scream-of-consciousness;
"If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
I guess someone in the Obama Administration remembered The Producers, and came up with green companies guaranteed to fail. The only thing Solyndra had to worry about was if it actually made money. They had better luck than Max Bialystock did. Max accidentally produced a hit, but Solyndra had no worries there.
In The Producers, the con men went to jail. In real life, the Solyndra fraudsters all got rich and paid no price whatsoever; they were favored by The Fraud Prince.
And Obama's fraudulent "birth certificate" is never ever mentioned.
Yes Eskyman, and that was the plan. They got their money and got out of Dodge, just as they went out of business. That follows the Producers exactly. After some Broadway flops that gave him lots of money, Max Bialystock made the mistake of accidentally creating a hit, so he and Leo Bloom went to prison.
I long to hear a jury foreman say about Eric Holder et all: "We find the defendants incredibly guilty." Judge: "No bail, incredible flight risks" Judge: "No luxury prison, off to the Supermax. Also no parole."
One has to wonder just how frequently failure is actually a part (albeit unstated) of a "business plan"; I suspect it's more common than just a few high-profile cases like Solyndra...
I guess someone in the Obama Administration remembered The Producers, and came up with green companies guaranteed to fail. The only thing Solyndra had to worry about was if it actually made money. They had better luck than Max Bialystock did. Max accidentally produced a hit, but Solyndra had no worries there.
ReplyDeleteIn The Producers, the con men went to jail. In real life, the Solyndra fraudsters all got rich and paid no price whatsoever; they were favored by The Fraud Prince.
ReplyDeleteAnd Obama's fraudulent "birth certificate" is never ever mentioned.
Yes Eskyman, and that was the plan. They got their money and got out of Dodge, just as they went out of business. That follows the Producers exactly. After some Broadway flops that gave him lots of money, Max Bialystock made the mistake of accidentally creating a hit, so he and Leo Bloom went to prison.
ReplyDeleteI long to hear a jury foreman say about Eric Holder et all: "We find the defendants incredibly guilty."
ReplyDeleteJudge: "No bail, incredible flight risks"
Judge: "No luxury prison, off to the Supermax. Also no parole."
I know, I know, I'm just dreaming here.
One has to wonder just how frequently failure is actually a part (albeit unstated) of a "business plan"; I suspect it's more common than just a few high-profile cases like Solyndra...
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteDer skoonger is usually ahead of the curve. That goes for his sidekick Stu.