I don’t know why this is cool to me, but there it is: someone from Wichita, Kansas, has visited the blog.

VISITOR ANALYSIS
Referring Link: http://blog.beliefnet.com/crunchycon/
Host Name: ip68-102-116-201.ks.ok.cox.net
IP Address: 68.102.116.201 [Label IP Address]
Country:
Region:
City:
ISP: Cox Communications Inc

VISITOR SYSTEM SPECS
Browser: Firefox 2.0.0
Operating System:
Resolution: 1280×1024
Javascript: Enabled

Also, to the person from , who arrived here after doing a search for “ completle [sic] nude”: you sick puppy. Get help.

I wonder if a man should be elected president who has voted to allow American citizens to be left for dead in certain circumstances as dictated by the selfish whims of said citizen’s mother:

The Associated Press has a shocking report on []’s state legislative record, though the AP’s Nedra Pickler does her best to play it down:

Democrat criticizes rival Barack Obama’s record on rights in a mailing sent to New Hampshire voters.

The mailer says that seven times during his time in the Illinois state Senate, Obama declined to take a position on abortion bills, while Clinton has been a defender of abortion rights.

During his eight years in the legislature, Obama cast a number of votes on abortion and received a 100 percent rating from the Council for his support of abortion rights, family planning services and health insurance coverage for female contraceptives. He voted against requiring medical care for aborted fetuses who survive, a vote that especially riled abortion opponents.

There is a word in English for “aborted fetuses who survive.” They are called infants.

Just another reminder, if anyone ever needed it, that abortion is murder with a fancy name. And Barack Obama voted to allow said infants to be left for dead.

What’s really interesting is that Hillary Clinton is the one going after him for being, apparently, too liberal about abortion. n politics — and especially American politicians — evidently can no longer be said to make any sense. (I realize my sentence presumes that it could, at some point in history, be said that said politics/politicians did, in fact, make sense)

(In Soviet Russia, hat tips you: Kathy Shaidle)