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Congratulations!
If you wanted to create a world that Karl Rove would love, if you wanted to pick up the ball he tossed you and run with it, you've succeeded! Beyond his wildest dreams. TOUCHDOWN! You're as talented a bunch of warriors as I have ever seen. Of course you're fighting yourselves, and ignoring your real enemies, but what does that matter, as long as you're fighting tooth and nail?
The fight's the thing. It's the goal, the prize, the exquisitely satisfying HIGH, in which you discover the enemy, in this case Hillary Clinton, and Fight!
Senator Clinton is not, of course, your enemy. Nor is she your savior. Sen. Obama isn't your savior either, but it's so satisfying to fight for him by destroying his enemy, Sen. Clinton. Bill Clinton isn't your enemy, but he needs to be fought, too. Rip him to shreds along with his wife. They're inextricably connected. Well, they're married, at least.
So, fight on, DU! Fight Hillary's LIES! and her SPIN! and expose her to each other without giving her a moment to catch her breath. Kill! Hurl vulgar terms with increasing abandon! The harder you fight, the sooner she'll fall, and the sooner you can glory in your nominee Sen. Obama, who will be sworn in to the presidency, unless they steal the election again. If he is sworn in, and actually tries to change anything important, like the system of legalized bribery that runs the country, he'll be dead. One way or another, really or symbolically, the way they killed Bill Clinton.
I don't think either of the Democratic candidates can do what needs to be done in this country and in the world. At least they can't do it simply be getting elected to the presidency. We can't trust the elections, we can't trust the reporting of the election outcomes, and we have a system of government that is corrupt to the core, and has been eating good men and women and spitting them out for the last thirty years. (That's an arbitrary figure, and open to discussion.)
What about calling a truce between the Democratic candidates, and asking yourselves the question: Who is really my enemy?
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