Saturday, February 18, 2006
Hollywood must be begging Laura Ingraham to write a sequel.
From Alec Baldwin in the the Huff and Puff social club news we get this.
Does it get any better than that? Baldwin even exonerates Gray "out" Davis. Being a Democrat politician must be the easiest job in the world, aside from moonbat actor. One might think that would be enough for one day, but alas
they would be wrong. Richard Dreyfus weighs in with the Don Quiote version of impeachment.
Definitely time for Volume II.
So, I suppose the question is...what kind of civil trial will we see, or not see, between Cheney and Whittington? Whittington is certainly no stranger to a court room and to civil litigation. Will Cheney pay him off, preemptively? Will they go to court? I would imagine if a guy with a few beers in him shoots you in the face on a hunting trip, how could you turn down that opportunity?
What would Cheney do about the whole secrecy thing then? I mean, this is the guy that sicced Enron on Gray Davis and the state of California to embarrass Davis, trigger the recall and then watched Arnold Schwarzenegger become governor of California. (To this day, perhaps, still the low point in American political life.) Then Cheney covered it up.
Cheney's the guy who told Libby to out Valerie Plame. The rumor I heard is that someone yelled, "Look out! Shooter!" and Cheney thought he said Scooter and fired in that general direction.
Cheney is a terrorist. He terrorizes our enemies abroad and innocent citizens here at home indiscriminately. Who ever thought Harry Whittington would be the answer to America's prayers. Finally, someone who might get that lying, thieving Cheney into a courtroom to answer some direct questions.
Does it get any better than that? Baldwin even exonerates Gray "out" Davis. Being a Democrat politician must be the easiest job in the world, aside from moonbat actor. One might think that would be enough for one day, but alas
they would be wrong. Richard Dreyfus weighs in with the Don Quiote version of impeachment.
"There are causes worth fighting for even if you know that you will lose," Dreyfuss said during a speech at the National Press Club. "Unless you are willing to accept torture as part of a normal American political lexicon, unless you are willing to accept that leaving the Geneva Convention is fine and dandy, if you accept the expansion of wiretapping as business as usual, the only way to express this now is to embrace the difficult and perhaps embarrassing process of impeachment."
Definitely time for Volume II.