The Brutality of Reason Example

By Ironcross One-One

Slicing and dicing things into pieces small enough
to be fed to Liberals, Kooks and Anti-Americans.
When feeding Kooks and Anti-Americans
I suggest a potato gun.
Example

If you are the emotional liberal type, this mindspace will make you uncomfortable. If you think my logic or facts are faulty, lets discuss it. When your findings disagree with my findings, that is dialogue. But using rhetoric to disagree with science is demogoguery. No demogoguery! I usually refrain from insults, but occasionally, ignorance and liberal hypocrisy bring out the worst in me.

Name:
Location: Edge of Nowhere, Washington, United States

Military Jumper, Diver, Motorcycle Rider, Air Traffic Control and Demolitions Man. I build furniture and cabinets and can frame, roof, wire, plumb and finish a house. Can weld steel, drive heavy equipment, build pole barns and mortared rock walls. Have written one bad novel and one brilliant thesis. And I play the guitar.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

I'll Tell You Why...

President Bush, Senators McCain, Kennedy, et al keep telling us that the new immigration bill will secure the border, make the lawbreakers face stiff penalties and keep the undesirables out. Here's a little more info for them. We don't reject the bill because we don't know what it's supposed to do. We don't reject the bill because we think those would be reasonable goals. We reject the bill because past experience tells us that you will not enforce it. Past experience tells us that you think more of the money from the business lobby and the endorsement of La Raza are more important than enforcing the law or the actually telling the truth.

We reject the bill because after being lied to 11 times on immigration reform, we don't believe you anymore.

Enforce the laws that are on the books and you won't have to deport them. They'll leave on their own.

We don't believe you anymore. So prove to us you mean what you say. Enforce the existing law.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Copyright © 2005 Michael A. Breeden