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****Open letter to all republicans and bush supporters on GFY****
I posted this in another thread, but I think it deserves it's own.
Dear bush supporter, 1. If you're not just a surfer, and you actually make a living in the adult industry, what do you think the bush administration thinks about your line of work? Do you think he's supportive of your business? Will the fat tax break you hope to get make much difference when you have to fend off an obscenity lawsuit? Freedom of speech is a limited right under the current administration. 2. Say someone accused you of stealing a car, but you didn't do it. Would you cooperate with the investigation? Or would you obstruct the investigation as much as possible to prevent them from looking in your garage? The bush administration sought to obstruct the 9/11 commission investigation and they are fighting to prevent an investigation into the election (among other things). What do you think this says about their involvement? If it was a fair election & no wrong doing occurred, shouldn't they willingly open the books, do recounts & prove their boy won? Do you really think they don?t want an investigation because they have nothing to hide? 3. I know the environment isn't a big deal on this board & most of you could care less what happens to our wilderness, air, water, trees, etc. However, these issues are important beyond all others if you look at the big picture. Even now, fresh, clean water costs more per gallon than gasoline. Wait until it starts to run out. Or when you have to wear a smog mask to go outside in LA (not too hard to imagine - traffic cops in Mexico City and Tokyo already do). Wait until the cost of non-renewable materials starts to skyrocket because there isn't any more. Think steel & plastic - both are finite non-renewable resources. The bush administration is the most anti-environmental administration is history. He seeks to reduce wilderness & national parks, create more roads for logging and mining, and reduce standards for clear air & water. Wouldn't you rather have water with less arsenic than more? 4. Maybe you like bush because he'll keep your taxes low. Or because he'll win the "War On Terror". Well I have news for you. How do you think $87 billion dollars are spent in Iraq? Taxes. And the ?War On Terror?? The war on terror is just like the war on drugs, or the war on crime, or the war on poverty. It's a war you can't win. There will always be terrorists because there will always be people who's only means to express their frustration to the world is to blow something up. Bush can no more win the war on terror than he can make me believe a word that comes out of his mouth. Before you dismiss this all as "silly liberal nonsense", think about some of the questions I have posed. Are the trade offs worth it? Do you even really know what you are losing? There?s more to bush than the ?good all American guy? image. Do you really know why you vote for him? |
I'll repeat what I said in that thread, people who still support the Bush administration at this point can't read that much at once.
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"Make yourself sheep and the wolves will eat you." Benjamin Franklin |
Neocon Rednecks dont think bro...
Silly. |
this thread is useless. When people form strong opinions they can't be changed no matter what. Bush could go on tv and start shooting kids with a gun and there would still be supporters who claim these kids were future terrorists and bush was doing god's work. Best thing to do is just forget about this election and bank on it.
Promote kman's pharmacy since bush will still block drugs from that 3rd world country known as canada. Promote health insurance plans since theres still 30 million people without. It sucks that bush won but at least you can make yourself some cash and buy something to make you happy and forget all about him until his next big fuckup. |
Yea,
I remember all those "Democrats for Porn" signs I saw on super Tuesday. If Muhammed is successful in his attempt to burn your children during thier recess at school, do you really care if someone is looking in your garage? |
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I know, but I figure it's worth a shot. If even one person rethinks their position, I will have done something. :2 cents: |
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How do you know they'll be satisfied after looking in your garage? Maybe they'll want to come in and poke around in your cabinets to see if you took the car apart and are hiding it in your kitchen. Maybe the want to root around in your underwear drawer to see if you hid the keys there. You're innocent so you've got nothing to hide, right? Quote:
While steel is in finite supply, about 5% of the earth's crust is made of iron. We are a LONG way away from from running out of steel. There is a steel shortage currently, but that has more to do with demand exceeding supply. You can't build new steel mills overnight. Oil certainly is scarce, but that seems all the more reason to ensure we fully develop domestic supplies and ensure our influence over foreign suppliers. Quote:
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:sleep :sleep :sleep :sleep :sleep :sleep
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Untrue. But thanks for proving your low level brain activity by believing what you hear in campaign commercials. |
I love how all the sheep say Bush is bad for the Business... Its amazing that the industry is still alive after the first four years eh ?:321GFY
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Kerry's values message didn't disappear entirely. It morphed into his religious message, which emerged around the same time. "Scripture teaches us it's not enough, my brother, to say that you have faith when there are no deeds. Faith without works is dead," he told the A.M.E. Church convention in July after he picked John Edwards as his running mate. Kerry's attack on Bush was that his professions of faith weren't matched by any "works" to help the poor and sick, or heal racial division. "I am running for president because it's time to turn the words into deeds and faith into action," he said.
While Kerry dropped the word "values," he returned frequently to the Book of James?s theme of faith without works. He talked about it at the NAACP convention, at the Congressional Black Caucus convention and at Baptist churches on Sundays throughout the final weeks of the election. In other words, he confined his most religious message to African-American groups. At the same time, Kerry was reluctant to express anything about his own Roman Catholic faith other than his assertion that he used to be an altar boy. His faith seemed either impersonal or absent to most of his regular audiences. Yep, he sounds like a candidate whom will love your "all holes filled" sites? |
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