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-   -   Last chances of winning $50,000 from PussyCash! This thread is worth $8,000! (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=565171)

chshkt 01-25-2006 05:38 PM


sweethotkayla 01-25-2006 05:44 PM

65 post ppl

bufferover 01-25-2006 05:44 PM

uhh little but spam .. ahh :)

chshkt 01-25-2006 05:52 PM

let me win! i almost can pay my rent with $50! :D

bufferover 01-25-2006 05:54 PM

haha promote pussycash ;) they rule

chshkt 01-25-2006 05:56 PM

i do promote them!

Furious_Male 01-25-2006 05:56 PM

They would rule more if I could see the free joins stat.

bufferover 01-25-2006 05:59 PM

bump for PC

bufferover 01-25-2006 06:18 PM

My last post for today.. peace ppl

chshkt 01-25-2006 06:23 PM

Independent: Discovery of Earth-like planet brings hope of finding alien life.

Spunky 01-25-2006 06:24 PM

Did I win more loot? :321GFY

chshkt 01-25-2006 07:00 PM

wazzzzzzuuuuuuup?

sweethotkayla 01-25-2006 07:19 PM

hey chskt - hows things

Doctor Dre 01-25-2006 07:23 PM

Getting there getting there ;) chskt things are never going well ... he's a paraniod person

chuckNC 01-25-2006 07:44 PM

moving along

Pipeline Q 01-25-2006 07:48 PM

bump to the top

chuckNC 01-25-2006 07:58 PM

to the top again

chshkt 01-25-2006 07:58 PM

hi sweethotkayla, everything's cool, thanks, i'm working on a site
but i think i need a sleep... it's 5 am...

Doctor Dre, you don't know me... obviously!

and both of you typed my nickname wrong :)

sweethotkayla 01-25-2006 08:12 PM

hahaha we both missed the second h:P

Doctor Dre 01-25-2006 08:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chshkt
hi sweethotkayla, everything's cool, thanks, i'm working on a site
but i think i need a sleep... it's 5 am...

Doctor Dre, you don't know me... obviously!

and both of you typed my nickname wrong :)

You're the guy posting conspiracy theories all the time aren't you ?

chshkt 01-25-2006 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doctor Dre
You're the guy posting conspiracy theories all the time aren't you ?

LOL yeah that would be me! :upsidedow

DivX 01-25-2006 08:39 PM

Post one here to entertain us

Jer 01-25-2006 08:41 PM

I'm a great thread bumper. If you're interested in my services, please let me know.

;)

chshkt 01-25-2006 08:50 PM

Alito Filibuster: It Only Takes One
By Robert Parry
Consortiumnews.com

Sunday 22 January 2006

With the fate of the U.S. Constitution in the balance, it's hard to believe there's no senator prepared to filibuster Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito, whose theories on the "unitary executive" could spell the end of the American democratic Republic.

If confirmed, Alito would join at least three other right-wing justices - John Roberts, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas - who believe that George W. Bush should possess near total control of the U.S. government during the ill-defined War on Terror. If Anthony Kennedy, another Republican, joins them, they would wield a majority.

Alito's theory of the "unitary executive" holds that Bush can cite his "plenary" - or unlimited - powers as Commander in Chief to ignore laws he doesn't like, spy on citizens without warrants, imprison citizens without charges, authorize torture, order assassinations, and invade other countries at his own discretion.

"Can it be true that any President really has such powers under our Constitution?" asked former Vice President Al Gore in a Jan. 16 speech. "If the answer is &'yes,' then under the theory by which these acts are committed, are there any acts that can on their face be prohibited?"

The answer to Gore's final rhetorical question would seem to be no, there is nothing prohibited to Bush. The "unitary executive" can assert authoritarian - even dictatorial - powers for the indefinite future.

Under this government envisioned by Alito and Bush, Americans would no longer have freedoms based on the Constitution and the law, but on Bush's tolerance and charity. Americans would, in essence, become Bush's subjects dependent on his good graces, rather than citizens possessing inalienable rights. He would be a modern-day king.

Resistance

In the face of such an unprecedented power grab, Americans might expect senators from both parties to filibuster Alito and resist Bush's consolidation of power. But Republicans seem more interested in proving their loyalty to Bush, and Democrats so far are signaling only a token fight for fear of suffering political reprisals.

A meeting of the Democratic caucus on Jan. 18 to discuss Alito drew only about two dozen senators out of a total of 45. The caucus consensus reportedly was to cast a "strategic" - or a symbolic - vote against Alito so they could say "we-told-you-so" when he makes bad rulings in the future. [See NYT, Jan.19, 2006]

But it's unclear why voters would want to reward Democrats for making only a meaningless gesture against Alito, rather than fighting hard to keep him off the court. An extended battle also would give them a chance to make their case about why they see Alito as a threat to the U.S. Constitution.

A filibuster could give voters time, too, to learn what Alito and Bush have in mind for the country under the theory of the "unitary executive." If after a tough fight the Democrats lose, they could then say they did their best and the voters would know what was at stake.

Losing, however, might not be the end result. A swing in public opinion is certainly possible if even one senator takes the floor to wage an old-fashioned, "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" filibuster in defense of the most fundamental principles of the American democratic experiment.

A filibuster could touch a public nerve if it concentrates on protecting the Founding Fathers' framework of checks and balances, the Bill of Rights, and the rule of law - all designed specifically to prevent an abusive Executive from gaining dictatorial powers.

Secondarily, the filibuster could explain to the American people the need for courage in the face of danger, especially at a time when some political leaders are exploiting fear to stampede the public into trading freedom for security.

Rallying the Nation

If an elder statesman, like Robert Byrd, or a younger senator, like Russell Feingold, started speaking with a determination not to leave until Bush withdraws the Alito nomination, the filibuster could be a riveting moment in modern American politics, a last line of defense for the Republic.

In effect, the filibustering senators would be saying that the future of democracy is worth an all-out congressional battle - and that Alito's theory of a "unitary executive" is an "extraordinary circumstance" deserving of a filibuster.

A filibuster also could force other senators to face up to the threat now emanating from an all-powerful Executive.

Democrats would have to decide if they're willing to stand up to the pressure that Bush and his many allies would surely bring down on them. Republicans would have to choose between loyalty to the President and to the nation's founding principles.

For some senators, the choice might define how they are remembered in U.S. history.

Republican John McCain, whose law against torture was approved in December but was essentially eviscerated when Bush pronounced that it would not be binding on him, would have the opportunity to either demand that the torture ban means something or accept Bush's repudiation of its requirements.

Democrats who think they have the makings of a national leader - the likes of John Kerry, Hillary Clinton and Joseph Biden - could either demonstrate a toughness for meaningful political battles or confirm their reputations for ineffectual gestures.

The American people also would have a chance to rise to the occasion, showing that they are not the frightened sheep as some critics say, but truly care about democracy as a treasured principle of governance, not just a pleasing word of self-congratulations.

An Alito filibuster could be a galvanizing moment for today's generation like the Army-McCarthy hearings were in the 1950s when red-baiting Sen. Joseph McCarthy finally went too far and was recognized as a dangerous demagogue.

Dangers

On the other hand, there are reasons to suspect that the Senate will recoil from a battle of such constitutional magnitude.

Democratic consultants already are saying that the Senate Democrats should finesse the Alito confirmation - letting it proceed without a big fight - and then focus instead on corruption as an issue with more "traction."

This advice parallels the party's strategy in 2002 when Democratic consultants urged congressional leaders to give Bush what he wanted in terms of authority to invade Iraq so the debate could be refocused on the Democrats' domestic agenda. That approach turned out to be disastrous, both on Election Day and in the Iraq invasion that followed.

Nevertheless, a similar approach was pressed on Democratic presidential nominee Kerry in 2004. The goal was to neutralize the national security issue by citing Kerry's Vietnam War record and then shifting the campaign to domestic issues.

So, instead of hammering Bush on his recklessness in the Iraq War, Kerry softened his tone in the days before the election, turned to domestic issues, and failed to nail down a clear victory, allowing Bush to slip back in by claiming the pivotal state of Ohio.

The strategists are back to the same thinking now, urging Democratic leaders to withdraw from a battle over Alito and to keep their heads down over what to do in Iraq, so they can supposedly gain some ground on the corruption issue.

There is, however, no guarantee that corruption will trump national security in November 2006 anymore than domestic issues did in 2002 and 2004.

Even if the Democrats do filibuster, they could still botch it by muddying the waters with appeals about abortion rights. A longstanding Democratic Party tendency is to pander to liberal interest groups even when doing so will hurt the overall cause.

As strongly as many people feel about Roe v. Wade, it would detract from what is of even greater importance in the Alito confirmation, that he would help consolidate the precedent of an American strongman Executive with virtually no limits on his powers.

A disciplined filibuster focused on protecting the Constitution and the Bill of Rights would have a chance of attracting traditional conservatives as well as moderates and liberals in a cause larger than any political grouping.

Indeed, the filibuster could be the start of a grand coalition built around what many Americans hold as dear as life itself, the principles of a democratic Republic where no man is above the law, where no man is king.

sweethotkayla 01-25-2006 09:03 PM

42 to go:)

pornprotege 01-25-2006 09:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sweethotkayla
42 to go:)

good evening

sweethotkayla 01-25-2006 09:15 PM

and hello to u pornprotege

pornprotege 01-25-2006 09:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sweethotkayla
and hello to u pornprotege

I love your arm length sentence ahaha, im trying to think of a catch phrase for a new site with it now :pimp

tungsten 01-25-2006 10:30 PM

im out for a bit

IceMaster 01-25-2006 10:41 PM

Bumping ...

rick-e 01-25-2006 10:45 PM

whats the next winning post?

IceMaster 01-25-2006 10:52 PM

4169. My last post, good luck everyone.

freesexxwebsite 01-25-2006 10:58 PM

good morning all:321GFY

reed_4 01-25-2006 11:08 PM

hello GFY!

freesexxwebsite 01-25-2006 11:20 PM

hello reed4

boner 2.0 01-25-2006 11:59 PM

bump for the night crew, next prize is near... 4169

Doctor Dre 01-26-2006 12:10 AM

Damn thoses threads are taking for ever

KRL 01-26-2006 12:17 AM

Amazing . . . 85 pages of posts!

Doctor Dre 01-26-2006 12:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KRL
Amazing . . . 85 pages of posts!

There have been some waaaaaaaaaaay bigger whore threads before. I think one was 20k+ posts.

Most of them are meaningless

adamneve 01-26-2006 12:25 AM

morning everyone, KRL where have you been?
haven't seen you around for a long time

everything ok?

rick-e 01-26-2006 12:29 AM

Hey everyone good morning :321GFY

Nightwind 01-26-2006 12:42 AM

Bumping this.

Fizzgig 01-26-2006 12:48 AM

This thread's moving fast!

Doctor Dre 01-26-2006 12:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by adamneve
morning everyone, KRL where have you been?
haven't seen you around for a long time

everything ok?

He's prolly tired that all the player haters are jumping on him...

Fizzgig 01-26-2006 01:10 AM

Bump so you guys can post again :) Then I'll snipe the win. ok?

Doctor Dre 01-26-2006 01:11 AM

You can try, but we all know I'm the master sniper.

rick-e 01-26-2006 01:15 AM

lets take this to the next page

Bigfuck 01-26-2006 01:29 AM

Good morning I'm so tired today:)

Doctor Dre 01-26-2006 01:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rick-e
lets take this to the next page

Yep ... the one after this ones gets next page spot

tradermcduck 01-26-2006 01:55 AM

Another bump for PussyCash :)


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