Rush: So all morning long the story has been that Mayor Doomberg caved to the protestors down at Zuccotti Park because they said there would be trouble. You know what really ought to happen? The Tea Party ought to go down there with mops and brooms. I mean the Tea Party members are used to cleaning up after their worthless, lazy kids. They ought to just head on down there. Well, that's my definition of kids. Anyway, the Tea Party should go in there and clean up. Three hundred people getting worldwide coverage; hundreds of thousands of Tea Party people ignored.
and
The AP had a story starting early this morning: "The official cleanup of a New York plaza where protesters have camped out for a month was postponed early Friday, sending up cheers from demonstrators who feared the effort was merely a pretext to evict them."
They would rather live in stench, these people would rather live in squalor like pigs in a sty than have the adults come in and clean the place up out of fear they're gonna be moved out. The New York City deputy mayor Cass Holloway said the owners of the private park Brookfield Office Properties, and, by the way, the owners of this office park are dyed-in-the-wool Democrats. This is private property these people are on, and I'm pretty sure these are dyed-in-the-wool Democrats that own this place. So Brookfield Office Properties put off the cleaning.
"Supporters of the protesters had started streaming into the park in the morning darkness before the planned cleaning, creating a crowd of several hundred chanting people. 'I'll believe it when we're able to stay here,' said Peter Hogness --" what a perfectly apt name for somebody in this situation. Peter Hogness is 56, a union employee from Brooklyn. Of course. "One thing we have learned from this is that we need to rely on ourselves and not on promises from elected officials." (laughing) No, he did say it. These people clamoring for everybody to pay everything for them, to take care of them are now saying only rugged individualism is gonna protect us from elected officials. I'm telling you, you listen to a lot of what these people are saying, they're clueless. They actually ought to be on our side. Not that we'd want 'em.
"But protester Nick Gulotta, 23, was jubilant. He originally held up a sign referring to Mayor Michael Bloomberg that said: 'Bloomberg Don't Evict Occupy Wall Street.' People cheered and clapped him on the back when he scratched out the 'don't' and replaced it with 'didn't.' 'It shows when people work together, you really can make a difference and make justice happen,' Mr. Gulotta said." Yeah, you can continue to live as pigs in a sty when you hang together. That's justice. You can live in a veritable garbage pit made by you, by the way, your own self-created squalor. That's justice. "A confrontation between police and protesters, who had vowed to stay put through civil disobedience, had been feared. Boisterous cheers floated up from the crowds as the announcement of the postponement circulated," and everybody thought that Bloomberg had caved.
______________
My Schedule of Regular Posts:
*Monday through Friday morning - schedules of President, VP and Secretary of State and her diplomats
*Monday through Friday afternoon - List of topics Limbaugh discussed on his program that day
*Monday through Friday throughout the day - My posts on anything that I feel like talking about. At least one or two a day, sometimes more.
*Saturday through Sunday morning - An addition to my booklist of political books - covering Democrats, Republicans and other interested parties.
No comments:
Post a Comment