If you want to like a person, never, ever, ever discuss religion or politics with them. EVER.
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yeah and as soon as you get in god yells at you "what am i made of fricken money ? turn the light off" lol
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*Holds up a paint ball gun for Daire to shoot them with*
Okay, I'm either sucking up, or being sarcastic, you choose!
Wrong! Cancer is number 1 and Jesus is number 2. Cancer has more of a grasp of reality (even with as screwed up as things can seem on this site) than Jesus does!
By the way, isn't that dude dead?
:P
hahaha.
and that's the attitude that makes me crazy because they manage to pray for everything but getting the job done...
although tossing the spastic chimp into the middle of them does sound fun
http://www.adn.com/sarahpalin/story/511471.html
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I wonder what books she had in mind for the firepit.
Seems that there is quite a confusion on this topic. I looked it up on
http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/sliming_palin.html
...to get a more accurate picture. Some of the books that she supposedly wanted banned were Harry Potter books, which weren't written then yet.
pff, democrats....
hahaha!
"Not a Book Burner
One accusation claims then-Mayor Palin threatened to fire Wasilla’s librarian for refusing to ban books from the town library. Some versions of the rumor come complete with a list of the books that Palin allegedly attempted to ban. Actually, Palin never asked that books be banned; no books were actually banned; and many of the books on the list that Palin supposedly wanted to censor weren't even in print at the time, proving that the list is a fabrication. The librarian was fired, but was told only that Palin felt she didn’t support her. She was re-hired the next day. The librarian never claimed that Palin threatened outright to fire her for refusing to ban books.
It’s true that Palin did raise the issue with Mary Ellen Emmons, Wasilla’s librarian, on at least two occasions, three in some versions. Emmons flatly stated her opposition each time. But, as the Mat-Su Valley Frontiersman (Wasilla’s local paper) reported at the time, Palin asked general questions about what Emmons would say if Palin requested that a book be banned. According to Emmons, Palin "was asking me how I would deal with her saying a book can't be in the library." Emmons reported that Palin pressed the issue, asking whether Emmons' position would change if residents were picketing the library. Wasilla resident Anne Kilkenny, who was at the meeting, corroborates Emmons' story, telling the Chicago Tribune that "Sarah said to Mary Ellen, 'What would your response be if I asked you to remove some books from the collection?' "
Palin characterized the exchange differently, initially volunteering the episode as an example of discussions with city employees about following her administration's agenda. Palin described her questions to Emmons as “rhetorical,” noting that her questions "were asked in the context of professionalism regarding the library policy that is in place in our city." Actually, true rhetorical questions have implied answers (e.g., “Who do you think you are?”), so Palin probably meant to describe her questions as hypothetical or theoretical. We can't read minds, so it is impossible for us to know whether or not Palin may actually have wanted to ban books from the library or whether she simply wanted to know how her new employees would respond to an instruction from their boss. It is worth noting that, in an update, the Frontiersman points out that no book was ever banned from the library’s shelves.
Palin initially requested Emmons’ resignation, along with those of Wasilla’s other department heads, in October 1996. Palin described the requests as a loyalty test and allowed all of them (except one, whose department she was eliminating) to retain their positions. But in January 1997, Palin fired Emmons, along with the police chief. According to the Chicago Tribune, Palin did not list censorship as a reason for Emmons’ firing, but said she didn’t feel she had Emmons’ support. The decision caused “a stir” in the small town, according to a newspaper account at the time. According to a widely circulated e-mail from Kilkenny, “city residents rallied to the defense of the City Librarian and against Palin’s attempt at out-and-out censorship, so Palin backed down and withdrew her termination letter.”
As we’ve noted, Palin did not attempt to ban any library books. We don’t know if Emmons’ resistance to Palin’s questions about possible censorship had anything to do with Emmons’ firing. And we have no idea if the protests had any impact on Palin at all. There simply isn’t any evidence that we can find either way. Palin did re-hire Emmons the following day, saying that she now felt she had the librarian’s backing. Emmons continued to serve as librarian until August 1999, when the Chicago Tribune reports that she resigned.
So what about that list of books targeted for banning, which according to one widely e-mailed version was taken “from the official minutes of the Wasilla Library Board”? If it was, the library board should take up fortune telling. The list includes the first four Harry Potter books, none of which had been published at the time of the Palin-Emmons conversations. The first wasn't published until 1998. In fact, the list is a simple cut-and-paste job, snatched (complete with typos and the occasional incorrect title) from the Florida Institute of Technology library Web page, which presents the list as “Books banned at one time or another in the United States.”
Update, Sept. 9: We have revised this section dealing with accusations that Palin wanted to ban books from Wasilla's library to include more detail about what transpired at the time."
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That sounds about right! :)
Feeling (F) 5%
Judging (J) 64%
Uh oh! haha........
Looks like I am going to have to lift this one too. All the kids are doin' it.
Don't judge me! :P
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BleedingPolaroid
02:45 Sep 29 2008
this encourages my back up plan If I fail at college.
I can be a pirate, woo bringing it back!
xxEmaeraldxx
22:23 Oct 01 2008
If our resident, "Popeye" was Captain of that ship..he would be a local hero in Somalia, I'm sure! hmm, but I'd wonder if he had rum at the wheel..