Meet Jeff Barth — He May Have Just Made the ‘Greatest Political Ad Ever’

User Profile: Mister July

Mister July

Member Since: April 07, 2011

CommentsDisplaying Mister July's 10 most recent comments.

  • “If an expatriate can prove he or she has a legitimate reason for renouncing U.S. citizenship, no penalties will apply.”
    Red flag (pun intended) line of the story.

  • I live in Miami. Carlos Alvarez was a RINO county mayor (formerly chief of police) who was successfully recalled thanks, in no small part, to the efforts of a fellow named Norman Braman. Kudos to him for helping county residents dodge the proverbial bullet that would have been the remainder of Carlos Alvarez’ term.

  • @SOUTHSIDELIB – ….pretty sure gravity is a law there, buddy.

  • AHhhhh, how refreshing to to finally have true academic and open-minded discourse going on! Everyone knows that “shut up you fool” and “your DNA is deficient” are all perfectly acceptable arguments in any peer-reviewed scientific journal; why not on the Blaze?

  • @OAK: I‘ve heard similar defenses of Mormonism before but here’s the difference between the Book of Mormon and the Bible. The Bible contains a historical record of the people of Israel in the ancient Middle-East for which there is ample extraneous historical and archaeological evidence. I’ve never heard such evidence ever being set forth outside of the fact of there being an ancient culture on the American Continent which worshiped a Tau symbol, a fact known well before the Book of Mormon was written.

  • That must be the most ignorant thing anyone could possibly say about Cuba (and even the Dominican Republic). Cuba, historically, (pre-Castro) enjoyed an extremely close trade relationship with the United States. At one point, the pre-1959 Cuban peso was valued on par with the U.S. Dollar. Havana was the most technologically advanced city in Latin America; and Miami, by comparison, looked like Monkey’s Eyebrow, Kentucky. Cuba was part of the first world. People owned businesses and were free to prosper according to their own industry. Of course, as in every nation on the planet, there were some extremely poor people. That is an inescapable fact of the human condition. Today, EVERYONE in Cuba is extremely poor, save for the privileged elites of the Communist party. Thankfully there are signs of some reform which might allow some portion of the population to eke out a meager existence. It’s the height of arrogance to think that Cubans on the island, and even Dominicans would be “better off” under a communist system. Your argument contains a central fallacy that the D.R. has permitted its citizens true economic freedom as Cuba had before 1959. History has proven that economic freedom and capitalism inevitably brings prosperity, while communism has only brought about misery, starvation, and scarcity.

  • @DIANN: You’re an idiot

  • Why is it that the supposed “LGBT community” can‘t get it’s narrative straight?
    If you ask someone who’s lesbian or gay or Lady Gaga, they say, “God doesn’t make mistakes. I was born this way, hey!” Then if you ask a transgendered person, they’ll say, “I wasn’t born this way, God must’ve made a mistake.”
    I can’t be the only one who sees the irony here.

  • 1. Investigate the truthfulness of the allegations.
    2. If the allegations are true, hand him over to the Afghans for justice. He committed murder in a foreign jurisdiction and should be treated the same as anyone else.
    3. If allegations are false, keep his identity concealed and bring him home. Otherwise he’ll have a target on his back the rest of his life.
    4. Quit pussyfooting and wipe out the Taliban and/or bring the troops home.

  • I believe it was Gen. George S. Patton who once said, “I’d rather have a German regiment in front of me than a French regiment behind me.”