Caroline Kennedy has made it clear that she wants Hillary Clinton’s senate seat, a role for which she has absolutely no qualifications. Liberal MSM types are drooling at the prospect of this fairy tale appointment but a few important points are getting lost in the love fest.
First of all, during the primaries, do we all remember Obama supporters saying that he was a better choice than Hillary because if Hillary were the nominee and won we would have had only two families in the White House for 28 years? I believe that point was made to the sound of Obama supporters chanting Change! Change! Change! Of course, change like that didn’t apply to the Daley family of Chicago but I digress.

I’d like someone to explain to me how bequeathing Hill’s senate seat to Caroline, simply because she’s a Kennedy represents some kind of “change.” I mean haven’t we had enough Kennedys in the senate? Ted Kennedy’s been in there since 1962. How about some of that “change?”
Furthermore, how can these MSM idiots look themselves in the mirror when they had the nerve to say Sarah Palin, a Governor, wasn’t qualified for VP just a few months ago. Do they think we forgot that? Do they really think we’re not going to notice Caroline’s utter lack of credentials? Duh!
Here’s a thought. Why don’t the people of New York elect someone to take Hillary’s seat? Remember that little thing we do called elections? Where the people get to choose. Isn’t that a better idea than allowing Governor Patterson to hand the crown to Caroline based on her last name and nothing else? God forbid the people of New York get to vote their choice. They might choose a Republican or a Libertarian.
One final thing. In Caroline’s efforts to look like a good choice for the seat, she’s been making the rounds. She had lunch today with Al Sharpton in Harlem and said in an interview. “I’m a Clinton Democrat.”
That’s funny Caroline. You sure weren’t a Clinton Democrat during the primaries.
Posted by Aleister on Thursday Dec 18, 2008 Under Caroline Kennedy, New York, Sarah Palin, Senate, media, politics





