Monday, June 12, 2006

Sansura & Susan Polk: SF Minds on the Loose

If anyone wonders what happens to minds brought up in public schools in northern California by liberal teachers [like Deep Throat's daughter in Santa Rosa, a school teacher who had "vaguely heard of" Bob Woodward], take a look at Susan Polk, on trial for stabbing her husband, who subsequently died, 20 times. She is her own defense counsel, and claims hubby died of a "heart attack."

The laughable SF Chronicle reporter and a defense lawyer named Canny both are straight-faced in the coverage by the MSNBC legal maven sitting in for Dan Abrams. The defendant Susan is taped daydreaming about Winona Ryder in jail, how good an actress Susan Sarandon would be playing her role in a made-for-TV flick, and saying Anthony Hopkins should play her 70-year old [allegedly] murdered husband in the movie, though "Felix was actually worse than Hannibal Lector."

California's Teacher Unions have dumbed down and imbedded socialization skills/nitwittery into generations of mentally-challenged students and the societal effects are starting to display themselves. Deep Throat's ignorant daughter had spent a decade in a Taos commune before getting a teaching certificate. A gamine-naive woman-child named Sansura was interviewed on The O'Reilly Factor and this 20-something child had absolutely no notion of the world outside her SF bay cocoon---"but polls show that most people favor....yadda, yadda....means it's law to Sansura. O'Reilly, ever the gentle didact when impairment appears unmixed with malice [a rarity on the generally impaired-nasty left], led Sansura gently to the border of the real world, and like that medieval woodcut of a man peeking under the rim of a curtain toward a Copernican universe, allowed Sweet Child-Bride a glimpse of straight reality.

Can Lotus-Eaters stand the harsh glare of sublunary worldliness? When the jury comes back with a guilty verdict on ultra-left husband-stabber battered-woman victimization pleader Susan, then I will have a glimmer of optimism left that human nature has a chance even in northern Cal. Read The San Jose Mercury or watch MSNBC tomorrow.

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