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2008-05-16
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HILLARY CLINTON THIRTY YRS AGO
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HILLARY CLINTON THIRTY YRS AGO

"a woman sitting on a bed holding a spoon"

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Comments for: HILLARY CLINTON THIRTY YRS AGO
pro_junior Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 03:22AM

thats hot
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 03:35AM

Somebody photoshop this with a joint in her hand!
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 04:23AM

She is trash, just like the neocons that the dicks around here worship, the neos came from the Commie Clinton following..... different paths.... same destination.

[www.youtube.com]
dv8 Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 07:27AM

her pants makes me dizzy and draws me into her twilight vagina zone where the mystery of time and space are explained as well as the true meaning of life. wow! i looked into the eye of that hairy cosmic twat and i finally understood why we are all her.....paid for by the ron paul for president campaignthe
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Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 01:10PM

Thieves, Crooks and Liars..... just like Bush/Cheney

[video.google.com]
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 01:11PM

Oh yeah and........... Drugs and Murder.... just like Bush/Cheney...

[video.google.com]
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 02:34PM

WOW!, that's way back when she actually 'swallowed' to get screwed, nowdays she uses the strap-on on uncle Bill....drinking smiley
Mrkim Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 04:33PM

'Bout like I figured .... she was NEVER hot enough for me to wanna hit it eye
popping smiley

smoking
smiley
shaDEz Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 06:18PM

honestly, I prolly would have back then... but I wasn't even born yet
as for being a "commie", she was and is about as far away as you can get to being a commie lol
PW Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 08:58PM

Liberal = Commie
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 09:10PM

Actually I'm getting chills down my spine, cause she looks "sure thing after a six pack" ...................eye
popping smiley
shaDEz Report This Comment
Date: May 16, 2008 11:55PM

Liberal is far from communist
Read What is to Be Done? (-Lenin)

Also with words like "totally obliterate Iran" would not be something a communist would say (or do).
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 17, 2008 07:50AM

Here's a good one for you DICKS. What it comes down to is that you are a bunch of puppet boys following those neo-commie spoiled intellect only mommas boys around, they have no real experience in the things they want done, it's just what they dreamed up on paper and believed like a coupla high school punks (reminds me of shadez of all people), you freaks are like boys on the playground, very sadistic in your way of thinking,it's funny how you guys talk so much self righteous tough shit and then go sit down and watch some History or Discovery Channel.


If they would have taken Ron Paul in instead of following Bush (that one guy that's helped ruin us) they would have risen up into a new world of strength, not a new world of fantasy, keep following lies and deny all truth and you will crumble yourself into a pit that there is no escape from. Isn't it funny, the whole Bush catastrophe has not even peaked yet, all of the crap that he stirred will surface even more as time moves on and produce nothing but more hate for the Republican Party overall, so, when they start talking their... we made some mistakes now we're back on course bullshit.... they will get "THE BIRD!"

This is something from a Conservative Lady.

DECLARATIONS
By PEGGY NOONAN


Pity Party
May 16, 2008

Big picture, May 2008:
The Democrats aren't the ones falling apart, the Republicans are. The Democrats can see daylight ahead. For all their fractious fighting, they're finally resolving their central drama. Hillary Clinton will leave, and Barack Obama will deliver a stirring acceptance speech. Then hand-to-hand in the general, where they see their guy triumphing. You see it when you talk to them: They're busy being born.

The Republicans? Busy dying. The brightest of them see no immediate light. They're frozen, not like a deer in the headlights but a deer in the darkness, his ears stiff at the sound. Crunch. Twig. Hunting party.

The headline Wednesday on Drudge, from Politico, said, "Republicans Stunned by Loss in Mississippi." It was about the eight-point drubbing the Democrat gave the Republican in the special House election. My first thought was: You have to be stupid to be stunned by that. Second thought: Most party leaders in Washington are stupid – detached, played out, stuck in the wisdom they learned when they were coming up, in '78 or '82 or '94. Whatever they learned then, they think pertains now. In politics especially, the first lesson sticks. For Richard Nixon, everything came back to Alger Hiss.

They are also – Hill leaders, lobbyists, party speakers – successful, well-connected, busy and rich. They never guessed, back in '86, how government would pay off! They didn't know they'd stay! They came to make a difference and wound up with their butts in the butter. But affluence detaches, and in time skews thinking. It gives you the illusion you're safe, and that everyone else is. A party can lose its gut this way.

Many are ambivalent, deep inside, about the decisions made the past seven years in the White House. But they've publicly supported it so long they think they . . . support it. They get confused. Late at night they toss and turn in the antique mahogany sleigh bed in the carpeted house in McLean and try to remember what it is they really do think, and what those thoughts imply.

And those are the bright ones. The rest are in Perpetual 1980: We have the country, the troops will rally in the fall.
(fossil!)

"This was a real wakeup call for us," someone named Robert M. Duncan, who is chairman of the Republican National Committee, told the New York Times. This was after Mississippi. "We can't let the Democrats take our issues." And those issues would be? "We can't let them pretend to be conservatives," he continued. Why not? Republicans pretend to be conservative every day.

The Bush White House, faced with the series of losses from 2005 through '08, has long claimed the problem is Republicans on the Hill and running for office. They have scandals, bad personalities, don't stand for anything. That's why Republicans are losing: because they're losers.

All true enough!

But this week a House Republican said publicly what many say privately, that there is another truth. "Members and pundits . . . fail to understand the deep seated antipathy toward the president, the war, gas prices, the economy, foreclosures," said Rep. Tom Davis of Virginia in a 20-page memo to House GOP leaders.

The party, Mr. Davis told me, is "an airplane flying right into a mountain." Analysis of its predicament reflect an "investment in the Bush presidency," but "the public has just moved so far past that." "Our leaders go up to the second floor of the White House and they get a case of White House-itis." Mr. Bush has left the party at a disadvantage in terms of communications: "He can't articulate. The only asset we have now is the big microphone, and he swallowed it." The party, said Mr. Davis, must admit its predicament, act independently of the White House, and force Democrats to define themselves. "They should have some ownership for what's going on. They control the budget. They pay no price. . . . Obama has all happy talk, but it's from 30,000 feet. Energy, immigration, what is he gonna do?"
* * *
Could the party pivot from the president? I spoke this week to Clarke Reed of Mississippi, one of the great architects of resurgent Republicanism in the South. When he started out, in the 1950s, there were no Republicans in his state. The solid south was solidly Democratic, and Sen. James O. Eastland was thumping the breast pocket of his suit, vowing that civil rights legislation would never leave it. "We're going to build a two-party system in the south," Mr. Reed said. He helped create "the illusion of Southern power" as a friend put it, with the creation of the Southern Republican Chairman's Association. "If you build it they will come." They did.

There are always "lots of excuses," Mr. Reed said of the special-election loss. Poor candidate, local factors. "Having said all that," he continued, "let's just face it: It's not a good time." He meant to be a Republican. "They brought Cheney in, and that was a mistake." He cited "a disenchantment with the generic Republican label, which we always thought was the Good Housekeeping seal."

What's behind it? "American people just won't take a long war. Just – name me a war, even in a pro-military state like this. It's overall disappointment. It's national. No leadership, adrift. Things haven't worked." The future lies in rebuilding locally, not being "distracted" by Washington.

Is the Republican solid South over?

"Yeah. Oh yeah." He said, "I eat lunch every day at Buck's Cafe. Obama's picture is all over the wall."

How to come back? "The basic old conservative principles haven't changed. We got distracted by Washington, we got distracted from having good county organizations."

Should the party attempt to break with Mr. Bush? Mr. Reed said he supports the president. And then he said, simply, "We're past that."

We're past that time.

Mr. Reed said he was "short-term pessimistic, long-term optimistic." He has seen a lot of history. "After Goldwater in '64 we said, 'Let's get practical.' So we got ol' Dick. We got through Watergate. Been through a lot. We've had success a long time."

Throughout the interview this was a Reed refrain: "We got through that." We got through Watergate and Vietnam and changes large and small.

He was holding high the flag, but his refrain implicitly compared the current moment to disaster.

What happens to the Republicans in 2008 will likely be dictated by what didn't happen in 2005, and '06, and '07. The moment when the party could have broken, on principle, with the administration – over the thinking behind and the carrying out of the war, over immigration, spending and the size of government – has passed. What two years ago would have been honorable and wise will now look craven. They're stuck.

Mr. Bush has squandered the hard-built paternity of 40 years. But so has the party, and so have its leaders. If they had pushed away for serious reasons, they could have separated the party's fortunes from the president's. This would have left a painfully broken party, but they wouldn't be left with a ruined "brand," as they all say, speaking the language of marketing. And they speak that language because they are marketers, not thinkers. Not serious about policy. Not serious about ideas. And not serious about leadership, only followership.

This is and will be the great challenge for John McCain: The Democratic argument, now being market tested by Obama Inc., that a McCain victory will yield nothing more or less than George Bush's third term.

That is going to be powerful, and it is going to get out the vote. And not for Republicans.

[online.wsj.com]

the
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jgoins Report This Comment
Date: May 17, 2008 10:54AM

Does anyone here really believe even if this black guy can get elected, that the KKK will allow him to live to serve. I believe there is a race war on the horizon if he wins. Then the Islamic radicals will use that as their method of destroying us. I really don't believe Obama stands much of a chance of winning the general election though.
Anonymous Report This Comment
Date: May 18, 2008 05:55AM

Start learning and you will see that no matter what side you pick you are picking the side "they" want you to.... get it? If you don't get it, it is just because you don't have the balls to get it, the more you dig, the more you're life will change.

[video.google.com]

Go get some rat poison and look at the ingredients.... Fluoride!
jgoins Report This Comment
Date: May 18, 2008 12:08PM

Oh please, more conspiracy theories?