Daily Dolt: Treason In Defense of Slavery Yankee

Usually I try and keep these somewhat local, but this is too much:

That doesn’t mean the Enquirer has suddenly become more credible. It just serves to show you how partisan and unreliable the American news media is today.

Barack Obama’s list of known mentors now includes child rapists (“Uncle Frank” Marshall), racists (Rev. Jeremiah Wright) and terrorists (Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dorn).

When is someone going to question how these associations must have warped Obama’s views and render him unstable, and unsuitable for the Presidency?

Let’s start with being the victim of a crime doesn’t make one unfit for office and many people who have been molested go on to lead happy and healthy lives. Those underlying issues show what a dunce Treason Boy is.

Let me suggest that promoting the idea that some sort of trauma might make you dangerously unstable is a really bad idea when the candidate you are backing was tortured in a Vietnamese prison camp for 5 1/2 years.

Just a thought.

0 thoughts on “Daily Dolt: Treason In Defense of Slavery Yankee”
  1. You will find that contrary to fairy tales drifting around the blogosphere, Davis never “admitted” that any of the events from his novel actually happened in real life. You will find that critics are trying to railroad Davis with trumped-up evidence.

    Davis wrote a semi-autobiographical NOVEL. FYI: a novel is a work of FICTION! In this regard, Davis’s book is like Samuel Clemens “Roughing It,” in that they were both written under pseudonyms that were also fictional characters in their stories:

    “Samuel Clemens wrote autobiographical novels under the pseudonym “Mark Twain,” including “Roughing It,” which “follows the travels of young Mark Twain through the Wild West during the years 1861–1867. After a brief stint as a Confederate cavalry militiaman, he joined his brother Orion Clemens, who had been appointed Secretary of the Nevada Territory, on a stagecoach journey west. Twain consulted his brother’s diary to refresh his memory and borrowed heavily from his active imagination for many stories in the novel.” – Wikipedia

    In both cases authors used pseudonyms to publish autobiographical novels that were “fictionalized but still based upon actual occurrences.” In both cases these novels presented fictionalized adventures of their pseudonymous characters.

    Does anyone claim that the adventures of “Mark Twain” literally occurred in the life of Samuel Clemens, because “Mark Twain” said they happened? If not, then why should anyone claim that the adventures of Bob Greene literally occurred in the life of Frank Marshall Davis, because “Bob Greene” said they happened? Fair weather principles indicate bias.

    “Truth is generally the best vindication against slander.”
    – Abraham Lincoln

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