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Emanuel: Dangerous if Republicans win in the fall
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June 20, 2010, 8:46am Report to Moderator
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WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama's chief of staff is warning about what might happen if Republicans—who have defended BP  over the Gulf oil spill—were to run Congress after the fall election.

Rahm Emanuel says the GOP philosophy is to paint BP as the victim. He says Obama will make clear to voters the fundamental differences in how each party would govern.

Emanuel tells ABC's "This Week" it would be "dangerous" if the GOP held power in Washington.

He says GOP lawmakers and candidates are attacking the administration for demanding that BP set up a $20 billion compensation fund.


http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9GF1A582&show_article=1
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Shadow
June 20, 2010, 8:56am Report to Moderator
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It's only going to be dangerous for the Democrats who will lose the control of Congress.
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alleykat
June 20, 2010, 9:52am Report to Moderator
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We have seen how dangerous is is when Reps are in Washington.  we had eight years of Bush--he gave us two wars and scores of dead American kids not to mention innocent folks in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Reps caused the financial crisis--please let's not review this.
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Shadow
June 20, 2010, 10:39am Report to Moderator
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Alley you are dead wrong about the Reps causing the financial crisis, it started with Jimmy Carter when he signed the bill to make it easier for the poor to buy a house. It was under Clinton that the poor found it even easier to get a loan and with Barney Frank and Chris Dodd threatening banks if they didn't give loans to the poor it made it even worse. Economists have said that the financial crisis was brought on by the mortgage bubble.
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Stein
June 20, 2010, 12:17pm Report to Moderator
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Or it was adjustable rate mortgages that sunk everyone including the poor and what's left of the middle class...

And it will be dangerous, the Reps will leave the US paying for BP's spill by not increasing their legal financial responsibility.
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Shadow
June 20, 2010, 2:59pm Report to Moderator
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It wasn't the Reps that got most of the campaign money and why did BP sign onto the cap and trade agreement with Obama if they weren't going to get something out of it. The Dems are not lilly white in all of this they have oil all over them.
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Shadow
June 20, 2010, 4:30pm Report to Moderator
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Here's some of the danger that Rahm is talking about and it's from the radicals on the left.     Missouri man’s incendiary sign on U.S. 71 draws fire
By DONALD BRADLEY
The Kansas City Star
DON BRADLEY/The Kansas City Star
Some people have been offended by the message David Jungerman of Raytown had painted on his trailer

David Jungerman farms 6,800 acres of river bottom land in western Missouri.

He’s not the kind of guy who posts on Twitter or has a Facebook profile.

So when the 72-year-old Raytown man wanted to speak out politically, he used what he had handy: a 45-foot-long, semi-truck box trailer.

Are you a Producer or Parasite

Democrats - Party of the Parasites

He planted the trailer with its professionally painted message in his Bates County cornfield along heavily traveled U.S. 71 about an hour south of Kansas City. He wanted lots of people to see it.

They did. Including at least one with a good case of outrage, matches and a can of gas.

On May 12, Jungerman’s trailer was torched. The Rich Hill volunteer fire department responded. A week later, it was set afire again. The firefighters put it out again.

Then flames erupted in an empty farm house that Jungerman owns.

“They don’t like free speech,” said Jungerman. He put out a $5,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

The sign is harder to read now because some of the letters are charred; the trailer tires burnt to nothing.

“Things are getting a little out of hand out there,” said Chief Deputy Justin Moreland of the Bates County Sheriff’s Office.

Local Democrats don’t want to be linked to the arsons. Jungerman has every right to speak his mind, said Kay Caskey, a Bates County Democrat and wife of longtime state Sen. Harold Caskey.

“Obviously our country is in disarray now because of economics, jobs and foreclosures,” she said. “We are hurting as a country. But there are too many people who want to tear it down instead of build it up. Yes, there is anger out there, and we are a long way from Washington.

“This man has a right to do what he did, but around here some people might wonder at what point do you cross the line?”

Jungerman said he didn’t mean to direct his sign at local Democrats. Many of those are old-fashioned Harry Truman Democrats, he said.

“They’re more conservative than many Republicans,” he said. “I should have put an ad in the paper to explain that. No, I meant the national Democrat parasite base that is sucking this country dry. The ones that just take from the government and not give anything back.”

Jungerman says he’s not even a die-hard Republican. He voted for Claire McCaskill when she won a U.S. Senate seat in 2006.

He put the sign out to make a point, but also to stir up some fun.

“You should have heard the truckers talking on the CB radio,” he said with a chuckle. “One would like the sign and another would tell him to pull over up ahead so he could whup him.”

Jungerman grew up on a farm, but got tired of the tail of a Jersey milk cow hitting him in the face so he told his father he was going to town to get a job.

“I’ve worked 80 to 90 hours a week ever since,” he said.

He’s a staunch believer in personal responsibility. In 1990, he and his daughter confronted four teens they caught fishing in a pond on their Raytown land. The boys called them names and threatened them, Jungerman said, and one spit on Jungerman’s daughter.

Jungerman pulled a snub-nosed .38-caliber and held them until police arrived.

The police, however, arrested him, took his Rolex watch and threw him in jail. The next day when he made bail, police did not return the watch. They said they didn’t remember him having one.

He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor gun charge.

Five years later, against advice, he sued the city of Raytown for the value of the watch. He represented himself in a three-day trial that he won. But the judge overturned the verdict and the jury’s award of $9,175.

Jungerman appealed, won again and got his money.

Today, he owns a baby furniture company called Baby-Tenda Corp. at 123 S. Belmont in Kansas City’s Northeast area. He manages to get down to his farmland two or three times a week.

Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2010/06/19/2029960/missouri-mans-incendiary-sign.html#ixzz0rR1H34yD
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bumblethru
June 20, 2010, 6:47pm Report to Moderator
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Don't you folks understand that it doesn't matter anymore. Dems....reps....they are all the same. A different side of the same exact coin. And we have been sitting back on our fat a$$es for decades while our government gave the farm away.

If our elected officials were really faithful to the constitution, it really wouldn't matter what party was voted into office. We wouldn't have to worry that a social policy we disapproved of would be imposed at the whim of the new president and his court appointees. Or thatmore of our money would be stolen to fund yet another government program.

They are ALL exceeding their powers under the constitution!!!


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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