Tuesday, August 06, 2013

I hear Murdoch's Movie Division is intact and producing a movie about Jeb Bush. Yes? I get the distinct feeling Priebus hates the First Amendment, besides unions.

Why don't you just admit it Priebus, you don't want to face news organization that actually might level honest questions that don't align with SuperPac banter?

I mean you have got to be joking. "Hillary the Movie" caused the worst case of corruption of our political system and it isn't going to be rebutted? Too bad.

Between Murdoch and Howard Hamm it would appear as though some of you folks are having a difficult hanging on to your wives, though. You all might want to reflect on that a bit.

You haven't got a 'thing' about women, successful women besides, do you?

The film that cracked the case (click here)

By Philip Rucker,January 22, 2010
David Bossie, a veteran Republican campaign operative who made his mark investigating the Clintons, thought his group could offer a conservative answer to Michael Moore's successful films. After Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11" premiered in 2004, Bossie's Citizens United group released "Celsius 41.11."
And after it became clear that Bossie's longtime enemy Hillary Rodham Clinton would run for president, Citizens United released another flick: "Hillary: The Movie." Featuring a who's-who cast of right-wing commentators, the 2008 film takes viewers on a savaging journey through Clinton's scandals. The sole compliment about the then-senator comes from conservative firebrand Ann Coulter: "Looks good in a pantsuit."
But "Hillary: The Movie" never became a blockbuster. The Federal Election Commission restricted Citizens United's ability to advertise the film during the 2008 primary season, a decision that Bossie and other conservative activists saw as a threat to their freedom of speech.