Ayn Rand Hates America http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com Most recent posts at Ayn Rand Hates America posterous.com Mon, 14 Nov 2011 12:39:29 -0800 Oh my, you mean regulations don't kill businesses? http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/oh-my-you-mean-regulations-dont-kill-business http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/oh-my-you-mean-regulations-dont-kill-business I would say that the lack of regulations kills workers and citizens.   

Money quote:

Data from the Bureau of Labor Statisticsshow that very few layoffs are caused principally by tougher rules.

Whenever a firm lays off workers, the bureau asks executives the biggest reason for the job cuts.

In 2010, 0.3 percent of the people who lost their jobs in layoffs were let go because of “government regulations/intervention.” By comparison, 25 percent were laid off because of a drop in business demand.




http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/does-government-regulation-really-kill-jobs-economists-say-overall-effect-minimal/2011/10/19/gIQALRF5IN_story.html?wpisrc=nl_most

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Mon, 19 Sep 2011 12:07:31 -0700 Hoffa was blasted because he called for voting? http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/hoffa-was-blasted-because-he-called-for-votin http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/hoffa-was-blasted-because-he-called-for-votin Breitbart says "They can only win a rhetorical war". Isn't that the only type of war this is? Why threaten those who you disagree with with violence? What difference does it make that you have"all the guns"? You make a stronger case for repealing the Second Amendment than any lefty. Violent paranoids shouldn't have any guns... Or any elected offices either.


http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/09/18/1018104/-Andrew-Breitbart-says-Fire-...

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Mon, 19 Sep 2011 11:52:27 -0700 It's about damn time #p2 #connecttheleft http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/its-about-damn-time-p2-connecttheleft http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/its-about-damn-time-p2-connecttheleft Let's make it an issue in the election, no...THE issue. Give the voters a choice, not a Republican lite option. God help us if the Plutocrats win this round. Of course the elections 4 years later might usher in a real radical, not just a Fox News created one.


From The New York Times:

Obama Vows Veto if Deficit Plan Has No Tax Increases

President Obama called for Congress to adopt his plan to reduce the federal deficit by more than $3 trillion over the next decade, calling for tax increases on the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations.

http://nyti.ms/qKVd1R

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Sat, 17 Sep 2011 07:19:26 -0700 Across the land, Republicans weep http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/across-the-land-republicans-weep http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/across-the-land-republicans-weep
Romney in particular, as he mourns the wealth that was not created. Quoting

It is the first new labor pact for any of the Detroit carmakers since G.M. and Chrysler received government bailouts and went through bankruptcy in 2009. The deal will help G.M.’s 48,500 union workers share in the company’s turnaround and should give them more job security, two top priorities for the U.A.W., though the tenuous nature of the economic recovery will continue to inject some uncertainty.

G.M. said the deal would cover four years. The union declined to give details but said the agreement included improved profit-sharing and “significant improvements to health care benefits.” The deal was also expected to include so-called signing bonuses worth at least several thousand dollars. And the U.A.W. had been seeking a wage increase for entry-level workers, who earn about half as much as other workers.

The union said in a statement that it had successfully fought G.M.’s proposals to weaken retirement benefits and obtain major concessions to health benefits.

“In both pensions and health care, the U.A.W. was able to convince G.M. that far greater success could be achieved working together than by cutting pensions or health care,” it said.

From The New York Times:

U.A.W. Reaches Tentative Agreement With General Motors

http://nyti.ms/on66Mm

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Fri, 16 Sep 2011 15:35:20 -0700 The hypothetical man that died and made the Tea Party happy wasn't so hypothetical http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/the-hypothetical-man-that-died-and-made-the-t http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/the-hypothetical-man-that-died-and-made-the-t
Million dollar quote here:

For all the hysteria over "death panels", it is Republican policies that kill people, and Susan's story is vividly (and painfully) educating thousands as it spreads virally around the country.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Tue, 13 Sep 2011 09:48:49 -0700 David Brooks sees a problem, but misses THE problem. It's Ayn Rand http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/david-brooks-sees-a-problem-but-misses-the-pr http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/david-brooks-sees-a-problem-but-misses-the-pr In today's New York Times, David Brooks has an overall thoughtful piece, and he correctly assesses a problem in society today where too many are embracing moral relativism, leaving all ethical frameworks up to individuals; therefore standing for nothing as relative morality becomes no morality. Quoting Mr. Brooks:

“Not many of them have previously given much or any thought to many of the kinds of questions about morality that we asked,” Smith and his co-authors write. When asked about wrong or evil, they could generally agree that rape and murder are wrong. But, aside from these extreme cases, moral thinking didn’t enter the picture, even when considering things like drunken driving, cheating in school or cheating on a partner. “I don’t really deal with right and wrong that often,” is how one interviewee put it.

The default position, which most of them came back to again and again, is that moral choices are just a matter of individual taste. “It’s personal,” the respondents typically said. “It’s up to the individual. Who am I to say?”

Rejecting blind deference to authority, many of the young people have gone off to the other extreme: “I would do what I thought made me happy or how I felt. I have no other way of knowing what to do but how I internally feel.”

Many were quick to talk about their moral feelings but hesitant to link these feelings to any broader thinking about a shared moral framework or obligation. As one put it, “I mean, I guess what makes something right is how I feel about it. But different people feel different ways, so I couldn’t speak on behalf of anyone else as to what’s right and wrong.


This condition does exist, and it manifests itself with a lack of community and responsibility towards our fellow man, particularly those who struggle.  Ironically, Ayn Rand and her disciples, which include the conservative movement and the Republican Party, have accelerated this moral relativism.

It's ironic, because Ayn Rand insisted that she hated moral relativism, she said only the objective was real, which meant only the physical world and that derived from reason, and her cult/religion/philosophy Objectivism was based upon this. From this, she produced the axiom that the self was the highest form of life, as it was objective and real, and that serving the self was the highest good.  End of story.

This gospel of self serving, or selfishness, leads to individualism of the extreme kind and therefore society suffers.  The whole theme of her fifty pound novel 'Atlas Shrugged' is of the individuals shunning society and leaving to be a collection of individuals.

But individualism has as many faces as there are people, and if the self is the ultimate good, then everyone has the incentive to take care of their own self.   Which destroys communities.

Reason is based on premises, and Ayn would have had us to believe that her premises were truth, therefore there had to be no other outcome but hers.  But with 300 million individuals in America acting on self interest, you are bound to get 300 million "truths", and none of them would call for sacrifice, community and cohesion necessary to strengthen society.

So if you serve yourself, your moral code just gets simpler.  Why care about any actions you take to pursue self interest that might affect your less fortunate neighbor?  It becomes a system of moral relativism disguised as objective truth.  In reality it isn't anything more than objective truths tailored for whatever whims that might motivate each individual.

In our society where consumerism and status determined by wealth are deemed the governing values, the conditions that David Brooks describes are the only expected outcome.

I'd say a majority of Americans haven't heard of Ayn Rand, and if they have, they don't know what her vision entails.  But the leaders of industry, fundamentalist Christianity, and conservative politics are fulfilling her vision one deregulation and tax cut at a time. Pretty soon, there will be no one who would serve in the military, and frankly, no good reason to ask anyone to, if this is the world they are protecting.

Brook's column linked here

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Sat, 10 Sep 2011 13:57:35 -0700 From the NYTimes, the right wing wants to make America Dodge City 1875 http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/from-the-nytimes-the-right-wing-wants-to-make http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/from-the-nytimes-the-right-wing-wants-to-make Why not just have people settle disputes by shootouts in the streets?


From The New York Times:

Florida Forces Towns to Pull Local Laws Limiting Guns

City and county officials risk fines and removal from office if they enforce their own firearms ordinances.

http://nyti.ms/q9HVSb

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Sat, 10 Sep 2011 08:08:12 -0700 Only one logical conclusion, that Dick Morris is a dumbass http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/only-one-logical-conclusion-that-dick-morris http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/only-one-logical-conclusion-that-dick-morris
From the Political Animal blog, a post that would be amusing save for the fact people listen to the jackass Dick Morris. Quote:

That's right, Dick Morris wrote an entire column based on the belief that the health care industry lost 30,000 jobs in August. The report he relied on actually said the health care industry gained 30,000 jobs in August. Morris' case isn't just lazy and unserious; it's backward

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Fri, 09 Sep 2011 14:27:52 -0700 Obama versus the nihilists, from the New Yorker online. I am afraid the writer is correct http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/obama-versus-the-nihilists-from-the-new-yorke http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/obama-versus-the-nihilists-from-the-new-yorke obama-jobs-speech.jpg

His implied message here is that Obama has been too much of Mr. Nice Guy.  It's time for Obama to go Harry S Truman on the GOP and give'em Hell.  If he doesn't, it's gonna continue to be Hell for a great many of us-george


http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/georgepacker/2011/09/obama-against-the-nihilists.html

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Fri, 09 Sep 2011 12:48:20 -0700 Koch Brothers attempt to destroy public schools. Its George Wallace all over again http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/koch-brothers-attempt-to-destroy-public-schoo http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/koch-brothers-attempt-to-destroy-public-schoo If you are familiar with the Koch Brothers, it will be more of the same for you. If you aren't, you ought to be. By far most dangerous force in America that you haven't heard of. If Ayn Rand had two sons, trained them to spread her filthy worldview & made them them one of the richest families in the world, they couldn't be any more destructive than the Kochs.


These people would return to the 19th century and enslave us all who aren't silver spoon trust fund babies or CEOs. Www.KochBrothersExposed.com/education

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Thu, 08 Sep 2011 18:43:13 -0700 Rick Perry's Ponzi Scheme Lie http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/rick-perrys-ponzi-scheme-lie http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/rick-perrys-ponzi-scheme-lie This is a pretty good explanation, from The Economist, hardly a left wing publication. But the lie will be told over and over. Is insurance a Ponzi scheme? The payouts for death benefits, or fire damage, are made with premiums of others. Social Security was never sold as an investment, it is social insurance, where premiums paid pay current benefits.

Just more exploitation of Republican selfishness.

via Democracy in America on 9/8/11

GOING into last night's Republican debate, Rick Perry would have known that people were going to take him to task for his stated views on Social Security, which he has called unconstitutional and a "Ponzi scheme." And when they did, the governor came out swinging. Based on the rapid reactions on Twitter and around the blogosphere, I'm outside the pundit mainstream in thinking that this answer was effective in political terms and even defensible on the merits. Let's look at the exchange:

Well, I think any of us that want to go back and change 70 years of what's been going on in this country is probably going to have a difficult time. And rather than spending a lot of time talking about what those folks were doing back in the '30s and the '40s, it's a nice intellectual conversation, but the fact is we have got to be focused on how we're going to change this program.

And people who are on Social Security today, men and women who are receiving those benefits today, and individuals at my age that are in line pretty quick to get them, they don't need to worry about anything. But I think the Republican candidates are talking about ways to transition this program, and it is a monstrous lie.

It is a Ponzi scheme to tell our kids that are 25 or 30 years old today, you're paying into a program that's going to be there. Anybody that's for the status quo with Social Security today is involved with a monstrous lie to our kids, and it's not right.

The moderator, citing Karl Rove and Dick Cheney's criticisms of Mr Perry's rhetoric on the subject, pressed. (Incidentally, no one is going to score political points against Mr Perry by citing the wisdom of Karl Rove or Dick Cheney, and Mr Perry's shot at Mr Rove—"I'm not responsible for Karl anymore"—also has the effect of distancing himself from the administration of George W. Bush, which some people still think is his albatross.) Mr Perry continued:

Absolutely. If Vice-President Cheney or anyone else says that the program that we have in place today, and young people who are paying into that, expect that program to be sound, and for them to receive benefits when they reach retirement age, that is just a lie. And I don't care what anyone says. We know that, the American people know that, but more importantly, those 25- and 30-year-olds know that.

In the immediate post-debate spin, Mr Romney's team was arguing that in light of Mr Perry's comments, the Texas governor "has lost" because no presidential candidate can win on a campaign to kill Social Security. Reihan Salam, in this post-debate scorecard, suggests that Mr Perry runs the risk of alienating older voters, who are particularly important in a Republican primary.

I'm not convinced. Mr Perry's comments last night were slightly softer than what he has said before. For example, he didn't talk about abolishing the federal programme and remanding that responsibility to the states, which is an idea that should give everyone pause. His rhetoric was nonetheless hyperbolic, but is that intrinsically problematic? Last night's debate was interesting partly because we saw a couple of the candidates, Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman, make salient points in calmer terms, which impressed our live-bloggers and commenters. But voters sometimes respond to hyperbolic arguments. Perhaps Mr Perry was right when he argued that "it's time to have some provocative language in this country."

It may be that Mr Perry's style is preferable on issues such as entitlement reform, where the problems are widely acknowledged but politically intractable. I've argued before on this blog that Social Security is "a pyramid scheme", and been scolded for it—which is fair, because my critique was hyperbolic, like Mr Perry's. But I note that in the rebuttal, Kevin Drum of Mother Jones nonetheless acknowledges that some changes need to be made if Social Security is going to pay out its scheduled benefits in the future. That rather glosses over the point that if making such changes were easy they probably would've been made already.

The fact is that Social Security as it stands has a looming shortfall, as depicted in this chart from the Congressional Budget Office.

And the issue that people are upset about isn't Social Security spending as a share of GDP; indeed, given the current strategies for collecting Social Security funds, the size of the programme as a share of spending is somewhat constrained, unlike the fast-growing burdens of Medicare and Medicaid. No, Mr Perry is targeting Social Security because the current system taxes workers under an explicit commitment to provide described benefits that, as it stands, it cannot meet.

I wouldn't characterise that as a "monstrous lie", because the phrase implies a deliberate deception, but it's clearly objectionable. Mr Perry was quite right to describe it as a generational issue. He might also have pointed out that the people who are going to suffer the most from the Social Security shortfalls are those who disproportionately depend on it as their major or sole source of retirement income, namely women and blacks. Those demographic dimensions make it all the more strange, in my view, that many Democrats are so insensitive to calls for Social Security reform in general, even if they object to the particular reforms being proposed. Why don't we see some action from them on this? Mr Perry's language here is intemperate, but at least he's starting a conversation.

(Photo credit: AFP)

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Thu, 08 Sep 2011 16:36:26 -0700 Breaking news from CNN says: Government officials briefed on 'specific, credible but unconfirmed threat' to the U.S. homeland, source tells CNN http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/breaking-news-from-cnn-says-government-offici http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/breaking-news-from-cnn-says-government-offici It's called the Republican Party.

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Thu, 08 Sep 2011 13:43:42 -0700 From Andrew Sullivan, more on the confessions of Mike Lofgren, the GOP staffer that finally told the truth http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/from-andrew-sullivan-more-on-the-confessions http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/from-andrew-sullivan-more-on-the-confessions

The Republicans execute this to perfection, and we are worse for it.  We have silently sat by while they have slandered teachers, unions, and all public servants.  This is a war that one side hasn't been fighting in.  We need to mobilize-   george. Quoting Andrew Sullivan below:


The reflections of Mike Lofgren, a former GOP congressional staffer, have been the talk of the liberal blogosphere recently (see posts by Benen, Tomasky, and Bernstein). A taste of Lofgren's piece:

A couple of years ago, a Republican committee staff director told me candidly (and proudly) what the method was to all this obstruction and disruption. Should Republicans succeed in obstructing the Senate from doing its job, it would further lower Congress's generic favorability rating among the American people. By sabotaging the reputation of an institution of government, the party that is programmatically against government would come out the relative winner. A deeply cynical tactic, to be sure, but a psychologically insightful one that plays on the weaknesses both of the voting public and the news media.

Fallows gets another staffer to comment:

Privately, many of us who have worked in Congress since before the Clinton Administration have been complaining about the loss of the respect for the institution by the Members who were elected to serve their constituents through the institution. I don't think people realize how fragile democracy really is. The 2012 campaign is currently looking to be the final nail in the coffin unless people start to understand what is going on.

Fallows has exhaustively covered the Lofgren cri de coeur here, here and here.


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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Wed, 07 Sep 2011 11:50:30 -0700 Why would any of these groups vote Republican? If you are elderly, why vote for the party http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/why-would-any-of-these-groups-vote-republican http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/why-would-any-of-these-groups-vote-republican that wants to destroy Medicare, and enrich the wealthy insurance companies that deny the old and sick insurance even more?

If you are hispanic, why vote for the party that demands ID checks on every function of life, just to prove you are legal, at the expense of your civil rights?

If you are a woman, why vote for the party that would mandate you only have sex for procreation, and would take away the most painful personal decision you could make, even at the risk of your life?

If you work for a living, why vote for the party that facilitates offshoring, the lowering of wages, and the suppression of your rights to safety and fair treatment?

If you are unemployed, why vote for the party that does not give one rat's ass if you get unemployment, health insurance, or even live.

Americans need to realize that the G.O.P. stands for "Good for Other People"

They are not good for America.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Wed, 07 Sep 2011 11:27:00 -0700 Surprise! Romney's plan will produce over 6 trillion in deficits, but it will be worth it http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/surprise-romneys-plan-will-produce-over-6-tri http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/surprise-romneys-plan-will-produce-over-6-tri

because they give the wealthy and corporations even more of a tax break!  Money well spent.  Also, since the Bush Cheney tax cuts worked so well, let's just make them permanent. And the most important aspect?  Throw away the estate tax, so Romney and the Koch Brothers can build dynasties, providing jobs through eternity for the proletariat!  Of course, wiping the ass of the estate master for less than minimum wage isn't much of a career.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Wed, 07 Sep 2011 10:05:27 -0700 Eric Cantor said relief aid must be treated like family budget. He says you cant afford both the car and a medical procedure. If it is like http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/eric-cantor-said-relief-aid-must-be-treated-l http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/eric-cantor-said-relief-aid-must-be-treated-l a family budget, the correct analogy is that the family can not afford medical care, the car, or basic improvements because the previous head of household has run up credit card debt paying for wasteful wars, spending sprees at corporations, and rebates for wealthy whores who don't care if the house burns down or not.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Wed, 07 Sep 2011 09:02:18 -0700 This is my congressman, Jim Cooper. Don't always agree with him, but he is dead-on here #p2 http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/this-is-my-congressman-jim-cooper-dont-always http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/this-is-my-congressman-jim-cooper-dont-always From The New York Times:

OP-ED COLUMNIST: The Last Moderate

Representative Jim Cooper, a Blue Dog Democrat from the Nashville area, remembers the day when Congress still worked.

http://nyti.ms/oQtOV7

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Tue, 06 Sep 2011 12:11:16 -0700 Paul Krugman has called it all along. It's 1937 all over again http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/paul-krugman-has-called-it-all-along-its-1937 http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/paul-krugman-has-called-it-all-along-its-1937
Of course being a conservative means you never have to admit your policies stink, even when they do.   They cut government, sending us in the abyss, and then claim we didn't do enough of their voodoo.  

I wish we still knew what we used to know. 


Sent from my iPad

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/1434258/aynrandlogosquare.jpg http://posterous.com/users/hdouon1UllDVU George Kelley Ayn Hates America George Kelley
Tue, 06 Sep 2011 11:23:42 -0700 Republicans spread & believe these kinds of lies. Are we to believe that businesses cant find workers because they'd rather be on foodstamps? http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/republicans-spread-believe-these-kinds-of-lie http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/republicans-spread-believe-these-kinds-of-lie
I'm calling bullshit on this-george

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Mon, 05 Sep 2011 17:02:29 -0700 When will America learn that these dorks want the economy to fail? http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/when-will-america-learn-that-these-dorks-want http://onesinglecandle.posterous.com/when-will-america-learn-that-these-dorks-want http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-politics-talk-20110905,0...

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