SUPPORTING Donald Duck and Kinky

Jon Ford jonmfordster at hotmail.com
Fri Aug 12 15:57:55 EDT 2005


I agree with Gerry about Jimmy Carter, a man of strong values who had the 
nerve to actually take a stand on our energy wastefulness. Note that he did 
have political experience before being elected president, just as Clinton, 
Reagan, and even George W-- as a state governor. He also was a party 
candidate, not an "independent." That's a far cry from Ventura, who was a 
total disaster as governor of Minnesota and now couldn't get elected 
dog-catcher. Same would go for Kinkey, if he got elected. My advice for 
celebrities who want to get into politics is to start small-- Mayor, or even 
city councilman. Learn how to do political business with people you don't 
agree with, and those you sort of do (those in your own party, for 
instance). Then run for the big house!

Jon

<Jimmy Carter awarded veterans who by chance of birth were not involved 
in<br>&gt;armed conflicts but who nonetheless manned to front during the 
cold war<br>&gt;their full rights. (I, among them). Thank you, Jimmy, sure 
came in handy.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;Jimmy Carter brought the nation down from the 
madness of the Viet Nam era to<br>&gt;a much cooler place. His calming 
influence was a great boon. The presence of<br>&gt;genuine feelings for 
humanity coming from the top was good and rare feeling.<br>&gt;<br>&gt;I 
love Jimmy Carter. He sacrificed a lot for us, and he is still walking 
his<br>&gt;talk. If more of us had defended him...nah, let it go, it was sad 
to see his<br>&gt;pain. Now he has found a better role.t: Re: SUPPORTING 
Donald Duck and Kinky Well they said the same of Jimmy Carter and that 
wrestler in the great<br>&gt;white<br>&gt; &gt; north. Seems to me that 
those snowballs didn't melt.




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