To paraphrase Ronald Reagan -- "Recession is when your neighbor loses his job. Depression is when you lose yours. And recovery is when Barack Obama loses his."
It could explain President Obama's enlightened(?) stance on gay marriage, but there is no truth to the rumor that Michelle Obama is leaving Barack for a U.S.A woman wrestler who picked the First Lady up and paraded her in front of her fellow athletes.
I contacted the Senator to inquire as to how many people with disabilities are on his staff and how many more he'll be hiring, but I have yet to hear back from Harkin.
My gut tells me it'll be similar to how Harkin handles Equal Pay for women.
In their story about Mitt Romney's surrogates taking part in an Iowa bus tour, the Ragister included commentary from Obama’s Iowa campaign communications director, Erin Seidler.
Not sure who the Norman New Guy was doing sports on their News at 9 on KDSMFOX 17 last night, turns out it's John Sears, but it was unprofessional to start laughing, on air, when he found out his segment was over and they wouldn't be coming back to him after the commercials.
If this happened in my family, it would take extreme willpower not to go all biblical eye for an eye on their ass and extract at least a pound of flesh.
On a roller back to the pitcher, I doubt there was any walking involved, but as annoying as the term walk off has become, this is at least as close to the original intent of the phrase.
I can understand the Ragister wanting to play up the somewhat local angle, but this makes it seem like the Iowa-based gymnast has the cover of Sports Illustrated (below) to herself.
On the same day I received this picture from our friend Cal (Freedom's pal), I read the following in an article and knew I had to put it together in a post.
I'm not going to begrudge Thomas or the Iowa Cubs a money making opportunity, but save it for a card show or during your winter Fan Fest, not before a baseball game.
To try and cover that, and to continue spreading the wealth to his voters, Obama wants to raise taxes on those paying taxes with incomes of $250,000 and up.
Must have been some sort of oversight, probably a typo.
Of the four days that Des Moines reached triple digits (7/4-101, 7/5-101, 7/6-102, 7/7-100) not one set a record, although Des Moines tied the 1936 record of 100 on July 7.