John,

So you are trying to eliminate celebrities who have an opinion that differs from yours. How fascist of you!

On 04/10/2011 01:53 PM, NoEinstein wrote:
No, Jonathan!  Celebrities in the media and in entertainment simply
can't voice their opinions or political preferences in any MEDIUM.
The man-on-the-street doesn't get hours a week to talk about how great
Barack Obama is, the way Oprah Winfrey did.  Barbara Walters, a
celebrity, made no bones about the fact she supported Barack Obama.
What in our "Constitution" gives high-paid celebrities the right to
have more influence on the outcome of elections than the man on the
street?  As soon as Jay Leno or David Letterman make one joke about a
candidate for public office, they will immediately be fired or their
network closed.  Politics is NOT about entertainment, nor is it a game
with 24-7 play-by-play coverage with commentary and prove-nothing
polls.  Those who would like our government to be run the way the
People say, rather than the way those who publicly endorse a candidate
say, should rally behind my New Constitution—a document for the
people!  —  J. A. A. —
On Apr 9, 1:01 am, Jonathan Ashley<[email protected]>
wrote:
John,

You have once again shown that you have no interest in freedom, but
instead want to dictate what others can and cannot do.

That you believe celebrities should have less right to voice their
opinions smacks of fascism. Or am I misinterpreting what you mean when
you state, "Entertainment celebrities, like media celebrities, have a
'following' which would be cesseptable (sic) to vote like the
celebrities vote. The (sic) means celebrities would have more influence
at the poles (sic) than the man-on-the-street (sic).  Of course, that
shift of power runs counter to principles of fair play and democracy."

Please explain to the world what "principles of fair play" means and why
someone who is a celebrity will not be allowed to "play" in your world.

And, John, you'd better do it fast. I think your time on this forum is
about up.

On 04/08/2011 09:07 PM, NoEinstein wrote:

Jonathan:  Entertainment celebrities, like media celebrities, have a
"following" which would be cesseptable to vote like the celebrities
vote.  The means celebrities would have more influence at the poles
than the man-on-the-street.  Of course, that shift of power runs
counter to principles of fair play and democracy.  The 1st Amendment
says: "... the freedom of a fair and pro-democracy press or other
medium".  Having a pro-democracy press means that no one like Mark is
allowed to push socialism nor communism. His threatening me because I
correctly peg him as anti-America, would shut down Google, if Google
didn't FIRE Mark, post haste!  � J. A. A. �
--

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