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Obama’s Mentor And Spiritual Guide Slurs Italians
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Rob - 09:03am on 03/26/2008
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Yo, Vinnie the Asterisk -

If you are going to quote Cicero, the Latin nominitive neuter fot the popular name of the Flavian Amphitheatre is “Colosseum” - I think you got the Esperanto version in there - it ain’t Italian.

1870 and the Franco-Prussian War - look it up.

Also - it is “vaffanculo”, not “fangool” unless you are just some poseur from Bensonhurst. Actually I suspect you are a poseur who got his “Italian heritage” from one too many Super Mario games, but I digress.

Eingang Ausfahrt - 04:03pm on 03/26/2008

just some poseur from Bensonhurst?

I think he has Season 1 of The Sopranos on DVD!

Proof - 05:03pm on 03/26/2008

*,

Don’t let the ad-hominem slow you down.  That’s all they’ve got.

And, you’ve got Proof summed up perfectly.  Please continue.

H

Hannitized - 05:03pm on 03/26/2008

you’ve got Proof summed up perfectly

Abbott has found his Costello! smile

Proof - 05:03pm on 03/26/2008

More apt: Tweedledum has found his Tweedledumber! smile

Proof - 05:03pm on 03/26/2008

Every sinful human being that has ever lived is responsible for the death of Christ. Anyone who claims to be a Christian would know that simple fact. I am as culpable for the death of my savior as anyone who ever walked and breathed. I wonder if Reverend (not a scriptural title) Wright has bothered to open the book itself, or just watched the really bad Jesus of Nazareth movies from the sixties.

Pierow - 06:03pm on 03/26/2008

As long as you’re leaving us Calabrese out of it, go ahead have your dung throwing party.

I’m just amused that a supposedly educated man like the the Rev Wright can’t do any better than ‘garlic noses’.

If he ain’t a walking talking cullie joke, I don’t know what is.

Gino - 06:03pm on 03/26/2008

reverend 1428, “worthy of respect,” from M.Fr. reverend, from L. reverendus “(he who is) to be respected,” gerundive of revereri (see reverence). As a form of address for clergymen, it is attested from 1485; earlier reverent (c.1380 in this sense). Abbreviation Rev. is attested from 1721, earlier Revd. (1693). Very Reverend is used of deans, Right Reverend of bishops, Most Reverend of archbishops.

Manufactured by men to indicate respect for one that speaks of God’s Word, and in recent years is really a shorthand title meaning a Christian minister. So, Wrught can claim it as a Church Of Christ minister, but to many of us it does not indicate much respect.

Neiman - 06:03pm on 03/26/2008

That’s ‘mullie’, not ‘cullie’.
typo.
so shoot me.

Gino - 06:03pm on 03/26/2008

mullie ?

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WOOF - 07:03pm on 03/26/2008
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