Sunday, December 2, 2007

Ron Paul's Gains Amazing Ground in Michigan


The graph speaks for itself.

Michigan GOP presidential nomination polls have recently reported that Ron Paul has jumped from five percent to at least 23.5 percent within weeks. The most displaced candidate by Ron Paul's gain was Giuliani, who has fallen by at least a startling dozen percentage points.

This is no doubt in part to the money bomb conducted on November 5th, which was surprisingly coordinated by Ron Paul supporters, not by the campaign itself.

The grassroots movement following Ron Paul continues to grow as more and more people begin to distrust mainstream media and search for Ron Paul in Google to find out more about the candidate. One anonymous person is quoted as saying in a local newspaper, "Before I heard about Ron Paul, I always thought I would vote for some generic Republican who was the frontrunner. While browsing the internet for news, I spotted the words Ron Paul and thought it was a nifty name. I soon learned more about the Ron Paul Revolution and realized that those popular news labels like CNN and FOX were not trustworthy. Needless to say, I am now a Ron Paul supporter and I strive to find objective views to news stories that are not apparent."

Several long-time Republican leaders including conservative icon Morton Blackwell complemented the Paul campaign on their strong organization and mobilization efforts, according to Ron Paul National Field Director Dennis Fusaro, who spoke on Dr. Paul's behalf at the event. Fusaro went on to say that, while this reflects the organizational strength of the Paul campaign around the country, it is essential that Michigan Ron Paul Republicans replicate this turn-out on a county-by-county basis at next year's mass meetings. Fusaro went on to congratulation the grassroots for, once again, coming out to support Dr. Paul in an unprecedented manner.
The poll was conducted by pollster.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Omittance of 16-bit key sparks violent protests

^ The response of some angry diggers

NEW YORK: Protests by diggers turned violent in front of the offices of the DIGG HQ today.

More than 15,000 people from across the country descended on the Digg building to express their disgust and offense at the omittance of 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 in a story that made the front page on Tuesday.

Said one protester: "Digg is destroying our inalienable rights of freedom. We are joining thousands of atheists in exercising our right to protest when Digg prints a story that misrepresents our cherished beliefs."

Digg protests mirror the world-wide protests by atheists against the printing of blank cartoons.

The atheists' protests turned violent after Digg administrators started blocking them.

"We came here to peacefully express our disgust with the insensitivity of the Digg administrators," one of the protest organizers said.

"You cannot blame a highly emotionally charged crowd for killing ten reporters after they added insult to injury. Setting fire to the Digg building was simply a natural progression of events," he continued.

The protesters calmed down after an explosion on the fifth floor of the building sent thousands of encrypted hard drives fluttering down into the street.

The protesters were seen leaving the scene, each clutching 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 f in their hands.