12 Comments on When CNN Throws You an Unexpected Hardball
I feel your pain man. Of course those walking around with a silver spoon in thei5r mouth aren’t feeling the pain like someone with a kid in the shopping cart, one in the baby seat in the cart, and Mom is pregnant again. Same Mom is standing on the cornet with a sign that says “3 children and another one on the way.” So, how do you measure pain? Everyone’s pain is different. I pick my poison.
9
Maybe he should have bounced the question back at Tater, “you first “.
4
ask him how his pfizer investments did for him
he makes money when everyone else suffers
how much did cnn pay him for the interview? I bet they sent a chauffeured car to pick him up for the gig, so he didn’t have to pay for the gas.
11
1. Not one single SCOTUS judge served in the military.
2. Every member of both Houses has a law degree (and most of their pages too)
3. Government employees are unionized
4. obozocare was mandatory for us, they all exempted themselves
5. The IRS, FBI, CIA were weaponized and select their targets, with impunity, for 3-4 decades now
29
I give the guy credit for not spewing bullshit about how $7 gas is hitting him in the wallet.
I’m surprised Tater didn’t see the downside to that question.
5
“I feel the pain…”
Horse shit. Not one follower of the progressive movement has any capacity whatsoever for empathy or sympathy on any level. They are rankest of rank opportunists whose motivation for this bullshit is to exploit any population they identify as vulnerable in an effort to advance their own agenda. I mean that literally and I men it emphatically.
To concede sincerity to any of them is to step willingly into a trap.
17
George Carlin’s been quoted many times, “It’s a big club, and you ain’t in it.”
14
What we need to do is start administering some pain to these bastards.
12
aleon,
I’m capable at 400-500 yds on a windy prairie, how about you?
4
It seemed for a moment that tater grew some tots!
3
@aleon: “What we need to do is start administering some pain to these bastards.”
I like this kind of pain the citizens doled out during the Bubonic Plague: Text from François Bonivard (1493–1570), “Chronicles of Geneva” Brutal but necessary, and it will be necessary again.
In short, one of the doctors became so impudent and lazy that he decided not to wander the city at night, but simply threw a bundle of dust into the crowd during the day. The stench rose to the sky and one of the girls, who by a lucky chance had recently come out of that hospital, discovered what that smell was.
The doctor was tied up and placed in the good hands of competent “craftsmen.” They tried to get as much information from him as possible. However, the execution lasted several days. The ingenious hippocrats were tied to poles on wagons and carried around the city. At each intersection the executioners used red-hot tongs to tear off pieces of meat. They were then taken to the public square, beheaded and quartered, and the pieces were taken to all the districts of Geneva.
The only exception was the hospital director’s son, who did not take part in the trial but blurted out that he knew how to make potions and how to prepare the powder without fear of contamination. He was simply beheaded “to prevent the spread of evil”.
4
It was interesting to watch him squirm his way to a statement of some honesty. Clearly unused to speaking simple truth and frightened of what might happen to him if he did. I rank him as marginally, possibly, in some small part an alright guy.
I feel your pain man. Of course those walking around with a silver spoon in thei5r mouth aren’t feeling the pain like someone with a kid in the shopping cart, one in the baby seat in the cart, and Mom is pregnant again. Same Mom is standing on the cornet with a sign that says “3 children and another one on the way.” So, how do you measure pain? Everyone’s pain is different. I pick my poison.
Maybe he should have bounced the question back at Tater, “you first “.
ask him how his pfizer investments did for him
he makes money when everyone else suffers
how much did cnn pay him for the interview? I bet they sent a chauffeured car to pick him up for the gig, so he didn’t have to pay for the gas.
1. Not one single SCOTUS judge served in the military.
2. Every member of both Houses has a law degree (and most of their pages too)
3. Government employees are unionized
4. obozocare was mandatory for us, they all exempted themselves
5. The IRS, FBI, CIA were weaponized and select their targets, with impunity, for 3-4 decades now
I give the guy credit for not spewing bullshit about how $7 gas is hitting him in the wallet.
I’m surprised Tater didn’t see the downside to that question.
“I feel the pain…”
Horse shit. Not one follower of the progressive movement has any capacity whatsoever for empathy or sympathy on any level. They are rankest of rank opportunists whose motivation for this bullshit is to exploit any population they identify as vulnerable in an effort to advance their own agenda. I mean that literally and I men it emphatically.
To concede sincerity to any of them is to step willingly into a trap.
George Carlin’s been quoted many times, “It’s a big club, and you ain’t in it.”
What we need to do is start administering some pain to these bastards.
aleon,
I’m capable at 400-500 yds on a windy prairie, how about you?
It seemed for a moment that tater grew some tots!
@aleon: “What we need to do is start administering some pain to these bastards.”
I like this kind of pain the citizens doled out during the Bubonic Plague: Text from François Bonivard (1493–1570), “Chronicles of Geneva” Brutal but necessary, and it will be necessary again.
In short, one of the doctors became so impudent and lazy that he decided not to wander the city at night, but simply threw a bundle of dust into the crowd during the day. The stench rose to the sky and one of the girls, who by a lucky chance had recently come out of that hospital, discovered what that smell was.
The doctor was tied up and placed in the good hands of competent “craftsmen.” They tried to get as much information from him as possible. However, the execution lasted several days. The ingenious hippocrats were tied to poles on wagons and carried around the city. At each intersection the executioners used red-hot tongs to tear off pieces of meat. They were then taken to the public square, beheaded and quartered, and the pieces were taken to all the districts of Geneva.
The only exception was the hospital director’s son, who did not take part in the trial but blurted out that he knew how to make potions and how to prepare the powder without fear of contamination. He was simply beheaded “to prevent the spread of evil”.
It was interesting to watch him squirm his way to a statement of some honesty. Clearly unused to speaking simple truth and frightened of what might happen to him if he did. I rank him as marginally, possibly, in some small part an alright guy.