Sunday, November 7, 2010

There’s madness to this method

Chris Powell, I’m not sure if you should be commended or reprimanded for your choice to over look that eight hundred pound guerrilla in our living room. Something stinks about the way things unfolded here in Connecticut before, during, and after the elections.

Obama came here to stump for his party members down in Bridgeport, and was received with less than a supportive greeting from the constituents of Connecticut. He was heckled and booed and was forced to stop his verbal proclamation in order to try to defend his claim that the previous administration was to blame for all of our country’s current woes.

We’ve all been made aware of the reverse 911 calls, the fact that the polls were allowed to stay open late on Election Day, and the mysterious bags of voting ballots that turned up. Even though Bridgeport is the focal point there are other areas of the state that also had suspicious occurrences that were brought to light.
That seems to be the accepted established legacy of the “Kennedy – Daley” political method that we’ve all come to know and expect. If you can’t prove it, then it’s just another conspiracy theory, it’s time to move on. If we dig too deeply into this it could cause a terrible disaster that will end up being something our country will have a hard time recovering from.

So we’ll just keep it as another conspiracy theory, because the ones on top probably already approved this one anyway. Conspiracy theories are useful because it keeps everyone baffled and confused, and that’s what politics is all about, keeping everyone confused, puzzled, and perplexed. Once they get that going they can start to use it to create different types of stress that leads to anxiety, that leads to mild to serious medical conditions, and that keeps the medical industry going, and it’s a sure way to jump start our economy. Do you understand how it works now? It does work, it just doesn’t work for you and me, but it works great for somebody. There’s madness to this method, and we’ve all adopted it as the Status Quo.

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