Have you ever wondered why so many of the environmentalist wackos say, "We need to get back to a more pristine lifestyle! We need to shut down all this technological advancement. We need to live more like they do in the Third World because that pollutes less?"
Who is he talking to? Or rather who makes up this shit?
Rush is one of those conservatives who believes that environmentalists are really all communists who want to impose massive regulations on companies in order to bring down the whole free-marked corporate world.
I just saw the coolest cat outside. White except for a coal black tail and mask that covers his ears and the top half of his face.
My downstairs neighbor is singing along with her stereo. She's really really really bad.
We had a '94 that we put 120,000 miles on until it got totaled in an accident.
We traded our '94 Saturn in at 120,000. Had a few minor issues here and there (like the AC running out of freon in mid-June), but served us well for 9-1/2 years.
Rush is one of those conservatives who believes that...
Eh. I'm not convinced he believes everything he spews. He's just out for attention and ratings.
Alias:
So what did SpyDaddy really dig out of his hand? Or was that a hallucination, too?
I really don't want to think about that. Ew ew ew!
Eh. I'm not convinced he believes everything he spews.
Yeah, you're probably right. I think he just says what his conservative (and mostly white male) audience wants to hear, whether it's true or not.
Jack and Bobby
was very good. Plus,
Harry Groener
was the grown-up version of
Bobby's friend Warren.
Eh. I'm not convinced he believes everything he spews.
That seems likely. I would be amazed if Ann Coulter believes much of anything she says.
Alias: I find it quite lovely that
SpyDaddy loves me so.
Well, that wasn't
what I was
thinking. It looked
like the Doc
was a
bad guy
last week. Now
I think Sloane
wanted to find
the doctor
for some
reason.
And what was up
with the hands
and
legs last week.
Silly me
trying to make sense
in Alias. Fun.
We often channel wolves a bit more noticeably than society likes.
This is so cool. Steven Levine talks about doing this with his wife in Embracing the Beloved. A great book and a wonderful practice. Good on ya.