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Sep 07 2012

Quote of the Day

The living icon Clint Eastwood succinctly sums up the sick joke in the White House:

“President Obama is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people.”

Thankfully, the hoax appears to be coming unraveled in time to save us from another four years of senseless damage.

Clint-Eastwood
Another well-placed round into the rancid heart of moonbattery.

On tips from Dr. 9, Bob Roberts, Byron, and Artfldgr.

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15 Responses to “Quote of the Day”

  1. MicahStone says:

    Thanks, Clint, once again You Made My Day. I’ll bet the punks feel even less lucky now.

  2. 762x51 says:

    Oh, to be Clint Eastwood! Ya gotta love a guy who can just call it as he sees it with no fear of retribution.

    In a Hollywood awash in Liberalism, most of it a contact disease passed from one person to the next by fear Eastwood stands above the crowd.

    In Hollywood, most are trying to get in the business or get ahead in the business. They attend cocktail parties, schmooze, fawn, cajole and worship anyone who may be able to help them, go along to get along and suck up to the A lister’s just to get any part in ANY movie.

    When Eastwood wants to make a movie he picks up the phone. Hilarious!

  3. justme says:

    Dave are you so sure that we are going to be saved?

    If the cemeteries emptied to vote for Kennedy, surely it will not be too difficult for Obama to have the bowels of Hell empty and pour into the voting booth for him come November.

  4. Vid Sicious says:

    After watching his pathetic performance, it looks more like he shot himself.

  5. justme says:

    Vid: to his “beLIEvers” he made the “greatest speech of his life.” Just ask Mike Lupica of The New York Daily Worker, ie .. News.

  6. justme says:

    Politics
    Mike Lupica
    President Obama delivers at Democratic National Convention in biggest speech he’s ever made
    At a time when the other side calls him not just a bad President but says he’s in over his head, he had to look strong Thursday night. And did.
    NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
    Friday, September 7, 2012, 2:30 AM
    President Barack Obama speaks on the third night of the Democratic National Convention at the Time Warner Cable Arena. (James Keivom/New York Daily News)
    James Keivom/New York Daily News

    President Obama acknowledges the crowd as he speaks on the third night of the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte.

    He stood in front of the country and delivered a speech at the Democratic convention that not only elevated the language of politics on this night to a high place, but also tried to raise the roof at the same time.

    And near the end of it this is what he said, before the cheers came at him once more from all corners of the hall:

    “This election will measure the record of the past four years. But more than that, it will answer the question of what kind of people we want to be.”

    RELATED: OBAMA CHARTS COURSE FOR BRIGHTER FUTURE

    This was not Barack Obama on Thursday night in Charlotte, or Bill Clinton the night before. It was then-Gov. Mario Cuomo delivering the keynote address at the Democratic Convention of 1984 in San Francisco, doing that with his words and with his intelligence, making himself a national figure for the first time, making you pay attention to what he had to say about his party and about America.

    Now all this time later there were other speeches to talk about this week, starting with Clinton on Wednesday night, the best speech of his career, the best speech any convention in any party has ever heard whether you like him or not or agree with him or not, and then the President himself on Thursday night, laying out his case, in a calm and substantive way, about why he should get a second term.

    “We’re offering a better path,” he said in Charlotte.

    It was part of the biggest speech he has yet been asked to make, bigger than in Boston in 2004 when he was the one introducing himself to the country at a Democratic convention, bigger than the one about race in Philadelphia four years ago.

    “Nobody has ever gotten a bigger push than Bill Clinton gave to Obama,” Mario Cuomo said Thursday morning.

    But for all the push he got and all the help, this was finally Barack Obama’s show in Charlotte, you saw this whether you are going to vote for him or not. At a time when the other side calls him not just a bad President but says he’s in over his head, he had to look strong Thursday night. And did.

    “I won’t pretend the path I’m offering is quick or easy. I never have,” he said. “You didn’t elect me to tell you what you wanted to hear. You elected me to tell you the truth.”

    He followed: “The truth is, it will take more than a few years to solve problems that have built up over decades.”

    And here is something else he said on Thursday night, talking about the party against which he will run from now until Nov. 6:

    “Have a surplus? Try a tax cut. Deficit too high? Try another. Feel a cold coming on. Take two tax cuts, roll back some regulations and call us in the morning.”

    So this was it, the end of the undercard in Charlotte. The preliminaries ended as soon as he stepped to the podium and began to talk about his wife and his children, as soon as it was his voice and his words and his ideals filling the hall the way Clinton’s had, the way Michelle Obama’s had on Tuesday.

    This was every bit the beginning of the main event: Obama against Romney, straight up, as clear a choice as we have had in presidential politics lately, his vision for the country against the other guy’s.

    “The clearest choice in a generation,” the President said.

    “(The Republicans) have bet everything on making this President look weak,” Mario Cuomo said before the speech. “It is what this election will ultimately turn on. The job for the President in this campaign is proving that he was a force for good from the very beginning and is still a force for good.”

    “We’re not in a depression,” Cuomo said. “Are we in a recession? We are. But if that’s the choice, you take a recession every time. We were on the verge of extinction economically when this man took office. Now we’re not.”

    First came Bill Clinton in Charlotte, the same Bill Clinton who ruined his legacy and tried to ruin his good name by acting the way he did with an intern, but for this one night reminding you of the greatness he had in him.

    Finally on Thursday night, it was this President’s turn. Not trying to be Clinton, or outdo him. Just be himself. Mario Cuomo is right, as usual. This election isn’t about the challenger. It’s about Obama, and really, as he put it near the end of his populist speech, it’s about you. You will vote for or against him.

    The other side doesn’t just say that the economy is weak. They say that he is weak. It wasn’t the job of the last Democratic President to tell the country otherwise in Charlotte. It was his. This he did between 10 and 11 p.m. Thursday night, at long last.

    He didn’t sound like a candidate on this night. He sounded like a President.

    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/president-obama-delivers-dnc-biggest-speech-made-article-1.1154032#ixzz25oaJM7cI

  7. [...] another four years of senseless damage. Another well-placed round into the rancid heart of [...] Moonbattery Tags: Quote Posted in Pundits | No Comments [...]

  8. Maudie N Mandeville says:

    That’s actually the truth when you think about it.

  9. Clingtomyguns says:

    Yep, Clint is correct. But his hoax only fooled the gulible. As posted on Moonbattery before Obama was first elected, many of us saw that Obama and Hope & Change were precisely the same as and foretold by the 1948 Make Mine Freedom cartoon’s Dr. Utopia and his “”ISM snake oil this cartoon warned folks about. Now its undeniable after we’ve has a taste of Hope & Change its snake oil is socialism. This should be required watching in order to vote.

    http://www.sodahead.com/united-states/1948-cartoon-about-communism-predicts-barack-obama-and-the-tea-party-watch-this-particularly-from/question-2682089/

    Especially the part after 8:27, which sums up the entire message of the Democratic National Convention and President Obama’s campaign for re-election:

    “When anybody preaches disunity, tries to pit one of us against the other, through class warfare, race hatred or religious intolerance, you know that person seeks to rob us of our freedom and destroy our very lives. And we know what to do about it….”

    Yep, vote straight Republican on Nov. 6.

  10. Bubba says:

    Mike Lupica, rack is illegal. Stop it.

  11. Bubba says:

    Oops, I hate this keyboard. Let’s try again.

    Mike Lupica, CRACK is illegal. Stop it.

    That’s better.

  12. Ginsengbull says:

    Most people don’t know this, but Clint Eastwood is allergic to horses.

  13. czuch says:

    2012/2013,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

  14. Right Reason says:

    Clint Eastwood – business owner, director, producer, taxpayer (to a massive extent), successful, fearless.

    Barack Obama – community organizer, never ran a business, never worked in a real job, sucks off the public tit.

    Why the hell is the former not an elected official, and the latter President of the greatest nation in history??

  15. D says:

    Eastwood for President!

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