Idaho: Disneyland

July 4, 2009 - 12:37 am
NEWS FEED: 43rd State Blues

Gov. Mark Sanford is the luckiest motherfu**er on the planet

First Michael Jackson dies, then Sarah Palin announces her resignation as governor of Alaska due to the moon being in the 7th house and Jupiter aligning with Mars, or some such nonsense.

Now, if only aliens would land on Earth and bugger a naked Dick Cheney in the middle of Disneyland, people will not only forget who Governor Sanford is or that he had an affair, they won't even remember Argentina is a country.

[Image blatantly stolen from the great and powerful TBOGG]

February 23, 2009 - 01:24 pm
NEWS FEED: 43rd State Blues

No Lie Too Small For DFO

Northern Idaho "journalist" Michael Costello, linked by DFO, has this to say about New Orleans and the Stimulus package:

Money, money everywhere and not one cent fit for New Orleans. The recently
passed $787 billion porkulus bill contains Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's, DNev.,
pet $8 billion earmark to build a high-speed train linking Disneyland to Las
Vegas. And Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., topped off the lard
bucket ironically misnamed as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of
2009 with tens of millions of dollars dedicated to restoring the habitat of the salt
marsh harvest mouse, a treasured mascot of San Francisco's environmental
extremists. Billions are destined for ACORN, the voter-fraud wing of the
Democratic Party. But, there is not a single dime designated for rebuilding New
Orleans.

How many lies can this man say in this short little paragraph?  read more »

February 18, 2009 - 01:37 pm

Risch: 'It's difficult reading'

U.S. Sen. Jim Risch, addressing the Idaho Senate today where he once presided as lieutenant governor and as president pro-tem, hauled out the actual printout of the congressional stimulus bill - all 1,100 pages of it - and slapped it on the lectern. "If you go through this, you cannot tell the answer to three questions of the money - how much, when, and what strings are going to come with it," Risch declared, slapping his hand on the stack of paper, which was secured by several rubber bands. "There is very little in this bill that talks about that." He restated his opposition to the stimulus idea, saying the country can't spend its way out of recession.