Yeah, right! When Rush Limbaugh called student Sandra Fluke a "slut" and a "prostitute", the lame street media ran 32 stories in the next two weeks on it. When Martin Bashir commented on Govenor Sarah Palin, does anyone have an idea how many stories the lame street media ran? I will put it this way. Anyone who claims to have heard one is a liar.
Liberal/Progressives "claim" to be pro-Women. They're really only pro-lesbian...or pro-"any woman that supports eugenics". Sarah Palin is neither...so she is vilified. This is the Liberal/Progressive image of a "real" woman... Child-Killer Casey Anthony, in case you don't remember. According to Liberal/Progressives, her only offense was procrastinating a bit too long before "choosing" an abortion. Liberal/Progressives would support Casey Anthony for office WAY before supporting Sarah Palin and the Down's Syndrome child she cares for every day... Obamacare will mandate abortions of Down's Syndrome babies. Liberal/Progressives have a different vision for America than the rest of us. Liberal/Progressives make me sick to my stomach!
Let me put it this way, what Bashir said did not mean dimwit - not even close. Oh, and translation of Limbaugh's comment was that Fluke was a dimwit, but it made the new over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over. Maybe it would help if you actually knew what happened.
Ah Caribou Barbie. The 5 funniest lessons from Sarah Palin’s Christmas book Palin predicts a President Romney and shares her recipe for Rice Krispies Treats Sarah Palin’s book about the so-called war on Christmas, “Good Tidings and Great Joy,” dropped this week; we anticipated its central argument, about Palin’s grievances with a culture that acknowledges that not everyone celebrates Christmas. Don’t tell her “happy holidays”! But there were a few fun nuggets — not all of them related to Christmas, even! — that Palin revealed in “Good Tidings and Great Joy,” that livened up the usual Christmas-warrior arguments about the right to public creches and Christ falling out of Christmas. Here are the book’s biggest lessons. She’s a futurist. Palin takes her readers to Anchorage in the year 2028, where her attempts to celebrate Christmas with her grandson, a college hockey player, are stymied. Karly, the college’s “Vice Dean of Respect and Inclusion,” informs Palin that Christians have been excluded from campus life, but pagan celebrations are open to all, which is certainly one way one could see the future. Less likely Palin predictions about 2028: Mitt Romney will be elected president, and both Palin herself and Tina Fey will be forgotten. (Karly asks future-Palin: ”Were you the lady in the old sitcom, say about twenty years ago, about some defunct television network on 30 Rock Street?”) She still loves that one apocryphal “Dancing With the Stars” anecdote. Palin has repeated, over and over, the story of Bristol Palin telling her privately, “The critics are going to criticize anyway, and the haters are going to hate, so you might as well dance!” during her run on “Dancing With the Stars” in 2010. This doesn’t quite jibe with how millennials speak — nor does it have much to do with Christmas (it gets into the book because Bristol’s Christmas stocking depicts a bear in a tutu). She’s really into her birthday. Palin equates people referring to the Christmas season as “the holidays” to her husband lumping in her birthday with other February events: “Today is the day,” her fictional Todd Palin intones as he refuses to celebrate his wife’s getting a year older, “General Eisenhower was chosen to command the Allied armies in Europe, Bill Parcells was named head coach of the New York Jets, and Janet Reno was chosen to be the first female attorney general.” Her birthday’s ruined! It’s a good thing she has another man in her life — a straw-man argument, her one true love. Her resignation as governor of Alaska relates to Christmas, too. Palin stepped down as governor in July 2009, but — perhaps in order to defend her record yet again in a book nominally about Christmas — she rehashes the putative ideas behind her resignation again, alleging that she was thinking about them a lot during Christmas 2008. “My heart has always been — and is — full of love for Alaska,” Palin writes. “But during that Christmas, it was heavy.” Her chili recipe is really simple! “Merry Christmoose Chili” can be cooked for “1 to 5 hours” and contains five ingredients: “moose hamburger (or caribou or, heck, I suppose you can use beef),” “regular chili seasoning mix,” “hot chili seasoning mix,” tomato sauce, and kidney beans. No cumin for this lady! This actually sounds delicious but is so self-explanatory as to seem like word-count padding — an impression aided by the fact that the next recipe is for Rice Krispies Treats.
Where does Pelosi come into this? And no, I don't think shes a dimwit, just crazy and dislocated from reality. Of course, I keep forgetting what an upstanding person Limbaugh is. What was I thinking?
All media is biased to some degree any one who thinks it is not lives on a different planet LOL People who own the media outlets set the tone of that particular media. And all owners have a bias it's is simply human nature be they left or right leaning
Story was basiclly true, some of it happened close to were I live but it still dont remove the fact that the media is biased based on the view point of the ownership