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Jon Stewart once stated “Democrats- you know, for their thing, it’s always they love this country- they just somehow wish it were a different country. You know, Democrats are always like- you know, America’s the greatest country in the world. Have you seen Finland’s health care system? You get back rubs at work. You’re surrounded [...]
Posted by Jim Ciscell on Friday, February 22, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Politics · Tagged abortion, abortion legislation, bailouts, Elves, European Union, George W. Bush, Great Recession, gun collectors, gun regulation, happy workers, huldufolk, Iceland, iceland policies, imagine peace tower, Iraq, licensed cohabitation, life expectancy, low infant mortality, maternity leave, minimum wage, Nonviolence, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, Panama, pregnancy, prenatal care, reusable biofuel, reusable fuels, taxes, TopTenz, unemployment, war crimes, war criminal
Let’s face it, nobody cares what YOU have to say. Even if it’s the most profound, life-affirming statement ever, the fact that it comes from you and your anonymous little mouth renders it meaningless to all but your closest friends and maybe your Mom (if you’ve been calling her lately, that is). In cases like [...]
Posted by Jason Iannone on Tuesday, December 27, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged abraham lincoln, Abstraction, Al Yankovic, baseball player, Benjamin Disraeli, chronic drug addicts, Colorado, Coors, European Economic Community, facebook, Facebook Inc, Franklin, George Carlin, George W. Bush, HBO, HBO & Company, http://quoteinvestigator.com/2010/06/11/time-you-enjoy, If and only if, John Lennon, Logic, Mathematics, Modal logic, Molson Coors Brewing Company, Morrissey, Prime Minister, pseudo, Steven Wright, Theresa, Thomas Jefferson, United Kingdom, United States, USD, Windows 95, winston churchill, Yogi Berra, youtube, YouTube Inc
Ten years have passed since the United States was attacked by Al-Qaeda terrorists on September 11, 2001. The event was a defining moment in U.S. history. After it was discovered that the attacks were orchestrated by Al-Qaeda, the information sparked intense debate in the political world. Former President George W. Bush decided to pass a [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Wednesday, September 7, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Politics · Tagged al qaeda, America, Andrew Card Jr., Anna Diggs Taylor, anthrax, barack obama, Bill Binney, Blair, Central Intelligence Agency, Clear Channel, Clear Channel Communications, commissioner, Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, George W. Bush, Homeland Security, J. Frank Wilson, James Bamford, Janet Napolitano, Joint Intelligence Community Council, law enforcement officers, Leon Panetta, Louis Armstrong, Men in Black II, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, National Institute of Health, National Intelligence, National Reconnaissance Office, National security, National Security Agency, Neil Diamond, New York, Peter Andreas, Politics, Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, Privacy of telecommunications, Protect America Act, Rage Against the Machine, Robert Gates, Scott Gold, Secret Service, secretary, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of the Treasury, Shelley Fabares, Skullcandy G.I. Headphone/Headset, Social Security, Social Security and National Insurance Trust, spider-man, terrorist networks, The Simpsons, Thomas M. Tamm, twin towers, U.S. Congress, U.S. government, U.S. Justice Department, U.S. National Intelligence, United States National Security Agency, USA PATRIOT Act, USA Today, USD, Verizon, Verizon Communications Inc., walt disney, Washington, White House, William Chace, World Trade Center
A lot of nasty things go on behind closed doors. Free from scrutiny, groups, governments, and companies often get up to no good, safe in the belief that their images will remain squeaky clean, no matter how filthy their actions may be. If not for the brave actions and dogged determination of a few men [...]
Posted by Geoff Shakespeare on Thursday, May 5, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Nature, People, Politics · Tagged aches, Afghanistan, Al Gore, America, Assange, Bernstein, Bernstein Investment Research And Management Inc, Bob Woodward, brand new drug epidemic, Bureau of Fisheries, C.I.A., California, cancer, CBS, CBS Corporation, chemical pesticides, Chicago, Church of Scientology, cruel and inequitable machinery, Democratic National Headquarters, Detroit, Edward R. Murrow, Environmental Protection Agency, fiction writer, food, Food and Drug Administration, gary coleman, Gary Webb, George W. Bush, hacker and software programmer, Illinois, Investigative journalism, Iraq, Israel, Joseph McCarthy, Journalism, journalist, Julian Assange, Lincoln Steffens, London Correspondent, Los Angeles, Mass media, master journalist, michigan, Middle East, Muckraker, Murrow, Nancy Reagan, Nicaragua, pains, passionate consumer advocate, President of the United States, Rachel Carson, Ralph Nader, Reagan Administration, research, Samuel Hopkins Adams, scientist, See It Now, Seymour Hersh, Sinclair, software programmer, Soviet Union, Supreme Court, tangled web, the Blitz, the New York Evening Post, The New Yorker, the Washington Post, The Washington Post Company, United States, Upton Sinclair, Vietnam, vigorous, Walter Cronkite, White House, Wikileaks
Every four years the good citizens of this country drag themselves to the voting booth (well, actually about half of them do, the rest being far too busy to concern themselves with such things as picking the leader of their nation) to pick the candidate they hope will do the least amount of damage to [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Friday, April 2, 2010 at 6:01 am
Filed under History, People, Politics · Tagged able general, abraham lincoln, Air Force, America, andrew jackson, Arkansas, author, bad president, Bay of pigs, Bill Clinton, candidate, Civil War General, Colorado, congressman and senator, cuba, Daniel Webster, Denver, elections, Europe, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Franklin Pierce, General, George Bush, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Georgia, Gerald Ford, Germany, Governor, great president, henry clay, Herbert Hoover, Horace Greeley, HORATIO SEYMOUR, Iran, Islamic Republic of Iran, JAMES COX, James K. Polk, Jeff Danelek, Jerry Ford, Jimmy Carter, John C. Calhoun, john f kennedy, Kentucky, leader, Massachusetts, Mexico, military commander, National Guard, Ohioan congressman, Panama, peanut farmer, Persian Gulf, Politics, Politics of the United States, president, presidential election, presidents, pretty decent vice-president, reporter, Republican Party, Richard Nixon, ronald reagan, Ross Perot, RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, SAMUEL TILDEN, Scots-Irish Americans, Secretary of State, Senate committee, Senator, Speaker, Tammany Hall, term governor, then President, Theodore Roosevelt, Ulysses S. Grant, United States, United States Army, United States Whig Party, Vice Presidents of the United States, Vietnam, warren g harding, Washington, White House, Wilson, Wilson administration, Wilson ASA, Wilson’s League of Nations, writer, www.ourcuriousworld.com
No matter what their supposed purpose, there’s something inherently sinister about a secret society. Though most are formed with relatively realistic political and religious goals in mind, their focus on mystery and secrecy has made them the target of countless criticisms and conspiracy theories involving everything from aliens and the occult to world domination. Of [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Wednesday, March 3, 2010 at 8:55 am
Filed under Bizarre, Politics, Religion · Tagged adolf hitler, Aleister Crowley, Arthur Rosenberg, Ben Franklin, Bob Dole, conspiracy, Ferdinand of Brunswick, Franklin Pierce, Freemasons, Gavrilo Princip, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Goethe, Hashshashin, Henry Ford, James Buchanan, jesse james, John and Samuel Adams, John Hancock, John Kerry, john wilkes booth, Magog, Mark Twain, Nizari, Ordo Templi Orientis, Paul Revere, Politics, Rudolf Hess, secret societies, secrets, Simpsons, Skull and Bones, The Bilderberg Group, The Black Hand, The Freemasons, The Illuminati, The Knights of the Golden Circle, The Order of Assassins, The Sons of Liberty, The Stonecutters, The Thule Society, winston churchill
A wise man once said, “popularity is overrated,” but when you are the president it certainly to gain the majority of the votes. Unfortunately for many of our previous presidents they stepped into our country’s most powerful role with less than half of our country’s support. Not a ringing endorsement and a heck of a [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Tuesday, November 4, 2008 at 11:26 pm
Filed under Politics · Tagged abraham lincoln, Al Gore, Bill Clinton, Democrat, Democratic, election of 1860, electoral vote, electors, Franklin Pierce, George W. Bush, John Frémont, john quincy adams, Lewis Cass, Nixon, Politics, popular vote, presidency, president, presidential election, presidents, Republican, Richard Nixon, Theodore Roosevelt, U.S. Electoral, united states presidential election, Whig, William Clinton, william taft, woodrow wilson, Zachary Taylor
In our recent history there have been some very close presidential elections, but elections decided by a small margin are certainly not something new. Throughout our country’s short history we have had more than our fair share of presidential elections that were too close to call. Here are the top 10 presidential elections based on [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Sunday, November 2, 2008 at 11:41 pm
Filed under History, Politics · Tagged Al Gore, Democrat, election, Garfield, George Bush, George W. Bush, Kennedy, Lewis Cass, Nixon, Politics, presidency, president, presidential election, presidential elections, presidents, Republican, Whig, Zachary Taylor