Friday, July 2, 2010

AREN'T YOU JUST SICK AND TIRED OF THIS KISSY, KISSY BALONEY?

Man, I don't know about you, but frankly I am completely fed up with phony folks!  Especially politicians. Wouldn't it be refreshing if Congress folks would start telling it like it is?  I can almost hear it now.  John Boehner has the floor and he is fixin' to address Barney Frank.  He looks at Frank and then says this, "Mr. Frank, who I have absolutely no respect for, as a man nor a Congressman, I need to let you know how idiotic your proposal is!"  I'd love it!  You know instead of, "My good friend Barney Frank from....."?  Everyone who knows these two, knows they despise each other, but they have to play their phony game.  Why?  To impress us?  How's that working out?  Maybe they are trying to put spit and polish on a
despicable shell.  Yeah, I don't like either one of them.  Their grins and rhetoric do not fool this cat.  They are the REAL DEAL alright!  The REAL CROOKED deal!

Oh, and than you have Pelosi at Robert Byrd's funeral.  Talk about laying it on thick!  She has to be the queen of phony!  Her majesty the Queen of Phoniness!  Oh, and yes she is definitely wearing clothes.  Thank God!  Her is some of what this caring, compassionate, lil' darlin' had to say at Byrd's funeral:

"I bring, as Speaker of the House, I sadly have the privilege of bringing the condolences of the House of Representatives to Marjorie and to Mona and the entire Byrd family. As a friend of Senator Byrd, I do so with great sadness.

"But happily, thanks to the Byrd family, some of us had the opportunity to sing Senator Byrd's praises in his presence in December, when he became the longest-serving Member of Congress in American history.

"I noted then that Senator Byrd's Congressional service began in the House of Representatives. In those six years in the House, he demonstrated what would become the hallmarks of his commitment: his love of the people of West Virginia, his passion for history and public service, and his remarkable oratorical skills.

"And I am going to talk to you about his service in the House briefly. In 1953, this is one of his earliest speeches, he came to the floor of the House and he said: 'I learned quite a long time before becoming a Member of this House that there is an unwritten rule in the minds of some, perhaps, which is expected to cover the conduct of new members in a legislative body to the extent that they should be often seen but seldom be heard; I have observed this rule,' he said, 'very carefully up to this time and I shall continue to do so... however...the book of Ecclesiastes...says: 'To everything there is a season... a time to keep silence and a time to speak.' And he decided it was time for him to speak.

"He went on in that speech; it was one of his earliest speeches. He went on in that speech to quote not only the bible but Shakespeare, Rudyard Kipling, and Daniel Webster. And, Mr. President, this was a speech about world trade.

"Though he thrived in the House, when he moved on to the Senate, Senator Byrd remarked that he was happy to leave behind the limitations on speaking time on the House floor.

"On a personal moment, I'll never forget a dinner I hosted for him in the early 80s when he was running for reelection at that time, in California.

"After dinner, we didn't know what to expect. We were all so nervous to be in the presence of such a great person. And what did he do? He pulled out his fiddle and regaled us with West Virginia tunes and told us great stories about each and every one of you. That was an act of friendship that I will never forget.

"Later, when I came to Congress, I told Senator Byrd how my father, who had served in Congress, gave me the image of a coal miner carved in coal. It is the only thing I have from my father's office as a Member of Congress. It had been a gift to him from Jennings Randolph, who had represented West Virginia so well, and it sat in my father's office when he was in the House of Representatives.

"It now sits in the Speaker's office. It is in my West Virginia corner, along with a silver tray from Senator Byrd which I love especially because it is engraved, 'With thanks, from Robert and Erma.'

"In the beginning of my comments, I mentioned a speech of Senator Byrd's on the House floor. That day, in 1953, he quoted the words of Daniel Webster. These words, when you come to the Capitol, are etched on the wall of the chamber high above the Speaker's chair. And these words would come to define his leadership but he voiced them in that earliest speech. Senator Byrd said, 'Let us develop the resources of our land, call forth its powers, build up its institutions, promote all its great interests and see whether we also in our day and generation may not perform something worthy to be remembered.' Daniel Webster.

"Senator Byrd's service, and his leadership, were more than worthy to be remembered for many generations to come. And as my colleague Mr. Rahall said, it is very appropriate that we are celebrating Robert Byrd's life and putting him to rest in the week of July 4th; he was a great American patriot. And as Governor Manchin said, we shall never see his like again.  "May he rest in peace. Amen."

SOMEBODY!  QUICK!  GET ME A TISSUE!  Not!  Folks do any of you actually buy this?  I pity you if you do 'cause brother or sister you are way out of touch!  This broad was grandstanding and at a funeral of all places.  She didn't care for Byrd's family as she spouted out utter lies about him, just to look good in front of the elites. "his love of the people of West Virginia, his passion for history and public service, and his remarkable oratorical skills."  C'mon, we got to set this straight guys.  I guess he loved all the folks of West Virginia, when he joined the KKK and voted against civil rights every time?  And his oratory amounted to a bunch of bullying and hollering and screaming.  Nothing skillfull about that.  I can even do that.  His public service is a joke, after all, they called him "The King of Pork" and that was from the folks trying to be nice.

No, I do not feel bad about telling it like it is!  No, I do not feel bad about calling out Pelosi, when she acts like a "try out" for a soap opera at a funeral!  No, I do not feel bad about wanting my so-called leaders to be truthful and honest, especially on our floor of Congress, yours and mine!  Instead of CONDEMING folks for shouting out "liar" in Congress, when in fact a person is lying, we need to COMMEND them for being truthful.  Instead of firing a highly decorated and frustrated General, for trying desperately to get the president to hear him on his war views, we need to promote him and FIRE THE PRESIDENT!  Common sense in our government has got to take over soon or we are all lost to communism!  They are banking on it!

There are three hundred and fifty million folks in America today.  Find me just three hundred and fifty truly honest, sincere, and patriotic folks, without any political or attorney connections and we can straighten out America in one year!  And cut cost, save money, and pay off our debt in ten years!  We need strong men and women!  We do not need folks to find loop holes and ponzi schemes!  I'm just sayin'!

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