Clay Bennett by Clay Bennett
- November 06, 2009
- From Beginning
- Previous feature
- Show Calendar
- Next feature
- Current
Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this plus any other comic strip delivered to your Personalized Comic Page, Daily. With a free account you will be able to build a Comic Page filled with the Comics you want to see each day.
With the largest collection of Comics and Editorial Cartoons online there is plenty to choose from. Upgrade to a Comic Genius account (Only $.99/Month) and have unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this or any other comic strip daily emailed daily. Comics and Editorial Cartoons are updated everyday so there is always something new.
With a free account you will receive one comic from your Personalized Comic Page daily. Upgrade to a Comic Genius account (Only $.99/Month) and get all of your comics emailed daily plus receive unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
A nominated finalist for the Pulitzer 6 times since 1999, Chattanooga Times Free Press cartoonist Clay Bennett won the Prize in 2002. He has also earned just about every other editorial cartoon award there is, including the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the John Fischetti Editorial Cartoon Competition, the Overseas Press Club's Thomas Nast Award, the National Headliner Award, the Society of Professional Journalists' Sigma Delta Chi Award, the National Journalism Award from the Scripps Howard Foundation, and the National Cartoonists Society Division Award for Best Editorial Cartoons. Bennett was also named Editorial Cartoonist of the Year by Editor & Publisher magazine in 2001.
© 2009 Washington Post Writers Group - All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2009. UCLICK LLC, All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy


Comments (22) Jump to Comments Form
deadheadzan
said,
14 days ago
That’s what it’s like in Mad Hatter Land!
ahab
said,
14 days ago
Barking mad. Woof!
DrCanuck said, 14 days ago
HA HA HA! Ohh, goody.
ANandy said, 14 days ago
The Congressional Lunch Room.
motivemagus said, 14 days ago
“We’re all a little mad here…”
dtroutma said, 14 days ago
Even one of my best friends is on that side of the table, but ignorance isn’t the sole determinate of long-time friendship, and forgiveness?
fennec said, 14 days ago
OK, the Hare is ANandy, the dormouse is scott, and the Mad Hatter is the Pup?
charliekane said, 14 days ago
I’ve been told it was a treatise on political science.
CB one brilliant sumbuck.
Ken Warren said, 14 days ago
Good, very good.
If you are a Republican you must face the fact that your party could be taken over by Rush and his people, and after what happened in 2008 they wont be willing to give up any power or control to the “Moderates”!
To the Tea Baggers and Fox News Rush is a moderate.
oldlegodad
said,
14 days ago
I’m getting too many propositions since posting my true countenance. Should I go back to my real self, THE WIZARD??
comYics said, 13 days ago
A very merry unbirthday to…
HUMPHRIES
said,
13 days ago
;oD
PS Oldie, yup
Magnaut
said,
13 days ago
or we could join the real ‘big tent’ party….whoops!… that should read big SOUK
cabrobst said, 13 days ago
Tea party means defeat.
wittyvegan said, 11 days ago
You want your county back? Tell this to the Indians.
striper77 said, 11 days ago
If my memory serves me right. Besides the original 13 colonies. The rest of American was purchased from other countries. Such as the Louisiana purchase (France). Furthermore did America get in a war with Spain and took over most of Mexico. Then turned around and gave Mexico back and purchased Texas from them.
Lets roll this out further. If America stayed with the Indians. Canada and the USA would be ruled by Spain. The country would have been no better than the current Mexico and/ or South America as it is today.
You could then roll it up to Hitler. Since it was the United States is the country that saved the world from Hitler. France was already defeated and Great Britain was about to roll over.
With all this said, the Nazi’s would be ruling the world today.
All the blacks, homosexuals, Jews, Native Americans, Muslims and so and so on with all be dead.
Take you Native American BS and put it where the sun does not shine.
striper77 said, 11 days ago
Back to the story line. I do not ever recall their being a president with as much baggage as Obama.
What would it be like to day if Obama, the democrats, Acorn, black panthers, NAACP and so on did not due all the voter fraud and we actually had some decent people in Washington?
comYics said, 11 days ago
LOL @ wittyvegan.
charliekane said, 11 days ago
Tripe:
Your memory/knowledge of history is bad. Perhaps that explains your posts.
striper77 said, 11 days ago
The Louisiana Purchase (French: Vente de la Louisiane “Sale of Louisiana”) was the acquisition by the United States of America of 828,800 square miles (2,147,000 km2) of the French territory Louisiana in 1803. The U.S. paid 60 million francs ($11,250,000) plus cancellation of debts worth 18 million francs ($3,750,000), a total cost of 15 million dollars for the Louisiana territory.[1][2][3]
The Louisiana Purchase encompassed all or part of 14 current U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. The land purchased contained all of present-day Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, parts of Minnesota that were west of the Mississippi River, most of North Dakota, nearly all of South Dakota, northeastern New Mexico, the portions of Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado east of the Continental Divide, and Louisiana west of the Mississippi River, including the city of New Orleans. (The Oklahoma Panhandle, and southwestern portions of Kansas and Louisiana were still claimed by Spain at the time of the Purchase.) In addition, the Purchase contained small portions of land that would eventually become part of the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan. The land included in the purchase comprises around 23% of the territory of the United States today.[2]
The purchase was a vital moment in the presidency of Thomas Jefferson. At the time, it faced domestic opposition as being possibly unconstitutional. Although he felt that the US Constitution did not contain any provisions for acquiring territory, Jefferson decided to purchase Louisiana because he felt uneasy about France and Spain having the power to block American trade access to the port of New Orleans.
Napoleon Bonaparte, upon completion of the agreement, stated, “This accession of territory affirms forever the power of the United States, and I have given England a maritime rival who sooner or later will humble her pride.”[4]
striper77 said, 11 days ago
The Mexican–American War was an armed conflict between the United States and Mexico from 1846 to 1848 in the wake of the 1845 U.S. annexation of Texas. Mexico claimed ownership of Texas as a breakaway province and refused to recognize the secession and subsequent military victory by Texas in 1836.
In the U.S. the conflict is often referred to simply as the Mexican War and sometimes as the U.S.–
Mexican War. [1] In Mexico, terms for it include Intervención Estadounidense en México (American intervention in Mexico), Invasión Estadounidense de México (American[a] Invasion of Mexico), and Guerra del 47 (The War of ‘47).
The most important consequences of the war for the United States were the Mexican terms of surrender under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which the Mexican territories of Alta
California and Santa Fe de Nuevo México were ceded to the United States. In Mexico, the enormous loss of territory following the war encouraged its government to enact policies to colonize its remaining northern territories as a hedge against further losses.[citation needed] In addition the Rio Grande became the boundary between Texas and Mexico, and Mexico never again claimed ownership of Texas.
charliekane said, 11 days ago
^Good enough!
Research improves output.