Saturday, January 13, 2007

Mr.Bush even the caveman can do it.


Take off the shackles of our troops Mr. Bush. Start with the Pendleton 8 and you will have 20,008 troops to add to our presence in Iraq.. Those guys are killing machines and thats what you will need in Sadr City.
Mr. Bush, cut the rediculous rules of engagement and that will make it so easy, even a caveman can do it.

3 comments:

alvindchipmunk said...

Tuesday January 16 2007,

The United States should have liberated Cuba in 1959.

Poor Fidel, his adversity led him to the operating table, His condition, was aggravated because the infection spread and caused peritonitis, the inflammation of the membrane that covers the digestive organs."

The recovery from the first operation, in which part of his large intestine was extracted and the colon was connected to the rectum, did not go well, resulting in peritonitis, the report said.

A second operation to clean and drain the infected area was conducted. Doctors removed the remainder of Castro's large intestine and created an artificial anus. But this operation also failed.

The Cuban leader was then hit with inflammation of the bile duct. He developed a condition called cholecystitis, which is an inflammation of the gall bladder. The situation is grave for this condition has an 80 percent mortality rate.

A prosthetic was implanted in the bile duct and failed, and was replaced with one made in Spain, so the bionic Fidel is still in transit to his friend, Louis Chypher on the express train.

The epitome of a leach, Fidel that went through life screwing everyone along the way in the a__. Finds himself in a comedy of errors with a prothesis of the very same orifice he abused with everyone who was in his way.

Che nust be rolling over in laughter.

alvindchipmunk
I know a Christian should never gloat at the misfortune of others. However may God forgive me for this, and I will receive on Sinday. In 2007, it seems to me, dictators are en endangered species

Unknown said...

I think we're going to enjoy reading your posts! Your first one with accompanying comment on Fidel was funny, engaging, and interesting.

Good luck!

Andrea
Radio Patriot

alvindchipmunk said...

Comet adds a slash of color to the western sky
Thursday, 18 January 2007

In the clear night tonight go out in your backyard and look up at the sky.


A comet tipped as the brightest yet visible to the naked eye can be seen in Western skies. And unless you're immortal, this week will be your only chance to see it.

Comet McNaught, named after Australian astronomer Robert McNaught who discovered it in August last year, has been delighting stargazers with its first appearance.

I heard on the radio that the comet was even visible during the day in eastern skies.

But it was best viewed in south-western skies after sunset.

"I saw it on Wednesday night and it was magnificent," and never. "I have never seen a comet so bright.

"You don't need a telescope; you can see it with the naked eye."

The comet was an estimated 124 million kilometres from Earth and should be visible for about a week, he said. The tail is six degrees long, equivalent to 15 million kilometres.

"It is a first-time appearance," Mr Wynne-Jones said. "We don't know its period (how long before it is visible again) but it is almost certainly going to be a very long time – maybe millions of years.

"The head of Comet McNaught, they say, is brighter than Venus and Venus is 200 times brighter than the brightest star."

September 11 2001

September 11 2001
Never Ever Forget nor Forgive

Favorite Books

  • Brutally Frank, Marshall Frank
  • Caveat, Alexander Haig
  • Florida Practice and Procedures, Trawick
  • In Defense of Internment, Michelle Malkin
  • In Mortal Danger, Tom Tancredo
  • Invasion, Michelle Marklin
  • Minutemen, Jim Gilchrist & Jerome R. Corsi
  • The 911 Report
  • The Death of the West, P. Buchanan
  • The Enemy Within, Michael Savage
  • The Secrets of the Kingdom, G. Posner
  • Truth About Muhammad, Robert Spencer

Nothing is left for the virgins?

Nothing is left for the virgins?
The future of the explosives belt