Oct 5, 2006

Nothing like a miscreant Republican to make you want to vomit....

Sometimes I read or see or hear things that I really wish I hadn't. The IM transcripts of Rep. Foley and a teenage boy's sexual conversations definitely fall into that category. I would've been fine knowing the story without reading those details.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous5/10/06 17:37

    At least liberals are finally
    exhibiting a moral compass
    about something. I am sure
    that they'd be equally outraged
    if Rep. Mark Foley were a
    Democrat.

    The object lesson of Foley's inappropriate e-mails to male pages is that
    when a Republican congressman is caught in a sex scandal, he immediately
    resigns and crawls off into a hole in abject embarrassment. Democrats get
    snippy.

    Foley didn't claim he was the victim of a "witch-hunt." He didn't whine that
    he was a put-upon "gay American." He didn't stay in Congress and haughtily
    rebuke his critics. He didn't run for re-election. He certainly didn't claim
    he was "saving the Constitution." (Although his recent discovery that he has
    a drinking problem has a certain Democratic ring to it.)


    In 1983, Democratic congressman Gerry Studds was found to have sexually
    propositioned House pages and actually buggered a 17-year-old male page whom
    he took on a trip to Portugal. The 46-year-old Studds indignantly attacked
    those who criticized him for what he called a "mutually voluntary, private
    relationship between adults."


    When the House censured Studds for his sex romp with a male page, Studds —
    not one to be shy about presenting his backside to a large group of men —
    defiantly turned his back on the House during the vote. He ran for
    re-election and was happily returned to office five more times by liberal
    Democratic voters in his Martha's Vineyard district. (They really liked his
    campaign slogan: "It's the outfit, stupid.")



    Washington Post columnist Colman McCarthy referred to Studds' affair with a
    teenage page as "a brief consenting homosexual relationship" and denounced
    Studds' detractors for engaging in a "witch-hunt" against gays: "New England
    witch trials belong to the past, or so it is thought. This summer on Cape
    Cod, the reputation of Rep. Gerry Studds was burned at the stake by a large
    number of his constituents determined to torch the congressman for his
    private life."


    Meanwhile, Foley is hiding in a hole someplace.


    No one demanded to know why the Democratic speaker of the House, Thomas
    "Tip" O'Neill, took one full decade to figure out that Studds was
    propositioning male pages.


    But now, the same Democrats who are incensed that Bush's National Security
    Agency was listening in on al-Qaida phone calls are incensed that
    Republicans were not reading a gay congressman's instant messages.


    Let's run this past the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals: The suspect sent an
    inappropriately friendly e-mail to a teenager — oh also, we think he's gay.
    Can we spy on his instant messages? On a scale of 1 to 10, what are the odds
    that any court in the nation would have said: YOU BET! Put a tail on that
    guy — and a credit check, too!


    When Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee found unprotected e-mails
    from the Democrats about their plan to oppose Miguel Estrada's judicial
    nomination because he was Hispanic, Democrats erupted in rage that their
    e-mails were being read. The Republican staffer responsible was forced to
    resign.


    But Democrats are on their high horses because Republicans in the House did
    not immediately wiretap Foley's phones when they found out he was engaging
    in e-mail chitchat with a former page about what the kid wanted for his
    birthday.


    The Democrats say the Republicans should have done all the things Democrats
    won't let us do to al-Qaida — solely because Foley was rumored to be gay.
    Maybe we could get Democrats to support the NSA wiretapping program if we
    tell them the terrorists are gay.


    On Fox News' "Hannity and Colmes" Monday night, Democrat Bob Beckel said a
    gay man should be kept away from male pages the same way Willie Sutton
    should have been kept away from banks. "If Willie Sutton is around some
    place where a bank is robbed," Beckel said, "then you're probably going to
    say, 'Willie, stay away from the robbery.'"


    Hmmmm, let's search the memory bank. In July 2000, the New York Times
    "ethicist" Randy Cohen advised a reader that pulling her son out of the Cub
    Scouts because they exclude gay scoutmasters was "the ethical thing to do."
    The "ethicist" explained: "Just as one is honor bound to quit an
    organization that excludes African-Americans, so you should withdraw from
    scouting as long as it rejects homosexuals."


    We need to get a rulebook from the Democrats:

    § Boy Scouts: As gay as you want to be.
    § Priests: No gays!
    § Democratic politicians: Proud gay Americans.
    § Republican politicians: Presumed guilty.
    § White House press corps: No gays, unless they hate Bush.
    § Active-duty U.S. military: As gay as possible.
    § Men who date Liza Minelli: Do I have to draw you a picture, Miss
    Thing?


    This is the very definition of political opportunism. If Republicans had
    decided to spy on Foley for sending overly friendly e-mails to pages,
    Democrats would have been screaming about a Republican witch-hunt against
    gays. But if they don't, they're enabling a sexual predator.


    Talk to us Monday. Either we'll be furious that Republicans violated the
    man's civil rights, or we'll be furious that they didn't

    ReplyDelete
  2. The thing that you don't seem to get, Dr. Whoami, is that Congressman Foley's sexually-explicit messages had nothing to do with the Democrats whatsoever, and that any attempt to overlook this matter in favor of finger-pointing in the Democrats' direction is nothing but political horse crap.

    Read this, Dr. Whoeveryouare: The Democrats didn't make Foley send disgusting correspondences to all of those pages. Stop looking at them and look within.

    ReplyDelete