b.k. barunt wrote:Blatant sexism? I'd love to do the Badunkadunk with her
are you capable of not being a gigantic creep just curious
She's a beautiful older woman. He's willing to admit that he finds her sexy. Why does that make him a gigantic creep?
...I prefer a man who will burn the flag and then wrap himself in the Constitution to a man who will burn the Constitution and then wrap himself in the flag.
b.k. barunt wrote:sultana finds man/woman sex creepy. Honibaz
I notice he had time to try to whale on you for your "creepy" remark, but he didn't seem interested in explaining his set of images, as I asked. Interesting...apparently, blatantly insulting Palin is ok, but not thinking she's sexy.
...I prefer a man who will burn the flag and then wrap himself in the Constitution to a man who will burn the Constitution and then wrap himself in the flag.
b.k. barunt wrote:sultana finds man/woman sex creepy. Honibaz
I notice he had time to try to whale on you for your "creepy" remark, but he didn't seem interested in explaining his set of images, as I asked. Interesting...apparently, blatantly insulting Palin is ok, but not thinking she's sexy.
It's no surprise, all he does well here is insult!
The joke doesn't even make sense. How was Bristol supposed to pull out?
Gosh, I think she is sexy, although I like my women a lot smarter. Mostly, I think she is great for the democrats, so I hope all of you send her money and keep her in the race for president in 2012.
mpjh wrote:Gosh, I think she is sexy, although I like my women a lot smarter. Mostly, I think she is great for the democrats, so I hope all of you send her money and keep her in the race for president in 2012.
How the heck did a troll like you become a moderator?
b.k. barunt wrote:sultana finds man/woman sex creepy.
Honibaz
i find the way you describe it creepy, especially considering how you baselessly project personal qualities you find attractive onto her, such as weakness and submissiveness, as if there's any evidence she is either of those things. (this aside from your bizarre insistence that she is leaving politics)
at least you've moved up from talking about literally jerking off over the thought of her like you did for lesbians. perhaps you can overcome your antisocial personality disorder yet.
maybe you should tackle your chronic mouthbreathing next? i'm here to help you. one step at a time and all that
mpjh wrote:Gosh, I think she is sexy, although I like my women a lot smarter. Mostly, I think she is great for the democrats, so I hope all of you send her money and keep her in the race for president in 2012.
How the heck did a troll like you become a moderator?
Hard work in the Society of Cooks. I just come out here every once-and-a-while to see what you guys are fighting about now. I do try to stick to my own opinion and humor, mostly trying to be honest but funny. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
b.k. barunt wrote:sultana finds man/woman sex creepy.
Honibaz
i find the way you describe it creepy he did not give any description , especially considering how you baselessly project personal qualities you find attractive onto her, such as weakness and submissiveness He said "feminine," not weak or submissive but it's interesting that YOU associate the word "feminine with these things , as if there's any evidence she is either of those things. (this aside from your bizarre insistence that she is leaving politics he stated that he thinks she is bound to fail, a rare point of agreement for the two of you!)
at least you've moved up from talking about literally jerking off over the thought of her DID he mention masturbation or was that you again? like you did for lesbians. perhaps you can overcome your antisocial personality disorder yet.
maybe you should tackle your chronic mouthbreathing next? i'm here to help you. one step at a time and all that.
mpjh wrote:Gosh, I think she is sexy, although I like my women a lot smarter. Mostly, I think she is great for the democrats, so I hope all of you send her money and keep her in the race for president in 2012.
How the heck did a troll like you become a moderator?
Hard work in the Society of Cooks. I just come out here every once-and-a-while to see what you guys are fighting about now. I do try to stick to my own opinion and humor, mostly trying to be honest but funny. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
I just wondered.
I know that I could never be a moderator, and I don't really have the time to do it, but I was surprised to see that a semi regular from here got the title.
GabonX wrote:especially considering how you baselessly project personal qualities you find attractive onto her, such as weakness and submissiveness He said "feminine," not weak or submissive but it's interesting that YOU associate the word "feminine with these things
lolll
b.k. barunt wrote:I also think she's too feminine and soft for politics.
b.k. barunt wrote:Don't think she could handle the pressure of being in the big leagues though - too feminine
he's clearly been using "soft" and "feminine" as synonyms for "weak" and "unequal to men," it doesn't take some subconscious misogyny to see barunt's completely unabashed sexism here
ps, barunt on lesbians:
b.k. barunt wrote:To be perfectly honest, i too am aroused by it. It's abnormal, and a perversion, but so is a woman who has multiple orgasms when you spank her. * * wanks one out and falls over backwards in chair * *
Honibaz
ah yes, the mark of a man who considers women his equals
Who gives a shit what he thinks about women? Whatever works for him is fine, we don't need thought police.
A lot of women are these things, but a lot of women are damned good at manipulating stronger forces than themselves, so the concept of "equal" is a bit abstract.
Is it wrong for BK to be attracted to submissive women? Should submissive women go without love?
GabonX wrote:Who gives a shit what he thinks about women? Whatever works for him is fine, we don't need thought police.
A lot of women are these things, but a lot of women are damned good at manipulating stronger forces than themselves, so the concept of "equal" is a bit abstract.
Is it wrong for BK to be attracted to submissive women? Should submissive women go without love?
i don't know about you, but bk has a habit of airing his fucked-to-death sexual hangups in public and i find it incredibly creepy, moral value of his neuroses notwithstanding. that's all i've been saying.
GabonX wrote:Who gives a shit what he thinks about women? Whatever works for him is fine, we don't need thought police.
I tend to let bk's more excessive stuff slide because I appreciate him as a poster, but this stance is a bit interesting. Is calling someone out for being a bigot thought policing? I mean, pointing out prejudice is hardly censorship.
mpjh wrote:Gosh, I think she is sexy, although I like my women a lot smarter. Mostly, I think she is great for the democrats, so I hope all of you send her money and keep her in the race for president in 2012.
How the heck did a troll like you become a moderator?
He's not really being a troll in this instance, is he? He seems to be on-topic.
SultanOfSurreal wrote:
b.k. barunt wrote:sultana finds man/woman sex creepy.
i find the way you describe it creepy, especially considering how you baselessly project personal qualities you find attractive onto her, such as weakness and submissiveness, as if there's any evidence she is either of those things.
Where did he do any such thing? He described her as feminine and too soft for politics...that doesn't necessarily equate to weakness or submissiveness. It seems to me that YOU'RE the one baselessly projecting personal qualities on people, not him.
SultanOfSurreal wrote:
b.k. barunt wrote:Don't think she could handle the pressure of being in the big leagues though - too feminine
he's clearly been using "soft" and "feminine" as synonyms for "weak" and "unequal to men,"
This presumes there are no other women in politics, doesn't it?
...I prefer a man who will burn the flag and then wrap himself in the Constitution to a man who will burn the Constitution and then wrap himself in the flag.
she'll run for the senate next year. the biggest complaint the dems had about her was a lack of international experience. depending when she would launch a presidential campaign, she would have at least 144 days of experience, that seem to be the prerequisite for international experience. to answer another one of your questions, NO we do not think she is the answer to our problems. unlike dems, we believe, left to our devices, we can solve our own problems. government tends to create more problems than it solves and should stay out the way.
Freedom is a fragile thing. It is never more than one generation away from extinction. It is not ours by inheritance. It must be fought for and defended constantly by each generation. Ronald Wilson Reagan
b.k. barunt wrote:Don't think she could handle the pressure of being in the big leagues though - too feminine
he's clearly been using "soft" and "feminine" as synonyms for "weak" and "unequal to men,"
This presumes there are no other women in politics, doesn't it?
no it clearly presumes that the qualities of "feminine" and "able to handle the pressures of the political world" are mutually incompatible. so according to bk any women who succeed in politics are not feminine, or more to the point are lacking some essential aspect of womanhood. i hope you see the problem with this assessment
b.k. barunt wrote:Don't think she could handle the pressure of being in the big leagues though - too feminine
he's clearly been using "soft" and "feminine" as synonyms for "weak" and "unequal to men,"
This presumes there are no other women in politics, doesn't it?
no it clearly presumes that the qualities of "feminine" and "able to handle the pressures of the political world" are mutually incompatible.
It presumes the qualities of "too feminine" (which is what bk said), not "just feminine". I think there can be some argument for that point, also, though I don't believe it applies to Palin at all. Obviously, bk would disagree with me on that. But there would logically be a point where being too feminine (or too masculine) would be a huge problem in politics.
SultanOfSurreal wrote:so according to bk any women who succeed in politics are not feminine, or more to the point are lacking some essential aspect of womanhood. i hope you see the problem with this assessment
Yes, I do see the problem with your assessment. You're equating a more extreme aspect of a quality with the quality itself.
Obviously, Palin has been successful at politics, so to say that being feminine (which she clearly is) would hamstring a politician is ludicrous. But that's not what he said.
However, I do appreciate that you're not simply lashing out with insults as you've done frequently lately...thank you. Hopefully, we can continue having meaningful discussions like this. (Ok, I'm not sure I'd call this MEANINGFUL, but you get the idea...)
...I prefer a man who will burn the flag and then wrap himself in the Constitution to a man who will burn the Constitution and then wrap himself in the flag.
scorpion86 wrote:she'll run for the senate next year. the biggest complaint the dems had about her was a lack of international experience. depending when she would launch a presidential campaign, she would have at least 144 days of experience, that seem to be the prerequisite for international experience. to answer another one of your questions, NO we do not think she is the answer to our problems. unlike dems, we believe, left to our devices, we can solve our own problems. government tends to create more problems than it solves and should stay out the way.
scorpion86 wrote:she'll run for the senate next year. the biggest complaint the dems had about her was a lack of international experience. depending when she would launch a presidential campaign, she would have at least 144 days of experience, that seem to be the prerequisite for international experience. to answer another one of your questions, NO we do not think she is the answer to our problems. unlike dems, we believe, left to our devices, we can solve our own problems. government tends to create more problems than it solves and should stay out the way.
I assure you, that was not the biggest complaint.
I'm not a Democrat (or a Republican), but I agree that wasn't anywhere NEAR my biggest complaint (hell, Obama?). Her stances on quite a number of issues were my problem.
That being said, I'm now stuck trying to figure out which is worse...to have McCain-Palin stick with their campaign promises or having Obama-Biden NOT sticking with theirs (and in some cases, falling back to McCain-Palin's proposals!).
...I prefer a man who will burn the flag and then wrap himself in the Constitution to a man who will burn the Constitution and then wrap himself in the flag.
It's funny that sultanofsurreal would use of all people Joe Biden to try and insult Sarah Palin. Something happens to Obama and he'll be running the country. As if it wasn't screwed up bad enough by Obama already. Top 10 Biden gaffes: 1.During a Feb. 25, 2009, interview on CBS' "Early Show," Biden encouraged viewers to visit a government-run Web site that tracks stimulus spending. When asked for the site's web address, Biden could not remember the site's "number."
"You know, I'm embarrassed. Do you know the Web site number?" he asked an aide standing out of view. "I should have it in front of me and I don't. I'm actually embarrassed 2.In a Sept. 22, 2008, CBS interview, Biden misspoke when he said Franklin D. Roosevelt was president when the stock market crashed in 1929.
"When the stock market crashed, Franklin D. Roosevelt got on the television and didn't just talk about the, you know, the princes of greed. He said, 'Look, here's what happened," he said. Herbert Hoover -- not Roosevelt -- was president in 1929, and television had not yet been invented in 1929.
3.During a Sept. 12, 2008, speech in Columbia, Mo., Biden called for Missouri State Sen. Chuck Graham, who is wheelchair-bound, to "stand up."
"Oh, God love ya," Biden said, after realizing his mistake. "What am I talking about?"
4.On Jan. 31, 2007 -- the day Biden announced his presidential bid -- the Delaware Senator was roundly criticized for calling Obama "the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man." 5.Vice President Joe Biden has been keeping a low profile these days. But last week he popped into headlines when he clashed with aides to former President George W. Bush after claiming to have rebuked Bush in private meetings. Recalling a conversation during an interview with CNN, Biden said he told Bush in the Oval Office: "'Mr. President, turn and around look behind you. No one is following.'"
Karl Rove, Bush's top political adviser in the White House, called the conversation "fictional."
This isn't the first time Biden's comments have made news. From historical blunders and Internet gaffes to offensive jokes, Vice President Joe Biden is never shy a quotable moment. 6.On March 13, 2009, Biden addressed a former Senate colleague by saying, "An hour late, oh give me a f**king break," after he arrived on Amtrak at Union Station in Washington, D.C. The vice president's expletive was caught on a live microphone. 7.Biden said he was running for president -- not vice president -- during a Sept. 1, 2008, roundtable discussion in Scranton, Pa.
"Today is the moment for me as a United States senator running for president to put aside the national politics and focus on what's happening down there," Biden said. 8.Vice President Joe Biden says he's advising his own family to avoid "confined places" -- to stay off commercial airlines and even subways -- because of the new swine flu.
Biden said Thursday if one person sneezes on a confined aircraft, "it goes all the way through the aircraft." Going beyond official advice from the federal government, Biden said of his family's personal precautions: "That's me." 9.Apparently, Biden has now revealed the location of the secret bunker that houses the Vice President of the United States in emergencies. 10.He portrayed himself in his vice presidential acceptance speech as coming from a working-class family, but as columnist Steve Chapman has observed, his father had been a business executive, had been part owner of an airport and crop-dusting firm and was a sales manager. Despite some hard times, the father wasn't working class.
So let's make fun of Palin when we have Biden.
Last edited by thelastpatriot on Sun Jul 05, 2009 1:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
thelastpatriot wrote:It's funny that sultanofsurreal would use of all people Joe Biden to try and insult Sarah Palin. Something happens to Obama and he'll be running the country. As if it wasn't screwed up bad enough by Obama already. Top 10 of the great Answers Biden has made: 1.During a Feb. 25, 2009, interview on CBS' "Early Show," Biden encouraged viewers to visit a government-run Web site that tracks stimulus spending. When asked for the site's web address, Biden could not remember the site's "number."
"You know, I'm embarrassed. Do you know the Web site number?" he asked an aide standing out of view. "I should have it in front of me and I don't. I'm actually embarrassed 2.In a Sept. 22, 2008, CBS interview, Biden misspoke when he said Franklin D. Roosevelt was president when the stock market crashed in 1929.
"When the stock market crashed, Franklin D. Roosevelt got on the television and didn't just talk about the, you know, the princes of greed. He said, 'Look, here's what happened," he said. Herbert Hoover -- not Roosevelt -- was president in 1929, and television had not yet been invented in 1929.
3.During a Sept. 12, 2008, speech in Columbia, Mo., Biden called for Missouri State Sen. Chuck Graham, who is wheelchair-bound, to "stand up."
"Oh, God love ya," Biden said, after realizing his mistake. "What am I talking about?"
4.On Jan. 31, 2007 -- the day Biden announced his presidential bid -- the Delaware Senator was roundly criticized for calling Obama "the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man." 5.Vice President Joe Biden has been keeping a low profile these days. But last week he popped into headlines when he clashed with aides to former President George W. Bush after claiming to have rebuked Bush in private meetings. Recalling a conversation during an interview with CNN, Biden said he told Bush in the Oval Office: "'Mr. President, turn and around look behind you. No one is following.'"
Karl Rove, Bush's top political adviser in the White House, called the conversation "fictional."
This isn't the first time Biden's comments have made news. From historical blunders and Internet gaffes to offensive jokes, Vice President Joe Biden is never shy a quotable moment. 6.On March 13, 2009, Biden addressed a former Senate colleague by saying, "An hour late, oh give me a f**king break," after he arrived on Amtrak at Union Station in Washington, D.C. The vice president's expletive was caught on a live microphone. 7.Biden said he was running for president -- not vice president -- during a Sept. 1, 2008, roundtable discussion in Scranton, Pa.
"Today is the moment for me as a United States senator running for president to put aside the national politics and focus on what's happening down there," Biden said. 8.Vice President Joe Biden says he's advising his own family to avoid "confined places" -- to stay off commercial airlines and even subways -- because of the new swine flu.
Biden said Thursday if one person sneezes on a confined aircraft, "it goes all the way through the aircraft." Going beyond official advice from the federal government, Biden said of his family's personal precautions: "That's me." 9.Apparently, Biden has now revealed the location of the secret bunker that houses the Vice President of the United States in emergencies. 10.He portrayed himself in his vice presidential acceptance speech as coming from a working-class family, but as columnist Steve Chapman has observed, his father had been a business executive, had been part owner of an airport and crop-dusting firm and was a sales manager. Despite some hard times, the father wasn't working class.
So let's make fun of Palin when we have Biden.
Biden's no F.D.R., but we've seen worse VP's. Palin, on the other hand, legitimately frightened me. The thought of her being close to the #2 position didn't make me facepalm as much as it made me shudder in horror.
Frigidus wrote: Biden's no F.D.R., but we've seen worse VP's. Palin, on the other hand, legitimately frightened me. The thought of her being close to the #2 position didn't make me facepalm as much as it made me shudder in horror.
I Know what you mean. Because when I look at the first 6 months of this administration i feel the same. I love the lies, and the lies to cover up the lies. Well then there's the liars that are covering up the lies that had to be lied about to keep the other liar from looking like a liar. That makes me feel safe at night. I would of rather Palin anyday