This is a must see video.
It speaks of American exceptionalism and refutes the likes of Moore, Maher, Gerofa-ho, and Obama.
It’s 15 minutes long, but well worth the time.

RULE I: ALL GUNS ARE ALWAYS LOADED
RULE II: NEVER LET THE MUZZLE COVER ANYTHING YOU ARE NOT WILLING TO DESTROY
RULE III: KEEP YOUR FINGER OFF THE TRIGGER UNTIL YOUR SIGHTS ARE ON THE TARGET
RULE IV: BE SURE OF YOUR TARGET

This is a must see video.
It speaks of American exceptionalism and refutes the likes of Moore, Maher, Gerofa-ho, and Obama.
It’s 15 minutes long, but well worth the time.
Dr. Death is peeved…
Sarah Palin vs. Dr. Death
by Stuart Schwartz
Ezekiel Emanuel is upset. The president’s health care czar sees the growing resistance to his vision, to his brave new world of government-run “communitarian” health care in which politicians and bureaucrats control one-sixth of the economy and 100% of our bodies. He doesn’t quite understand how it all came apart on him, but he does know who started the unraveling: Sarah Palin.
Just another reason for me not to eat their ice cream. You can be all activist as you like. I’ll respond by never buying their products.
Ben and Jerry’s renames ice cream Hubby Hubby in celebration of gay marriage
By Matthew Moore
The flavour formerly known as Chubby Hubby will be sold under the playful new name for the length of September.
Ben and Jerry’s has developed a reputation for social activism – and smart publicity stunts – since being founded by two former hippies in Burlington, Vermont in 1978.
They don’t get to the anti-tax stance until the second page at the end of the article. But, what do you expect from Reuters?
At any rate, taxing everything more is not going to solve America’s problems. Lower taxes, less government are the proven methods of generating an economy that will be vibrant and let Americans prosper. This BS isn’t going to cut it.
Since they waited to say it at the end, I’m putting it up front:
Battle lines drawn over soda, junk food taxes
By Lisa Baertlein
Critics say new “sin tax” plans would turn the nation into a nanny state, hurt business, threaten an already weak economy and place an unfair burden on low-income shoppers. And groups such as Americans Against Food Taxes are striking back.
That organization has big-name backers such as juice maker Welch’s, PepsiCo Inc, the American Beverage Association, the Corn Refiners Association, agribusiness giant Cargill Inc and restaurant chains ranging from fast-food purveyors McDonald’s Corp and Burger King Holdings Inc to Olive Garden owner Darden Restaurants Inc.
Its website warns that taxes on sugary drinks would have a “negative impact on American families struggling in this economy.” A narrator on its television ads, which feature a family camping trip, says: “Taxes never made anyone healthy. Education, exercise and balanced diets do that.”