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Mister Slippery |
Jesse Helms yields his time. - oh and is DEAD DEAD DEAD |
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yet another reason to celebrate the 4th.
Last Edited By: Mister Slippery 07/04/08 10:14 AM.
Edited 1 time.
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StaredownSally |
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you beat drudge.
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Antithesys |
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His last words were "Strom Thurmond survives."
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Mister Slippery |
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StaredownSally wrote: CNN beat Drudge, I just happened to catch the "breaking news" item |
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worstdog |
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Time to pay the piper.
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ag |
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who's that
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Pizzathetic |
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PRAY FOR MORE?
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SuitSnob |
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I am going to put on a pink shirt and dance gaily about, like Snoopy on the first day of Spring! Burn in Hell Jesse-that is, if Satan would even take your
ass in!
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bitwrangler |
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OMG!!!! WHY DID HE DIE ON INDEPENDENCE DAY!!!
This is like the end of a DYNASTY! He used to terrify me on the nightly news when I was growing up...all his talk of "comnists and nigras".... LOL at Anti...that was the second thing I said to my sister after calling her with the news... |
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Phuz1 |
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Hooray! We've been liberated from another "family values" bigot whose ignorance and close-mindedness set back civil rights every year he served
in Congress.
I hope Robert Mapplethorpe is waiting for him in the afterlife with a thick-handled bullwhip. |
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finishthemoff |
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Kind of weird that he died on the same day of Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.
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hossc |
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Give me the FTO quinella and I'll cum!
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DaveSoGay |
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What great news. Jesse Helms was a racist and homophobic piece of shit. We should shoot fireworks off all over the nation to celebrate!
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Hotlantan |
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Will McSame now take Jesse off of his short list for VP?
Rugslug moves up one more spot! Yay! |
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Shag |
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I don't know, I kinda hoped he'd live to see the instituting of Interracial Buttfucking Day.
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superguppie |
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His last words were "Strom Thurmond survives." |
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bitwrangler |
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some helmsian quotage...from the N&O
"I'm so old-fashioned I believe in horse whipping." - During a debate in 1991 on an AIDS-related amendment. "Well, there is no joy in Mudville tonight. The mighty ultraliberal establishment, and the liberal politicians and editors and commentators and columnists, have struck out again." - Helms after defeating black Democrat Harvey Gantt for Senate in 1990. "I came up between the two world wars during the Depression. All the people around me emphasized working and savings and personal responsibility. They spelled out in one way or another the uniqueness of America. This has largely been lost. Nobody would have thought of turning to the government to solve all our problems." - 1984 interview. "The destruction of this country can be pinpointed in terms of its beginnings to the time that our political leadership turned to socialism. They didn't call it socialism, of course. It was given deceptive names and adorned with fancy slogans. We heard about New Deals, and Fair Deals and New Frontiers and the Great Society." - From a Helms editorial at WRAL-TV in Raleigh. "I shall always remember the shady streets, the quiet Sundays, the cotton wagons, the Fourth of July parades, the New Year's Eve firecrackers. I shall never forget the stream of school kids marching uptown to place flowers on the Courthouse Square monument on Confederate Memorial Day." - Helms writing in 1956 on life in his hometown of Monroe, N.C. "If he taught us anything, he taught us that we are personally responsible and accountable. I remember that day, and always will, when he called in several from the senior class. ... He said you can make it in this country. He said it's going to take hard work. ... He said you're going to succeed. He said you'll own your own homes and you'll have two cars and all that. I thought this man had lost his mind." - Helms reflecting on his high school principal. "Compromise, hell! That's what has happened to us all down the line - and that's the very cause of our woes. If freedom is right and tyranny is wrong, why should those who believe in freedom treat it as if it were a roll of bologna to be bartered a slice at a time?" - Helms writing in 1959 on compromise in politics. "To rob the Negro of his reputation of thinking through a problem in his own fashion is about the same as trying to pretend that he doesn't have a natural instinct for rhythm and for singing and dancing." - Helms responding in 1956 to criticism that a fictional black character in his newspaper column was offensive. |
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DaveSoGay |
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He was right about one thing: Those blacks can really sing and dance.
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The Balloon Artist |
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Looks the Westboro Baptists got here pretty quick.
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Hotlantan |
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Casual One-Nighter Gives Jesse Helms Change Of Heart On Gay IssueWASHINGTON, DC-Sen. Jesse Helms (R-NC), widely known for his conservative views, retooled his hard-line stance against homosexuality after a casual one-nighter last weekend with a D.C.-area man identified only as "Stan."
Sen. Jesse Helms (R-NC), long known for his opposition to "wicked, homosexual perverts," has rethought his stance in the wake of a recent romantic encounter. Helms, 86, first elected to Congress in 1972 on a segregationist platform, described the homoerotic rendezvous as "a remarkably loving and mutually rewarding exchange of affection between two consenting adults." "I was mistaken when I said that homosexuals were perverts bent on the destruction of the family and the nation through their wicked, deviant sex acts," a visibly glowing Helms told reporters. "Stan respected me for who I was, not just for my body. He was a sharp dresser and a charming conversationalist, not to mention a considerate and attentive lover." "To all my longtime constituents," Helms continued, "I want to stress that this sexual episode was neither planned nor expected. I was heading home from my senate office after working late on a revised defense budget, when I was approached by a tall, handsome man who asked if he could buy me a drink. We had a wonderful conversation about old Judy Garland movies, the sort I used to love back when I was in my mid-70s. Before I knew it, Stan was asking me back to his place to see his house plants. He had incredible blue eyes, the kind that no legislator-liberal or conservative-could resist." Helms went on to state that they had stayed up nearly half the night, talking about such varied topics as men's wear; low-fat gourmet cooking; and the tragic, early deaths of silver-screen luminaries James Dean and Marilyn Monroe. Helms said that his new found friend, a systems analyst in the greater D.C. area, held and cuddled him as he fell asleep, then left him a plate of cheese and fresh fruit salad before leaving for work the following morning. "He would not have made me breakfast if all he cared about was sex," Helms said. "Stan saw me as more than just a piece of meat." Though reluctant to discuss more personal, intimate details of the encounter, Helms did say that "you have not lived until you have brought another man to climax using only your lips and tongue." Helms' aides were quick to point out that despite the homoerotic nature of the encounter and the fact that Helms and the gentleman in question have since become "very close," the senator does not consider himself "gay." "I see no reason why we must put labels on the senator," said Harlan Richardson, Helms' longtime press secretary. "It is unfair to judge a man's entire identity on one sexual episode alone. Why must we always speak of 'gay' or 'straight,' when human sexuality is so much more complex than that?" "Gay, straight, bi-we are all just people," Helms said. "Yes, I have known the love that dare not speak its name, but I am still just me, Senator Jesse Helms-a human being." Helms noted that he had been exploring only one facet of his sexuality, and that he remained deeply devoted to his family. He then thanked his wife for being supportive and understanding of his emotional growth. "In conclusion, I would just like to say to all the gays and lesbians, against whom I have spoken out so vociferously throughout my career, I am sorry," Helms said, shedding te ars. "If an old man like me, set in his ways, can in his twilight years open his heart to a new understanding, not only of homosexuality, but also of himself, then perhaps it is not too late for all of us to see the truth. I hope you can find it within yourselves to forgive me." The senator then died. |
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Zzunk |
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Jesse Helms was a hero. His passing will be mourned by bigots and news crews worldwide.
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