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#52 Oct 13 2008 at 4:40 PM Rating: Decent
It's Just a Flesh Wound
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22,702 posts
The only type of poems I can write are acrostic. Smiley: lol What's worse is that I have to make them rhyme. I'll see if I can dig up one I wrote in 11th grade.
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#53 Oct 13 2008 at 5:44 PM Rating: Good
Encyclopedia
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35,568 posts
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Of everything I wrote, that's what you choose to respond to?

Shallow much? ;)
Feeling a touch put off that I wasn't impressed with the rest of it?


That and you appear to be demeaning my brilliant Voice of Democracy essay from eons ago...
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#54 Oct 20 2008 at 10:39 AM Rating: Excellent
Liberal Conspiracy
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Bumping here. Frontline ran some interviews with people from Obama's Harvard days. Most interesting is probably the statements made by Bradford Berenson, Bush's associate White House counsel and influence in Bush's counter-terrorism/interogation policies. Not exactly an Obama shill:
Berenson wrote:
[A]fter [Obama] became president of the Review, he was under a lot of pressure to participate and lend his voice to those debates. And he did, I think, to some degree. But I would not have described him as a campus radical or a campus political leader. He was the president of the Harvard Law Review, the leader of that organization. But, in that role, his job was to manage, in essence, a publication, and the editors who brought it forth and to do a lot of close editing of academic legal articles. …

You don't become president of the Harvard Law Review, no matter how political, or how liberal the place is, by virtue of affirmative action, or by virtue of not being at the very top of your class in terms of legal ability. Barack was at the very top of his class in terms of legal ability. He had a first-class legal mind and, in my view, was selected to be president of the Review entirely on his merits.

... I never regarded him as kind of a racial special pleader, or a person looking for race-based benefits, either for himself or others. I think as a policy matter, he supported affirmative action and believed in the arguments for it. But unlike many people on the left, he was also willing to acknowledge that it had costs, and he could at least appreciate the arguments on the other side. ...


Edited, Oct 20th 2008 1:32pm by Jophiel
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
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