Steve Benson for April 20, 2010

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    oneoldhat  about 14 years ago

    and army and police and no soc for me – of course i did not pay in

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    Motivemagus  about 14 years ago

    Note the logo: “Bendable Straws - Bendable Principles.” And Sarah apparently doesn’t want to mention that Alaska is the largest beneficiary per capita of government money in the US.

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    Dtroutma  about 14 years ago

    Anarchy is SUCH a great political, social, and economic system!! Review the politics of Czolgosz- who shot McKinley, the dude who shot Archduke Ferdinand, or Tim McVeigh. Blathering birdbrains CAN be dangerous, even by whom they inflame, when they aren’t taking credit for the match.

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  4. Cheryl 149 3
    Justice22  about 14 years ago

    How long will it be until she quits this gig for some other lucrative deal? Another $multimillion book????, My Life as Head of the TEA PARTY? ??? High School Point Guard to Governor……??? How to Rouse the Rabble! ???

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  5. Cheryl 149 3
    Justice22  about 14 years ago

    Thank you Mr. Benson. I like the “note to self”.

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  6. Warcriminal
    WarBush  about 14 years ago

    wbr is a tax cheat! He must be one of those 50% O’Really is talking about.

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    Simon_Jester  about 14 years ago

    Uhhhh, does this mean Former half-Governor Palin thinks the Patriot Act should be repealed, and that Bush should be prosecuted for that warrantless wiretapping thing?

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  8. Georg von rosen   oden som vandringsman  1886  odin  the wanderer
    runar  about 14 years ago

    av8or, you idiot, the reductions apply to processed foods. Why should I let some private sector salt Nazi chef decide how much salt is in my can of soup? You’ll still be free to buy your own salt and add spoonful after heaping spoonful.

    Personally, I’d prefer it it processed foods had no salt and the choice to add was left entirely up to me. Isn’t that the conservative way?

    You’re such a tool.

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  9. Cheryl 149 3
    Justice22  about 14 years ago

    Senor, I used to add a pinch of salt to my tea when I was in Korea to take the bitterness out of it. I wish I hadn’t developed this habit since I developed high blood pressure and related health issues. Today the only salt in my house is in food as it comes from the market.

    Sometimes that is way too much and rinsing food does not get rid of it.

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  10. Tarot
    Nighthawks Premium Member about 14 years ago

    runar, you are such a hoot!

    love your stuff

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    CorosiveFrog Premium Member about 14 years ago

    Doesn’t your country has better things to do than argue about salt?

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    Dtroutma  about 14 years ago

    Salt is mandatory for survival, thus through history, empires were built, and destroyed, relative to the trade. Too much salt is not good for humans, or snails and slugs.

    PROCESSED foods ARE loaded with salt- it covers up the taste of the alleged “food product” inside all that lard, breading, and who knows what. The FDA lists sodium already.

    Just mandate a skull and crossbones on all packaged foods that can kill you - that should dampen the market considerably.

    Years ago we commented that scientists had discovered that even distilled water can give you cancer. Water in excess HAS recently been noted as lethal in several college hazing incidents where plebes ingested too much- so it really is true that just about anything WILL kill you!

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    oneoldhat  about 14 years ago

    no warb i paid income taxes soc sec is insurance – i was employed by ssa

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