End of Issue #78 |

Any Questions?
Editorial and Rants

Holy shit! Look at this C-SPAN webpage! That Marxist/Communist/socialist/liberal/Jew/faggot 'One Nation' rally on October 2, 2010 sure brought in alot of people! But wait a second! That view sure looks familiar...

That's because it was taken at Glenn Beck's 'Restoring Honor' rally on August 28, 2010!
Views from the 'One Nation' Rally


How's that "hope" and "change" stuff working out! LOL!

Maria Isabel with "Houston Votes" and the "Houston Obama Leadership Team" was just caught registering 20,000+ fake names during the 2008 election. Don't worry, I'm sure this Maria Isabel has NO connections to Obama and Eric Corley will be covering this story in the next issue of $2600!
(www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/09/23/voter-fraud-houston-tea-party-truethevote-texas/)

Yep! That's Maria Isabel!
This is what Jews think of your history, White man!
Revolutionary War Town in Revolt Over Synagogue
September 11, 2010 - From: latimes.com
By Rinker Buch
The scenic village green of Litchfield has long symbolized the charms of Connecticut small-town life. Settled in 1721, it hosts tourists drawn by its Revolutionary War history: Litchfield served as a "safe town" for Continental forces seeking refuge while the British occupied New York City. But this fall, the celebrated tourist town of about 8,500 will receive publicity for quite a different reason: charges of religious discrimination.
This summer, a federal judge ruled that sufficient evidence of "discrimination against Jewish people" may exist, warranting a trial over the Borough of Litchfield's denial of a Hasidic group's application to build a synagogue on the west end of Litchfield Green. The ruling virtually guarantees a trial this fall on a controversy that has deeply divided the town.
In December 2007, the borough's historic district commission, after contentious hearings, denied an application by Chabad Lubavitch of Litchfield County to extensively renovate a historic house just below the green. The group's plans included a synagogue, living space for Rabbi Joseph Eisenbach and his large family and a swimming pool for the Chabad group's popular summer camp.
Among other objections, the commission cited plans to replace a single front door with double doors and said that the addition would dwarf the existing historic home and others in the neighborhood. But it was the tone of the commission meetings that now forms the core of Chabad's federal suit.
At one meeting, commission Chairwoman Wendy Kuhne objected to Chabad's proposed use of a Star of David on the synagogue by stating that it "may not comply with the [historic] district." In the uproar that followed, Kuhne was depicted on a local website wearing a Nazi uniform, and she recused herself from the vote on the synagogue. Another commission member, according to Chabad's complaint, said of the group's plans to use facing stone from Israel, "Stone from Israel? We'll have to get the whole town out for this one."
Another commissioner said that Chabad's plans would "turn Litchfield into a factory town." A lawyer representing historic-district homeowners suggested Chabad's plans should be "reviewed as if it were a strip joint."
Chabad's federal suit contends that, under the U.S. and Connecticut constitutions and federal law, the borough violated Chabad's religious freedom and denied it the right to expand its building to the same size as Christian churches in the historic district. U.S. District Judge Janet C. Hall wrote in her July ruling on pretrial motions, "Several statements were made in what appear to be meetings of the [historic district commission] that may contain evidence of discrimination directed against Jewish people in general and the Chabad in particular."
In their replies in federal court, the commission and its attorney, James Stedronsky, argue that the panel simply was applying the standards that any project in the historic district must observe. Historic district commission members did not return calls requesting interviews. But in depositions, the commission cited evidence supporting its claim that Eisenbach has few local followers, that his Sabbath services are poorly attended and that his plans for a personal residence and a swimming pool are too grandiose for the site.
"This case is not about the construction of a synagogue," Stedronsky said recently. "It's about the construction of a personal palace for Rabbi Eisenbach, complete with a 4,500-square-foot apartment and an indoor swimming pool big enough to serve a summer camp." The tensions between commission members and the rabbi do not appear to have diminished with time.
In April, when Kuhne appeared for her deposition in Litchfield, she left the room when Eisenbach arrived, stating, according to Chabad's complaint, "I will not be in the same room with that man." Kuhne was deposed on another day, and then only after Eisenbach agreed to sit in a corner of the room.
Litchfield has seen plenty of municipal spats in its history. That's inescapable for a place 289 years old. But it's also known plenty of peace. As the town's website notes, the Rev. Dan Huntington, a Congregational minister in the town from 1798 to 1809, wrote upon his arrival here:
"A delightful village on a fruitful hill, richly endowed with schools both professional and scientific, with its venerable governors and judges, with its learned lawyers, and senators both in the national and state departments and with a population both enlightened and respectable, Litchfield was now in its glory."

"Bleech... Holocau$t! Us poor kikes! Discrimination! We're eternal victims!"
Funny... The AP has no problems running faked or staged photos, but burn a Quran and they go crazy!
Remember - there is NO liberal bias in the media! LOL!
AP Will Not Distribute 'Images or Audio' of Burning Qurans
September 10, 2010 - From: thehill.com
By Elise Viebeck
The Associated Press said Thursday it will not distribute images or audio of the Quran-burning demonstration planned for Saturday evening by a Gainesville, Fla., church. "Should the event happen on Saturday, the AP will not distribute images or audio that specifically show Qurans being burned, and will not provide detailed text descriptions of the burning," deputy managing editor Thomas Kent wrote in a memo to AP staff. "With the exception of these specific images and descriptions, we expect to cover the Gainesville event, in all media, placing the actions of this group of about 50 people in a clear and balanced context."
The announcement came amid a larger effort by the AP to standardize its coverage of the issue, which has drawn national media attention and opposition from President Obama and other leaders. The memo noted that the wire service will run "ONE main spot story" on the event and its run-up per day, and emphasized that "at the moment [the issue] is a proposal by a tiny group that may or may not happen." Kent, who is responsible for the AP's editorial standards, explained that the decision not to release images or audio is consistent with the wire's approach to covering other difficult or offensive situations.
"AP policy is not to provide coverage of events that are gratuitously manufactured to provoke and offend," Kent wrote. "In the past, AP has declined to provide images of cartoons mocking Islam and Jews. AP has often declined to provide images, audio or detailed descriptions of particularly bloody or grisly scenes, such as the sounds and moments of beheadings and shootings, displays of severed heads on pikes and images of hostages who are displayed by hostage-holders in an effort to intimidate their adversaries and advance their cause. Decisions are made on a case-by-case basis."


From: casting.backstage.com
Casting call for "extras" in Obongo's staged and scripted MTV town hall meeting. Yeah, nothing funny going on here... I'm sure they are only screening for the most difficult questions to ask! LOL! Change!
Check out this little gem from that kike Sumner Redstone's (Rothstein) Viacom network:
"Whether you lean left or right, hail from a blue state or red, prefer keeping sanity, fear, or a healthy dose of both alive and well, the one thing we all have in common is that we've pledged allegiance to the MTV Networks flag. And when an opportunity arises to support one (or two) of our own. we'll take it pretty much every time.
You may have heard that Comedy Central's Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert are hosting a little get together on the National Mall in Washington, DC on Saturday, October 30th. ... This will be a day when - no matter what transpires from Jon, Stephen, and their special guests - our brothers and sisters at Comedy Central will own the cultural conversation, without question. Who would want to miss that one?
On the morning of October 30th, we're loading up a fleet of buses here at 1515 Broadway and sending as many of you as we can down to DC for a free one-day, round-trip journey to join in the Rally to Restore Sanity and March to Keep Fear Alive. It's about a 5-1/2 hour trip down 95 to our nation's capital."