Thursday, September 2, 2010

The Open-Minded, Tolerant, Considerate, Respectful ....

I have memories of this intense unwritten emphasis in nearly every area of life, that we must tolerate, accept, listen, be respectful toward even if we disagree - after all, that is what being an educated liberal is; contrasted with anyone on the right who is clearly unstable, violent (guns), and hateful (anti-choice). 

It is always the right who busily concocts hateful lies and spews it out to an unsuspecting public via their mouthpiece, 'FOX News'. 

Recently, it has been the left that has argued that Muslims have a right to build their mosque, and we should tolerate and be respectful, and understanding, and not spew hate and ....



Billboard buyer shares why he brought 'Vote Obama?' sign to the Ozarks


by Marie Saavedra, KY3 News
August 30, 2010
 
OZARK, CO., Mo. -- When it comes to politics, there may be as many opinions as cars cruising down U.S. 65. So, naturally, there are different reactions to a billboard south of Ozark that says "Voted Obama? Embarrassed yet?"


"I know the president didn't win down here, but there were a lot of people down here that voted for him, and I think I can speak for them and say we are not embarrassed yet," Matthew Patterson, executive director of the Greene County Democratic Central Committee, said in a telephone interview on Sunday.

"My partner and I felt lots of frustration here lately, and we liked that sign and we thought that was a reasonable question to ask," Steve Critchfield said in a telephone interview on Monday.

Critchfield and his business partner from Commercial One Brokers, a real estate firm in Branson, saw a similar sign online, bought it, and brought it to the Ozarks.

"I've certainly voted for people I'm embarrassed to say I've voted for," he said. "We're not naïve enough to think that we wouldn't get someone to be upset. I'm just surprised how upset people are."

Critchfield says he's received death threats due to the sign; people accuse him of hate speech and racism. He insists the billboard was for something more American in the name of discourse, conversation, and old-fashioned debate.

"If everybody thinks [President Obama's] done a great job and they're very happy," he said, "then I guess they'd be buying billboards saying 'I'm proud to have voted for him.' That's what makes America great, isn't it?"

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
liberals

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.