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I've never heard of such a thing. Also, I can't help but think that if there were tire slashers, they would be found on BOTH ends of the political spectrum.

2006-11-07 05:17:02 · 11 answers · asked by tangerine 7 in Politics & Government Politics

Not all Democrats slash tires. (I, for one, am not into that.) Also, I had some liberal bumper stickers on a car I once had, and I got some nasty responses from some Republicans, so it works both ways.

2006-11-07 05:21:18 · update #1

11 answers

Probably just another political tactic.. Take one example and paint the whole party. Happens all the time. ex. Gay liberals, secular liberals, Liberals don't work, this guy said pull out of Iraq right now so all Democrats must want that. blah blah blah.. It's nothing new, fuel for the retards that's all...

2006-11-07 05:29:04 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

You have never heard of such a thing? Where were you the last election, on Pluto?

Actually the Republicans don't usually slash tires-- Too crude. They usually use the rules to stop people from voting. Democrats aren't that subtle. Like the guy that was going to go to the polling place with ten of his buddies and then take all day sitting there taking his time to vote.

Did you know that a survey of absentee voters in New Jersey shows that four out of five dead people that vote--vote for Democrats?

2006-11-07 13:26:41 · answer #2 · answered by namsaev 6 · 1 1

Democrats have been convicted of tire slashing and far worse.

When it comes to mean and nasty, the Liberals are the true leaders of the pack.

2006-11-07 13:20:07 · answer #3 · answered by Zee HatMan 3 · 2 1

A bunch were busted in the 2004 election, they got caught slashing tires on Republican vans set to take old people to vote. google it, it happened.

2006-11-07 13:19:08 · answer #4 · answered by Have gun, will travel. 4 · 4 1

It's just a figure of speech. Most people have steel belted radials you would need a sawzall to slash them.

What it really means is that foreign citizens working as Redpublican activists spray painted BLUE DOG on you car while you were voting.

Go big Red Go

2006-11-07 13:22:40 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

Campaign strategist: Five activists celebrated after tires were slashed

Sowande Omokunde, the son of Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.), is accused of slashing the tires of vans rented by Republicans on Election Day.

By Chris O'Connell
Court TV

MILWAUKEE — A Democratic political consultant for the 2004 John Kerry presidential bid told jurors Tuesday that the five campaign workers accused of slashing the tires of vans rented by Republicans on Election Day boasted about the stunt.

"They were boisterous, slapping high-fives, laughing and so forth," said Opel Simmons III, a campaign strategist, referring to the five defendants after they returned to campaign headquarters at about 3:30 a.m. on Nov. 2, 2004.

Simmons, who said he saw the men leave the office about 30 minutes earlier, testified that he only learned of what they did after Michael Pratt, the son of then acting Milwaukee Mayor Marvin Pratt, and others, spoke.

"[Pratt] says, 'We got them. They're not going anywhere today," Simmons testified.

Pratt's father was in court for much of the day Tuesday, as was U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore (DWis.), whose son Sowande A. Omokunde is also a defendant in the trial.

Simmons said the defendants' behavior led him to only one conclusion.

"I believe that they were telling me that they had gone from our office to the Bush-Cheney office and had punctured tires of vehicles in the staging area," he said.

Defense attorneys attempted to discredit Simmons on cross-examination by pointing out inconsistencies in his statements to police, which, the attorneys hope, will leave jurors wondering if the state's key witness was in fact one of the vandals.

Pratt, Omokunde, Justin Howell, Lewis Caldwell and Lavelle Mohammad are all charged with criminal damage to property — a felony that carries a maximum sentence of 3 1/2 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

The GOP rented more than 100 vehicles for a get-out-the-vote campaign on Nov. 2, 2004. The vehicles were parked in a lot adjacent to a Bush campaign office, and party workers planned to drive poll watchers to polling places by 7 a.m. and deliver any voters who didn't have a ride.

Defense lawyers attempted to have much of Simmons' testimony ruled as hearsay and therefore inadmissible, but Judge Michael Brennan denied the motions.

Simmons said that despite plans for an election eve stunt dubbed "Operation Elephant Takeover" — a plan to placard the same Republican office where the tires were slashed — the operation was dropped after he overslept and several people were spotted still in the GOP office late at night.

When he came into the Democrat's office at about 3 a.m., Simmons said he saw all of the defendants dressed in black and then leave the building. When he asked two of them where they were going, both Mohammad and Pratt replied to the effect of, "Don't ask. You don't want to know," Simmons testified.

When they returned, aside from the boisterous behavior, their shoes were also covered in mud and the five men were making noises to mimic the deflating tires.

Caldwell then explained how they targeted tires of vans on the perimeter of the lot and on soft ground so that the numerous vehicles on the interior would be unable to exit because they would be trapped by the disabled vans.

On cross-examination, however, Pratt's lawyer, Rodney Cubbie went on the offensive, getting Simmons to concede that his testimony on the stand was inconsistent with his first police statement, which he endorsed as being truthful.

In the statement, Simmons told a detective that he did not arrive at the office until 4 a.m. that morning.

"Were you telling [the detective] a different story?" Cubbie asked.

"No," Simmons said. "I was telling him a very vague variation of the truth."

Simmons, who was detained by police when they connected a van seen by a security guard outside the Republican offices to him, said that he gave police the defendant's names only after 36 hours of incarceration.

Cross-examination of Simmons continues Wednesday morning and could take most of the day. The trial, which Court TV Extra is streaming live on the Web, is expected to last about two weeks.

~*~*~
I agree that both sides do a lot of underhanded crap, but that's why people say Democrats slash tires.

2006-11-07 13:21:38 · answer #6 · answered by Jadis 6 · 3 0

http://wfrv.com/topstories/local_story_116123954.html

2006-11-07 13:20:33 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 4 0

Express your opinion and vote if you haven't.

2006-11-07 13:27:39 · answer #8 · answered by Sue Chef 6 · 1 1

http://www.bestandworst.com/v/?id=65550

2006-11-07 13:18:36 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 5 1

I do

2006-11-07 13:20:10 · answer #10 · answered by Timmy Mic 1 · 4 0

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