Archive for 2012

DON SURBER: Reuters: Obama Needs Vote Fraud.

Democrats have gotten too clever for themselves in battling voter ID. Requiring people to show the same ID to vote that they must show to buy cigarettes or beer somehow disenfranchises them according to those great super-duper thinkers on the Left. It’s comical. And the British business wire service, Reuters, bought into the liberal line so much that it inadvertently makes Barack Obama seem like one big crook.

Or maybe it was a mole. Read the whole thing!

BRIT HUME ON THE OBAMA-EATS-DOGS STORY: Payback’s A Bitch. Plus, from the comments: “Payback had better run like hell. Obama eats bitches ya’ know. #ObamaEatsDog.”

DOG BITES NETWORK: ABC Flip-Flops on #ObamaAteADog. “ABC went from promoting the ‘Dog Wars’ to declaring the issue dead within 24 hours. Actually, their flip-flop on the issue took about 14 hours.” Long enough for them to figure out it might actually hurt Obama.

MEEP! MEEP! This Week’s Exploding Cigar: Obama The Dog-Eater.

As Don Surber notes: “Sadly, the economy still slogs along with gun sales as the lone bright spot.” Aware that this is not the kind of record you win re-election on, Obama’s crack campaign staff has — with the aid of their media lapdogs — set up a series of diversions, each of which is exploding in Obama’s face like Wile E. Coyote’s Acme exploding cigars.

Read the whole thing.

GREEN FIGHT: It’s On: Romney Campaign Takes on Fisker Over Federal Loans. “Stick with me to the end on this, and if you’re worried that Mitt Romney’s campaign will be too weak to take on Obama’s you’ll leave happy. Well, unless you’re an Obama fan.”

NANOTECHNOLOGY UPDATE: FDA proposes rules for nanotechnology in food. “The Food and Drug Administration issued tentative guidelines Friday for food and cosmetic companies interested in using nanoparticles, which are measured in billionths of a meter. Nanoscale materials are generally less than 100 nanometers in diameter. A sheet of paper, in comparison, is 100,000 nanometers thick. A human hair is 80,000 nanometers thick. The submicroscopic particles are increasingly showing up in FDA-regulated products like sunscreens, skin lotions and glare-reducing eyeglass coatings. Some scientists believe the technology will one day be used in medicine, but the FDA’s announcement did not address that use.”