Our new Attorney General, Eric Holder in 1999 on NPR.
How’s this going to sit with the anti-”wiretapping” crowd, I wonder?
more about “Eric Holder: Government Needs to Rest…“, posted with vodpod
HT: HotAir
Our new Attorney General, Eric Holder in 1999 on NPR.
How’s this going to sit with the anti-”wiretapping” crowd, I wonder?
4 Comments
November 21, 2008 at 9:09 pm
Meet Eric Holder, future Director of Media and Free Speech Controls. Dude is scary.
Keep on bloggin!
November 21, 2008 at 10:47 pm
Sounds like communism to me. Maybe we can get our news delivered to us on pamphlets dropped from airplanes.
February 24, 2009 at 9:04 am
Dear Mr. Holder: What about the Native American Indian. I hope one of them will have a chance to be president before an East Indian. Our country has not done well by them.
March 7, 2009 at 9:30 pm
Speaking of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder:
Eric Holder is a racial-minority individual, and in his heart and mind he inevitably does not endorse hate crimes committed by George W. Bush.
George W. Bush committed hate crimes of epic proportions and with the stench of terrorism (indicated in my blog).
George W. Bush did in fact commit innumerable hate crimes.
And I do solemnly swear by Almighty God that George W. Bush committed other hate crimes of epic proportions and with the stench of terrorism which I am not at liberty to mention.
Many people know what Bush did.
And many people will know what Bush did—even to the end of the world.
Bush was absolute evil.
Bush is now like a fugitive from justice.
Bush is a psychological prisoner.
Bush has a lot to worry about.
Bush can technically be prosecuted for hate crimes at any time.
In any case, Bush will go down in history in infamy.
Submitted by Andrew Yu-Jen Wang
B.S., Summa Cum Laude, 1996
Messiah College, Grantham, PA
Lower Merion High School, Ardmore, PA, 1993
“GEORGE W. BUSH IS THE WORST PRESIDENT IN U.S. HISTORY” BLOG OF ANDREW YU-JEN WANG
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I am not sure where I had read it before, but anyway, it is a linguistically excellent statement, and it goes kind of like this: “If only it were possible to ban invention that bottled up memories so they never got stale and faded.” Oh wait—off the top of my head—I think the quotation came from my Lower Merion High School yearbook.