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« Are They Serious? | Main | Keep An Eye on This » October 6, 2004It Was Either Halliburton or the Neocons...Some deranged fool, most certainly a Bush-hater, shoots up a Bush campaign office in Knoxville and Knoxville's best-known Dem blogger dismisses it as a GOP campaign trick. "Even the stupidest, most unhinged Democrat would have nothing to gain and a lot to loose (sic) by something this retarded."Er, except that in Orlando, Democrat union thugs stormed and ransacked a Bush campaign office, and I doubt Karl Rove put 'em up to it. UPDATE: Bubba's up to his usual juvenile tricks, redirecting anyone who clicks the link from this blog to his blog to go to FreeRepublic.com instead. I'm happy to have you visit FreeRepublic, but I think you should see the depraved idiocy of Bubba's post for yourself. So the URL is http://www.southknoxbubba.net/skblog/archive_2004_10.php#3554 and if you click here you can see a screenshot. Given the hate-filled rhetoric spewing from the Left, often reflected on South Knox Bubba's site and in the comments posted there by his loony readers, it is beyond amazing that Bubba trivializes this violent attack as a partisan trick - especially given the recent spate of attacks on Republican campaign offices and personnel often by Democrats and leftists in recent days in Seattle, in West Allis, Wisconsin; in Bozeman, Montana; in St. Paul, Minnesota; in Orlando, in Knoxville, in Huntingdon, West Virginia, and in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where bullet holes were found Sept. 16 in the windows of local Republican Party headquarters. The list of cities where GOP offices are being criminally attacked is growing, and the perps are Democrats. If any Democrat offices are attacked, you can bet Bubba will still blame Karl Rove. Al Gore is wrong. The digital brownshirts - and the real-world kind - are on the Left. Posted in Campaign Season
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Even locally here in Mid-Tenn, the Dems supporters are doing some vandalizing - yet the Bush supporters have made and example out of it too. [Pics included] Posted by: DocB at October 6, 2004 07:39 AMWow, I am sure we will turn to the Democrats to restore order as soon as the Reichstag fire is put out! Posted by: Bob Diethrich at October 6, 2004 08:36 AMMr. Hobbs, Can you account for your whereabouts during the time in question? Posted by: SemiPundit at October 6, 2004 08:47 AMYes. Can you? Can Bubba? Heh. Posted by: Bill at October 6, 2004 09:12 AMThe orange shirts was a coordinated union event. Posted by: Sandy P at October 6, 2004 09:12 AMSemiPundit, what's the point of your question? I mean, Christ, we've got half a dozen examples of Democrat violence against Republicans, and all you can do is make snark comments? BTW -- it appears the Florida and Wisconsin attacks were part of a coordinated effort. A federal prosecutor should be looking into this, ASAP. Add another one: Huntington, WV. Steve Bragg Thanks, Steve. I added it to the list. Posted by: Bill at October 6, 2004 02:34 PM. . .reflected on South Knox Bubba's site and in the comments posted there by his loony readers . . . Jeez, Bill, I see your name in the 'comments' section a lot over at Bubba's. Is you one of them loony readers too? Posted by: The Fixer at October 6, 2004 03:00 PMOh, absolutely. Loony as can be. Certifiable. Posted by: Bill at October 6, 2004 03:37 PMLooks like another theme to go along with vote fraud. On a side note, there was a slightly defaced Kerry sign on Rock Spring Road near Waldron Road last week. Posted by: Michael Chaney at October 6, 2004 08:37 PMDon't forget the nazi symbol being spray painted on Bush/Cheney yard signs around the U of Memphis area last month. Posted by: Gail at October 6, 2004 09:47 PMWere the Nazis upset about it? Posted by: SemiPundit at October 7, 2004 08:12 AM"Were the Nazis upset about it?" What an inane remark. You're slippin', Semi. Posted by: jane m at October 7, 2004 11:05 AMOn reflection, I think I will have to agree. The remark, though I thought witty, is probably rather harsh. These guys, in my opinion, are misguided, grasping, and rather deluded--but not evil as the Nazis were (and are). Posted by: SemiPundit at October 8, 2004 12:49 AMMaybe you should stick with the more generic "fascists" misnomer if you want to imply that your political foes hold such views. Like I prefer the generic term "communists" to the "Marxists" label when I want to insult the "left-wing extremists" we find among us. Posted by: jane m at October 8, 2004 11:11 AMJeez, who's dividing America, here? I'm a member of the GOP and a Bush supporter. According to Semi, I'm evil, but not "as evil" as the Nazis. According to John Edwards, I've "lost my mind." According to Turayzah, "I'm and idiot" because I don't support kerry's health care plan. The AFL-CIO is storming GOP campaign buildings and tearing up little girl's signs. Some nut job is doing drive bys in Knoxville. And, as Bill has so thoroughly pointed out, the DNC and it's allies are engaged in rampant voter fraud on the Boss Tweed/Daley level. There is a political wing in America detached from reality, blinded by hate, and power-mad beyond all comprehension. And it's not the Right. Posted by: Ivan at October 8, 2004 12:18 PMA few weeks ago Jimmy Carter made a splash with his concern that elections in the USA might be unfair. Perhaps he should do more than whine about it and contact his own party members who seem to be the ones trying to make his prediction come true. I keep forgetting that many people are semantically challenged (i.e., using ellipses and partial quotes when citing Mr. Kerry's 1971 testimony, so that he appears to have accused the Winter Soldier veteran of atrocities, instead of reporting what they had said to him). It is my fault that I did not say "--but not evil, as the Nazis were (and are)." My closest friend of about 20 years is a Republican. You know--the kind we don't see much of anymore. So is about 90 percent of my extended family of aunts, uncles, and cousins. Not only that, they are mostly Baptists, with many of them ministers. They are good people, as are so many others who aspire to have a better country. If you could read my lips, it would look like this: the current Republican leadership is cynically misleading them and is unworthy of their loyalty. Posted by: SemiPundit at October 8, 2004 03:05 PMNice reply, Semi, except for the first paragraph. I didn't misquote you, nor did I incorrectly read what you wrote...I'm not semantically challenged (I'm interpreting that as an insult...or is this another case of me not understanding you?). Next time say what you mean and mean what you say. Your guy Kerry would have a lot less trouble right now if he could do that and stop leaving himself nuanced "outs" on every position he does or does not hold. Posted by: Ivan at October 8, 2004 03:16 PMPost a comment
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