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Friday, February 18, 2005

Guess who's been hard at work...



...squeezing out important legislation.



Our beloved Queen Shrillary has gained some backing from her fellow liberal constituents on a piece of sh** legislation that would allow convicted felons the right to vote. Wait? lemme rephrase that? legislation that would make it legal for droves of convicted felons to show up at the polls and vote for donks. Go figure. I liken this to telling your child that from here on out, they won?t get a spankin? for raidin? the cookie jar. Shrillary and the rest of the donks have the mindset of dysfunctional parents who think their kids should be allowed to get away with raiding the cookie jar because they?re just misunderstood.



Felony crimes are offenses that are deemed by law to be the most socially destructive actions and are therefore deserving of the harshest penalties. Those convicted of such offenses are stripped of their civil liberties and likewise should loose their voting rights as a means of preventing them from electing individuals to political office that may seek to undermine the safety of our society by softening laws on felony crime. It?s pure common sense here folks and not all states have the common sense enough to recognize this threat, but because of the fact that liberals are typically a bunch of Freudian Dr. Spock worshipers who think that it?s counter-productive to spank children who refuse to stop raiding the cookie jar, our communities will continue to remain at risk.



Every election we end up dealing with the same old crap; liberals dragging felons and dead people out to the polls (multiple times in some cases), liberals buying votes with crack (remember that?) and liberals doing everything they can to disenfranchise the Republican leaning military vote. When the hell is this insanity going to stop?! This proposed legislation is pure excrement folks. We don?t need to have our communities endangered by lax laws at the voting booth. On the contrary, as a safe and peaceable society what we need are more affective voting laws and more diligent enforcement of existing regulations in order to validate the legitimacy of each and every vote.

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