Gawker, the cesspool of the world wide web, titled its Vincent hit piece "Sarah Palin's Ghostwriter Pals Around With Racists and Wackos":
"Sarah Palin's book will be awesome because her ghostwriter has abundant experience in shaping the confused, fevered thoughts of religious fanatics into sentences."Another dung heap of a site called God's Own Party? contributes this lofty argument to the discussion:
"This is no coincidence, nor is it to be taken lightly. Lynn Vincent is a devout Dominionist! If there has been ANY lingering doubt that my assertions regarding Palin’s direct ties to dominionism – you may now lay those fears to rest."And, lest anyone doubt the urgency of his rantings, the unhinged blogger adds:
"I cannot stress enough how serious this is."Then there's Phil "Hate" Munger at the fanatical Progressive Alaska:
"Palin's fit with Vincent may be a stroke of sick genius. Imagine Vincent tossing Palin's verbal herbage into a lethal concoction, designed to spread more hatred of non-whites, urging people to reject the products of interracial marriage, conjuring up the false spirits of the Old South, touting carrying loaded weapons into public meetings, urging citizens to strike out openly and assertively against census workers - and on and on and..."Yikes, now we feel the sudden need for a long, hot shower. Where is the the Lysol and steel wool?Aside from all of these websites being run by hysterical Leftist extremists, what else do they have in common? It seems that Charles Johnson, who is as convinced that Stacy McCain is a raaaaacist as Andrew Sullivan is of his wacko Trig Troother conspiracy theories, is now a reliable source of hogwash for these and other moonbat bloggers.
They probably don't know or don't care that Lynn Vincent is, like Sarah Palin, a good and decent person who works to help the less fortunate. San Diego Union Tribune writer Matthew Hall reports:
It's not just a younger generation that's promoting homeless causes.But let the moonbat hate bloggers, free of all sin as they are, cast their stones. After all, that bearing of false witness taboo is just for the Christianists and Jooooos, isn't it?
San Diego writer Lynn Vincent, 47, has helped the homeless for years. She has volunteered in shelters and handed out oranges and soap to people on the street.
She also has collaborated on two memoirs about an art dealer befriending a homeless man. The first memoir, “Same Kind of Different as Me,” has spent 75 weeks on The New York Times best-seller lists. It spawned a second book last month, which continues the two men's story and includes tales of how the first book changed readers' lives and inspired social involvement.
Vincent, who is helping Sarah Palin write her memoir, said Americans are now “kind of more aware that the line between poverty and affluence is a little more fluid than they thought.”
- JP
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