11-13-2006, 10:28 PM
<!--QuoteBegin-Mudy+Nov 8 2006, 02:13 PM-->QUOTE(Mudy @ Nov 8 2006, 02:13 PM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->Biden will try for Presidential race.
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Apparently he's now in race! Plagirist won't go anywhere.
Meanwhile Sidhart's still toast of the town for making a macaca pile of that pompous a$$
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Last spring, Bruce Andrews, of QGA, got a phone call from a friend needing a favor. A young University of Virginia student named S.R. Sidarth wanted an internship in Democratic politics.
âYes, of course,â Andrews said. âHave the kid send me his résumé.â
Andrews called the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee on the studentâs behalf to see if they had any internships left, but the âD-Tripâ was full.
Then he had a conversation with Sidarth to see what the kid was looking to do. âIâd really like to work on one of the Senate campaigns,â Andrews recalled him saying.
So Andrews advised the kid: âOne rule in politics: Bet on the winner. Jim Webbâs going to win the primary in Virginia.â Andrews made a couple of calls, got a contact at the Webb campaign for Sidarth and sent the lad on his way.
That was the last he heard of Sidarth, until he opened the paper one morning in August when he returned home from a trip and saw the news splashed across the front page. At a campaign rally Allen had pointed at Sidarth, who had become the traveling âmoleâ for Democrat Webbâs campaign, and called him a âmacaca,â saying, âWelcome to America, welcome to Virginia.â
Oh dear. âI turned to my wife and said, âHoly s---! Youâre not going to believe this! Remember that kid I was trying to help? He is Macaca!ââ
And that is Andrewsâ footnote in history: helping S.R. Sidarth get an internship with the Webb campaign and a future in Democratic politics.
âThank God the DCCC was all full up,â Andrews joked on the phone Friday, giddy over the Democratic tidal wave in last weekâs mid-term elections. â<b>History could have been different had S.R. Sidarth ended up at the DCCC.</b>â
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[right][snapback]60563[/snapback][/right]
<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Apparently he's now in race! Plagirist won't go anywhere.
Meanwhile Sidhart's still toast of the town for making a macaca pile of that pompous a$$
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Last spring, Bruce Andrews, of QGA, got a phone call from a friend needing a favor. A young University of Virginia student named S.R. Sidarth wanted an internship in Democratic politics.
âYes, of course,â Andrews said. âHave the kid send me his résumé.â
Andrews called the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee on the studentâs behalf to see if they had any internships left, but the âD-Tripâ was full.
Then he had a conversation with Sidarth to see what the kid was looking to do. âIâd really like to work on one of the Senate campaigns,â Andrews recalled him saying.
So Andrews advised the kid: âOne rule in politics: Bet on the winner. Jim Webbâs going to win the primary in Virginia.â Andrews made a couple of calls, got a contact at the Webb campaign for Sidarth and sent the lad on his way.
That was the last he heard of Sidarth, until he opened the paper one morning in August when he returned home from a trip and saw the news splashed across the front page. At a campaign rally Allen had pointed at Sidarth, who had become the traveling âmoleâ for Democrat Webbâs campaign, and called him a âmacaca,â saying, âWelcome to America, welcome to Virginia.â
Oh dear. âI turned to my wife and said, âHoly s---! Youâre not going to believe this! Remember that kid I was trying to help? He is Macaca!ââ
And that is Andrewsâ footnote in history: helping S.R. Sidarth get an internship with the Webb campaign and a future in Democratic politics.
âThank God the DCCC was all full up,â Andrews joked on the phone Friday, giddy over the Democratic tidal wave in last weekâs mid-term elections. â<b>History could have been different had S.R. Sidarth ended up at the DCCC.</b>â
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