Nancy Pelosi’s culture of corruption: Nancy Pelosi
Posted by Moonage on 16 May 2007 | Tagged as: Ethics
Nancy Pelosi condemned the Republicans as a culture of corruption in her efforts to take over Congress. And, people bought it apparently. Since then we’ve had Barbara Boxer very quietly slip out of the spotlight after giving her husband billions of taxpayer money. We had William Jefferson, under investigation for taking bribes put on Homeland Security. Now, we’ve got another pillar of Democrat morals busted for giving her husband $25 million of taxpayer money in earmarks. Who might be that unscrupulous icon of Democrat corruption be?
Would you believe Nancy Pelosi?
Now, where this gets fun is under Nancy’s direction, legislation was passed requiring members requesting earmarks to sign a form stating they would not personally benefit from the earmark itself.
No sooner than it passed, she gave her husband $25 million. I hear CNN and MSNBC’s Hardball are all over this story.
2 Comments »

on 31 May 2007 at 11:45 pm 1.David Vigliotti said …
I just found your site. I will be reading it voraciously (and verifying the facts therein, as I can). In fact, regarding the story about shrillary avoiding divorce for a presidency bid..on the fox news site I found a link to the whole story. so much for a clinton gag order.?. at least for now…lets just get the whole scoop from george soros. I’m sure he’d be forthcoming with nothing but the truth.
Anyhow, good stuff. The san fran nan story is just getting to be too common to get a rise out of anyone anymore. It’s making me feel sick. It seems to me that the second ammendment is the only reason we’re not a full blown communist country already.
on 01 Jun 2007 at 8:01 am 2.Moonage




























said …
Thanks David. Glad you’re enjoying it. I like to practice my 2nd as much as possible. However, I understand that the 2nd also gives me the right to make a complete fool of myself for all the world to see daily, if I so choose. So, I TRY to get things right here and b&m about things that matter that don’t really make the national headlines.
Then again, sometimes I just like to b&m.