So Sorry, Mr. Kahn. We already have a Constitution and it's the best the world has ever seen. Take your sharia and stick it.
Update!: Tricked?
So, why would Khizr Khan choose to insert himself into politics and demean his son’s sacrifice by lying at a political convention on national television?This sounds just like Democrats. Just remember: All Democrats are anarchists, corpses, crooks, deviants, drunks, liars, materialists, pagans, parasites, perverts, and thieves.
The answer is simple: He allowed himself to be tricked into it. And the Clinton campaign was all too eager to take advantage of him and his family and Capt. Khan and use them for their own political partisan purposes.
**********************
Looks like BrunHillary can't get any one to come out unless Mr. Bill shows up along with her:
Hardly anyone showed up on her "Bus Tour" when it was just her and the Kainester. Doesn't sound like enthusiasm to me.
**********************
This is the world's smallest violin playing "My Heart Bleeds for You!" Texas shale oil has fought Saudi Arabia to a standstill.
This agility has changed the nature of the oil cycle. It means that OPEC faces an unprecedented headwind from mid-cost producers. [American Shale Oil producers] Anadarko and Hess say they will wait for $60 before investing heavily, but they are already preparing the ground.Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha!!!!!
The losers are high-cost projects elsewhere: off the coast of Nigeria and Angola, in the Arctic, or the oil sands of Canada and Venezuela's Orinoco basin. Roughly 4m to 5m barrels a day of future supply has been shelved around the world.
This sets the stage for an oil shortage and a price spike later this decade. Whether OPEC can survive that long is an open question. Most of the cartel need prices of $100 to fund their regimes.
Venezuela is already in the grip of hyperinflation and food riots. Nigeria's currency peg was smashed last month, and the naira has fallen 60pc. Angola has turned to the International Monetary Fund, Azerbaijan to the World Bank.
Saudi Arabia has deeper pockets but its net foreign reserves have fallen from $737bn to $562bn, even though it is borrowing money abroad to slow the loss. It burned through another $11bn last month.
Riyadh is trying to curb the country's culture of subsidy and entitlement, but was forced to sack a minister and backtrack after a 500pc rise in water prices set off an outcry. It is the famous social contract from cradle-to-grave that keeps the House of Saud in power.
**********************
Ok, that's enough for today!
No comments:
Post a Comment