Blogging Tory and official Stephen Harper fellatrix Sandy Crux takes her normal level of batshit crazy idiocy and cranks it up to 11:
"... the notion that a minority is the best thing for this country is a fallacy."
Fuckin' A, because who in their right mind would ever argue that checks, balances and fundamental restraints on the absolute and unbridled power of a governing party could possibly be a good thing? I mean, really, who could be that indescribably, unspeakably, mind-meltingly moronic that they would seriously even think that, much less, say, mention it out loud in public, eh, Sandy? Who the fuck, indeed? Oh ... wait ...
Campaigning Tuesday [in January of 2006], [Stephen Harper] tried to assuage fears raised by the Liberals and NDP of a majority government running roughshod with power.
A majority Conservative government would not have "absolute power" to run the country because of a long history of Liberal rule that has left a legacy of appointees in the Senate, civil service and on the Supreme Court bench, Harper said Tuesday.
"I'm not sure there's such thing as a true Conservative majority in the sense of a Liberal majority," Harper said after a number of public opinion polls placed his party within striking distance of a majority government. "We will have checks on us and limits on our ability to operate that a Liberal government would not face.
"The reality is that we will have, for some time to come, a Liberal Senate, a Liberal civil service, at least at the senior levels where they've been appointed by the Liberals, and courts that have been appointed by the Liberals," he said. "These are obviously checks on the power of a Conservative government. That's why I say ... there is certainly no absolute power for a Conservative government and no real, true majority."
Now would someone please give Sandy another large bowl of pudding, and wheel her over to the corner where she can pee into her adult diaper in peace?
1 comment:
Watching Barack O'Bama trying to outdo The Real McCain dissing The President, it occurred to me that maybe Stephen could use this gambit too.
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