You get the MSM to stop treating you as if you’re relevant and we’ll stop pointing out when you push craziness then disavow its effects.
And to update August’s earlier comment, this is now the sixth opinion Glenn Reynolds has promoted because he’s too cowardly to put his own out there.
ALSO: Fox News, now sponsoring tea bag parties?
’)
Let’s call them what they are: traitors.
A few years back it was kind of funny to ask someone “Why do you hate America?” as a light-hearted response to the extremely jingoistic herd mentality of conservatives under the Bush II regime.
But I ask now, in complete sincerity, to Republicans/conservatives:
Why do you hate America? Why do you want its economy to fail? Why do you want people to go nuts and start blowing each other away?
I’ll say it again — the KKK never fully disappeared either, it just faded into hate-filled obscurity. Same thing is now happening with the GOP. And America will be far better off without them.
[...] piece does a good job expanding on the issue I wrote about earlier in the week. We on the left are forced to keep whacking on the right, because for as [...]
But I ask now, in complete sincerity, to Republicans/conservatives:
Why do you hate America? Why do you want its economy to fail? Why do you want people to go nuts and start blowing each other away?
I’ll say it again — the KKK never fully disappeared either, it just faded into hate-filled obscurity. Same thing is now happening with the GOP. And America will be far better off without them.
Oh, please. I’m impressed you can spell “sincerity,” but it’s obvious that you don’t understand the term. No great surprise there.
I’ll play along with your juvenile game, though, Jaim: when one sees a political leader espousing policies that one honestly, sincerely, and completely believes are ruinous for the nation, than one damned well better hope that the implementation of those policies DOES fail.
You want examples? Bill and Hillary Clinton’s first attempts to “reform” health care. George W. Bush’s attempts to change Social Security. Jimmy Carter’s economic policies.
That’s more sincere than I’ve ever seen you — except the time you admitted you sometimes react to what you wish someone had said, instead of what they really said.
J.