Originally posted by beattyfamily
Their both insulting and tasteless.
As we all can be sometimes....

I'd rather focus on the politics.
Originally posted by beattyfamily
Their both insulting and tasteless.
Originally posted by Miss Jasmine
I think if she would have said it during the exchange the two of them were having I wouldn't have thought twice about it. BUT she had already walked away, found out who he was, and went back to tell him to shove it. I don't think that was right.
Originally posted by shortbun
The Gabors were eastern European, Heinz Kerry's accent is
Portugese and Afrikaner. Actually quite different. As I was
listening to her speech last night, I forgot she even had an
accent. You must live in some small town to not be accustomed
to accents in 2004!!! Where I live is a melting pot of accents,
skin color, religion, dress. I love it-it's the United States of America brother/sister; we all came from somewhere at sometime.
Or are you native American? I descend from two Revolutionary
War families, one German and one French. The RW familes both
came from Scotland originally.
Originally posted by minniepumpernickel
Just to add to this, she is also multi-lingual and speaks five languages. I also enjoyed hearing about her experience with apartheid in South Africa.![]()
Originally posted by auntpolly
I guess some people would prefer she smile, wave, and keep her mouth shut in all 5 languages!
Originally posted by HollyJoy
If she was Republican, the Democrats would have been up in arms over the comment.
Originally posted by HollyJoy
If she was Republican, the Democrats would have been up in arms over the comment.
Originally posted by beattyfamily
Why was everyone in an uproar over what Cheney said but for Heinz, it's no big deal...even when what she said was totally unwarranted.
Originally posted by jrydberg
I'll sum it up... she was dead wrong about the question at hand, but the reporter probably deserved it anyway![]()
Yeah right. ROFLMBO. Believe me, Mr. Cheney was not the first one to use the "f" word on the Senate floor and he won't be the last.Originally posted by BedKnobbery2
B. he did it on the Senate floor, which is akin to swearing in church.
Originally posted by faithinkarma
I am surprised no one has brought this up sooner. If you mean she was wrong when she denied saying what he accused her of, you are mistaken.
She said UnAmerican traits....he accused her of saying UnAmerican activities. For anyone old enough to remember, or any student of history, UnAmerican activities has a particularly nasty connotation.
How often have we seen garbage like this happen.......someone is accused of saying something that is not quite what they said....and in the blink of two news cycles the lie repeated so often it is burnt into the consciousness to the viewers.
This woman stood up to a bullying reporter who tried to put words into her mouth. She drew a line in the sand. Making it clear such bull is no longer to be tolerated. Good for her ! It is time someone at last stood up to the news hounds and asked " have you no shame?"
Oh wait...that has been done before...too bad they all forgot.
Originally posted by Miss Jasmine
Yeah right. ROFLMBO. Believe me, Mr. Cheney was not the first one to use the "f" word on the Senate floor and he won't be the last.