I saw about 20 minutes of Dr. Carson on last evening’s Charlie Rosie interview show. I was impressed by some bits, mostly his formative years during which he took command of himself and accomplished much but he just didn’t click with me as the next President. I thought his ideas about dealing with foreign bad guys kind of “tough-guyish” in the if I’m tough the thuggish foreign bad guys will yield sense.
To expand, since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the declaration of the USofA as the world’s Unipower, I’ve had an alternative view that comes from all those “nature” programs wherein a lion, the proverbial King of the Jungle, is trying to defend his kill from a pack of non-laughing hyenas who dart and dash in and out while the lion’s harem try to protect their offspring and figure out their part in the on-going chaos.
Or, as an alternative to that alternative, when my father was teaching me to protect me and mine he mentioned a time or two, that “Multiples are always tricky.”
I’d be more willing to support him if he was a 2nd Amendment supporter.
Greetings:
I saw about 20 minutes of Dr. Carson on last evening’s Charlie Rosie interview show. I was impressed by some bits, mostly his formative years during which he took command of himself and accomplished much but he just didn’t click with me as the next President. I thought his ideas about dealing with foreign bad guys kind of “tough-guyish” in the if I’m tough the thuggish foreign bad guys will yield sense.
To expand, since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the declaration of the USofA as the world’s Unipower, I’ve had an alternative view that comes from all those “nature” programs wherein a lion, the proverbial King of the Jungle, is trying to defend his kill from a pack of non-laughing hyenas who dart and dash in and out while the lion’s harem try to protect their offspring and figure out their part in the on-going chaos.
Or, as an alternative to that alternative, when my father was teaching me to protect me and mine he mentioned a time or two, that “Multiples are always tricky.”