Friday, February 10, 2012

Feeders Feed Links, Fri. Feb. 10, 2012

From Mac McPherson I've missed y'all too, & wish I coulda made it on weeknights...but I'm layed up in bed & wishing I could be cognizant enough to share in the discussion, but the pain has been keeping me down lately. But tell Ruthie in TN that she made me a happy man with the beef jerky care package she sent. I love y'all, & tell everyone on the Feed I said so... 






The Q&A for phone screener extraordinaire,Keith Malinak is in!!!
Remember, this is a Feeders Feed EXCLUSIVEinterview that is only available HERE!!!

Beginning Monday, February 13th, and every day for the next 11 Days, we will have a segment, during the Feeders Feed, called "What Keith Says."
We will post one question, from you, the Feeders, and Keith's reply.





Contraception "Compromise" Is Worse Than the Original Mandate Zephyr


Ted Nugent- National Anthem TLan

AFL-CIO Paying Protestors to Demonstrate at CPAC TLan

Fox Detroit- Jeff Zaslow, Husband of Sherry Margolies Dies in Car Accident JB

Hockey-Wings vs Leafs at 2013 Winter Classic Colleen

Iowahawk in Clint Eastwood JB


Hey, Cody and Nix Know one of my favorite movies of all time!  (along with "Zorro, the Gay Blade")


From DM- SJTF
 You knew this one was coming.....SJT &JKP

In the middle of the 19th century, the Democrat party was fracturing in several directions, fiscally and socially. And just like today, the party's elite only cared about keeping their party in power. By 1844, Tilden, a corporate lawyer in NYC, had garnered enough political clout to be courted for a position in the Polk administration but, he turned down the offer.
The following quotes are from John Bigelow, New York Secretary of State from 1872-1876. Bigelow and SJT were friends for many years; he was also the executor of Tilden's estate and his primary biographer.

The effort was made to seduce Tilden from his allegiance to his friends in New York by the offer of the naval office, then a lucrative and honorable position. Tilden had but just completed the thirty-first year of his age; the emoluments of the office were some twenty thousand dollars a year; the labor and responsibility inconsiderable. Tilden was poor, and many years must elapse before he could hope for any such revenue from his profession. The offer, however tempting it was, he promptly declined, saying that he did not labor for the election of President Polk to push his private interests; that when he was admitted to the bar he resolved that he would hold no merely lucrative office, and that, if he took any, it must be in the line of his profession or a post of honor, but under the then existing circumstances he could accept of nothing from this
Mr. Tilden engaged in this canvass for President Polk with more zeal than in any other except, perhaps, the last, in which he was a candidate, and in both instances was betrayed by his party.  




http://tvpc.com/ has FNC (CoryE)










Hi, Ned!

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