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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

America can relax; the Casey Anthony show's over:



Are you relaxed?

Thanks for the heads up Connie. Casey Anthony got away with first degree murder now we can all relax.

The point to this story is what? To write something dripping in liberal goo?

See comment below



 By
Connie Schultz
Cleveland Plain Dealer




The FBI reports that 1,494 children under the age of 18 were killed in America in 2008.


Of these children, 221 died before their first birthday; 338 were murdered between the ages of 1 and 4. Most of us know the name of only one of these victims: Caylee Anthony.


The temptation is to use the next 600 words to decry America's obsession with the murder of one little girl in Orlando, Fla., while we ignore the violent deaths of 1,493 other children.


This is, after all, what columnists do when we're concerned that America is losing its way. We like to tell ourselves that it's just an issue of your being distracted, and that with a few carefully chosen words of outrage, we can redirect your attention to what really matters. What really matters to us, anyway.


This is arrogance on our part, to be sure.


In this case, it's also just as surely magical thinking.


My, how so many of us loved to hate Casey Anthony.


The 25-year-old mother, accused of murdering her 2-year-old daughter, almost single-handedly -- if you don't count the thousands of hours of media coverage -- gave millions of Americans permission to feel judgmental and superior. We like that. A lot.


Anthony's trial, covered gavel to gavel, also made it a whole lot easier not to think about all the other children whose lives are in peril, but invisibly so.


As the Annie E. Casey Foundation reports, for example, three times as many African-American children live in poverty, compared with white children. One in five rural children lives in poverty, too. And one-third of America's children are in families where no parent has a full-time job. None of these statistics makes for compelling television, I realize.


Which brings me back to Casey Anthony, who is young, white and photogenic. She lied. A lot. She also refused to meet our standards for a grieving mother. She was too aloof, too quick with a smile. Her hair, her clothes, her tattoo, her sex life: God, what a mess, we declared, riveted.


Day after day, hour after hour, we had at her.


Strangers traveled hundreds, sometimes thousands, of miles to stand in line for the chance to sit in the courtroom, and then offered their instant expertise to reporters waiting outside. Even the most local of news outlets posted breaking alerts about her trial.


After the jury acquitted her last week of first-degree murder, aggravated manslaughter and aggravated child abuse, Twitter and Facebook exploded with verdicts to the contrary. The judge and defense attorneys say they're concerned about death threats against Casey and the jurors. Because, by golly, that's how you honor a child who's been murdered.


Soon enough, we will forget about Casey Anthony, but not because we'll turn our collective concern to the 15 million children living in poverty, the 17 million who go hungry or the 8.1 million who are uninsured. We like to focus on one at a time.


In 2009, the year after Caylee Anthony was killed, 1,348 more children were murdered in America.


Here's a partial list of the FBI's breakdown:


Infants: 193


Ages 1 to 4: 298


Ages 5 to 8: 72


Ages 9 to 12: 71


Ages 13 to 16: 400


Who among us can name even one?


Great comment by Ed Kilbane

She conveniently forgot to mention the millions of children who are killed in the womb every year!







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Presidential views on the National Debt









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Monday, July 11, 2011

What would Jesus do?




Censured Veteran Democratic Rep. Charlie Rangel made an impassioned plea to religious leaders Friday, calling on them to lobby members of Congress and the Obama administration to remember the "lesser of my brothers and sisters" (who could be less then him?) during this weekend's debt negotiations.

With the national debt at over 14 trillion and taking up most of Congress’s summer efforts, Censured Rep. Charlie Rangel made a special plea to his colleagues that, in voting on whether to raise the debt ceiling, they consider how Jesus would vote: “What would Jesus do this weekend?” 




It's funny how liberals have a general distain for God.
Unless they can use God to advance their agenda.



Come Christmas he and his liberal comrades will bash the Nativity scene at the local church!







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Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Obama Legacy



On a tip from Keith Grant

Be sure the sound is turned up. The music is good, too.






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Thursday, July 7, 2011

Aftermath of the Casey Anthony trial






Multiple choice test

 Tragically your child supposedly drowns in the family pool. What should you do?



A. Don't call the police. Wrap the child in plastic bags, don't forget to duct tape the nose and mouth, and drop it in the woods and say your father did it.


B. Go get a tattoo


C. Shortly thereafter make an entry in your dairy "This is the happiest that I have been in a very long time."


D. All of the above







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