The World’s Worst Person

This post was written by Radio1 on June 27, 2008
Posted Under: Uncategorized

What is it with the liberal elite? Why aren’t they happy or pleasant? Take little Keithie Overbite.  While the rest of his co-workers were wondering  if they would be able to go to Tim Russert’s funeral.  Good Ole Keithie pop’s off on a NBC staffer because he couldn’t get a first class train ticket down to the Kennedy Center in Washington.

“You better hope to God there is a first-class train ticket tomorrow.” — Keith Olbermann

Then at the Kennedy Center guests overheard Olbermann popping off again on NBC staffers because there was no Ketchup packets for his lunch.  Geez, Keithie it was a funeral! 

 ”this place is going to hell,” because there wasn’t any ketchup packets — Keith Olbermann

Not only is Olbermann an ASSHOLE.   He’s a typical flip-flopying liberal “progressive” ASSHOLE.

He once called George Bush a fascist because of Bush’s support for giving the telecoms immunity and revisions to FISA:

“shameless, breathless, literally textbook example of Fascism — the merged efforts of government and corporations that answer to no government.”  Keith Olbermann

This is no longer just a farce in which protecting telecoms is dressed up as protecting us from terrorists conference cells. Now it begins to look like the bureaucrats of the Third Reich, trying to protect the Krupp family, the industrial giants, re-writing the laws of Germany for their benefit. — Keith Olbermann

“There is not a choice of protecting the telecoms from prosecution or protecting the people from terrorism, Sir. This is a choice of protecting the telecoms from prosecution or pretending to protect the people from terrorists. Sorry, Mr. Bush, the eavesdropping provisions of FISA have obviously had no impact on counter-terrorism, and there is no current or perceived terrorist threat the thwarting of which could hinge on an email or phone call that is going through Room 641 of AT&T in San Francisco.” —- Keith Olbermann

Well, well that’s telling that Bushhitler Keithie!

Now that his man Barack Obama is supporting telecom immunity the FISA.  Mr. Olbermann is changing his tune.   No “examples of fascism” no ” protecting corporate criminals”  and no mention of the Third Reich.

Here’s Keithie interviewing Jonathan Alter of Newsweek on his show about Obama’s support for the FISA and Telecomm Immunity Bill.

OLBERMANN: Asked by “Rolling Stone” publisher, Jann Wenner, about how Democrats have cowered in the wake of past Republican attacks, Senator Obama responding, quote, “Yeah, I don’t do cowering.” That’s evident today in at least three issues . . . 

Senator Obama also refusing to cower even to the left on the subject of warrantless wiretapping. He’s planning to vote for the FISA compromise legislation, putting him at odds with members of his own party . . . But first, it’s time to bring in our own Jonathan Alter, also, of course, senior editor of “Newsweek” magazine.

Good evening, Jon.

JONATHAN ALTER, NEWSWEEK: Hi, Keith.

OLBERMANN: “Yeah, I don’t do cowering.” This is not just the man, but the campaign?

ALTER: Yes. This is part of the message that is consistent across the last couple weeks and it comes down to one word — strength. The United States is not going to elect a president that perceives to be as weak. You look weak if you’re flip-flopping. You look weak if you’re not taking actions that seem to be securing the United States against terrorists. And you look weak if you don’t fight back against your political adversaries.

OLBERMANN: But this cuts,Imean, this terminology cuts in more than one direction here. Not cowering to Republicans is one thing in the Democratic, recent Democratic history, it’s a thing that I think anybody who has a “D” near their name cheers, but not cowering to the left, not going along with the conventional, the new conventional thinking on the FISA bill, that’s something altogether different, isn’t it?

ALTER: Yes. I don’t really think it is. It was only a matter of time before the left was disappointed in Barack Obama, at least in a limited way. No politician is ever going to do everything that somebody likes.

And I think some folks in the netroots in particular on this FISA bill who are, you know, pulling their hair out over this, they have to realize, he’s always been a politician, he’ll always be a politician, and politics is the art of the possible. And he’s a legislator. He knows that you can’t always get everything that you want in a bill, even if he personally believes that the immunity for Telcoms is a bad idea. The larger idea of the bill was important.

And I actually think one of the big points, Keith, that hasn’t been made about this bill is that currently, as of last August, since last August, we’ve been operating in an unconstitutional environment, clear violation of the Fourth Amendment.

So, there was tremendous urgency to get the FISA court back into the game. And does this bill do it imperfectly? Yes. But it does do it and it restores the Constitution, which is a point that’s not getting made very much.

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