14 Replies to “Global Test”

  1. Kerry is the wishy washy little twerp who signed the Small Arms Control Treaty who has rubbed elbows with Hanoi Jane He is a traitor like most all of his party and the rest of the political hacks in the District of Crinimals

  2. He also asserted that “conservatism” is a bigger threat to the US than ISIS/radical Islam (which he didn’t call it, because they Islamic Obama administration won’t allow any disparaging of the prophet (ptui be upon him)).

  3. Well, of course terrorism, specifically, muslim terrorism is a bigger issue than climate change, because it is an actual issue. People are killed by it every day, somewhere in the world. It killed 50 people in Florida this week.
    Climate change is a totally fictional issue, and hasn’t hurt anyone, although stupid measures intended to “fight climate change” have caused hardship and death.

  4. Kerry Obama the Finks major Dumb O and Dumb-O-Crats as well a member of the Stupid Jackass Party and a mealy mouthed little twerp he need to stick his fingers in a light socket

  5. Being equal threats they will deal with it in the same way.
    Kill ISIS and kill AGW deniers. Or send them to Guantanamo.

  6. truth be known, we can blame Abraham for the muzzlims, their roots do start there, and much of the garbage in the koran is lifted rite from the old testament. So Occam’s MacRazor dicktate the kristinas are to blame!!

  7. Exactly! Lurch is lurching from biggest threat to another, and all the while he and his MB sympathizer boss are actually the biggest threat to the US.

  8. Of course the Christians are to blame. After all, they’re the cause of every single thing that’s bad about this world. That’s obvious. Christians are even responsible retroactively for all the evil that happened before Christians existed, like during the time of Abraham.
    NME, your obsession with Christianity causes me to wonder what happened to you to make you this way. You know a little about the Bible, although you seem to have most of that wrong. So near and yet so far!

  9. deer greg, truth hurts, don’t it. The bible bangers expect the “moderate” muzzies to speak up, while mostly remaining deadly silent on their own sins. Child molestation within religious orgs, and not just in the RC church, gets covered up and the “moderate” kristians remain silent. Do you understand the term hippocrit?
    So here’s a heads up for an idiot like you, moderate Muslims identify more closely with the extremists than they do with any other demographic, just as Christians identify with other, even the sinning ones, Christians. Also, extremists, criminals, and other nare-do-wells, usually turn on there own first, just ask Hirsi Ali. So, just as kristians don’t out sinning kristians, so muslims don’t out exremists in their midst. It’s basic behavioral psychology. Maybe people like you should read more before opening your pie hole?

  10. The Discreet Charm of the Terrorist Cause
    By Anne Applebaum
    sympathy for the Irish Republican Army that persisted for decades in some Irish American communities and is only now fading away. Like British Muslim support for Muslim extremist terrorism, Irish American support for Irish terrorism came in many forms. There were Irish Americans who waved the Irish flag once a year on St. Patrick’s Day and admired the IRA’s cause but felt queasy about the methods. There were Irish Americans who collected money for Catholic charities in Northern Ireland without condoning the IRA at all. There were also Irish Americans who, while claiming to be “aiding the families of political prisoners,” were in fact helping to arm IRA terrorists. Throughout the 1970s, until Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asked President Ronald Reagan to stop them, they were the IRA’s primary source of funding. And even after that they were widely tolerated.
    I concede there is one major difference: The Irish terrorists were setting off their bombs across the ocean and not in New York or Boston, which somehow made the whole thing seem less real. But in Britain the explosions were real enough. In 1982 — the year an IRA bomb killed eight people in Hyde Park — four IRA men were arrested in New York after trying to buy surface-to-air missiles from an FBI agent. In 1984 — the year the IRA tried to kill the whole British cabinet in Brighton — an IRA plot to smuggle seven tons of explosives was foiled, an action that led to the arrests of several Americans. As recently as 1999, long after the IRA had declared its cease-fire, members of an IRA group connected to an American organization, the Irish Northern Aid Committee (Noraid), were arrested for gun-running in Florida.
    The range of Americans who were unbothered by this sort of thing was surprisingly wide. Some were members of Congress, such as Republican Rep. Peter King of Long Island, who stayed with IRA supporters on visits to Northern Ireland and drank at a Belfast club called the Felons, whose members were all IRA ex-cons. Some were born in Ireland, such as Michael Flannery, Noraid’s founder, who once said that “the more British soldiers sent home from Ulster in coffins, the better,” and whose flattering obituary in 1995 described him as a man who “treated everyone he met with gentle respect.” Some were Americans of Irish descent, such as Tom McBride, a businessman who is still the chairman of the Hartford chapter of Noraid, and who still refuses to condemn IRA terrorism. “I think they are protecting a segment of the population that needs to be protected,” he told me over the phone.
    Nor were these opinions irrelevant. The Irish journalist Conor O’Clery, who has followed Irish-American relations for more than a decade, says the IRA has “always looked to the diaspora for moral backing” as well as money.
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/02/AR2005080201943.html

  11. Obama and Clinton would claim they were disaffected youth filled with right wing hate, for whom salvation was only possible with bomb control.

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