Buttle's World

12 June, 2008

The PODS People

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 21:51

Melanie Phillips on Princess Obama Derangement Syndrome.

First, it is quite clear that any questioning at all of Obama’s background is entirely off-limits. Next, the posters fail totally to grasp that the real point isn’t what faith he professed or was brought up in as a child – it is the fact that he has not told the truth about his early background. Then, some even compare such questioning with the ‘truthers’ who allege that 9/11 was perpetrated by a conspiracy between America and Israel. They thus demonstrate that they cannot tell the difference between rationality and lunacy, evidence and fantasy, failing to grasp that the sole reason for the questions about Obama is the many discrepancies in the accounts of his early life — including his own accounts — plus his many questionable associations.

All the hubbub started with this.

We are entitled therefore to ask whether the Muslim world supports him because it believes he is still a Muslim. We are entitled to ask precisely when he stopped being a Muslim, and why. Did Obama embrace Christianity as a tactical manoeuvre to get himself elected? Why indeed has he dissembled about his family background if not for that end?

These multiple known deceptions by someone who may become President of the United States are deeply alarming. The concealment is the issue. To dismiss such concerns and the related questions they provoke as a smear campaign is to attempt to browbeat into silence those who legitimately raise them and require urgent answers as a matter of the most acute public interest.

Why Judges Matter

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 13:24

In a nutshell.

I’m afraid of who McCain would pick, because he says he’ll pick judges who disagree with his own policies.

I’m terrified of who Obama would pick.

Update:

If you’re looking for comfort from John McCain I have concerning news.

Portland Used to Be Literate

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 9:19

This reminded me of a joke my dad used to tell. Back in the 50’s, long before it became Berkeley North, Portland, Oregon had quite the reputation for literacy. Dad was part of an active group of freelance writers. The story is of a man who arrived from Boston and hailed a cab at the airport. Feeling peckish he asked the cabbie, “Where can I get scrod?”

After a thoughtful pause, the driver replied, “I’ve had that request many times, but this is the first in the pluperfect subjunctive.”

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