Read David defending the concept of violence.
you gotta remember, that the 90s were mostly about peace and
prosperity. nearly everyone was doing well, including the ultra-rich.
everyone's happy, right? no. the republicans were furious at clinton
about blow-jobs, but not all republicans. the conservative cream was
not furious. they were making money by the boatloads. all a
conservative had to do was show up at a job interview, demonstrate he
had a pulse, and even your everyday conservative got the job. put
another way, so many of the republicans that were furious and entered
politics during the 90s because of that sound and fury, were not the
cream of the crop. cream isn't their hallmark. violence is. they
LOVE violence, in all its politically incorrect glory. this is why all
the death and destruction stats in iraq don't bother them. i mean,
shouldn't bush's numbers be far lower than it is, given everything
going wrong today? no, because his base ****ing loves lethal payback.
they love violence.
Ohio GOP at it again
by kos
Fri Nov 04, 2005 at 12:02:09 PM PDT
As if Republicans in Ohio don't already have enough problems.
"The investigation into a late-night barroom brawl led police to three
officials of the Butler County Republican Party after one of them left
his credit card behind, police say.
A complaint filed with the Butler County Sheriff's Department said that
central committee Chairman Quentin Nichols, of West Chester; Tim
Dearwester of Hamilton, a member of the central committee; and Sean
Maloney of Liberty Township, a member of the executive committee,
allegedly assaulted the bartender at Putter's Tavern & Grill shortly
after midnight Oct. 26.
Adam William told deputies he approached the trio about a plastic
advertising sign being damaged in the men's room. He asked them to
leave after one of the men threatened him with a pool stick and another
made sexual remarks about the bar's owner, the police report said.
The men then jumped on William and punched and hit him with a chair
before the fight moved outside at the Cincinnati-Dayton Road
establishment, resulting in a bench being damaged, William told police.
Nichols, Dearwester and Maloney left in a silver or gold Hummer before
deputies arrived. No charges have been filed while the brawl remains
under investigation. William sustained minor injuries. Damage was
estimated at $500 for the sign and the bench."
and what of their women? do they love violence? NO, and that's what
they tell everyone. but damned, if they can't help love their big,
masculine, aggressive, confident, dick-swinging, ignorant but non-geeky
(<-- an extremely important criterion for women), conservative men that
beats them up once in a while.
McCready Says She Still Loves Boyfriend
Friday, November 04, 2005
Associated Press
FRANKLIN, Tenn. - Mindy McCready (search) says she still loves the
man charged with nearly beating her to death earlier this year, and her
two suicide attempts were the result of their troubled relationship.
"I wanted him to be sorry," McCready said Thursday about her boyfriend,
William McKnight (search), on Oprah Winfrey's talk show.
McKnight was charged with attempted murder in May after he allegedly
broke into the singer's home and assaulted her.
McCready, 29, had a No. 1 hit in 1996 with "Guys Do It All the Time,"
but has suffered a series of legal and personal problems in the last
year.
During the interview, McCready described the attack and recalled being
choked and "gurgling on blood." She broke into tears several times.
"That feeling of not being able to breathe is something I'll never
forget," she said.
But McCready said she still loves McKnight and has been with him since
the attack. She told Winfrey that she became pregnant by McKnight
unintentionally in July and is carrying his baby.
She blamed the violence on drug use, and said she didn't think he would
hit her again. She said she hasn't been able to heal emotionally
because McKnight hasn't shown remorse.
"He doesn't think that he's done very much wrong," McCready said.
She said she attempted suicide twice after quarreling with McKnight.
"I wanted him to take responsibility for it," she said. "I wanted him
to be extremely sorry for it."
Besides the suicide attempts, McCready's problems since August 2004
include a drunken driving arrest in Nashville, an arrest in Arizona on
charges stemming from her involvement with a con man and a conviction
for fraudulently obtaining prescription painkillers.