Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Harry Reid Has Dementia? Kind Of Looks Like It.

I really is sad to see Crybaby Harry Reid lose his mental faculties. Clearly, Reid is not intellectually able to be a senator from Nevada, much less majority leader of the Senate as I have shown time and time again.
More evidence from the Las Vegas Sun: In his first-ever Twitter town hall, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid charged Republicans are holding up progress on President Barack Obama’s jobs bill. But he still plans to push the Senate to vote on the $450 billion measure.
We’re going to have the Republicans belly up to the bar and turn down this plan that will create hundreds of thousands of jobs,” Reid said, as he fielded questions via the social-media web platform.
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2011/sep/14/harry-reid-criticizes-republican-opposition-jobs-b/
Umm, will someone please tell Crybaby Reid that the Democrats still control the Senate and if the jobs bill is turned down, the GOP may have a hand in it, but so will the Democrats.
It really is sad to see someone who once had a brilliant political mind, just go down hill intellectually. I really hope his family intervenes on his behalf.
Oh, and Crybaby Reid's questions were made simple for him by his chief of staff: Moderator and Deputy Chief of Staff Darrel Thompson skipped questions from Republicans about Reid’s personal finances, why the Senate hadn’t yet taken up most House economic bills and his support for Nevada Senate candidate Shelley Berkley.
Clearly, Thompson recognizes Crybaby Reid's intellectual limitations and has to limit his questions to friendly questions. In the past, I know Reid would have answered those questions and would have answered them forcibly, Now, he needs his chief of staff to guide him along and make things easy for Reid.
Just really sad.

1 comment:

  1. I heard through a friend that Harry's grandson Billy is a Boy Scout and in a conversation between the scoutmaster and Harry, Harry could not remember Billy's name. This is symptomatic of Dementia.

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