Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Never forget...







Tuesday, July 24, 2007

You're suing for what?!?!?!?



The sister of a man that was suspected of soliciting a 13 year old boy on the internet for sex, is bringing a "frivolous" lawsuit...wait let me try not be so biased. The sister of a man...OH who am I kidding. This lady is trying to sue NBC for $105 million because her brother, a retired district attorney, shot and killed himself as police were about to serve a warrant on him for soliciting sex from who he thought was a 13 year old during a Perverted Justice/Dateline sting.

The sister claims a police officer told a Dateline producer "That'll make good TV." You know what, he's right. But, what does that have to do with the man killing himself. That did not make the man shoot himself. I can draw a common sense conclusion as to why the man killed himself, he was guilty. Not tricked, not coerced. He was going to be given a fair trail or in the case of these men that were involved in this sting operation, charges dropped. He chose the death penalty.

Monday, July 09, 2007

The Real 2006 'Iraq Body Count'



The Real 2006
'Iraq Body Count'


16,791
Iraqi civilians killed last year by ISLAMIC Terrorists


225
*

Iraqi civilians killed collaterally in incidents involving Americans
(and Islamic Terrorists)


Iraqis aren't
dying from war.
They are being murdered by
Islamic terrorists.




*Source: IraqBodyCount.net (includes civilians caught in crossfire who may have been killed by the terrorists, and terrorists who may have been counted as civilians)

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Who is the real racist?


We all know by now the stupid thing that Don Imus said on his show that led to him getting fired (by the way, if you are a listener of his show, you would know that was not the first stupid thing the man has ever said). Is the man a racist? I'm not sure. What I do know is that he apologized for what he said, no matter how ignorant of a comment it was. Those girls’ lives were not ruined; they can still play basketball and live their lives.

The real racists in this is not Don Imus, it's the Rev Al Sharpton. Al Sharpton demands an apology from Don Imus, but where is the apology for the Duke players that were charged for rape by a black female and Sharpton took her side from the beginning and even after the charges have been dropped, Sharpton still has yet to set the record straight.

Has anyone forgot the Tawana Brawley case? The black girl who accused a district attorney of rape. A grand jury later determined her story was a hoax, which didn't sway Sharpton from saying the man was still guilty of the crime by stating, “We stated openly that Steven Pagones did it. If we’re lying, sue us, so we can go into court with you and prove you did it. Sue us—sue us right now.” Pagones did sue, and won. To this day Sharpton refused to apologize for his public comments that Pagones was a rapists by stating, “I did what I believed… They are asking me to grovel. They want black children to say they forced a black man coming out of the hard-core ghetto to his knees….Once you begin bending, it’s ‘did you bend today?’ or ‘I missed the apology, say it again.’ Once you start compromising, you lose respect for yourself.”

How about the "Central Park Jogger"? The white woman that was raped in central park and claimed the rapists was black. Even after confessions from the black defendant, Sharpton claimed the man was innocent and the white jogger was a "Whore!". He also stated that the jogger’s boyfriend was the guilty one. He protested in front of the courthouse with others chanting, "The boyfriend did it!" A man (not the joggers boyfriend) was found guilty of the crime. Any apology from Sharpton?

So let's review shall we. Sharpton seems to take the side of blacks no matter the evidence and then refuses to apologize once the truth is revealed.
I think we all can see who the real racist amongst is.

You want to blame who?!?!?


In Garland Texas a young boy drowned while rescuers where attempting to pull him from flood waters. During the attempt to save him, he lost his balance and grip of the bridge support he was holding onto and was swept down the flood waters. Several police officers jumped into the water to try to save the boy but could not reach him without becoming a victim themselves.

Now the parents of the boy are getting on TV stating the rescuers did not do enough and they are to blame for their son's death. Even going as far as threatening legal recourse. It goes without saying that I feel for these parents and their loss. But the blameless society we live in today has got to stop.

If this family attempts to sue the city or rescuers, I hope the city turns around and sues this family for neglect. Why were they allowing their son to play in or next to a swollen creek where it had been raining for a week straight on and off and multiple people had already lost their lives to flood waters. This wasn't a flash flood that came from nowhere. This had been going on for a week. Rain everyday somewhere in or near Garland Texas. How about you blame yourself for not teaching your son the dangers of flood waters. How about you blame your 13 year old son for playing in such a dangerous situation.

These policeman and rescuers put their lives on the line to try and save a child that chose to play near a dangerous situation. The decisions they make are split second and the last thing they need to do is to worry if the decision they make will result in them getting sued by the same people they are trying to save from themselves.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Common Sense by Thomas Paine


"These are the times that try men's souls," begins Thomas Paine's Common Sense, the impassioned pamphlet that helped ignite the American Revolution. Published in Philadelphia in January of 1776, Common Sense sold 150,000 copies almost immediately. A powerful piece of propaganda, it attacked the idea of a hereditary monarchy, dismissed the chance for reconciliation with England, and outlined the economic benefits of independence while espousing equality of rights among citizens. Paine fanned a flame that was already burning, but many historians argue that his work unified dissenting voices and persuaded patriots that the American Revolution was not only necessary, but an epochal step in world history.

Click here to read the entire pamphlet