Where are the black people!!!!!!!!!!

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Maverick74, Oct 5, 2011.

  1. He reminds me of Ru Paul- a man one minute and a whiny bitch the next.
     
    #41     Oct 5, 2011
  2. From last nights St. Louis tea party rally outside the Obama-Carnahan fundraiser.

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    I guess Dems don't much like black people in power.

    Here is who they were calling an Uncle Tom.

    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Martin-D-Baker-for-US-Congress/305198495162
     
    #42     Oct 5, 2011
  3. pspr

    pspr

    Those are NOT FEDERALLY given rights. They are unalienable rights given to ever person by God and recognized as such by the Founding Fathers.

    Big, big difference.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life,_liberty_and_the_pursuit_of_happiness
     
    #43     Oct 5, 2011
  4. And yet you, despite all of your name calling and slander have failed to EVER ONCE tells me what objectively qualifies me as a "racist". Then again, I guess your ilk never had a problem with using slander and erroneous name calling to attack people who's views you dislike...

    The Tea Party has a "racist bell" around it's neck? You mean the same Tea Party who's straw poll Herman Cain won? The same Tea Party who champions Allen West and Thomas Sowell? LOL! What planet are you on?

     
    #44     Oct 5, 2011
  5. No one wishes to deny anyone the rights of life, liberty, or the pursuit of happiness. Giving business and property owners, and individuals the right to do business with with and associate with anyone they please on any basis they deem appropriate does not infringe upon any of the aforementioned rights. Rather, denying people those freedoms DOES infringe on the right to liberty and pursuit of happiness, and in many cases had ended up infringing on the right to life. Your erroneous rhetoric is exposed for the steaming pile of shit which it is yet again.

     
    #45     Oct 5, 2011
  6. Tea party attacks government and occupy wall st. attacks the source of wealth, if they team up its game over. Tea party wants smaller government and smaller business and occupy wall st. wants corporate accountability. Good luck with that :D
     
    #46     Oct 5, 2011
  7. Ain't gonna happen. The 'occupy ws' crowd wants bigger government.
     
    #47     Oct 5, 2011
  8. Eight

    Eight

    actually the Fed offers the States money to pay for things that are unconstitutional like the dept of education and all that s%^t.. the states have to just man up and tell the Feds to keep their dirty money but instead they lay down and say "do it all!!" with a big grin...
     
    #48     Oct 5, 2011
  9. Mercor

    Mercor

    Quite a bit more then a Pizzaman. But of course he is no community organizer.
    _________________________

    Cain was born in Memphis, Tennessee, son of Luther Cain, Jr. and his wife Lenora Davis.[6][7] His mother was a cleaning woman and his father, who was raised on a farm, was a chauffeur.[3] He grew up in Georgia.[8] Cain graduated from Morehouse College in 1967 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics, and received a Master of Science degree in computer science from Purdue University in 1971,[9] when he was also working full-time in ballistics for the U.S. Department of the Navy.
    [edit] Business career

    After completing his master's degree from Purdue, Cain left the Department of the Navy and began working for The Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta as a business analyst. In 1977, he moved to Minneapolis to join Pillsbury, soon becoming director of analysis in its restaurant and foods group in 1978. He was assigned in the 1980s first to analyze and ultimately to take the reins of Burger King, which at the time was a Pillsbury subsidiary, where he managed 400 stores in the Philadelphia area. Under Cain's leadership, his region went in three years from the least profitable for Burger King to the most profitable. This prompted Pillsbury to appoint him President and CEO of another subsidiary, Godfather's Pizza. Aiming to cut costs, Cain over a 14-month period reduced the company from 911 stores down to 420. As a result of his efforts, Godfather's Pizza finally became profitable. In a leveraged buyout in 1988, Cain, Executive Vice-President and COO Ronald B. Gartlan and a group of investors bought Godfather's from Pillsbury. Cain continued as CEO until 1996, when he was asked to resign by the board.

    Later that year he became CEO of the National Restaurant Association – a trade group and lobby organization for the restaurant industry – where he had previously been chairman concurrently with his role at Godfather's.[10]

    Cain became a member of the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in 1992 and served as its chairman from January 1995 to August 1996, when he resigned to become active in national politics.[11] Cain was a 1996 recipient of the Horatio Alger Award.[12]

    Cain was on the board of directors of Aquila, Inc. from 1992 to 2008, and also served as a board member for Nabisco, Whirlpool, Reader's Digest, and AGCO, Inc.[13][1
     
    #49     Oct 5, 2011