Thursday, October 21, 2004

Because Blood Is Thinner Than Oil, And Whoppers Are Juicy.

Bush Relatives For Kerry
Quite humorous and worth thinking about. If your own blood doesn't support you, then you know ya gotta play dirty. Also check out the links section.

Also, You don't get my whopper
Basically, Burger King decided to pull its commercials from Sinclair's biased programming stations. I am betting that other companies did the same. According to the article, the documentary has been dropped from being aired and will be replaced, proving that we do have the power to make a difference. So how do you stand up to big companies? Boycott them. They get very scared when they see their stock prices falling.

"Sinclair on Tuesday backed away from airing a documentary critical of Kerry's Vietnam War-era record, but said it would show portions of that film in a special program that discusses allegations he betrayed fellow veterans with his antiwar activities."

"In response to the controversy, Sinclair said on Tuesday it would not air the entire documentary "Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal," which accuses Kerry, a Democratic senator from Massachusetts, of betraying fellow Vietnam veterans by testifying more than 30 years ago against the war and about atrocities he said were committed by U.S. forces."

"Sinclair shares fell nearly 17 percent after the controversy began earlier this month, with investors concerned about a potential advertising boycott or legal threat.

After Sinclair clarified its broadcast plans, the stock rose 12.6 percent on Wednesday to close at $7.05 on the Nasdaq."


So, research and find all the campaign contributors for Bush, and if you have any involvement in their stock, products and whatnot, change that. Stop buying their products, tell your friends to aswell, whatever it takes. Here's the top contributors of 2004.


Morgan Stanley

$591,230

Merrill Lynch

$564,304

PriceWaterhouseCoopers

$505,800

UBS Americas

$444,925

Goldman Sachs

$368,100

MBNA Corp

$351,000

Credit Suisse First Boston

$319,290

Lehman Brothers

$309,775

Citigroup Inc

$309,350

Bear Stearns

$299,850

Ernst & Young

$293,840

Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu

$273,850

Wachovia Corp

$259,110

US Government

$256,826

Ameriquest Capital

$244,400

Blank Rome LLP

$220,150

Bank of America

$208,811

JP Morgan Chase & Co

$199,150

Microsoft Corp

$191,890

Southern Co

$190,732


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