An on-topic political development
"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 01:50:45 GMT, JoeSpareBedroom penned the following
well considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:
I'm sitting here shaking my head, wondering about "placing religious
symbols
and messages on park property". This reinforces my belief that if I were
president and politicians suggested this sort of thing, I would have a
small
gang of dubious characters ready to take those idiots out behind the White
House dumpsters for a tuneup involving a baseball bat, resulting in a long
future in a wheelchair.
You and I are, apparently, of similar temperament and conviction......
thus, I pose this rhetorical question:
It's about time you realized it was best to be just like me. I never lie
and I'm always right. :-) :-)
What is your course of action when the president's moral convictions
drives the imperative to "place religious symbols and messages on park
property?"
Hard to say. My intuition reinforces something I heard many years ago:
Instead of looking to the top, where the buck theoretically stops, look down
the chain of command to the smallest of peons, even if that means you send
obnoxious letters to county supervisors, and next, to congressmen &
senators. These people actually have more pull in local party organizations,
and from what I've observed, that actually does filter up to the idiot in
the White House, who really doesn't give a damn about the people, as long as
he has a job and book contracts waiting when his term's over.
***Possible*** proof of this is illustrated by two issues: gun control and
gay marriage. We haven't heard a peep out of Nookular Boy about gun control
since his last election campaign, when he promised to do this, that & the
other thing, but in fact, has done nothing. And, the gay marriage thing just
surface again (briefly) because the party told him to raise the issue in an
election year. If we want him to shut his trap with regard to religious
symbols in national parks, the best thing to do is complain locally, and let
the Republican party convey the message that he needs to shut the phuque up.
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