If only ..

This sounds too good to be true. A Buffalo, NY independent prank-called Governor Scott Walker, pretending to be David Koch.
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Gov. Walker’s spokesman, Cullen Werwie, admits the call was real, according to the same source I linked.

11 thoughts on “If only ..

  1. YIKES! Not good to get caught with your Koch hangin’ out! Montanans can never forget that THESE are Denny’s benefactors too! Let the games begin!

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    1. Jesus. THAT’S gonna be the Blimpaugh defense? Too funny. I know that THAT is gonna impress the folks on the street in Wisconsin. What an equivalency. Walker’s toast. It looks as if what he did is criminal. Jail time would be nice.

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  2. Koch PAC gave $43K to Walker’s campaign. Big deal.

    “Lipton leaves that claim hanging, and never tells his readers how much the Koch PAC contributed to Walker’s campaign. In fact, the total was $43,000. That was out of more than $11 million that Walker raised, and $37.4 million that was spent, altogether, on the 2010 race for Governor of Wisconsin. Which means that people associated with Koch Industries contributed a whopping one-tenth of one percent of what was spent on last year’s election. So why is the Times running scare headlines about the “Billionaire Brothers’ Money?”

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    1. You’ve skimmed the surface, and as usual haven’t looked deep enough and I’m not going to do it for you. Please, spend more than a minute at a web site.

      By the way, Koch Industries probably wants to buy the Wisconsin power plants, which is why they spent not just the $43,000, but far more via the Republican party and on Citizens United anonymous campaigns.

      Damn – I spilled the beans. Now you don’t have to research any more.

      Damn I want to sell yo a bridge – you’re so easy!

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    1. God you’re dumb. The Packers are a community owned nonprofit.

      Here, I’ll do a little homework for you, to save you the trip to wikiland:

      As of June 8, 2005, 112,015 people (representing 4,750,934 shares) can lay claim to a franchise ownership interest. Shares of stock include voting rights, but the redemption price is minimal, no dividends are ever paid, the stock cannot appreciate in value (though private sales often exceed the face value of the stock), and stock ownership brings no season ticket privileges. No shareholder may own over 200,000 shares, a safeguard to ensure that no individual can assume control of the club.

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