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#1
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Psalm 109:8
"May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! |
#2
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 07/16/10 06:54 pm, Vincent Parry wrote:
Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! IOW: Replace the person who's gradually figuring out how the system works by a newbie who has to start from the beginning. We should try it with our major corporations. Perce |
#3
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
"Vincent Parry" wrote in message ... Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! Why parrot your favorite hate radio hosts? |
#4
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 7/16/2010 4:20 PM Percival P. Cassidy spake thus:
On 07/16/10 06:54 pm, Vincent Parry wrote: Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! IOW: Replace the person who's gradually figuring out how the system works by a newbie who has to start from the beginning. We should try it with our major corporations. Eggs-zactly! WTF is it with all this hoo-ha about term limits and incumbents? In addition to the observation you made, it turns out that we already have term limits, and a way to deal with incumbents who ought to be removed from office: they're called ... ELECTIONS! (The *real* problem is getting $$$$ out of elections[1], which of course we've done practically nothing about. Can you say "publicly financed elections"?) [1] Of course, the recent Supreme Court decision (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission) sends us in the completely wrong direction here. -- The fashion in killing has an insouciant, flirty style this spring, with the flaunting of well-defined muscle, wrapped in flags. - Comment from an article on Antiwar.com (http://antiwar.com) |
#5
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 07/16/10 10:13 pm, David Nebenzahl wrote:
Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! IOW: Replace the person who's gradually figuring out how the system works by a newbie who has to start from the beginning. We should try it with our major corporations. Eggs-zactly! WTF is it with all this hoo-ha about term limits and incumbents? In addition to the observation you made, it turns out that we already have term limits, and a way to deal with incumbents who ought to be removed from office: they're called ... ELECTIONS! (The *real* problem is getting $$$$ out of elections[1], which of course we've done practically nothing about. Can you say "publicly financed elections"?) [1] Of course, the recent Supreme Court decision (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission) sends us in the completely wrong direction here. Here is the proposal for political reform I posted in another ng just a few weeks ago: Hold a new election for all positions -- (a) A publicly funded election with a permanent prohibition of all other political contributions, whether corporate or private. (b) A permanent prohibition of political advertising by radio, TV and print media. (c) The public funding shall include the financing of printing and distribution of policy statements (an agreed set maximum number of words or pages) by each candidate to every household in his/her electoral district (for elections to the House), state (for elections to the Senate) -- or nationwide (for the President/VP). These could be separate publications for each candidate, or they could to advantage be combined in a single booklet to each household. Such publications to be in at least both English and Spanish, and where more than x% (to be decided) of the population of any area has as its mother tongue a language other than those two, such publication should be in that language/those languages as well. (d) To become a candidate and thus qualify for such public funding and get one's name on the ballot would require nomination by some specified modest number of citizens and payment of a modest fee; both number and fee might well vary according to the position being sought. (e) Direct election of President/VP -- no Electoral College. That should be a good start. Unfortunately, most of it would be ruled unconstitutional. But now we see all the problems with the "it-seemed-like-a-good-idea-at-the-time" Constitution and its amendments -- or at least with the specific wording that was employed. Perce |
#6
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 23:31:11 -0400, "Percival P. Cassidy"
wrote: Snip Such publications to be in at least both English and Spanish, and where more than x% (to be decided) of the population of any area has as its mother tongue a language other than those two, such publication should be in that language/those languages as well. Snip Correct me if I am wrong, but I was certain that English was the language of the U.S.A. Did this change? |
#7
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 17, 12:03*am, Gordon Shumway wrote:
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 23:31:11 -0400, "Percival P. Cassidy" wrote: Snip Such publications to be in at least both English and Spanish, and where more than x% (to be decided) of the population of any area has as its mother tongue a language other than those two, such publication should be in that language/those languages as well. Snip Correct me if I am wrong, but I was certain that English was the language of the U.S.A. *Did this change? You are wrong. The USA has no such designation. You are welcome. .. |
#8
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 21:13:31 -0700 (PDT), hibb
wrote: On Jul 17, 12:03*am, Gordon Shumway wrote: On Fri, 16 Jul 2010 23:31:11 -0400, "Percival P. Cassidy" wrote: Snip Such publications to be in at least both English and Spanish, and where more than x% (to be decided) of the population of any area has as its mother tongue a language other than those two, such publication should be in that language/those languages as well. Snip Correct me if I am wrong, but I was certain that English was the language of the U.S.A. *Did this change? You are wrong. The USA has no such designation. You are welcome. . Thanks! If it wasn't for the internet I would have never known. |
#9
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
I think the OP meant to replace the ones who had been corrupted by
power. Incidentally, as to replacing experienced guys. The LDS church does it all the time. Of course, we have the power of God with us. That (God; Heavenly Father) doesn't need replacing. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Percival P. Cassidy" wrote in message ... IOW: Replace the person who's gradually figuring out how the system works by a newbie who has to start from the beginning. We should try it with our major corporations. Perce |
#10
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Diebold electronic voting machines. You vote, we decide. Fair and
balanced. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... WTF is it with all this hoo-ha about term limits and incumbents? In addition to the observation you made, it turns out that we already have term limits, and a way to deal with incumbents who ought to be removed from office: they're called ... ELECTIONS! (The *real* problem is getting $$$$ out of elections[1], which of course we've done practically nothing about. Can you say "publicly financed elections"?) [1] Of course, the recent Supreme Court decision (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission) sends us in the completely wrong direction here. -- The fashion in killing has an insouciant, flirty style this spring, with the flaunting of well-defined muscle, wrapped in flags. - Comment from an article on Antiwar.com (http://antiwar.com) |
#11
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 17, 6:41*am, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: That (God; Heavenly Father) doesn't need replacing. That doesn't keep individuals from replacing Him all the time. |
#12
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
In article ,
"Percival P. Cassidy" wrote: (a) A publicly funded election with a permanent prohibition of all other political contributions, whether corporate or private. You won't get that though. Many different courts of many different ideological outlooks have said that this won't fly. That pesky first amendment thingy. (d) To become a candidate and thus qualify for such public funding and get one's name on the ballot would require nomination by some specified modest number of citizens and payment of a modest fee; both number and fee might well vary according to the position being sought. You most likely won't get this either. Way too close to a poll tax which has been tossed long ago. (e) Direct election of President/VP -- no Electoral College. Until 2000 I probably would have agreed. We had enough trouble with FL, just think what would have happened if we had to recount EVERY state and EVERY precinct in every state. We'd still be at it. -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
#13
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
English and American have some similarity. But, they are clearly not
the same language. Blimey, my tyke just turned up the telly. I've got to go to the ironmonger and buy a bulb for my torch. And put some petrol in the lorry, on the way back to my flat. I don't think the USA has an official language. I'd like to see American as the official language. Stop doing government things in multiple languages. I'd also like to see American only at the stores. Like Lowe's, I try not to shop there. Everything is bilingual with American and Spanish. Disgusting. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. Correct me if I am wrong, but I was certain that English was the language of the U.S.A. Did this change? |
#14
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
David Nebenzahl wrote:
Eggs-zactly! WTF is it with all this hoo-ha about term limits and incumbents? In addition to the observation you made, it turns out that we already have term limits, and a way to deal with incumbents who ought to be removed from office: they're called ... ELECTIONS! Nope. I'm in Texas. No matter how hard I work or how often I vote, I can't do anything about Harry Reid or Chuck Schumer. Their votes affect ME, but my vote has no effect on them. (The *real* problem is getting $$$$ out of elections[1], which of course we've done practically nothing about. Can you say "publicly financed elections"?) Nonsense. There's too LITTLE money spent on elections. Some wag figured out we spend more on potato chips than we do on presidential elections. George Will proposed three simple rules for campaign finance: 1. No foreign contributions, 2. No cash, and 3. Instant, public, reporting. If a voter doesn't want to vote for a candidate that takes 95% of his campaign funding from the rutabaga industry, or if the voter supports the hand-picked and financed pawn of the Aircraft Propeller Manufacturer's Association, he can make his decision based on the support the candidate receives. If, for example, a voter sees that the Sierra Club (or the NRA or the ACLU, etc.) promotes a candidate, the voter can easily make the determination that a group knows more about, and favors, the candidate. To the degree, then, that the voter agrees with the aim of the supporting group, the voter can make a better decision about the candidate. [1] Of course, the recent Supreme Court decision (Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission) sends us in the completely wrong direction here. The Supreme Court held that people who have banded together and pooled their money to support a candidate are exercising a constitutionally-protected form of political support and speech. Absent that ruling groups as diverse as the ACLU and the NRA could not support the candidacy of people friendly to their cause. A politician needs two things to get elected: support of the voters and money. Money (i.e., "special interests") is the counterpoint to mob rule. California, to a significant degree, is a "mob rule" state where all manner of wacky propositions find their way onto the ballot - and get adopted. For example, a proposal to limit the number of children in a classroom to, say, 25, sound good to the general public but may have profound, and expensive, consequences. |
#15
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Stormin Mormon wrote:
I think the OP meant to replace the ones who had been corrupted by power. Incidentally, as to replacing experienced guys. The LDS church does it all the time. Of course, we have the power of God with us. That (God; Heavenly Father) doesn't need replacing. Uh, so do the Catholics. In fact, all hierarchical religions do. Jews, Muslims, Southern Baptists, most evangelical churches, and others replace their local authorities regularly, but they don't have a central authority TO replace. |
#16
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 7/17/2010 8:57 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote:
English and American have some similarity. But, they are clearly not the same language. Blimey, my tyke just turned up the telly. I've got to go to the ironmonger and buy a bulb for my torch. And put some petrol in the lorry, on the way back to my flat. I don't think the USA has an official language. I'd like to see American as the official language. Stop doing government things in multiple languages. I'd also like to see American only at the stores. Like Lowe's, I try not to shop there. Everything is bilingual with American and Spanish. Disgusting. Perhaps we should all speak Canadian, eh? Show those Brit hosers who's boss, eh. TDD |
#17
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
In article ,
"HeyBub" wrote: The Supreme Court held that people who have banded together and pooled their money to support a candidate are exercising a constitutionally-protected form of political support and speech. Absent that ruling groups as diverse as the ACLU and the NRA could not support the candidacy of people friendly to their cause. And the law in question only was involving 90 days before a regular election and some time before a primary. It also SPECIFICALLY reiterated that it was okay to put caps on what everybody could give to the CANDIDATES. -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
#18
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 7/17/2010 5:09 AM Kurt Ullman spake thus:
In article , "Percival P. Cassidy" wrote: (d) To become a candidate and thus qualify for such public funding and get one's name on the ballot would require nomination by some specified modest number of citizens and payment of a modest fee; both number and fee might well vary according to the position being sought. You most likely won't get this either. Way too close to a poll tax which has been tossed long ago. How do you figure that's like a poll tax? A poll tax is a levy on *voters*; he's talking about a small fee for *candidates*. As things stand now, candidates for many offices have to pay a nominal filing fee, as an indicator of good faith, I suppose; I assume that's what he means. As long as it isn't an insurmountable barrier to some class of candidates compared to others, it ought to pass Constitutional scrutiny. (e) Direct election of President/VP -- no Electoral College. Until 2000 I probably would have agreed. We had enough trouble with FL, just think what would have happened if we had to recount EVERY state and EVERY precinct in every state. We'd still be at it. Well, we do have these newfangled things called "computers", you know, which can help count votes even when paper ballots are used. Should be do-able. -- The fashion in killing has an insouciant, flirty style this spring, with the flaunting of well-defined muscle, wrapped in flags. - Comment from an article on Antiwar.com (http://antiwar.com) |
#19
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
In article ,
David Nebenzahl wrote: On 7/17/2010 5:09 AM Kurt Ullman spake thus: You most likely won't get this either. Way too close to a poll tax which has been tossed long ago. How do you figure that's like a poll tax? A poll tax is a levy on *voters*; he's talking about a small fee for *candidates*. As things stand now, candidates for many offices have to pay a nominal filing fee, as an indicator of good faith, I suppose; I assume that's what he means. As long as it isn't an insurmountable barrier to some class of candidates compared to others, it ought to pass Constitutional scrutiny. Assuming that, but it sounded like something in addition to the filing fee to my reading. The main reason I thought it might be constitutionally suspect is that the whole point was to make sure some people were unable to run. That is was a way to screen out, then it would be suspect. For the reasons you suggested. (e) Direct election of President/VP -- no Electoral College. Until 2000 I probably would have agreed. We had enough trouble with FL, just think what would have happened if we had to recount EVERY state and EVERY precinct in every state. We'd still be at it. Well, we do have these newfangled things called "computers", you know, which can help count votes even when paper ballots are used. Should be do-able. Won't be. If you want a really interesting disertation on this find the Ca Supreme Court opinion on whether the Recall Election that eventually lead to Ahnold's coronation could be held. (Sorry don't have the citation right off). They went into rather long and involved discussion of error rates, and even computers had error rates in the +- 3% range. 2000 was well within that error rate. Most of the computer readers were higher. I don't think it is possible to get any system to the margin of error of less than 1/2 of 1%, the difference in 2000. -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
#20
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 07/17/10 04:36 pm, Kurt Ullman wrote:
You most likely won't get this either. Way too close to a poll tax which has been tossed long ago. How do you figure that's like a poll tax? A poll tax is a levy on *voters*; he's talking about a small fee for *candidates*. As things stand now, candidates for many offices have to pay a nominal filing fee, as an indicator of good faith, I suppose; I assume that's what he means. As long as it isn't an insurmountable barrier to some class of candidates compared to others, it ought to pass Constitutional scrutiny. Assuming that, but it sounded like something in addition to the filing fee to my reading. The main reason I thought it might be constitutionally suspect is that the whole point was to make sure some people were unable to run. That is was a way to screen out, then it would be suspect. For the reasons you suggested. What I had in mind was a somewhat nominal filing fee (even a refundable deposit in the event of gaining more than x% of the vote) as evidence of good faith -- to replace the vast sums of money people spend now just to get their name on the ballot paper. I had friends in Australia who ran as candidates for a new political party (which did not survive). Six signatures and a few hundred $$ to get their names on the ballot for a State election; ten or twenty signatures and $1000 to get their names on the Commonwealth (national) ballot paper. Perce |
#21
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Vincent Parry wrote:
Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! There is a proverb that states, "the rod is for the back of those who are void of understanding". -- LSMFT I haven't spoken to my wife in 18 months. I don't like to interrupt her. |
#22
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 17, 4:51*pm, LSMFT wrote:
Vincent Parry wrote: Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! There is a proverb that states, "the rod is for the back of those who are void of understanding". -- LSMFT I haven't spoken to my wife in 18 months. I don't like to interrupt her. I'm betting...there's a proverb that states...etc,etc, duh! |
#23
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 16, 6:54*pm, Vincent Parry wrote:
Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership.." Look it up if you don't believe me!! ARE YOU RELATED TO PANCHO VILLA ? MUST BE [;-)] SEEMS LIKE THE LORD FAVORED DEMOCRACY WITH THIS PSALM EVEN BACK THEN I AM PROTEUS |
#24
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Kurt Ullman wrote:
In article , "HeyBub" wrote: The Supreme Court held that people who have banded together and pooled their money to support a candidate are exercising a constitutionally-protected form of political support and speech. Absent that ruling groups as diverse as the ACLU and the NRA could not support the candidacy of people friendly to their cause. And the law in question only was involving 90 days before a regular election and some time before a primary. It also SPECIFICALLY reiterated that it was okay to put caps on what everybody could give to the CANDIDATES. "Only 90 days..." The difference between 90 days and one year is where the line is drawn. The court held there can not be a line at all, no matter where it might be. We have "Freedom of Speech," but the court has allowed differing restrictions based on the content. One of the most restricted is "commercial" speech, for example, cigarette advertising. The restrictions which the court holds most suspect and on which they frown severly is "political" speech. True, they've allowed SOME restrictions, such as permits and boundaries around sound trucks and parades, but, in general, the court has traditionally cleaved to the notion that polictical speech should be almost without limits. For example, some years ago a New England local candidate proposed a TV commercial featuring a nude model. The TV station declined to run the ad and the politician sued. The court held that, as a political speech, the ad trumped decency laws. As for money, the struck-down law permitted the NY Times to print anything for or against a candidate, but prohibited me from running my own small printing press with the same story. The court essentially held that "money" = "press" and trash-canned limits on contributions. |
#25
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 17, 6:17*pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
Kurt Ullman wrote: In article , "HeyBub" wrote: The Supreme Court held that people who have banded together and pooled their money to support a candidate are exercising a constitutionally-protected form of political support and speech. Absent that ruling groups as diverse as the ACLU and the NRA could not support the candidacy of people friendly to their cause. *And the law in question only was involving 90 days before a regular election and some time before a primary. It also SPECIFICALLY reiterated that it was okay to put caps on what everybody could give to the CANDIDATES. "Only 90 days..." The difference between 90 days and one year is where the line is drawn. The court held there can not be a line at all, no matter where it might be. We have "Freedom of Speech," but the court has allowed differing restrictions based on the content. One of the most restricted is "commercial" speech, for example, cigarette advertising. The restrictions which the court holds most suspect and on which they frown severly is "political" speech. True, they've allowed SOME restrictions, such as permits and boundaries around sound trucks and parades, but, in general, the court has traditionally cleaved to the notion that polictical speech should be almost without limits. For example, some years ago a New England local candidate proposed a TV commercial featuring a nude model. The TV station declined to run the ad and the politician sued. The court held that, as a political speech, the ad trumped decency laws. As for money, the struck-down law permitted the NY Times to print anything for or against a candidate, but prohibited me from running my own small printing press with the same story. The court essentially held that "money" = "press" and trash-canned limits on contributions. BOO WHOO [;-(] THIS IS A HOME REPAIR GROUP TAKE YOUR A POLITICAL RANTS ELSEWHERE I AM PROTEUS |
#26
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
In article ,
"Percival P. Cassidy" wrote: What I had in mind was a somewhat nominal filing fee (even a refundable deposit in the event of gaining more than x% of the vote) as evidence of good faith -- to replace the vast sums of money people spend now just to get their name on the ballot paper. Thanks, I stand better informed (grin) -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
#27
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
Proteus IIV wrote:
BOO WHOO [;-(] THIS IS A HOME REPAIR GROUP TAKE YOUR A POLITICAL RANTS ELSEWHERE I AM PROTEUS "Proteus" is the illegitimate (*******) son of Posiedon and assign the task of herding sea turtles for eternity. |
#28
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 17, 5:15*pm, Proteus IIV wrote:
On Jul 16, 6:54*pm, Vincent Parry wrote: Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! ARE YOU RELATED TO PANCHO VILLA ? MUST BE [;-)] SEEMS LIKE THE LORD FAVORED DEMOCRACY WITH THIS PSALM EVEN BACK THEN I AM PROTEUS It's not my quote...what the...? |
#29
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 18, 8:54*am, "HeyBub" wrote:
Proteus IIV wrote: BOO WHOO [;-(] THIS IS A HOME REPAIR GROUP TAKE YOUR A POLITICAL RANTS ELSEWHERE I AM PROTEUS "Proteus" is the illegitimate (*******) son of Posiedon and assign the task of herding sea turtles for eternity. YES MY LITTLE SEA TURTLE COME COME ALONG I AM PROTEUS |
#30
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On Jul 18, 9:12*am, Bob Villa wrote:
On Jul 17, 5:15*pm, Proteus IIV wrote: On Jul 16, 6:54*pm, Vincent Parry wrote: Psalm 109:8 "May his days be few and let someone else take his position of leadership." Look it up if you don't believe me!! ARE YOU RELATED TO PANCHO VILLA ? MUST BE [;-)] SEEMS LIKE THE LORD FAVORED DEMOCRACY WITH THIS PSALM EVEN BACK THEN I AM PROTEUS It's not my quote...what the...?==SAY IT YOU SEE A FOREST NEVER STOPPING TO REALLY LOOK AT THE TREES I AM PROTEUS |
#31
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
The Daring Dufas wrote the following:
On 7/17/2010 8:57 AM, Stormin Mormon wrote: English and American have some similarity. But, they are clearly not the same language. Blimey, my tyke just turned up the telly. I've got to go to the ironmonger and buy a bulb for my torch. And put some petrol in the lorry, on the way back to my flat. I don't think the USA has an official language. I'd like to see American as the official language. Stop doing government things in multiple languages. I'd also like to see American only at the stores. Like Lowe's, I try not to shop there. Everything is bilingual with American and Spanish. Disgusting. Perhaps we should all speak Canadian, eh? Show those Brit hosers who's boss, eh. TDD Canadian is the same as American, except for the pronouncing of any word with "ou" in it. -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ |
#32
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
In article ,
willshak wrote: Perhaps we should all speak Canadian, eh? Show those Brit hosers who's boss, eh. TDD Canadian is the same as American, except for the pronouncing of any word with "ou" in it. Which American? Heck, here in Indiana alone you can see 3-4 different dialects of pronunciation and usage as you head from the Chicauga suburbs down through the Southern accents around Lville or Cinci. -- I want to find a voracious, small-minded predator and name it after the IRS. Robert Bakker, paleontologist |
#33
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A Prayer for Political Incumbents
On 7/21/2010 3:27 PM, Kurt Ullman wrote:
In , wrote: Perhaps we should all speak Canadian, eh? Show those Brit hosers who's boss, eh. TDD Canadian is the same as American, except for the pronouncing of any word with "ou" in it. Which American? Heck, here in Indiana alone you can see 3-4 different dialects of pronunciation and usage as you head from the Chicauga suburbs down through the Southern accents around Lville or Cinci. Here in Alabamastan there are four distinct dialects that I'm familiar with. The Northern Hillbillies, the central hicks, flat-landers and coast-liners around Mobile. There is actually a region that was settled by the exiled officers of Napoleon's army, they thought they could grow grapes there for wine making. TDD |
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