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		<title>gdp's Comments</title>
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		<link>https://www.intensedebate.com/users/440302</link>
		<description>Comments by Wrath_of_Wotan</description>
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<title>Big Hollywood : Jon Stewart Puts Everyone On Notice</title>
<link>http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/jjmnolte/2009/03/17/jon-stewart-puts-everyone-on-notice/#IDComment17675156</link>
<description>Pardon my irreverence, but in my humble opinion jon stewart is a minuscule piece of maggot dung.  Typical brain-dead libtard.  Unfortunately, he&amp;#039;s being paid a ridiculous salary to insult our intelligence - kinda like cramer!  Only that obnoxious p.o.s., keith olbermann, can surpass them.  puke. </description>
<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2009 04:07:41 +0000</pubDate>
<guid>http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/jjmnolte/2009/03/17/jon-stewart-puts-everyone-on-notice/#IDComment17675156</guid>
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<title>Big Hollywood : Why &#039;Atlas Shrugged&#039; Matters</title>
<link>http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/mbaron/2009/03/26/why-atlas-shrugged-matters/#IDComment17671145</link>
<description>What a grand read it was!  I slugged through Atlas Shrugged about 40 yrs. ago, when I was 20 or so, and it was a truly eye-opening adventure.  At the time I was a staunch liberal dumocrat, and this wonderful book certainly tore the blinders off for me.  It kick-started the slow process of questioning the ultimate worth(less) of the very core concepts of the dumocrat party, which eventually led me to the conclusion that taken to it&amp;#039;s ultimate end, the welfare state mentality was a self-defeating and nation-killing agenda.  I now read comments on how uncannily timely the storyline is to our present circumstances - exactly what I was thinking in 1969!  LBJ had just rammed his Great Society down our throats and chased it with the little debacle in Viet Nam (the dumocrats don&amp;#039;t like to talk much about that, or Woodrow Wilson), and even back then I could see the horror beginning to unfold.  Eventually I grew up and became an adult, and switched from dumocrat to Republican.  I&amp;#039;ve noticed several comments on the length of the entire work, and some of the speeches therein.  Remember, at the time of publication things moved more slowly and reading a great long book was a pleasure.  Weren&amp;#039;t no tv, xbox or home computers, and people hadn&amp;#039;t morphed into instant-gratification wonks with attention spans measured in nano-seconds!  Perhaps the problem is not the length of the novel, but instead our current perception of it.  Having previously read several of Dostoyevsky&amp;#039;s works along with War &amp;amp; Peace, I don&amp;#039;t recall Atlas Shrugged being a particular challenge, or overly lengthy, but that was then, as they say, and this is now.  READ IT AND ENJOY! </description>
<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2009 02:19:19 +0000</pubDate>
<guid>http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/mbaron/2009/03/26/why-atlas-shrugged-matters/#IDComment17671145</guid>
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