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia :cuckoo:




[youtube]IhlW6gQx57s[/youtube]

Larry is a smart guy, but he is often used by racists as cover. What does he say about how is portrayed in the Anti-Obama Super Pac Racist Campaign Proposal

Larry lives in a dream world as do almost all Libertarian Weirdos. He says in the above linked video that blacks would benefit most from privatization of Social Security. If Social Security had been privatized before 2007, most people collecting would suffered horrendous losses.

Social Security was NOT designed to be a retirement plan as proposed by conservatives, it was designed as a safety net -- a hedge against society and greed and stupidity.
 
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Hannity says that was great radio...of course Elder talks over Ayers and refuses to allow Ayers a fair hearing.

Agree with Elders or Ayers, good radio would be a two-way conversation. When Conservative Talk Show Hosts, speak over people and do not allow them to present their case, this is what conservative audiences live for. It's their red meat.

Hannity says he believes Obama was born in the USA

[youtube]0M4WqTf4frk[/youtube]
 
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Hannity says that was great radio...of course Elder talks over Ayers and refuses to allow Ayers a fair hearing.

Agree with Elders or Ayers, good radio would be a two-way conversation. When Conservative Talk Show Hosts, speak over people and do not allow them to present their case, this is what conservative audiences live for. It's their red meat.

Conservatives had Colin Powell, but he went with America, its hard to find loyal, intelligent right wingnuts in this day and age. George Will isn't far right enough for Tea Party types.
 
I thought that was hilarious. Except for the President (who is obviously intelligent and literate), I guess the Republicans don't really know any right off. Otherwise, why advertise?
 
Then things you can't say in America? Which one can't you say in America:

There's only a dime's worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats.

Or

Blacks have a lower IQ than whites.


That's right. The one you can't say in America isn't in the book.
 
Then things you can't say in America? Which one can't you say in America:

There's only a dime's worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats.

Or

Blacks have a lower IQ than whites.


That's right. The one you can't say in America isn't in the book.

Which IQ tests do you reference? Stanford-Binet? Wechsler? Culture Fair?
 
Then things you can't say in America? Which one can't you say in America:

There's only a dime's worth of difference between Republicans and Democrats.

Or

Blacks have a lower IQ than whites.


That's right. The one you can't say in America isn't in the book.

Which IQ tests do you reference? Stanford-Binet? Wechsler? Culture Fair?

Males score lower than females on verbal tests. Thought I'd toss that in.
 
Conservative Racists Seeking: "extremely literate conservative African-American"

And they put out feelers to Larry Elder who "says that Atlas Shrugged, written by novelist Ayn Rand, is one of his favorite books." - Larry Elder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia :cuckoo:




[youtube]IhlW6gQx57s[/youtube]

Larry is a smart guy, but he is often used by racists as cover. What does he say about how is portrayed in the Anti-Obama Super Pac Racist Campaign Proposal

Larry lives in a dream world as do almost all Libertarian Weirdos. He says in the above linked video that blacks would benefit most from privatization of Social Security. If Social Security had been privatized before 2007, most people collecting would suffered horrendous losses.

Social Security was NOT designed to be a retirement plan as proposed by conservatives, it was designed as a safety net -- a hedge against society and greed and stupidity.

i know several very intelligent negroes.

is there any money in this?
 
Hannity says that was great radio...of course Elder talks over Ayers and refuses to allow Ayers a fair hearing.

Agree with Elders or Ayers, good radio would be a two-way conversation. When Conservative Talk Show Hosts, speak over people and do not allow them to present their case, this is what conservative audiences live for. It's their red meat.

Hannity says he believes Obama was born in the USA

[youtube]0M4WqTf4frk[/youtube]

I may not always enjoy his writing, but there is no question Thomas Sowell is brilliant.
 
Hannity says that was great radio...of course Elder talks over Ayers and refuses to allow Ayers a fair hearing.

Agree with Elders or Ayers, good radio would be a two-way conversation. When Conservative Talk Show Hosts, speak over people and do not allow them to present their case, this is what conservative audiences live for. It's their red meat.

Conservatives had Colin Powell, but he went with America, its hard to find loyal, intelligent right wingnuts in this day and age. George Will isn't far right enough for Tea Party types.

Will? He sold his soul to the Reagan Revolution. That man was a born again Reaganite...the worst kind .. a convert.
 
Conservative Racists Seeking: "extremely literate conservative African-American"

And they put out feelers to Larry Elder who "says that Atlas Shrugged, written by novelist Ayn Rand, is one of his favorite books." - Larry Elder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia :cuckoo:




[youtube]IhlW6gQx57s[/youtube]

Larry is a smart guy, but he is often used by racists as cover. What does he say about how is portrayed in the Anti-Obama Super Pac Racist Campaign Proposal

Larry lives in a dream world as do almost all Libertarian Weirdos. He says in the above linked video that blacks would benefit most from privatization of Social Security. If Social Security had been privatized before 2007, most people collecting would suffered horrendous losses.

Social Security was NOT designed to be a retirement plan as proposed by conservatives, it was designed as a safety net -- a hedge against society and greed and stupidity.

i know several very intelligent negroes.

is there any money in this?
You A Jewish Agent?
 
Conservative Racists Seeking: "extremely literate conservative African-American"

And they put out feelers to Larry Elder who "says that Atlas Shrugged, written by novelist Ayn Rand, is one of his favorite books." - Larry Elder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia :cuckoo:




[youtube]IhlW6gQx57s[/youtube]

Larry is a smart guy, but he is often used by racists as cover. What does he say about how is portrayed in the Anti-Obama Super Pac Racist Campaign Proposal

Larry lives in a dream world as do almost all Libertarian Weirdos. He says in the above linked video that blacks would benefit most from privatization of Social Security. If Social Security had been privatized before 2007, most people collecting would suffered horrendous losses.

Social Security was NOT designed to be a retirement plan as proposed by conservatives, it was designed as a safety net -- a hedge against society and greed and stupidity.

i know several very intelligent negroes.

is there any money in this?
You A Jewish Agent?

unitarian arbitrageur
 
I thought that was hilarious. Except for the President (who is obviously intelligent and literate), I guess the Republicans don't really know any right off. Otherwise, why advertise?

or maybe they are saying the majority of blacks who go conservative are not literate?

and why extremely literate? does the con literacy need to be extreme to compete with the literacy of an Obama black?

:lol:
 
Hannity says that was great radio...of course Elder talks over Ayers and refuses to allow Ayers a fair hearing.

Agree with Elders or Ayers, good radio would be a two-way conversation. When Conservative Talk Show Hosts, speak over people and do not allow them to present their case, this is what conservative audiences live for. It's their red meat.

Conservatives had Colin Powell, but he went with America, its hard to find loyal, intelligent right wingnuts in this day and age. George Will isn't far right enough for Tea Party types.

Will? He sold his soul to the Reagan Revolution. That man was a born again Reaganite...the worst kind .. a convert.

And the Tea bunnies think he is too liberal, that is how far to the right side of reality they are.
 
Conservatives had Colin Powell, but he went with America, its hard to find loyal, intelligent right wingnuts in this day and age. George Will isn't far right enough for Tea Party types.

Will? He sold his soul to the Reagan Revolution. That man was a born again Reaganite...the worst kind .. a convert.

And the Tea bunnies think he is too liberal, that is how far to the right side of reality they are.

Poor George, he joined the ranks and the ranks moved father to the right every time. Maybe he should stick to commenting on baseball.

one note: in mid/late seventies(?) George Will wrote a book I devoured, the subtitle was 'and other sobering thoughts' a collection of his columns up til then ... Google: "The Pursuit of Happiness and Other Sobering Thoughts", George Will's first collection of columns, covers the period from 1974 to 1977

It is my opinion that George became a different man after 1980


Kirkus' Review

George Will's columns offer two congruent pleasures: that of knowing what he'll say, that of not knowing what he'll say. Writing for the Washington Post syndicate and Newsweek for the past five years, he has articulated an acute, unsparing, up-to-date conservative position. He can be counted on to mount a respectable argument against preferential treatment for minorities and, equally, against ""single-minded majoritarians, who consider democracy a matter of mere numbers."" He is satisfyingly scathing about ""verbal litter,"" recipes for making love (""How many of us have ever made mayonnaise?""), or prescriptions for raising children and a comfort, as well, to those discomfited by rampant pornography, ""the prevailing zest for frankness"" (a la Betty Ford), and other aspects of the coarsening of America. But he doesn't hold televison or any other ""them"" responsible: ""the world is not that easy to turn."" Will brings to his predilection for reticence, moderation, discipline--all the hardtack virtues--two significant assets, a sense of history and a capacity for making distinctions. He knows the old, pre-FDR days weren't all that good, that government intervention may be required ""to achieve collective purposes for an ongoing nation"" (whether saving fuel or saving motorists' lives), that--going abroad--""Britain's fundamental problem is not the generosity of its social programs"" but an inconvenient lack of aggressiveness. He is nowhere more discerning, however, than on politics and public figures--not the baddies or goodies (too ridiculous, too sublime)--but those mixed quantities like Jerry Brown or Huey Long, the political animals like Russell Long, Tip O'Neill--or Jimmy Carter. Read him on the Playboy gaffe, the first debate (""as satisfying as a completed sneeze""), the dense ""weave of the world's fabric"" and the concomitant peril of weak government. ""Friendship,"" he observes in passing, ""should, indeed, be an education in complexity."" Getting to know Will, the Murray Kempton of the Right, is exactly that.

Pub Date: May 31st, 1978

Publisher: Harper & Row
 
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Will? He sold his soul to the Reagan Revolution. That man was a born again Reaganite...the worst kind .. a convert.

And the Tea bunnies think he is too liberal, that is how far to the right side of reality they are.

Poor George, he joined the ranks and the ranks moved father to the right every time. Maybe he should stick to commenting on baseball.

one note: in mid/late seventies(?) George Will wrote a book I devoured, the subtitle was 'and other sobering thoughts' a collection of his columns up til then ... Google: "The Pursuit of Happiness and Other Sobering Thoughts", George Will's first collection of columns, covers the period from 1974 to 1977

It is my opinion that George became a different man after 1980


Kirkus' Review

George Will's columns offer two congruent pleasures: that of knowing what he'll say, that of not knowing what he'll say. Writing for the Washington Post syndicate and Newsweek for the past five years, he has articulated an acute, unsparing, up-to-date conservative position. He can be counted on to mount a respectable argument against preferential treatment for minorities and, equally, against ""single-minded majoritarians, who consider democracy a matter of mere numbers."" He is satisfyingly scathing about ""verbal litter,"" recipes for making love (""How many of us have ever made mayonnaise?""), or prescriptions for raising children and a comfort, as well, to those discomfited by rampant pornography, ""the prevailing zest for frankness"" (a la Betty Ford), and other aspects of the coarsening of America. But he doesn't hold televison or any other ""them"" responsible: ""the world is not that easy to turn."" Will brings to his predilection for reticence, moderation, discipline--all the hardtack virtues--two significant assets, a sense of history and a capacity for making distinctions. He knows the old, pre-FDR days weren't all that good, that government intervention may be required ""to achieve collective purposes for an ongoing nation"" (whether saving fuel or saving motorists' lives), that--going abroad--""Britain's fundamental problem is not the generosity of its social programs"" but an inconvenient lack of aggressiveness. He is nowhere more discerning, however, than on politics and public figures--not the baddies or goodies (too ridiculous, too sublime)--but those mixed quantities like Jerry Brown or Huey Long, the political animals like Russell Long, Tip O'Neill--or Jimmy Carter. Read him on the Playboy gaffe, the first debate (""as satisfying as a completed sneeze""), the dense ""weave of the world's fabric"" and the concomitant peril of weak government. ""Friendship,"" he observes in passing, ""should, indeed, be an education in complexity."" Getting to know Will, the Murray Kempton of the Right, is exactly that.

Pub Date: May 31st, 1978

Publisher: Harper & Row

That was the the same time I was transfixed by The Jeweler's Eye. I'll look for some of Will's older works; he is an example of conservative thought that the TEAS have rejected.
 

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