Hey, if it makes you feel good about yourself, and look good in front of your peers, who cares that the actual real-world consequences mean deprivation and early death to the hoi-polloi?
Of all the Team R candidates Wall Street Romney is the one that is by far the most likely to support policies based on eco-nonsense. This is because he’s a whore.
If debunking all the junk science floating around out there that informs policy were the only thing these gentlemen did in their entire lives, they would be national heroes.
One of the first things they teach in whore school is how to be reasonable-y priced.
For every proposition with PRO and CON positions, you can be sure that the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
Years ago, about the time McVeigh went to his judgment, a local Atlanta radio station ran a series of station promotions stating the proposition that “sometimes the two sides there are to every story, are right and wrong.”
Hey, if it makes you feel good about yourself, and look good in front of your peers, who cares that the actual real-world consequences mean deprivation and early death to the hoi-polloi?
Damn the hoi polloi anyway. Why can’t they just do as they’re told and be grateful they have betters willing to tell them what to do?
Of all the Team R candidates Wall Street Romney is the one that is by far the most likely to support policies based on eco-nonsense. This is because he’s a whore.
Inhofe/Vitter/Issa demand proof of “sound science” from the White House concerning major federal actions.
If debunking all the junk science floating around out there that informs policy were the only thing these gentlemen did in their entire lives, they would be national heroes.
Go, men, go!
This is because he’s a whore.
No, ‘feets, it’s because he’s reasonable.
For every proposition with PRO and CON positions, you can be sure that the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
One of the first things they teach in whore school is how to be reasonable-y priced.
Years ago, about the time McVeigh went to his judgment, a local Atlanta radio station ran a series of station promotions stating the proposition that “sometimes the two sides there are to every story, are right and wrong.”