"Racism is an accusation hurled by scoundrels who have no argument." JM Bovee
JM Bovee Liberalism fails everywhere and every time it's tried, whereas conservatism works every time it's tried. WTF?! Who in the hell is voting for these failures?
Yesterday at 8:23pm

Darling Nikki Geez is it that serious? Just be happy to be alive. How can u be a Prince fan & always have your panties in a bunch? Don't be so concerned with such earthly issues. Purple Luv bro:)
Yesterday at 8:27pm ·
JM Bovee I love my country. With out Washington, Adams, Jefferson, etc. setting up this amazing republic, then there would be no Prince. And if we don't wake up, then we will lose this country, and there will be no future Prince.
7 hours ago ·
Darling Nikki There will always be music, we were making music in Africa before we were brought to America. The achievments & genious of an African American man has nothing to do with the founding father's lol! I am also an American Indian person meaning I have an actual claim to this land base called "America". President Obama is the only president that ...
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5 hours ago ·
JM Bovee WTF are you talking about? How many black millionaires existed before America was founded?
24 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee Indians were nothing more than cave dwellers who hadn't invented the wheel yet. They had to either assimilate or make way for more progressed peoples.
23 minutes ago ·
Darling Nikki How many Black slaves existed before America or Latin American countires were founded-better question. If u think we were done a favor, u are dead wrong:(
23 minutes ago ·
Darling Nikki Europeans that came to America were nothing but rejects & prisoners. Rejected from Europe.
22 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee I don't give a flying fuck what Obambi's skin color is. The guy is a fucking Communist, America-hating asshole, and fuck him and all of his socialist ilk.
21 minutes ago ·
Darling Nikki If it weren't for African civilization there would be no mathmatical systems, astronomy, anything u are comparing to civilized so my brother u come from cave people. My people have never ever lived in caves:)
20 minutes ago ·
Darling Nikki And furthermore u are an uninvited guest on my homeland, remember that because God knows its the truth.
19 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee #1. Slaves of ALL colors existed everywhere throughout ALL time until The British and Americans put an end to it. Muslims had black Christian slaves so what the hell were guys like Muhammed Ali and Malcom X and Mike Tyson thinking?
#2. The Europeans who came here were tired of the monarchies and religious corruption. They were good people. Perhaps ...
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12 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee Read "The End of Racism" by Dinesh D'Souza and then tell me what time it is.
11 minutes ago ·
Darling Nikki Wow, u are clearly very hateful of Black people in general. I see that u think u are superior? Just ignorant, I hope u don't teach your kids to hate. I don't hate u, as a matter of fact I will pray for u.
3 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee You're so obsessed with race. I could care less what color you are. I'm about truth--'keepin' it real.'
2 minutes ago ·
JM Bovee I lost my virginity to a black girl in high school. I still remember her name, Alexia. Loved her. Why the F would I like Prince music if I were a racist. The only racists are the black politicians who LIE about Tea Party Protestors, or Jesse Jackson who 'shakesdown' corporations to enrich his own pockets.
about a minute ago ·
JM Bovee I refuse to be intimidated by that accusation. Anyone who calls me a racist better be able to endure my wrath because that is a vile accusation.
JM Bovee With every comment you prove my point. I mentioned those black names because you laughably tried to assign all of these mythical accomplishments by blacks throughout history.
Darling Nikki Because u are entertained by a Black man or woman doesn't mean u respect them. If u love this country then u wish well whoever the president is.
JM Bovee Did you 'respect the presidency' when Bush was in office? I do not respect this prick because he is a thug.
Darling Nikki Ha! Yes I pray for every president, whether they are who I voted for or not.
Monday, March 29, 2010
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
Friday, September 11, 2009
Is America Coming Apart?
by Patrick J. Buchanan
09/11/2009 http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=33517#c1
Flying home from London, where the subject of formal debate on the 70th anniversary of World War II had been whether Winston Churchill was a liability or asset to the Free World, one arrives in the middle of a far more acrimonious national debate right here in the United States.
At issue: Should Barack Obama be allowed to address tens of millions of American children, inside their classrooms, during school hours?
Conservative talk-show hosts saw a White House scheme to turn public schools into indoctrination centers where the socialist ideology of Obama would be spoon-fed to captive audiences of children forced to listen to Big Brother -- and then do assignments on his sermon.
Yet Byron York of The Washington Examiner dug back to 1991 to discover that, when George H.W. Bush went to Alice Deal Junior High to speak to America's school kids, the left lost it. "The White House turned a Northwest Washington junior high classroom into a television studio and its students into props," railed The Washington Post. Education Secretary Lamar Alexander was called before a House committee. The National Education Association denounced Bush. And Congress ordered the General Accounting Office to investigate.
Obama's actual speech proved about as controversial as a Nancy Reagan appeal to eighth-graders to "Just say no!" to drugs. Yet, the episode reveals the poisoned character of our politics.
We saw it earlier on display in August, when the crowds that came out for town hall meetings to oppose Obama's health care plans were called "thugs," "fascists," "racists" and "evil-mongers" by national Democrats. We see it as Rep. Joe Wilson shouts, "You lie!" at the president during his address to a joint session of Congress.
We seem not only to disagree with each other more than ever, but to have come almost to detest one another. Politically, culturally, racially, we seem ever ready to go for each others' throats.
One half of America sees abortion as the annual slaughter of a million unborn. The other half regards the right-to-life movement as tyrannical and sexist.
Proponents of gay marriage see its adversaries as homophobic bigots. Opponents see its champions as seeking to elevate unnatural and immoral relationships to the sacred state of traditional marriage.
The question invites itself. In what sense are we one nation and one people anymore? For what is a nation if not a people of a common ancestry, faith, culture and language, who worship the same God, revere the same heroes, cherish the same history, celebrate the same holidays, and share the same music, poetry, art and literature?
Yet, today, Mexican-Americans celebrate Cinco de Mayo, a skirmish in a French-Mexican war about which most Americans know nothing, which took place the same year as two of the bloodiest battles of our own Civil War: Antietam and Fredericksburg.
Christmas and Easter, the great holidays of Christendom, once united Americans in joy. Now we fight over whether they should even be mentioned, let alone celebrated, in our public schools.
Where we used to have classical, pop, country & Western and jazz music, now we have varieties tailored to specific generations, races and ethnic groups. Even our music seems designed to subdivide us.
One part of America loves her history, another reviles it as racist, imperialist and genocidal. Old heroes like Columbus, Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee are replaced by Dr. King and Cesar Chavez.
But the old holidays, heroes and icons endure, as the new have yet to put down roots in a recalcitrant Middle America.
We are not only more divided than ever on politics, faith and morality, but along the lines of class and ethnicity. Those who opposed Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court and stood by Sgt. Crowley in the face-off with Harvard's Henry Louis Gates were called racists. But this time they did not back down. They threw the same vile word right back in the face of their accusers, and Barack Obama.
Consider but a few issues on which Americans have lately been bitterly divided: school prayer, the Ten Commandments, evolution, the death penalty, abortion, homosexuality, assisted suicide, affirmative action, busing, the Confederate battle flag, the Duke rape case, Terri Schiavo, Iraq, amnesty, torture.
Now it is death panels, global warming, "birthers" and socialism. If a married couple disagreed as broadly and deeply as Americans do on such basic issues, they would have divorced and gone their separate ways long ago. What is it that still holds us together?
The European-Christian core of the country that once defined us is shrinking, as Christianity fades, the birth rate falls and Third World immigration surges. Globalism dissolves the economic bonds, while the cacophony of multiculturalism displaces the old American culture.
"E pluribus unum" -- out of many, one -- was the national motto the men of '76 settled upon. One sees the pluribus. But where is the unum? One sees the diversity. But where is the unity?
Is America, too, breaking up?
________________________________________
Mr. Buchanan is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World, "The Death of the West,", "The Great Betrayal," "A Republic, Not an Empire" and "Where the Right Went Wrong."
by Patrick J. Buchanan
09/11/2009 http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=33517#c1
Flying home from London, where the subject of formal debate on the 70th anniversary of World War II had been whether Winston Churchill was a liability or asset to the Free World, one arrives in the middle of a far more acrimonious national debate right here in the United States.
At issue: Should Barack Obama be allowed to address tens of millions of American children, inside their classrooms, during school hours?
Conservative talk-show hosts saw a White House scheme to turn public schools into indoctrination centers where the socialist ideology of Obama would be spoon-fed to captive audiences of children forced to listen to Big Brother -- and then do assignments on his sermon.
Yet Byron York of The Washington Examiner dug back to 1991 to discover that, when George H.W. Bush went to Alice Deal Junior High to speak to America's school kids, the left lost it. "The White House turned a Northwest Washington junior high classroom into a television studio and its students into props," railed The Washington Post. Education Secretary Lamar Alexander was called before a House committee. The National Education Association denounced Bush. And Congress ordered the General Accounting Office to investigate.
Obama's actual speech proved about as controversial as a Nancy Reagan appeal to eighth-graders to "Just say no!" to drugs. Yet, the episode reveals the poisoned character of our politics.
We saw it earlier on display in August, when the crowds that came out for town hall meetings to oppose Obama's health care plans were called "thugs," "fascists," "racists" and "evil-mongers" by national Democrats. We see it as Rep. Joe Wilson shouts, "You lie!" at the president during his address to a joint session of Congress.
We seem not only to disagree with each other more than ever, but to have come almost to detest one another. Politically, culturally, racially, we seem ever ready to go for each others' throats.
One half of America sees abortion as the annual slaughter of a million unborn. The other half regards the right-to-life movement as tyrannical and sexist.
Proponents of gay marriage see its adversaries as homophobic bigots. Opponents see its champions as seeking to elevate unnatural and immoral relationships to the sacred state of traditional marriage.
The question invites itself. In what sense are we one nation and one people anymore? For what is a nation if not a people of a common ancestry, faith, culture and language, who worship the same God, revere the same heroes, cherish the same history, celebrate the same holidays, and share the same music, poetry, art and literature?
Yet, today, Mexican-Americans celebrate Cinco de Mayo, a skirmish in a French-Mexican war about which most Americans know nothing, which took place the same year as two of the bloodiest battles of our own Civil War: Antietam and Fredericksburg.
Christmas and Easter, the great holidays of Christendom, once united Americans in joy. Now we fight over whether they should even be mentioned, let alone celebrated, in our public schools.
Where we used to have classical, pop, country & Western and jazz music, now we have varieties tailored to specific generations, races and ethnic groups. Even our music seems designed to subdivide us.
One part of America loves her history, another reviles it as racist, imperialist and genocidal. Old heroes like Columbus, Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee are replaced by Dr. King and Cesar Chavez.
But the old holidays, heroes and icons endure, as the new have yet to put down roots in a recalcitrant Middle America.
We are not only more divided than ever on politics, faith and morality, but along the lines of class and ethnicity. Those who opposed Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court and stood by Sgt. Crowley in the face-off with Harvard's Henry Louis Gates were called racists. But this time they did not back down. They threw the same vile word right back in the face of their accusers, and Barack Obama.
Consider but a few issues on which Americans have lately been bitterly divided: school prayer, the Ten Commandments, evolution, the death penalty, abortion, homosexuality, assisted suicide, affirmative action, busing, the Confederate battle flag, the Duke rape case, Terri Schiavo, Iraq, amnesty, torture.
Now it is death panels, global warming, "birthers" and socialism. If a married couple disagreed as broadly and deeply as Americans do on such basic issues, they would have divorced and gone their separate ways long ago. What is it that still holds us together?
The European-Christian core of the country that once defined us is shrinking, as Christianity fades, the birth rate falls and Third World immigration surges. Globalism dissolves the economic bonds, while the cacophony of multiculturalism displaces the old American culture.
"E pluribus unum" -- out of many, one -- was the national motto the men of '76 settled upon. One sees the pluribus. But where is the unum? One sees the diversity. But where is the unity?
Is America, too, breaking up?
________________________________________
Mr. Buchanan is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World, "The Death of the West,", "The Great Betrayal," "A Republic, Not an Empire" and "Where the Right Went Wrong."
Saturday, June 27, 2009
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