Oh Keith, how I've missed you so much. Your constant ramblings and idiotic nature has filled my heart with a flutter that no other liberal could possibly do.
And yet, there was a long time when you started making good points about things that needed to be said. I thought you were coming to the Dark Side.
But alas, here we are, and you've blasted John McCain for something his pastor says, yet, you yourself have praise for Obama's speech about his pastor. A bit hypocritical don't you think?
How odd eh? I thought you were a journalist, not a partisan hack. But you surprise me almost daily Mr. Olbermann. Pretty soon, you'll surprise me again and say something nice about a Republican, you know, "there are times where we need to be bipartisan". Just a thought.
But then again, Reverend Wright is now having the nerve to say that his words were "twisted".
The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, former pastor to Barack Obama, said that publicizing sound bites of sermons in which he condemned U.S. policies was "unfair" and "devious," and done by people who know nothing about his church, according to excerpts of a PBS interview released Thursday.
Wright said that, as an activist, he is accustomed to being "at odds with the establishment," but the response to the sermons has been "very, very unsettling."
The interview, scheduled for broadcast Friday night, is the first the pastor has given since video of his preaching gained national attention in March, putting Democratic presidential hopeful Obama on the defensive.
Among the most remarked upon sound bites was Wright proclaiming from the pulpit "God damn America" for its racism. He accused the government of flooding black neighborhoods with drugs.
The controversy forced Obama to explain his 20-year association with the minister, who is stepping down from Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.
"The blowing up of sermons preached 15, seven, six years ago and now becoming a media event, not the full sermon, but the snippets from the sermon ... having made me the target of hatred, yes, that is something very new," Wright told "Bill Moyers' Journal."
"I felt it was unfair. I felt it was unjust. I felt it was untrue. I felt _ for those who were doing that _ were doing it for some very devious reasons," he said.
Remember Reverend, it's wrong to lie.
Travis
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