Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Hopeful changes

The sun is shining, I’ve ridden the K75S into town, it’s a glorious day and the world looks remarkably brighter than it did a year ago on the day after the election.

The day after the 2008 election was also a motorcycle day for me -  a gloomy road trip through the cotton and rice fields to Blytheville and back to take my mind off of what I was sure meant catastrophe for the U.S.

But maybe it was a blessing in disguise because Obama has repeatedly stepped on his dick as he dropped his centrist mask and revealed his true Marxist nature.

Americans have reacted with Tea Parties, a massive march on Washington, a flood of email, mail and phone calls to Congress, huge donations to conservative causes, skyrocketing ratings for FOX News and plummeting ratings for MSNBC, CNN and the three major networks.

Incumbent Democrats, especially those from conservative states like Arkansas and Indiana, were put on notice yesterday that their president and party’s headlong rush to socialism generated a savage backlash that promises to stop the craziness and undo the damage of the past 10 months when we go to the polls in November 2010.

Nobody believes the White House spin that yesterday’s election results are meaningless. Obama arguably did more damage than good when he campaigned for Democrats in the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races. And the fact that an independent conservative candidate could chase a liberal Republican out of the race and only lose to the Democrat by 3 percentage points is equally telling.

Yes, I truly believe the tide is turning and by this time next year we will be rid of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, either through defeat at the polls or a GOP majority in the House and Senate.

And I also believe that Obamacare and the ruinous deranged Cap and Trade are dead.

The only thing better would be to see Pelosi, Dodd, Frank, Rangel, Geithner, and all of the other sleazebags in the Obama administration in orange prison jumpsuits.

Now that would be real Hope and Change.

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