The convicted criminal and his fellow criminal-intending billionaires will undo all earlier R's did.
Trouble is, Dems let them in, as Dems could not, cannot message. Or, can message only purity.
I’ve returned to the three collections of poems by “Homegrown Democrat” Garrison Keillor: “Good Poems,” “Good Poems for Hard Times,” and “Good Poems, American Places” – by the many Americans he showcased for years on National Public Radio’s “The Writer’s Almanac.”
Garrison Keillor’s public life ended Nov. 29, 2017, when Minnesota Public Radio fired him for improperly touching the back of a young women, a staffer.
This came a day after he, also long-time host of NPR’s “A Prairie Home Companion,” had published an op-ed piece in The Washington Post defending fellow Minnesotan Al Franken. The latter resigned from the U.S. Senate a week later, after fellow Dems reviled his having tastelessly posed with a sleeping woman on an airplane.
The poems in Garrison Keillor’s three volumes celebrate varieties of Americans abroad the land. I don’t know further details in his firing. I do know that Al Franken asked the best questions of Donald Trump’s first appointment to the Supreme Court.
I also know that Garrison Keillor’s wide variety of American poets shows more being in touch with the American experience than have all Dems in Washington put together.
The convicted criminal and his fellow criminal-intending billionaires will undo all earlier R's did.
Trouble is, Dems let them in, as Dems could not, cannot message. Or, can message only purity.
I’ve returned to the three collections of poems by “Homegrown Democrat” Garrison Keillor: “Good Poems,” “Good Poems for Hard Times,” and “Good Poems, American Places” – by the many Americans he showcased for years on National Public Radio’s “The Writer’s Almanac.”
Garrison Keillor’s public life ended Nov. 29, 2017, when Minnesota Public Radio fired him for improperly touching the back of a young women, a staffer.
This came a day after he, also long-time host of NPR’s “A Prairie Home Companion,” had published an op-ed piece in The Washington Post defending fellow Minnesotan Al Franken. The latter resigned from the U.S. Senate a week later, after fellow Dems reviled his having tastelessly posed with a sleeping woman on an airplane.
The poems in Garrison Keillor’s three volumes celebrate varieties of Americans abroad the land. I don’t know further details in his firing. I do know that Al Franken asked the best questions of Donald Trump’s first appointment to the Supreme Court.
I also know that Garrison Keillor’s wide variety of American poets shows more being in touch with the American experience than have all Dems in Washington put together.
Still pissed about all this