….because it must be about you!
But if it was about me, I would be vaguely inclined to respond.
Since it’s not, I suggest YOU read it and weep.
….because it must be about you!
But if it was about me, I would be vaguely inclined to respond.
Since it’s not, I suggest YOU read it and weep.
So, I guess we just need to grin and bear it.

I have several friends who make their living here teaching English to the youth of Korea.
Hope this isn’t an indication of how that’s working out:

Hat Tip: OnMyWaytoKorea
Ok, so I know about the “cap and trade” bill, and of course the Obamacare bill, but what is this hurricane Bill thing I’ve been hearing about? Pretty scary to think that Congress is messin’ with the weather now…
When was the last time you heard that being chanted by angry un-American mobs fervant anti-war protesters?
Seriously, where did the anti-war movement go? We are still 130,000 strong in Iraq and we are ramping up in Afghanistan. Where is the moral outrage, the rightgeous indignation? Oh, there is a Democrat in office, never mind. War is cool. Bryan York in the Washington Examiner is asking the same thing:
Remember the anti-war movement? Not too long ago, the Democratic party’s most loyal voters passionately opposed the war in Iraq. Democratic presidential candidates argued over who would withdraw American troops the quickest. Netroots activists regularly denounced President George W. Bush, and sometimes the U.S. military (“General Betray Us”). Cindy Sheehan, the woman whose soldier son was killed in Iraq, became a heroine when she led protests at Bush’s Texas ranch.
That was then. Now, even though the United States still has roughly 130,000 troops in Iraq, and is quickly escalating the war in Afghanistan — 68,000 troops there by the end of this year, and possibly more in 2010 — anti-war voices on the Left have fallen silent.
No group was more angrily opposed to the war in Iraq than the netroots activists clustered around the left-wing Web site DailyKos. It’s an influential site, one of the biggest on the Web, and in the Bush years many of its devotees took an active role in raising money and campaigning for anti-war candidates.