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GOP Senator admits link to escort service [D.C. Madam]
Politico ^ | 7/9/07 | Carrie Budoff

Posted on 07/09/2007 8:55:07 PM PDT by freespirited

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To: freespirited
Well, at least there’s one politician in the US who isn’t gay or screwing a child when they cheat on their spouse.
21 posted on 07/09/2007 9:58:14 PM PDT by RavenATB
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To: Gay State Conservative
Hey,it’s only sex...and assuming that he hasn’t perjured himself in this matter then everything’s just duckey.

Sure this equal low self esteem, lack courage, can not deal with the real world, sneaky etc

22 posted on 07/09/2007 9:59:05 PM PDT by restornu
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To: Biblebelter

Ya know, those are excellent points!


23 posted on 07/09/2007 9:59:53 PM PDT by ovrtaxt (The FairTax and the North American Union are mutually exclusive.)
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To: Biblebelter
First of all this a madame who offered women to heterosexuals. That alone excludes a lot of Democrats, both the closeted and uncloseted alike.

LOL

24 posted on 07/09/2007 10:00:06 PM PDT by Maynerd (Bush is the Herbert Hoover of border security)
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To: yahoo
This is a marriage of convenience...she made that abundantly clear.

Or maybe she decided to forgive her husband and try to work things out for the sake of their marriage and four children rather than simply throwing her hands up, giving in, and walking away.

25 posted on 07/09/2007 10:01:01 PM PDT by Balke
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To: freespirited

He should have gotten a hot 25yo “intellectual valet” like Corzine.


26 posted on 07/09/2007 10:04:27 PM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: Biblebelter

Like Mark Foley?


27 posted on 07/09/2007 10:04:34 PM PDT by MARTIAL MONK
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To: Balke
Nope, it's convenience. She likes the life of a Senator's wife, and does not want to give it up.

Otherwise, she would not have said what she did.

28 posted on 07/09/2007 10:10:22 PM PDT by yahoo (There IS a solution to illegal immigration. It's called the Mexipult.)
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To: MARTIAL MONK
Like Mark Foley?

He is an example of why the Republicans do not have much of a closet. When Republican leadership like Hastert mistakenly thinks he can keep such a fellow in the closet, he finds out the Dems and the press will conspire to clean the Republican closets 'round election time.

29 posted on 07/09/2007 10:12:52 PM PDT by Biblebelter (I can't believe people still watch TV with the sound on.)
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To: freespirited

Out of the thousands of numbers posted from this book, the only one identified publicly so far is a Republican? Am I to beleive there will be no Democrats in the book?

I’m not holding my breath waiting to see any Democrat names listed in the lamestream media.


30 posted on 07/09/2007 10:18:30 PM PDT by DakotaRed (Liberals don't rattle sabers, they wave white flags)
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To: calex59
Let's see, if you are a Dem President you can get a blow job in the White House and it is ok with the Liberals. If you are a Republican it is not OK to have sex with a prostitute.

More to the point, clinton did it in the workplace with an employee, in OUR office, working for US.

Vitter did it on his own time, it was a private matter.

31 posted on 07/09/2007 10:24:18 PM PDT by Wil H (So just what IS the Globe's optimum temperature?)
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To: linn37

Why!!!


32 posted on 07/09/2007 10:33:21 PM PDT by shadowcat
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To: freespirited
Him supporter Giuliani is starting to make a little more sense.
33 posted on 07/09/2007 10:34:46 PM PDT by elizabetty (Perpetual Candidate using campaign donations for your salary - Its a good gig if you can get it.)
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To: yahoo

Nope, it's convenience. She likes the life of a Senator's wife, and does not want to give it up.

Otherwise, she would not have said what she did.

Except, he wasn't even a senator when she said that. It is entirely possible that, faced with the situation in real life, she takes a different opinion.

I for one, respect the woman for not just giving up on her marriage and honoring the vows that she took. Do you expect her to divorce her husband (and break up a family with four kids), just for the sake of being consistent with a statement that she made in response to a hypothetical question posed to her seven years ago?

34 posted on 07/09/2007 10:58:14 PM PDT by Balke
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To: ovrtaxt
You wrote, “Good for Vitter. Confession is a cleansing thing, and this is the best way to handle something like this.”

‘Good for Vitter’? What would be really good is if he resigns right now, right away, the sooner the better. Most men go their entire lives working hard, telling the truth, raising their children, and staying faithful to their wives. If the GOP truly stands for traditional values, then those GOP politicians caught with their pants down need to get out of public life. Let him do what the rest of us do if we should fail our marriage and destroy our reputations: focus on rebuilding that marriage and re-earning that reputation. He has no standing to do either on the taxpayer’s dime.

Further, it isn’t good enough to point to a Democratic Party sociopath like Bill Clinton and decry MSM double standards. The moral bar should be higher for GOP politicians. Why? Because character does count: bad human beings make bad political decisions. Another thing, too: the way Vitter referred to his transgression as a ‘sin’. I’m pretty sure frequenting a prostitute is a crime, even in D.C. By calling it a ‘sin’, he immediately took his actions from the political to the personal, as if it is solely a private matter of no public consequence.

The Democrats are keen on ‘re-framing’ various issues, as if wrong can be made right by some semantic sleight-of-hand. Sorry, no. That cannot be our way, or there truly is no difference between us and those we oppose. Such an action by an elected official is tantamount to a freezer filled with cash. It’s corrupt, illegal, and equally worthy of contempt and reprobation.

I’m not throwing stones from some sanctimonious high ground here. I’m a recovering drunk and addict, and I’ve plumbed moral depths no one should ever experience, but evidently unlike Vitter and those like him, I’m willing to own up to those moral lapses without advice from a bevy of image consultants and spin doctors.

35 posted on 07/09/2007 11:15:48 PM PDT by Rembrandt_fan
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Comment #36 Removed by Moderator

To: Rembrandt_fan
“This was a very serious sin in my past for which I am, of course, completely responsible”

Geeze dude. Are we reading about the same guy? He owned up and takes full responsibility.

I guess you and others here would like to see him kneeling in a soccer stadium with an AK47 agains his head, even after you admit yourself that you've had your own moral lapses. The reformed drinkers / smokers / etc. are the most sanctimonious I guess, even when speaking of others who claim to be reformed themselves.

Everbody should get off their high horse and reconsider the quote from the Senator I pasted above. When have you ever heard a Dem talk like that? That alone paints a picture of sincerity.

37 posted on 07/09/2007 11:30:11 PM PDT by bluefish (Are you really that thick, or are you simply trolling for fun?)
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To: freespirited

Who cares what these people do anymore, in the end we are the ones getting screwed.


38 posted on 07/09/2007 11:32:42 PM PDT by unixfox (The 13th Amendment Abolished Slavery, The 16th Amendment Reinstated It !)
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To: yahoo
Why have principles when you could be a social climber.

What evidence do you have that she stayed with him solely to climb the social ladder? You sound bitter. I've love to understnad what is driving your overly confident assessment of the woman's psychological mindset in choosing to stay with the guy. You have it all figured out, based on a 7 year old quote and a subsequent decision to remain with the guy.

The sanctimoniousness in this thread is amazing. What I'd give for a peak into your closet.

Exceptionally judgemental people, especially those who are wlling to lash out with minimal knowledge, are generally covering up for their own emotional baggage. What exactly are you projecting here?

39 posted on 07/09/2007 11:35:27 PM PDT by bluefish (Are you really that thick, or are you simply trolling for fun?)
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To: bluefish
Sanctimonious? Nope. I don’t concern myself overmuch with the moral shortcomings of others. We all fall short at one point or another and should, as a general rule, tend our own garden and mind our own business. So no, I don’t want to see the man ‘kneeling in a soccer stadium’ et al, or otherwise further humiliated. I just want to see him out of office. If he can’t be faithful to his wife, then he can’t be trusted in any other aspect of his life, either.

But it is bigger than that. Vitter didn’t just fail his wife, he failed his constituents and his country. While supposedly representing their interests, he placed himself in a position where he could be compromised and blackmailed—presumably even by a hostile foreign power, but more likely by one of the many powerful interest groups active in the Beltway who make it their business to gather dirt on public officials. Knowledge is power, after all.

As an aside, emotional confessions occurring after being caught red-handed are usually not acts of conscience. The term we are looking for here, I think, is ‘damage control’.

40 posted on 07/09/2007 11:56:09 PM PDT by Rembrandt_fan
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