Next: the ol’ Mao try.
Next next: the ol’ villagers/torches/pitchforks try.
Picture Mark Levin playing rock & roll...
It’s about time there’s something for US that’s not country western.
LYRICS: MR. NOBEL
The Europeans love you...take your nobel prize
Copenhagen cut u down to size......
Your Stimulus projections were completely off the track
Your words sound good but they don’t mean jackBow to the Saudis, Dvd;s for the Queen…
another cover of Time Magazine
Never waste a crisis, you better grab another czar
Save the planet --- take my carIts a revolution...ooh Can u hear us now
Don’t want your redistribution, ooh can u hear us, can u hear us now.Clingin to our bibles, clingin to our guns..
Red, White & Blue Americans
You can call us nazis, and make some children sing
Hear us now, lettin’ freedom ringIts a revolution...ooh Can u hear us now
Don’t want your redistribution, ooh can u hear us, can u hear us now
You’re outta office in 3 years, yes you WILL go down
We’re the new revolution, Can you hear us....Can you hear us now?
TerryJ (rock on! )
hold me
An now a few words from the Most Powerful Woman in Da House:
Q: ...Will we see higher taxes in 2010?
NANCY PELOSI: Well, I-- well, there will be a time when we will hopefully lower taxes because of the comprehensive overview of our tax code. Over the-- even the corporate tax. And in-- budget that was passed re-- and in the recovery package, as well, we lowered taxes for the middle class. But as far as the other initiatives, the cap and-- the-- climate change and energy investments, as well as health care. They are designed to be job creators. Because they will lower the cost of energy. And lower the cost of health care to businesses.
erm, what?
OR *clicky*clicky*
yup.
10/22 at 06:39 PM •
(6) Extra Credit • Pass it on...

DocPeabody

A motorized La-Z-Boy chair driven by Dennis Anderson of Proctor was operating when he hit a parked vehicle in August of 2008. Anderson pleaded guilty to a DWI charge on Monday, Oct. 20, 2009

As the colorful leaves fall away, a number of bright new banners soon will go up along city streets, proclaiming “It’s Your Olympia.”
QuantcastHighlighted with orange, green, blue and purple, the vertical banners feature iconic images of the city – a totem pole, a wooden ship and a person playing volleyball in Heritage Park, in view of the Capitol dome. The signs say “welcome,” “enjoy,” “express,” “discover” and “gather.”
The effort is part of a marketing campaign from the Parking and Business Improvement Area, a downtown improvement group that subsists on mandatory yearly fees charged to businesses in the center city.
For now, 16 banners will go up, mostly along State Avenue, said Janis Dean, marketing committee chairwoman for the improvement district. She hopes to expand the program.
It’s not just banners. The “It’s Your Olympia” branding is proposed for advertisements, a Web page and perhaps T-shirts and buttons. Another key part of it is one-page business profiles that downtown businesses can put on their windows, telling the story of their store or office.
Eben Design of Seattle created the campaign.
“The idea was putting a face on downtown Olympia and being as inclusive as possible, and that kind of said it all,” Dean said.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld an order preventing Washington State from releasing the names of more than 120,000 people who signed petitions seeking a voter referendum on whether to give same-sex couples most of the same rights as married couples.
The 8-to-1 decision, with Justice John Paul Stevens dissenting, upheld a recent ruling in Federal District Court in Washington that was overturned last week by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
The order by the Supreme Court said the injunction against releasing the names would remain in place at least until parties involved filed new motions. That process could take months and essentially assures that the names will remain anonymous through the Nov. 3 referendum.The question over whether to release the names has become a prominent subplot to the debate over the Washington ballot issue, Referendum 71. The measure gives voters the chance to approve or reject a law passed by the Legislature last spring that expanded the rights of same-sex couples without approving same-sex marriage. Under Washington law, voters can decide whether to approve legislative decisions through referendums if enough petition signatures are gathered.
Opponents of expanded rights for same-sex couples, led by the group Protect Marriage Washington, gathered just enough signatures this summer to force a vote on the matter. Keeping the petition names anonymous, said James Bopp, a lawyer for the group, protects free speech.
“It has to do with the right of citizens to be able to engage in political speech without the government requiring the public identification of people who engage in political speech,” Mr. Bopp said.
He said his group feared harassment from groups that support expanded rights for same-sex couples. Some of those groups sought the names under state public records laws, in some cases with the goal of posting them on the Internet.
Thank God, somebody is finally doing something!!1!!oen!
Activists asked cell phone users to stop texting for one hour yesterday—not to save energy or focus on the road, but to call attention to one of the deadliest and most under reported conflicts in the world.
It’s not as completely arbitrary as it looks; the Congo is a source of some mineral used in cell phone electronics. So there’s some tenuous connection. But their grand gesture to protesting untold numbers of deaths in an ongoing racial and cultural bloodbath is to stop tweeting their every waking thought for an hour?
Leave it to the current generation of would-be activists to make me actually respect hippies. They were a bunch of socialist assbags, but when it came to protests, even filthy stoned slackers could motivate themselves to something more substantial than “hey, I won’t fart in public for, like, twenty minutes, man.”
Every year, more than 44,000 Americans die simply because they have no health insurance.
I have created this project in their memory. I hope that honoring them will help us end this senseless loss of American lives. If you have lost a loved one, please share the story of that loved one with us. Help us ensure that their legacy is a more just America, where every life that can be saved will be saved
...and while you’re at it, make a campaign donation to me…
Grayson, who paid for the new site with his own money, became an overnight sensation with his “die quickly” floor remarks and has attempted to seize on the controversy to raise campaign funds.
The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) slammed the site’s content and said it violated a number of House ethics rules and campaign laws, including prohibitions against floor speeches intended to direct people to campaign websites. Lawmakers are also not permitted to use personal funds to subsidize official House business, an NRCC spokesman said.
The NRCC also noted that the new site links to both Grayson’s campaign website and his official House website. Commingling publicly funded congressional communications and campaign communications is prohibited.

6 bunches of plastic roses from the dollar store - $6
1 “fir” wreath from Michael’s craft store- $3
1/2 can leftover black spray paint -
being more goth than Hello Kitty- priceless!
I rock.
with bonus contest!
David Letterman has been recorded on tape having sex with a female staff member — and he is worried that the footage will eventually be leaked.
...Dave apparently didn’t know the location of the security cameras at his Late Show studio.
Top Ten Reasons Anyone Would Want to Watch a Dave Letterman “Sex” Tape
1.
2.
3.
4…
10/22 at 06:04 AM •
(20) Extra Credit • Pass it on...
another distraction
srsly?!?
On Monday, MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow were among several people who attended an off-the-record briefing with Pres. Obama at the White House. Sources tell us other attendees at the two-and-a-half hour chat included Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post, Maureen Dowd of the New York Times, Gwen Ifill of PBS and Gloria Borger of CNN. Perhaps not surprisingly, no one from Fox News was in the room.
Is that when they collected email addys?
10/22 at 04:13 AM •
(11) Extra Credit • Pass it on...
Naveed Haq wasn’t insane - just angry - when he stormed a Seattle Jewish center in 2006, killing one woman and wounding five others as he railed against Israel and demanded to go on CNN, a prosecutor said Wednesday.
”He was tired that no one was listening to the Muslim point of view. He wanted that point of view heard ,” King County deputy prosecutor Don Raz told jurors as Haq’s second trial opened Wednesday. “Naveed Haq’s press release found one woman dead, three women struggling for their lives, two women critically injured and a community struck to its core."…
Although no one waits in long lines for a new edition of Windows anymore, the debut of Microsoft’s latest software that runs PCs is part of why buying a computer is starting to feel fun for the first time in years…
BWAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



















