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klg
The Kludge Report Mark Unseen   Feb 8 12:03 UTC 2006

Rites or Rally?  Dems Can't Decide

Was it a funeral for Coretta Scott King or a bash Bush rally?  
Apparently, some Democrats have a hard time telling the difference.  
Wacko ex-prez Jimmy Carter and former NAACP honcho Jos. Lowry took 
their turns on the podium to lash into the current Republican 
administration.

It was reminiscent of the Paul Wellstone memorial in 2002.  Bubbling 
Democratic anger forced Republican invitees to leave the event.  After 
the fact publicity derailed the bid of 50 state loser Walter Mondale to 
win the deceased's Senate seat.

Can anyone say say "deja vu?"  Do the Dems really enjoy shooting 
themselves in the foot?
119 responses total.
johnnie
response 1 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 14:21 UTC 2006

Yeah, after all these years, those crazy negroes and the their
negro-loving friends still haven't learned their place.  Good thing we
have the GOP around to teach them proper manners.
johnnie
response 2 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 14:44 UTC 2006

Or, to be less snarky:  Given the history of her and her family, I'd be
willing to bet that Mrs. King, her late husband, and the King family as
a whole would be hap-hap-happy to have friends use the pulpit to decry
the use of illegal wiretaps, the war, the erosion of civil rights, the
lack of concern for the poor and underprivleged, and whatever else,
particularly with a captive audience consisting of many of those
responsible for said social ills.
other
response 3 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 15:06 UTC 2006

KLG and his fellows in the Wrong Wing hining about the politicization of
the King funeral is like Democrats whining about the Bush
Administration's persistent tendency to powergrab and obfuscate.  It's
the nature of the thing, and to expect different would be foolish.
bru
response 4 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 16:39 UTC 2006

so we should expect people to criticize the government at every funeral from
now on?  How does that work?  I thought funerals were for the comfort of the
bereaved and to say goodbye to the dearly departed.

It was a disgrace that an ex-president, a serving senator, and a minister
would use it to attack any guest.  But the liberals keep grasping at straws.
cross
response 5 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:10 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

klg
response 6 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:14 UTC 2006

Where did I say that I had any objection???

As long as you liberals keep demonstrating to thinking Americans why 
Democrats don't deserve to win elections, more power to 'em!
tod
response 7 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:33 UTC 2006

Thinking Americans know GW and his puppet master Tim LeHaye are full of crap
rednecks.  Anyone that thinks preaching at a King funeral is disgraceful is
ignorant.  Keep pining to be part of the GW elite by labeling all dissent as
liberal leftist propaganda because it will hurt less when you wonder why an
energy crisis brought upon us is affecting your blindly obedient ass.
edina
response 8 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:40 UTC 2006

Personally, if someone used my funeral to talk about things in life that I
very much believed in, I would think that was a fitting tribute to my life.
happyboy
response 9 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:53 UTC 2006

i just enjoyed watching that chickenhawk squirm like a little
boy that has to go potty...or has been caught in a big lie.

i especially enjoyed that.


tod
response 10 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 17:55 UTC 2006

I just kind of assume that people at my funeral will be a bunch of attention
sucking exploiting liars since that how it usually goes.  My old man's family
had great funerals cuz it was a bunch of cynical boozers telling jokes. 
That's how it should be.
edina
response 11 of 119: Mark Unseen   Feb 8 18:10 UTC 2006

I was just at a funeral the other night - it convinced me that I want my own
held in a bowling alley.  Go bowl a game and think of me.
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