Theron McChesney, one of the four South Dakota Democrat bloggers that went to Ohio, demonstrates his lack of tolerance by attacking the Republicans that had a problem with proper notary approval on absentee ballots last year. He just can’t come to forgive those who admit wrong, plead guilty, and have paid their debt to society.
Then McChesney makes this statement:
I only hope that the South Dakota progressives are better examples of South Dakota politics than our predecessors that last set foot on Ohio soil.
First off he says they are "progressives". So lying is not a good value for South Dakotans to import to other states. I have already noted his lack of tolerance. Then we have the Clear Cut Kidder, who has already been busted several times for being fast with the facts. Then add Jeremy Funk, who likes to change one letter in his last name when referring to the opposition. I hope Nathan Peterson doesn’t announce that he is a member of the South Dakota National Guard and then start trashing America’s military in regard to the Iraq war.
David Limbaugh gives us more on this:
Ah, yes, Iraq. This is where it gets interesting. The Dems think it's the Republican's Achilles' heel, but it may well be theirs. For the Democratic Party and the press, all roads lead to Iraq. To them, President Bush's "duplicitous" scheme to drag us into war there subsumes every other issue.
So complete is their obsession, they apparently don't see the need to develop an agenda of their own. They have no plan on Social Security, which they labeled a crisis as recently as Bill Clinton's presidency. They have no coherent tax policy – other than to oppose Bush's plan. They don't even have a clue about Iraq – whether we should stay or leave and how we should accomplish either non-goal.
When discussing Iraq, they talk nostalgically about Vietnam, the Mother of all Quagmires, fervently hoping Iraq will end up being just as bad and the vast quicksand that finally drowns the Bush presidency and GOP dominance.
But again, the profound irony is that while they see Iraq as Bush's quagmire, it has become their own. Just as their self-made myths about Republicans stealing the election in 2000 drove them to a Norman Bates-esque frenzy, their delusional "Bush-lied" ravings have driven them to a blinding monomania.
I have little hope that the four Desperate Delusional hate-filled Dumped Daschle Disciples will be good examples of South Dakota politics.