...for every share you got.
Don't you see what's happening? Potter isn't selling, Potter is buying. And why? Because we're panicking and he's not. He's picking up some bargains. Now, we can get through this thing alright. But we've got to have faith in each other. We've got to stick together.
No way. No how. No corporate welfare. Being a democrat doesn't mean you give away money. That's what Newt Gingrich says we are. We have (most of us) purchased shares in the democractic revolution. Call candidates who you've given to and tell them that unless they stop the federal reserve's inequitable open-door policy, your contributions will be going to a Republican deficit hawk.
An "aye" vote takes universal healthcare off the table for at least ten years. And we can't wait. My note to my congressman, Dave Loebsack (IA-2) after the jump:
Congressman Loebsack,
Do NOT fall in line with this emerging boondoggle! Yes, the government needs to step in in some capacity to alleviate economic suffering, but this johnny-come-lately panic takes me all the way back to January 2003. If you vote for this--even as a rank-and-file freshman--you politically sign away universal health care. Please, stand up, if only to moderate the scope of the greatest instance of corporate welfare in human history.