Friday, June 11, 2010

Forest... Trees

This is hardly surprising coming from a financially teetering weekly magazine that tracked left long ago...
Alvin Greene, the surprise Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate in South Carolina, has a way with words. It’s the way, though, of Sarah Palin and George W. Bush—a tortured relationship with the English language that prevents him from making his points, and that says to voters he may not be up to the job.
They just can't see the point. It's actually on their head. Like Bush and Palin, Greene is a winner, regardless of his rhetorical skills. He won. Meanwhile the guy with the gift of gab is polling under 50 percent as he stammers and yammers his way through gaffe after gaffe exacerbated by less than gifted leadership qualities. In other words, talk doesn't always equal action.

Perhaps this can be a teachable moment for this Newsweek reporter. Ya think?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I do agree; I simply don’t know if the Newsweek reporter can be taught.

A.C. McCloud said...

Old socialist dogs are that way..

Anonymous said...

I may have discovered a possible explanation for the Greene phenomenon: LA Sunset is in the Carolinas. That’s all I can say about that.

Right Truth said...

Interesting they would lump him in with Palin and Bush, since he's a Democrat. It is amazing that Greene won the election. What does it say about his opponents with all their money, ads, etc. and he didn't even have a website.

Not sure about these charges against him, but hey, as I said, he's a Democrat.

Debbie
Right Truth
http://www.righttruth.typepad.com