Yea, but we know Tom is one of those home-grown BHo talks about.
Of course I would never use rope, it stretches. Lead is the preferred media to me.
But seriously Tom has some good points & we do agree on a lot - I suspect many more do too but either are afraid to speak or don't want to duplicate etc. If you could take a nationwide vote on how, I'm sure there would be a lot of support. Hopefully we won't find out because things will get straightened out after Jan 2013 & BHo will be a fading nightmare tried for treason with all his cronies & punished accordingly & all his agenda will be erased since Pelosi & co never vetted him & we have to go back a few years & get a do-over. Then we can go after Soros with drones since he is a terrorist on the loose.
Pops, I like the way you think

I know where we could get plenty of help and probably even financing for that one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YukosOJSC "Yukos Oil Company" (Russian: ОАО Нефтяна́я Компа́ния Ю́КОС, IPA: [ˈjukəs]) was a petroleum company in Russia which, until 2003, was controlled by Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky and a number of other prominent Russian businessmen. After Yukos was bankrupted, Khodorkovsky was convicted of fraud and sent to prison.
Yukos headquarters was located in Moscow. Yukos was one of the biggest and most successful Russian companies in 2000-2003. In 2003, following a tax reassessment, the Russian government presented Yukos with a series of tax claims that amounted to US$27 billion. As Yukos's assets were frozen by the government at the same time, the company was not able to pay these tax demands.[1] On August 1, 2006, a Russian court declared Yukos bankrupt.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GazpromGazprom's situation changed abruptly in June 2000, when Vladimir Putin became the President of Russia. Putin launched a campaign to rein in the oligarchs and, per his policy of the so-called national champions, to establish state control in strategic companies.[10] He launched an attack against what he saw as mismanagement and personal pillaging of state assets. After coming to power, Putin immediately fired Chernomyrdin from his position as the chairman of the company's board and used the stock owned by the state to vote out Vyakhirev. The two men were replaced by
Dmitry Medvedev and Alexei Miller, who had previously worked with Putin in Saint Petersburg.[10
Soro's owns about 25% of GazProm and is close to Putin who also made Billions off the Iraq oil for food program, it is quite likely that the guy sitting in Siberia, as well as his billionaire associates who fled Russia would be very happy to get a little pay back.