Wednesday, February 15, 2012

So what legislation does Herman Cain plan on proposing that I can staple onto my cereal box in the morning?

Maybe I'm bad with analogies but staple on your "cereal box"....... "in the morning".... Uh

uhm..... uh uh um

































uhSo what legislation does Herman Cain plan on proposing that I can staple onto my cereal box in the morning?The notion that a bill should not exceed the intelligence or attention span of a Legislator is pretty damn funny.



See the scary thing here is YOU think a 3 page rule would be outrageous - but the Dems pass a budget busting bill not one of them has read %26amp; it's NBD.So what legislation does Herman Cain plan on proposing that I can staple onto my cereal box in the morning?"Muslims suck.''

That's what counts as conservative legislation, these days.
Cain is ampin' it up. To the MAX.

He's even said that he was worried over the last name of a doctor he visited, as the name was suspiciously Muslimish.

....And openly bragged that he will refuse appointing any Muslim to his cabinet. If he wins, that will probably be the biggest factor of his victory.So what legislation does Herman Cain plan on proposing that I can staple onto my cereal box in the morning?Hermain Cain is not the answer. The 3 page bill idea is just dumb.



His belief that Muslims (but not Catholics, Jews, Atheists or anybody else) should have to prove their loyalty to the Constitution is CREEPY.



Imagine Ron Paul vs. Barack Obama.



One supports the Patriot Act, an indefinite occupation of Iraq, a poorly defined goal and indefinite occupation of Afghanistan, presidential ordered assassination of U.S. citizens suspected of terrorist activities, George W. Bush's guy (Bernanke) running the Federal Reserve, a federal mandate to force every citizen to purchase insurance from a for profit company, indefinite detention without charges etc.



The other opposes all that.........his name is Ron Paul.



Ron Paul also opposes the War on Drugs (which Obama laughed at the idea of modifying despite the fact it isn't working). The U.S. spends appx. $44 billion annually on this failure.

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