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Wendy Davis: one too many muscle relaxants? [Darleen Click]

You know, I always thought Abortion Barbi looked familiar —

h/t Wayne Dupree

45 Replies to “Wendy Davis: one too many muscle relaxants? [Darleen Click]”

  1. happyfeet says:

    texas is doing just fine without having the “#1 in the nation” school system I think

    what does that even mean and how much does it cost

  2. palaeomerus says:

    You know how a robot that resembles a human is an android? She’s a robot that resembles a shrew.

  3. McGehee says:

    What #1 means is “costs the most.”

  4. McGehee says:

    And yet “costs the most” invariably turns it to #2…

  5. eCurmudgeon says:

    Looks like she picked the wrong week to give up horse tranquilizers.

  6. serr8d says:

    That gal inhaled too many abortifacients, is her problem. #TeamWendy *is* #TeamAbortion

    If Texas does elect that empty-headed child to the Governor’s seat, then all hope for this dissolving Republic is lost. Turn over the keys to the Atheists, Communists, lackadaisical TV addicts (includes the Nike sneakers and iPhone 6 line-standees) and shut out the lights on your way out, please.

  7. guinspen says:

    On the other hand, chipmunk Wendy.

  8. serr8d says:

    Albania’s president, Nishani, thanked Francis for making the country his first European destination, saying it was a historic event for all Albanians.

    “There is no intolerance, extremism among us but reciprocal respect inherited from generation to generation,” he said. “From an atheist country, we have turned into a country of religious freedom.”

  9. cranky-d says:

    Francis is yet another person who believes that the Muslims doing all the killing are the radicalized ones.

    What a dope.

  10. newrouter says:

    >Pope in Albania urges Muslims to condemn Islam extremism

  11. newrouter says:

    that allan dude be real

  12. happyfeet says:

    Rick Perry suggests Joan Rivers might not have died under Texas abortion laws

    he suggested it out loud using his words

  13. newrouter says:

    >he suggested it out loud using his words<

    admitting privileges to the effin' hospital no? electric hamster? kill the baby is a death cult.

  14. newrouter says:

    yea and go “ax allan he’s 10′ tall”

  15. Jimmy Crater says:

    Rabbits once went chasing me.

  16. newrouter says:

    the proggtards : effing things up since 1890

  17. newrouter says:

    RULE 12: “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions

  18. geoffb says:

    A rare moment of introspection on the left.

  19. Darleen says:

    griefer

    You know that to be a board certified oral surgeon — the people who do things like remove wisdom teeth? — are REQUIRED to have hospital admitting privileges.

    A woman’s life is more valued and protected when she’s having a wisdom tooth pulled but not when she is having her unborn child killed?

    sick sick sick

  20. Ernst Schreiber says:

    And here I thought Perry’s point might be about the fact that surgical procedures ought to be perfomed at a surgical center.

    Not so long ago, Happyfeet was saying hopeful things about Perry 16. What’s a poor pikachu to do now?

  21. cranky-d says:

    A poor pikachu will continue to do what it does, which is to sometimes pretend to be on the side of liberty, but most of the time try to undermine it.

  22. happyfeet says:

    I’m not a big nannystater

    hyper-regulation of healthcare is not the answer it’s the problem

    Republicans used to know that

  23. serr8d says:

    Hyper regulation means surgeons need use hospital facilities? Why, that would mean no ‘mo back-alley abortions! What’s a good Democrat cat lady to do, after a horde of evangelical GOP Christian godbotherers descend on her Nature-Tribal-Lesbian-Wiccan community, raping and impregnating all but the goats (left unmolested for the servants of Allah, who tend to the growing of the weed and the making of the meth) ?

  24. happyfeet says:

    Hyper-regulation means regulating something without any empirical evidence that you’re addressing a real problem that exists in the real world

  25. serr8d says:

    Then let’s sundown all laws and start fresh, ‘feets. Let’s redo, re-beginning, the basics first:

    1) Thou Shalt Not Kill

    Abortionists hardest hit.

  26. serr8d says:

    …calls Obama “vile”, more foolish than Bush, and a “mule of the Jews.” Warning Americans and Europeans that “you will pay a great price, when your economies collapse,” ISIS blasts Kerry, “the uncircumcised old geezer,” for his “false arguments.”

    Laughing! My!Ass!Off!

  27. BigBangHunter says:

    – Now all ISIS has to do is start demanding to “kill the filthy apes”, and they’ll have achieved Charleton Heston level useless stardom.

  28. serr8d says:

    Perhaps ISIL is telegraphing a change in strategy, from head-chopping to circumcising old men?

    THK: “You’d like ketchup with that. Believe me!”

  29. geoffb says:

    Poor baby.

    If only in the past 16 months she had had a place where she could tell the truth about herself and all that happened on her watch. But no one ever gave her that opportunity, sat her down and asked her questions about it, till now.

    Employers won’t hire her. She’s been berated with epithets like “dirty Jew.” Federal agents have guarded her house because of death threats. And she’s spent hundreds of thousands of dollars defending herself against accusations she orchestrated a coverup in a scandal that has come to represent everything Americans hate about the IRS.

    Lois Lerner is toxic — and she knows it. But she refuses to recede into anonymity or beg for forgiveness for her role in the IRS tea party-targeting scandal.

    “I didn’t do anything wrong,” Lerner said in her first press interview since the scandal broke 16 months ago. “I’m proud of my career and the job I did for this country.”

    I think the “for” should be replaced with a “to” but that of course is my own partisanship showing as the “for” is hers. She should be “proud” by her own standards as she did more than any $100,000,000 in contributions, GOTV operation, or vote fraud scheme to insure that Obama would be re-elected.

  30. McGehee says:

    Lerner is a true believer; she’s really convinced that combining an Obamarrhoid’s political imperatives with the daunting and unaccountable powers of the Internal Revenue Service was the natural, righteous and patriotic thing to do.

    Because as President Peter Principle would surely say, if he spoke French, l’etat, c’est moi.

  31. geoffb says:

    David Harsanyi on the Lerner/Politico piece.

  32. guinspen says:

    **** Kerry, “the uncircumcised old geezer” ****

    **** Lerner, who sat down with POLITICO in an exclusive two-hour session, has been painted in one dimension: as a powerful bureaucrat scheming with the Obama administration to cripple right-leaning nonprofits.

    […]

    And she’s a savvy lawyer: She studiously avoided answering fundamental questions about her role in the IRS scandal that could land her in deeper trouble with Congress.

    During her POLITICO interview, flanked by her husband, a partner at a national law firm, and two of her personal attorneys, she opened up about her life as a pariah, joked about horrible news photos and advice that she disguise herself with a blond wig, and cried when expressing gratitude for her legal team’s friendship. ****

    *sniffle*

  33. sdferr says:

    Do we notice any longer these days that whenever politicians such as Davis or Abbott speak of education (and by these two, Davis and Abbott, I intend to point at practically all politicians, regardless of their partisan direction), they never speak of education?

    And yet we Americans listen anyhow, and can’t seem to ask the questions of them which would force them to speak of education, or in the alternative, force ourselves to speak of education?

  34. serr8d says:

    Perhaps we should consider not wasting time trying to educate those who are caught up in the throes of decline, but instead work to preserve critical knowledge for their (hopefully smarter) successors? Because, this cake is already baked I’m guessing.

    “Books are the carriers of civilization. Without books, history is silent, literature dumb, science crippled, thought and speculation at a standstill. They are engines of change, windows on the world, lighthouses erected in the sea of time.”

    The above quote is one of my all-time favorites, spoken by the brilliant Barbara Tuchman, a celebrated American author who boasts a Pulitzer Prize for her book, “The Guns of August”. I had this quote going through my mind the entire time I read “Lucifer’s Hammer”, particularly during the scene where Dan Forrester meticulously selects books to rebuild human civilization. In fact, I thought it was one of the most important scenes in the entire book, and I wished we had talked about it more in class. I am not often lucky enough to be around people who appreciate books to the extent that I do, so to see the reverence that Forrester uses while handling and carefully protecting the works that would re-build civilization was very significant to me. There was something beautiful in the fact that Dan Forrester saved humanity so humbly and silently. He received little thanks from anyone in the book, but he was the only person who realized that humanity stood a chance with the proper materials.

  35. bgbear says:

    I assume states that spend more per pupil are spending it on heating in states with colder weather.

  36. My thoughts for quite some time, Serr8d.

    In building my library of several thousand books I originally planned to provide myself with such works at my ready fingertips, but, in the last few years, I’ve come to realize I have built a library of critical works of non-fiction and fiction. My hope is to be able to preserve as much of it as I can in whatever place we move to – secure it somehow.

    Surrounding me in my small home office I have been slowly accumulating several dozen works, a core, that I can throw into duffel bags and take with me if I have to make a quick exit. I’ve got to refine it.

    The key, I think, in both ventures is to not plan to bring along any works by Leftists. Their poisons must not survive any upheaval.

  37. happyfeet says:

    that’s totally insane but completely endearing at the same time

  38. McGehee says:

    “Grandpa Bob, how did the Leftists get so powerful when they couldn’t read or write?”

  39. But, McGehee, I’ll have books by bitterclingers who discuss the Left’s poisonous ideas.

    When you have a cancer, you cut it all out.

  40. Ernst Schreiber says:

    I think the better argument is that the Left became powerful because they could read and write at a time when reading and writing was a path to power.

    When it all goes ass over tea kettle, (if indeed it does) the guys who can field strip an AR maintain a functioning firearm will be powerful, regardless of their literacy. or lack thereof.

    We know this from history. We call it The Middle Ages.

  41. But somebody, Ernst, has to go do the Lindisfarne thing.

  42. angstlee says:

    Getting back to Abortion Barbie, she sounded like she was scared shitless but trying desperately to enunciate her words so they wouldn’t slur. haha, love it.

    Secondly – can we get that moderator to be in on the presidential debates?

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