Buttars sees nothing wrong with a little bullying
- Victims of random violence should not threaten to use it. J. Eric Fuller was one of the people injured in the Tuscon massacre.
On Saturday he was participating in a town hall meeting, and threatened
local Tea Party activist Trent Humphries. “According to sheriff’s
deputies at the scene, Fuller took a photo of Humphries and said,
‘You’re Dead.’” Fuller was charged with threats and intimidation. Humphries hopes Fuller gets the help he clearly needs. “If pressing charges is
the only way to make sure he gets the help he needs, we’ll probably do
that,” Humphries said in an interview Sunday. “I’m not saying this
guy’s Jared Loughner, but I can’t tell you for sure he’s not a danger
to himself, me or the community.”

- That’s nasty. Tuscon shooting suspect Jared L. Loughner took many pictures of himself in a red g-string, in various poses with a
Glock 9mm pistol. That’s the type of gun he allegedly used last week to
shoot at Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. Give Ann Coulter a few days. She’ll
make Loughner gay and another reason why DADT needs to come back. While
we are on the topic, have you seen the creepy video he made about his college?

- Giffords still mending. Rep. Giffords continues to make remarkable progress. Her condition has been upgraded
from critical to serious. She is now breathing on her own, although a
tracheotomy tube remains in her throat.

- Buttars comes out for bullying. Remember Utah state Sen. Chris Buttars?
He once offered an opinion about gays and lesbians being mean and
lacking morals. Now he has introduced a bill to get rid of the
anti-bullying rules put in place by Salt Lake City’s school board.
“This is an entire program to bring America down and I want to tell you
right now it’s well entrenched in Utah.” So if we listen to Buttars,
wanting kids not to be hassled in school is a step to the ruination of
the U.S. of A., and Utah is home central of the queer radical agenda!
Who knew??

- No more Steele. He gave it a shot, but Michael
Steele will not lead the RNC for a second term. A sane man would have
handed in his resignation, but Steele’s entire career is based on a high
sense of regard. Wisconsin Party Chairman Reince Priebus won the election for the job—he was Steele’s campaign manager two years
ago (Et tu, Reince?). “I will earn your trust. I’m going to start
working right now as your chairman,” Priebus said in his acceptance
speech. “We all recognize there’s a steep hill ahead of us. The only
way we can move forward is if we’re all together.” The new RNC chief thinks life starts at conception, and is completely against gay
marriage. Rather shocking for a RNC chair to have those positions.

- Golden Globes. Did not watch because the Tarheels and SpursSan Antonio?). Fill me in on the details. were playing (why are people sleeping on

- Worried for all those hot guys getting injured on Broadway. Randy Rainbow is such a caring person (that’s one of the reasons why I loves him).
He’s concerned about what’s happening to all the attractive men in the
play Spider-Man. Clearly a tragedy that needs a national conservation.

- A poem on Martin Luther King Day. Robert Hayden’s Frederick Douglass is apt today.

When it is finally ours, this freedom, this liberty, this beautiful
and terrible thing, needful to man as air,
usable as earth; when it belongs at last to all,
when it is truly instinct, brain matter, diastole, systole,
reflex action; when it is finally won; when it is more
than the gaudy mumbo jumbo of politicians:
this man, this Douglass, this former slave, this Negro
beaten to his knees, exiled, visioning a world
where none is lonely, none hunted, alien,
this man, superb in love and logic, this man
shall be remembered. Oh, not with statues’ rhetoric,
not with legends and poems and wreaths of bronze alone,
but with the lives grown out of his life, the lives
fleshing his dream of the beautiful, needful thing.