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  1. #1
    jescando's Avatar
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    roy moore to run as independent..signatures and funds needed

    Everyone..great news...we now have a super strong candidate who has thrown his hat into the ring....!!!

    His name is Roy Moore, the ten commandments judge, and strong opponent to NWO, illegal immigration and other problems we all stand against.

    Please get involved today by contact his moral law office to offer your support to do signature drives in your state and to do fund raising for his independent run.

  2. #2
    MW
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    Do you have a link on this guys positions?

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts athttps://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    UMMM Never heard of him
    Please support ALIPAC's fight to save American Jobs & Lives from illegal immigration by joining our free Activists E-Mail Alerts (CLICK HERE)

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    Needed

    Link to this or link to Roy Moore to find out .

  5. #5
    JAK
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    I think this is him:

    http://www.cnn.com/2003/US/South/08/25/ ... index.html
    Moore: 'I've kept my oath'
    Thursday, January 8, 2004 Posted: 12:32 AM EST (0532 GMT)

    VIDEO at link (Why he won't remove the Ten Commandments)
    (although I can't seem to get it to work!)

    MONTGOMERY, Alabama (CNN) -- Suspended Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore offers no apology for defying a federal court order to remove a massive Ten Commandments monument from the state judicial building's rotunda.

    "I've kept my oath. I have acknowledged God as the moral foundation of our law," Moore told cheering supporters outside the building Monday afternoon.

    Moore argues that the Ten Commandments are the foundation of the U.S. legal system and that forbidding the acknowledgment of the Judeo-Christian God violates the First Amendment.


    "It's not about a monument," he said. "It's not about religion. It's about the acknowledgment of almighty God," he said.

    Moore has long been of the mind that the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and just about every other law on the books first came from the creator.

    Moore's own roots suggest he was taught these beliefs from a very early age.

    From a working-class home in rural Etowah County, Alabama, Moore earned an appointment to West Point in 1965.

    He later served as a military policeman in Vietnam, where being a stickler for constant salutes and regulation haircuts in the midst of war almost made him a target of the men under him.

    "His policies damn near got him killed in Vietnam," Barrey Hall, who served under Moore, told The Associated Press. "He was a strutter."

    After he returned home and graduated from law school in 1977, he landed a job as an assistant district attorney in Etowah County -- but resigned in 1982 after losing an election for circuit court judge.

    Moore moved to Texas where he trained as a full-contact karate fighter. He later spent several months in the Australian outback, wrangling wild cattle.

    He returned to Alabama to resume his legal career in 1992, becoming a circuit-court judge in Gadsden.

    It was in that position, that Roy Moore became known as the "Ten Commandments judge" -- a title he's embraced.

    "I will never, never deny the God upon whom our laws in our country depend," he said on August 21.

    Moore hand-carved a wooden plaque of the Ten Commandments -- and placed it on his courtroom wall.

    A legal firestorm ensued and in 1997, a federal judge ordered him to remove it. Moore refused to obey.

    Alabama's governor intervened and the plaque stayed in place.

    After Moore campaigned as the "Ten Commandments Judge" and won the election to become chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, he had a monument of the commandment scroll – weighing more than two and a half tons – placed in the rotunda of the justice building in 2001.

    That very summer, activists were locked out of the judicial building after trying to place a display of Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech next to the monument.

    Having lost two federal court rulings, having the U.S. Supreme Court refuse to stay those rulings and having his fellow state justices vote to remove the statue -- Moore finds himself under suspension, but still fighting.
    Please help save America for our children and grandchildren... they are counting on us. THEY DESERVE the goodness of AMERICA not to be given to those who are stealing our children's future! ... and a congress who works for THEM!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  6. #6
    JAK
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    More Information:

    Foundation for Moral Law
    http://www.morallaw.org/

    http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/artic ... E_ID=36899
    ELECTION 2004
    Roy Moore for president?
    'Ten Commandments judge' won't rule out challenge to Bush

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Posted: February 02, 2004
    10:38 pm Eastern

    © 2008 WorldNetDaily.com



    Ousted Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore is focused on trying to get his job back but will not rule out a third-party run for the presidency that could threaten President Bush's re-election chances.

    Roy Moore (Photo: WSFA.com)

    At a recent speaking engagement, the man who became famous for his defense of a Ten Commandments monument was asked during a question-and-answer session whether he would run for president, reported Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund.

    "Not right now," Moore said, according to Fund, who noted Moore's friends say he is undecided about whether to run for president or to wait two years and seek Alabama's governorship.

    Jessica Atteberry, a spokeswoman for Moore, emphasized yesterday to WorldNetDaily Moore is focused on his appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court but indicated he would not rule out a candidacy for the country's highest office.

    "Anything is possible," she told WND. "However, until the appeal process has been run through, he'll make no decision for political office."

    Atteberry said Moore believes he has an obligation to the people who elected him to appeal the Alabama Supreme Court's Nov. 13 decision that stripped him of his chief justice position for defiance of a federal judge's order to remove a Ten Commandments monument.

    "He is fighting for his job back for the people of Alabama," Atteberry said. "So he feels he needs to take every legal avenue possible to become chief justice again."

    Earlier this month, Moore asked the state's high court to restore him to office, calling his expulsion "dangerous."

    In legal briefs, he argued the decision sets a "dangerous precedent" that requires judges to deny their oath of office by barring acknowledgement of God, which is stipulated in Alabama's constitution.

    A special court has been seated to hear Moore's appeal. A decision is expected in the next month or so.

    Fund commented that while third-party campaigns by social conservatives have fizzled in the past, Moore could make a difference in a close race.

    He noted last Saturday Moore was a featured speaker at the Christian Coalition's "Family and Freedom" rally in Atlanta. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported he was "treated like a rock star, signing autographs and getting thunderous standing ovations."

    One week prior to that event, Moore spoke at a dinner in Lancaster, Pa., sponsored by the Constitution Party, which has the third-largest number of registered voters in the U.S. The party's presidential candidate, Howard Phillips, was on 41 state ballots in 2000, Fund noted.

    Richard Winger, an authority on independent candidates, told Fund he believes Moore could rally enough support to sustain a presidential candidacy.

    "If he can get on talk shows and stir up conservative voters he could easily get significantly more than the usual third-party vote totals," said Winger, editor of Ballot Access News.

    Winger points out the Constitution Party has 320,000 registered voters nationwide and guaranteed ballot access in large states such as California and Pennsylvania.

    With its convention scheduled June 22, Moore would have enough time to exhaust his appeal before Alabama courts.

    Fund notes reporters who want to see President Bush face a tight race this year will be particularly interested in covering him. That's why Republican strategists are trying to talk Moore into campaigning this year for GOP candidates who agree with his stance.

    "He can get a lot of attention this year for his themes," a strategist told Fund. "The question is whether he does it in a way that will help conservatives or whether he tries to do it in a way that could make him the Ralph Nader spoiler of the right in 2004."

    See original article for links below:

    Previous stories:

    Roy Moore asks high court to restore him

    Roy Moore files notice to regain position

    Roy Moore to appeal removal from office

    Alabama voters file suit to restore Moore

    Roy Moore owes Alabama $7,000?

    Roy Moore plans bill to curb federal courts

    Alabama ousts Justice Moore

    Alabama moves to oust Judge Moore

    Moore petitions Supreme Court

    Moore takes Decalogue battle to D.C.

    Suit over Decalogue dismissed

    Judge to hear lawsuit on 10 Commandments

    Dobson, Keyes to join Moore rally

    ACLU, Moore agree on 10 Commandments?

    Decalogue dismantled

    Dobson urges: Go to Alabama

    Justice Moore suspended

    Moore faces suspension?

    Moore: Fight 'will continue'

    Judge Roy Moore: 'Captain America'

    10 Commandments showdown tonight

    Judge Moore stands firm

    Backers of 10 Commandments to rally
    Please help save America for our children and grandchildren... they are counting on us. THEY DESERVE the goodness of AMERICA not to be given to those who are stealing our children's future! ... and a congress who works for THEM!
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  7. #7
    MW
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    Sweet Home Alabama
    Frightened right-wingers gather to keep the 'Cradle of the Confederacy' safe from leprosy, pedophiles, Spanish and rampant godlessness
    By Susy Buchanan

    With tea bags stapled to their hats, Alabamians gathered for the third annual Alabama Tea Party.


    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Accompanied by the mournful strains of a giant Wurlitzer organ, a crowd of almost 1,600 mostly white, mostly elderly Alabamians inside Birmingham's resplendent Alabama Theater this March sang "God Bless America" with gusto, swaying slightly while lifting their arms to the gilded ceiling.
    Many had teabags lashed or stapled to their hats in honor of this special occasion — the third annual "Alabama Tea Party," a one-day, ultra-conservative gathering organized and hosted by husband-and-wife talk radio team Russ and Dee Fine.

    The couple was well known to their audience. During their decade on the air at WERC-AM in Birmingham, the Fines have reportedly boycotted the Martin Luther King holiday. Their Web site has long linked to a racist anti-immigrant hate group, American Patrol.

    When photos surfaced in 2001 of Auburn University Halloween parties where fraternity brothers dressed up in blackface and Klan robes and posed with nooses in front of a Confederate battle flag, Dee Fine belittled the ensuing protests. What the lads had done, she insisted, was no worse than dressing up as a witch — and "you don't see witches out there protesting."

    The Fines specialize in launching attacks on illegal immigration, taxes and the separation of church and state. The goal of this year's Tea Party, their promotional material explained, was "to send a message to elitist officials that Alabamians are mad as hell" about these issues "and we're not going to take it any more!"

    The event sometimes resembled an old-fashioned, all-American gathering of conservatives. But following "God Bless America," the pledge of allegiance, and the presentation of the American flag by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department Honor Guard, Russ Fine showed that he was no shrinking violet.

    "Today, the Alabama Tea Party declares war on illegal immigration in this state!" the goateed radio man roared. "If you intend to pursue the American dream, and we encourage you to do so, you will do it legally! You will pay all the taxes everyone else pays, and you will learn to read and speak our language!

    "This is America, by God, and we speak English here!"


    Russ and Dee Fine (from left) hosted right-wing luminaries including ejected Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore at an event that focused on illegal immigration.


    One of the Tea Party's "celebrity guest speakers" was former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, who was accompanied by his wife, four children, and professional bodyguard Leonard Holyfield, the cousin of former world heavyweight boxing champion Evander Holyfield, a 10th degree black belt — and one of the very few black people inside the crowded Alabama Theater.

    Moore, who is reportedly considering a run for Alabama governor, plugged his new autobiography, So Help Me God: The Ten Commandments, Judicial Tyranny, and the Battle for Religious Freedom.

    He bemoaned his fate since being kicked off the Alabama Supreme Court for refusing federal court orders to remove the Ten Commandments statue he secretly erected one night in the state's Judicial Building. He spoke of the "moral foundation" of the law. All in all, it was the same speech Moore has given repeatedly at extremist gatherings in the last year.

    Support for Moore is high in Alabama — polls show him leading other potential Republican gubernatorial candidates including sitting Gov. Bob Riley — and he enjoys a 72% approval rating among registered Republicans.

    At the Tea Party, it was more like 100%.

    "No judge on earth has the authority to tell you you can't consider God!" he yelled to the crowd. "You tell 'em, Judge Roy!" a voice cried back.

    Moore explained that when judges are forbidden from making rulings according to the word of his God, people start making up their own "rights," such as the right to privacy (which Moore said leads to sodomy) and the right of all children to public education (which Moore said leads to higher taxes).

    Moore went on to defend his opposition to Amendment 2, the referendum that would have removed segregationist language from the Alabama constitution. Amendment 2 was defeated last November after Moore and a few other arch-conservatives campaigned against the proposition by claiming it would lead to court decisions that mandated tax hikes to fund the public school system.

    "It's always about taxes!" the former justice bellowed.

    Moore received a standing ovation. Next up was Hugh McInnish, a far-right-wing member of the Alabama GOP's executive committee as well as the Alabama Course of Study Committee for Social Studies, which oversees public education curriculums.

    McInnish, an avowed enemy of multiculturalism, speaks regularly at events hosted by the Council of Conservative Citizens, which describes blacks as "a retrograde species of humanity." He also has corresponded with leading Holocaust denier David Irving about the gas chambers in Nazi death camps.

    McInnish introduced Erin Anderson, a self-professed "illegal immigration expert," a regular on the "Russ and Dee Show," and one scary speaker.

    Anderson said she grew up near the Mexican border in Cochise Country, Ariz., where her ranching family settled in the late 1880s. Now, she splits her time between the family spread and Washington, D.C., where she works as an anti-immigration lobbyist.

    Like Moore, she is a popular speaker on the far-right-wing conference circuit. Anderson is scheduled to appear in early September 2005 at the National Federation of Republican Assemblies' "Turn up the Heat on the Left!" national convention in Scottsdale, Ariz., and is booked to appear later that month back in Birmingham before the Mid Alabama Republican Club.

    A professional alarmist with a baby-doll voice, Anderson fires up audiences with wild claims about Mexican immigrants, portraying them as disease-ridden, child-molesting "invaders" bearing down on an unsuspecting and hapless America. Transcripts of her speeches are regularly posted to widespread acclaim on white supremacist and neo-Nazi Web sites like the Vanguard News Network.

    Anderson opened her presentation at the Alabama Tea Party with images of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in flames. She then told the startled crowd that 2,000 to 3,000 illegal aliens tromp through her family's valley every night, claiming that "children trying to go to school risk being ambushed by illegal aliens. Every one of us has been ambushed at one time or another."

    That certainly wasn't the end of it.

    Anderson said there are schools in Latin America where Middle Eastern terrorists are training to pass as Mexicans once they infiltrate America. She said pedophiles from Mexico are flocking to the United States in droves to escape death at the hands of Mexican law enforcement.

    She spoke of the deadly diseases illegal immigrants supposedly bring to America in their blood: west Nile virus, hepatitis B and C, tuberculosis. She said illegals have spawned an outbreak of leprosy near Boston, and have tainted the blood supplies in major metropolitan areas such as Houston, Miami and Los Angeles with chagas, a disease found mainly in Latin America that she claimed kills more people than AIDS and has no cure. (The truth is that chagas is only occasionally fatal).

    Of all the stories Anderson told about the consequences of illegal immigration that day, it was the one about the Mara Salvatrucha that was the most chilling. Andersen said "La Mara," a violent, international gang of El Salvadoran nationals and immigrants formed in the late '80s, has left its U.S. base of Los Angeles and can now be found near large, well-established illegal alien communities. She dwelled in some detail on how La Mara likes to disembowel, dismember and scalp people.

    "And yes," she told her audience to gasps, "they are here in Alabama."

    Then Anderson held up her "proof" — a photograph clipped from a Birmingham newspaper story last fall about graffiti. The picture showed a building with "sureños" (Spanish for "southerners") painted on it. She did not explain how that piece of graffiti revealed the presence of the disembowelers.

    For her final act, Anderson hauled out yet another piece of evidence, this one designed to prove that scary Muslim foreigners are invading the United States via our southern borders. A Muslim prayer rug, she told her audience as she displayed a shiny green rug, had been found near her family's Arizona ranch prior to 9/11.

    Well, it wasn't actually the rug she was holding, she conceded. But it was "similar."

    Flashbulbs popped. Frightened "oohs" and "ahhs" filled the room. This was one group of Alabamians who had been thoroughly warned.


    Intelligence Report
    Spring 2005
    http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelrep ... sp?aid=528

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts athttps://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  8. #8
    Senior Member NOamNASTY's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MW
    Sweet Home Alabama
    Frightened right-wingers gather to keep the 'Cradle of the Confederacy' safe from leprosy, pedophiles, Spanish and rampant godlessness
    By Susy Buchanan

    With tea bags stapled to their hats, Alabamians gathered for the third annual Alabama Tea Party.


    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Accompanied by the mournful strains of a giant Wurlitzer organ, a crowd of almost 1,600 mostly white, mostly elderly Alabamians inside Birmingham's resplendent Alabama Theater this March sang "God Bless America" with gusto, swaying slightly while lifting their arms to the gilded ceiling.
    Many had teabags lashed or stapled to their hats in honor of this special occasion — the third annual "Alabama Tea Party," a one-day, ultra-conservative gathering organized and hosted by husband-and-wife talk radio team Russ and Dee Fine.

    The couple was well known to their audience. During their decade on the air at WERC-AM in Birmingham, the Fines have reportedly boycotted the Martin Luther King holiday. Their Web site has long linked to a racist anti-immigrant hate group, American Patrol.

    When photos surfaced in 2001 of Auburn University Halloween parties where fraternity brothers dressed up in blackface and Klan robes and posed with nooses in front of a Confederate battle flag, Dee Fine belittled the ensuing protests. What the lads had done, she insisted, was no worse than dressing up as a witch — and "you don't see witches out there protesting."

    The Fines specialize in launching attacks on illegal immigration, taxes and the separation of church and state. The goal of this year's Tea Party, their promotional material explained, was "to send a message to elitist officials that Alabamians are mad as hell" about these issues "and we're not going to take it any more!"

    The event sometimes resembled an old-fashioned, all-American gathering of conservatives. But following "God Bless America," the pledge of allegiance, and the presentation of the American flag by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department Honor Guard, Russ Fine showed that he was no shrinking violet.

    "Today, the Alabama Tea Party declares war on illegal immigration in this state!" the goateed radio man roared. "If you intend to pursue the American dream, and we encourage you to do so, you will do it legally! You will pay all the taxes everyone else pays, and you will learn to read and speak our language!

    "This is America, by God, and we speak English here!"


    Russ and Dee Fine (from left) hosted right-wing luminaries including ejected Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore at an event that focused on illegal immigration.


    One of the Tea Party's "celebrity guest speakers" was former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, who was accompanied by his wife, four children, and professional bodyguard Leonard Holyfield, the cousin of former world heavyweight boxing champion Evander Holyfield, a 10th degree black belt — and one of the very few black people inside the crowded Alabama Theater.

    Moore, who is reportedly considering a run for Alabama governor, plugged his new autobiography, So Help Me God: The Ten Commandments, Judicial Tyranny, and the Battle for Religious Freedom.

    He bemoaned his fate since being kicked off the Alabama Supreme Court for refusing federal court orders to remove the Ten Commandments statue he secretly erected one night in the state's Judicial Building. He spoke of the "moral foundation" of the law. All in all, it was the same speech Moore has given repeatedly at extremist gatherings in the last year.

    Support for Moore is high in Alabama — polls show him leading other potential Republican gubernatorial candidates including sitting Gov. Bob Riley — and he enjoys a 72% approval rating among registered Republicans.

    At the Tea Party, it was more like 100%.

    "No judge on earth has the authority to tell you you can't consider God!" he yelled to the crowd. "You tell 'em, Judge Roy!" a voice cried back.

    Moore explained that when judges are forbidden from making rulings according to the word of his God, people start making up their own "rights," such as the right to privacy (which Moore said leads to sodomy) and the right of all children to public education (which Moore said leads to higher taxes).

    Moore went on to defend his opposition to Amendment 2, the referendum that would have removed segregationist language from the Alabama constitution. Amendment 2 was defeated last November after Moore and a few other arch-conservatives campaigned against the proposition by claiming it would lead to court decisions that mandated tax hikes to fund the public school system.

    "It's always about taxes!" the former justice bellowed.

    Moore received a standing ovation. Next up was Hugh McInnish, a far-right-wing member of the Alabama GOP's executive committee as well as the Alabama Course of Study Committee for Social Studies, which oversees public education curriculums.

    McInnish, an avowed enemy of multiculturalism, speaks regularly at events hosted by the Council of Conservative Citizens, which describes blacks as "a retrograde species of humanity." He also has corresponded with leading Holocaust denier David Irving about the gas chambers in Nazi death camps.

    McInnish introduced Erin Anderson, a self-professed "illegal immigration expert," a regular on the "Russ and Dee Show," and one scary speaker.

    Anderson said she grew up near the Mexican border in Cochise Country, Ariz., where her ranching family settled in the late 1880s. Now, she splits her time between the family spread and Washington, D.C., where she works as an anti-immigration lobbyist.

    Like Moore, she is a popular speaker on the far-right-wing conference circuit. Anderson is scheduled to appear in early September 2005 at the National Federation of Republican Assemblies' "Turn up the Heat on the Left!" national convention in Scottsdale, Ariz., and is booked to appear later that month back in Birmingham before the Mid Alabama Republican Club.

    A professional alarmist with a baby-doll voice, Anderson fires up audiences with wild claims about Mexican immigrants, portraying them as disease-ridden, child-molesting "invaders" bearing down on an unsuspecting and hapless America. Transcripts of her speeches are regularly posted to widespread acclaim on white supremacist and neo-Nazi Web sites like the Vanguard News Network.

    Anderson opened her presentation at the Alabama Tea Party with images of the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in flames. She then told the startled crowd that 2,000 to 3,000 illegal aliens tromp through her family's valley every night, claiming that "children trying to go to school risk being ambushed by illegal aliens. Every one of us has been ambushed at one time or another."

    That certainly wasn't the end of it.

    Anderson said there are schools in Latin America where Middle Eastern terrorists are training to pass as Mexicans once they infiltrate America. She said pedophiles from Mexico are flocking to the United States in droves to escape death at the hands of Mexican law enforcement.

    She spoke of the deadly diseases illegal immigrants supposedly bring to America in their blood: west Nile virus, hepatitis B and C, tuberculosis. She said illegals have spawned an outbreak of leprosy near Boston, and have tainted the blood supplies in major metropolitan areas such as Houston, Miami and Los Angeles with chagas, a disease found mainly in Latin America that she claimed kills more people than AIDS and has no cure. (The truth is that chagas is only occasionally fatal).

    Of all the stories Anderson told about the consequences of illegal immigration that day, it was the one about the Mara Salvatrucha that was the most chilling. Andersen said "La Mara," a violent, international gang of El Salvadoran nationals and immigrants formed in the late '80s, has left its U.S. base of Los Angeles and can now be found near large, well-established illegal alien communities. She dwelled in some detail on how La Mara likes to disembowel, dismember and scalp people.

    "And yes," she told her audience to gasps, "they are here in Alabama."

    Then Anderson held up her "proof" — a photograph clipped from a Birmingham newspaper story last fall about graffiti. The picture showed a building with "sureños" (Spanish for "southerners") painted on it. She did not explain how that piece of graffiti revealed the presence of the disembowelers.

    For her final act, Anderson hauled out yet another piece of evidence, this one designed to prove that scary Muslim foreigners are invading the United States via our southern borders. A Muslim prayer rug, she told her audience as she displayed a shiny green rug, had been found near her family's Arizona ranch prior to 9/11.

    Well, it wasn't actually the rug she was holding, she conceded. But it was "similar."

    Flashbulbs popped. Frightened "oohs" and "ahhs" filled the room. This was one group of Alabamians who had been thoroughly warned.


    Intelligence Report
    Spring 2005
    http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelrep ... sp?aid=528

    This has turned into the most divided ' 2nd world ' nation on earth !

    If it's not the farracons and wrights, it's the kkk and constitutionist ! Not to speak of the larazas and radical muslims associates like cair .

  9. #9
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    Here is a link that lists some of Moore's positions, from his 2006 run for Governor of Alabama: http://everyman.mu.nu/archives/179439.php

    Moore is a good man, IMHO.

  10. #10
    GUYMAN's Avatar
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    I'm not sure what to make of this. Supposedly he was trying for the Constitution Party nomination - they have not even had their convention yet. I wonder if he is just resigned to the fact that Keyes is going to be the CP candidate. If Moore runs as an Independent I can't see him being on the ballot in more than a few Southern states.

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