Preserve second amendment in CA
Posted on | October 10, 2009 | 3 Comments
CA Assembly Bill 962 must be actively vetoed by Governor Schwarzenegger by October 11 or it becomes law! This bill will destroy the 2nd Amendment in CA because it will destroy CA gun owners’ ability to obtain ammunition.
Please call the Governor at 1-916-445-2841 THROUGH SUNDAY and use the automated system to voice your opposition. When prompted, press 1 then 2 then 2 then 2 to oppose.
Even if you’ve called before, please call again, and from as many phones as you can! The NRA is calling daily, and all the gun groups need our help! This Bill is too grave a threat to the 2nd Amendment. Thank you!
Category: Uncategorized
Comments
3 Responses to “Preserve second amendment in CA”
October 10th, 2009 @ 2:35 pm
Excellent site. It was pleasant to me.,
October 10th, 2009 @ 3:56 pm
Thank you for your work defending 2nd Amendment rights and in pursuing the Obama birth certificate issue. Your work is appreciated and admired. Do not give up the fight. Our Constitution must never die.
Ron & Marjorie Nelson
October 10th, 2009 @ 6:18 pm
Dear Dr. Orly-This was posted at Citizen Wells. The article speaks for itself. I don’t know if the Kenyans are trying to send a message, the are honest in their innocence, trying to make fools out of the people of the United States of America or just our legal system.
KENYANS WANT OBAMA AS KING
Posted by thelastcrusade – October 10th, 2009
He Belongs to Africa?
Maybe, He Does!
By
Paul L. Williams, Ph.D.
The Last Crusade
Residents of Kenya want Barack Obama to return to their country and to rule over them.
“We need an Obama here in Africa,” grumbled Humphrey Oguto, a 27-year-old engineer. “He’s done a lot in just a little time … Our leaders have done nothing for years.”
Photographs of the US President are omnipresent in huts, shantys, marketplaces, and businesses throughout the country. His image has also been plastered on buses and minibuses, known as matatus, in Nairobi, Mombassa, and other cities throughout the country.
Most Kenyans believe that Mr. Obama was born in their country and has more in common with them than with the American people.
Obamamania in this Third World African country reached fever pitch when the Norwegian Nobel Committee’s awarded their Peace Prize to the fledgling U. S. President for “his initiatives to reduce nuclear arms and defuse tensions through diplomacy.”
“When I heard it [the announcement of the award] on the radio I said ‘Hallelujah!’ ” says 65-year-old James Andaro. “It’s God’s blessing, this win is for Africa.”
In the Kenyan city of Kisumu, the capital of the home province of Mr. Obama’s father, radio shows interrupted broadcasting to have live phone-ins so callers could congratulate the president on his win. Many callers claimed that the President had been born in their city of 273,400 people and not Honoloulu, Hawaii.
This claim was supported by Sarah Onyango, the President’s step-grandmother, who resides in a small house in Kisumu, adorned by a make-shift altar to her step-grandson.
Granny Sarah insists that she and other members of her family were present in the delivery room when Mr. Obama was born in Kenya..
She further insists that the US President inherited the combative spirit of her husband Onyango Obama and her stepson Barack Obama Sr. Onyango Obama spent several years in prison for his involvement with the Kikuyu Central Association (KCA), a radical organization that sought to drive the British settlers from Kenya by violence. Many members of the Association became leaders of the Mau Mau Movement that spread terror throughout Kenya during the 1950s.
Members of the KCA were obliged to take an oath to fight and defend themselves against all white colonists and Western European intruders. The oath included animal sacrifice and the ingestion of blood. The ritual reportedly also included cannibalism, ritual zoophilia with goats and other animals, and sexual orgies.
Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki issued this statement of congratulations to the U.S. leader for capturing the Nobel Prize: “I have no doubt that this award will give new impetus to your efforts to bring about lasting peace in areas where war has ravaged communities over long periods of time. I also encourage you to continue opening the avenues of dialogue in order to bring about a better understanding among the family of nations.”
Mr. Obama has not visited his Kenya since his inauguration amid concerns over poor governance in the African country. More than 1,000 people were killed in riots that followed Mr. Kibaki’s narrow re-election in 2007. Observers described the polls as deeply flawed