... a blow-dried sanctimonious hypocrite who makes a personal fortune hawking profitable organized violence and who looks down his nose at ordinary people who earn less in a year than he spends on botox who want to protect themselves from a less glamorous form of profitable violence.
Goodness gracious I can't stand liberals.
Greg Gutfeld calls Costas out:
Goodness gracious I can't stand liberals.
Greg Gutfeld calls Costas out:
Goodness gracious I can't stand liberals.
ReplyDeleteThat sums you up. You hated the other side as an atheist. You are now a Catholic, but you still hate the other side.
Face it, you are just a bitter hack, or at least play one on the internet. Either way, I can only pity you.
Hoo
I hate pity.
DeleteYou hate anything—as long as it comes from your political opponents.
DeleteIf my opponents admitted they were fools, I'd like that.
DeleteWe're all fools. Including you. Some of us are better at that than others.
DeleteHow's that for a draw? Feel better now?
Hoo
I love it.
DeleteGood. Embrace your inner fool. You have been saying lots of silly things lately.
DeleteHoo
Politics can be so complicated. So unpredictable.
ReplyDeleteAmerica certainly is exceptional.
ReplyDeleteAustralia actually rethought its gun laws. The newly elected Prime Minister, John Howard, a conservative, in 1996 was almost immediately faced with the Port Arthur massacre, in which a single deranged gunman shot and killed 35 people at a popular family tourist attraction.
And he almost immediately instituted perhaps the world's strongest gun control laws, including a mandatory gun buy back and strict gun licensing. Including a law that if you have previously been convicted of a violent crime, no matter how minor, you're not allowed to legally own a gun.
And guns have to be safely stored.
And guess what? I feel completely safe in Australia. There are very few places I'd be afraid to visit.
If it weren't for crazy gun-loving Americans, you'd be saying "I feel completely safe in Australia" in Japanese.
Delete"... was almost immediately faced with the Port Arthur massacre..."
DeleteWhy would the shooting of 35 people who didn't have guns to protect themselves be used as a rationale to prevent people from having guns to protect themselves?
Michael,
DeleteYou're an idiot. Australians have the police and the armed forces to protect us. And the police don't have to worry about being shot by a private citizen in the course of their duty, so they're much less likely to shoot first and ask questions later.
And it was the American armed forces, trained professionals, not gun crazy Americans, who saved Australia from Japanese invasion.
And after the Kokoda Track, an almost entirely Australian operation, the risk of a Japanese invasion was zero. America had greater reasons for fighting Japan than saving Australia. Getting revenge for Pearl Harbor for one (71st anniversary tomorrow...)
Every damn country thinks it is exceptional. The results are sometimes hilarious, but most of the time not. I have seen that first hand.
ReplyDeleteHoo