Guam might tip over and capsize according to one Democrat!

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kokonut

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Man, he's serious. Look at his hands gesture at the 1:25 mark when he said, "...
it will tip over, and, uh,...capsize," in reference to increasing population on that island. He literally thinks it will tip over if it gets too populated. An impossibility.This is an island, not a boat.

Nice to have a crank Democrat...on board.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNZczIgVXjg&feature=player_embedded]YouTube - 3-25-2010_Hank_Johnson_Guam_Tip_Over.wmv[/ame]


More here....
Rep. Johnson gaffe: Guam might capsize | ajc.com
 
No, apparently it was not a joke. He was heavily "medicated".

Did you read the link? He was not heavily medicated. He does, however, suffer from Hepatitis C, as revealed last year. Medications used for Hepatitis C are not mind or mood altering.

And, apparently, it was a joke. He has stated as much. But again, the real joke is that anyone would take such a statement seriously and the need to clarify humor.:roll:
 
Did you read the link? He was not heavily medicated. He does, however, suffer from Hepatitis C, as revealed last year. Medications used for Hepatitis C are not mind or mood altering.

And, apparently, it was a joke. He has stated as much. But again, the real joke is that anyone would take such a statement seriously and the need to clarify humor.:roll:

The real joke is on you. Even the democratic underground is calling for him to resign.


http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x8071613


Earlier today, we (along with a lot of other Web sites) poked fun at Rep. Hank Johnson's assertion that, were the U.S. to relocate naval personnel to Guam, "my fear is that the whole island will become so overly populated that it will tip over and capsize." Over at The Gaggle, we called it the quote of the day, noting that "Guam is 212 square miles with a population of 175,877 (2008 estimate)."

Now we've come across information that makes the statement seem a lot less funny. On Monday, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ran an exclusive in which Johnson admitted to having hepatitis C. Reporter Bob Keefe writes:

The Lithonia Democrat's already-thin frame has shed 30 pounds in the past year. His speech is slower than ever, and he regularly gets lost in thought in the middle of a discussion. He is easily fatigued and often impatient and irritable . . . To keep the disease in remission, Johnson is going through an experimental treatment that he said has been the worst part so far.

http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/...c-us-rep-suffers-from-too-common-illness.aspx
 
The real joke is on you. Even the democratic underground is calling for him to resign.

Link to support your claim, please. The democratic underground? A discussion web site. Like they have any influence over resignation.

In VA they are calling the VeriChip the mark of the beast and the AntiChrist, too. :laugh2:

Yep, Monday was a full moon.:lol:
 
It was an April Fool's joke....I read this on AOL news.
 
He was stammering some, slurring somewhat, couldn't find the right words in requesting the size of the island and such, it was just ridiculous watching him. He wasn't joking when he expressed fear that additional population would cause the island to capsize. Even he gestured the capsizing motion with his hands.

Spin anyway you want, this guy was off his rockers. Medicine? Maybe but he did say "tip over" and "capsize."
 
April Fool's? That video was taken on March 25, 2010.
 
The article that you posted is April 1.

Joke, joke, joke, joke, joke...

It's the Atlanta Journal Constitution. It was referring to what transpired on March 25, 2010 in their April 1st article. And, no, not an April Fool's joke.

So, I imagine every article posted on April 1st is an April Fool's one?
 
It's the Atlanta Journal Constitution. It was referring to what transpired on March 25, 2010 in their April 1st article. And, no, not an April Fool's joke.

So, I imagine every article posted on April 1st is an April Fool's one?

Wow, you believe in wonderland so it is okay. :ugh:
 
This isn't a Democrat vs. Republican thing - although some might make it out to be. The man is very ill. He is sick. He shouldn't have been "working", instead, he should have been at home with a hot bowl of soothing chicken soup and a good nights rest.

I have said some pretty bizarre things when I have been very sick.

No, unfortunately, it was not a joke. The AJC ran an article about him last week and it explained that his illness was becoming obvious.

He needs rest.
 
Does it say anywhere in the article that it's an April Fool's joke?

Point it out to me. The date "April 1" isn't proof.

Fact is that Hank Johnson said he feared Guam would tip over and capsize.
 
actually, I was mistaken, the AJC article about Hank Johnson wasn't last week, it was posted December 7, 2009

U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson battling hepatitis C | ajc.com

5:23 p.m. Monday, December 7, 2009


U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson battling hepatitis C

AJC Exclusive: Congressman has shed 30 pounds in the past year due to hepatitis C


By Bob Keefe
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WASHINGTON -- For months, speculation has swirled in both Atlanta and Washington about U.S. Rep. Hank Johnson's health.

The Lithonia Democrat's already-thin frame has shed 30 pounds in the past year. His speech is slower than ever, and he regularly gets lost in thought in the middle of a discussion. He is easily fatigued and often impatient and irritable.

Monday, he revealed why.

In an exclusive interview with the AJC, Johnson disclosed he has been battling hepatitis C, an incurable, blood-borne liver disease, for more than a decade.

He was officially declared free of the virus in January, but it has ravaged his liver, resulted in thyroid problems and other health issues, including depression, for which he's also being treated. To keep the disease in remission, Johnson is going through an experimental treatment that he said has been the worst part so far.

"I am weaker than I ever have been," Johnson, 55, said in his Capitol Hill office.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hepatitis C is transmitted when clean blood comes in contact with blood infected by the disease. Between 3 million and 4 million people in the United States have the disease today, and many more may not even know they have it because it can lie dormant for decades.

Before 1992, hepatitis C was commonly transmitted through blood transfusions. Today, with improved blood screening, the most common mode of transmission is through injection drug use, but it also can be spread by other means, such as through contaminated razor blades or dirty tattoo needles or by coming into contact with infected blood in other ways. It also is occasionally transmitted through sex, or from a mother to a child, said Dr. John Ward, director of the CDC's division of viral hepatitis in Atlanta.

Johnson said he first learned he had the disease in 1998. He said he does not know how he contracted it.

With Mereda Davis Johnson, his wife of more than 20 years, seated beside him in his Capitol Hill office, Johnson said he has never used intravenous drugs or engaged in any other sort of risks that could have caused him to get the disease. He also said he has never had a blood transfusion.

"I have no idea," he said when asked how he contracted the disease.

Mereda Davis Johnson said the disease has been the most difficult challenge she and her husband have ever faced. She said she gets checked regularly for the disease, and that it has not spread to her or either of the couple's two children.

"This has been the most difficult challege for him ever," said Mereda Davis Johnson, an Atlanta area attorney. "I know I could not do it. But Hank is tough."

Rep. Johnson decided to disclose he had the disease after the AJC asked him about it amid rising questions about his health both in Washington and in the 4th Congressional District, east of Atlanta, which he has represented since 2006.

The disease, he said, was one of the reasons he decided to run for office in the first place.

When he was first diagnosed 11 years ago, Johnson said, his doctor gave him 20 years to live.

"I determined that if I only had 20 years to live, I am going to do everything I wanted to do in life," he said.

Johnson said he got his financial affairs in order, saved some money for his family and then ran for DeKalb County Commission, serving two terms beginning in 2000. When he had the opportunity to run against former congresswoman Cynthia McKinney for the 4th Congressional District seat, he decided to do so. He beat her in a runoff election in August 2006. He was unopposed for re-election in 2008.

"The final goal I had was to be a congressman," he said.

Johnson said he doesn't worry anymore about dying. While his liver has degraded and other health problems have resulted from his treatment, he said doctors have given him no limitations on how much longer he'll live.

He is being treated at Walter Reed Army Medical Center with a combination of interferon and ribavirin, which, like cancer chemotherapy, comes with many side-effects.

"He has been a model patient, sticking with his course of treatment even when it was most difficult," his physician, Dr. Maria Sjogren, said in a statement.

Up for re-election in November 2010, Johnson said he is planning to begin campaigning for office again, in earnest, when he's done with his latest round of treatment in February. At least two Republican challengers have said they'll run for his seat.

Alan Abramowitz, a political science professor at Emory University in Atlanta, said he doesn't think that an illness such as Johnson's is necessarily damaging to a politician's career. That's especially the case in a district where they have a strong base, he added -- as Johnson has with Democrats in the 4th Congressional District.

"Certainly it's something they're going to have to deal with," Abramowitz said. "But it's my guess that if someone has a solid base in their constituency, they could survive it."

Along with seeking re-election, Johnson said he wants to become an advocate for hepatitis C victims. He said Monday he has signed on as a co-sponsor of a House bill that would establish and promote a comprehensive prevention, education and research program for viral hepatitis infections.

He also said he plans to begin working with the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable, a coalition of more than 100 organizations that works to prevent viral hepatitis.

"On behalf of the entire chronic viral hepatitis community, we offer Congressman Johnson our support, prayers and encouragement," Martha Saly, director of the group, said in a statement. "Congressman Johnson's announcement shines a much-needed spotlight on a public-health issue that has historically resided in the shadows."

Sometimes called the "silent epidemic" because it can manifest itself in a victim for decades without showing any symptoms, hepatitis C has become better known publicly in recent years.

Numerous celebrities, including singers Naomi Judd and Natalie Cole and actors such as Pamela Anderson and Christopher Kennedy Lawford, who have been stricken with the disease, have become outspoken advocates. They encourage people to get tested regularly and they are pushing to find a cure.

Johnson said he hopes to do the same.

"There are literally millions of people walking around with this virus who do not even know they have it," Johnson said. "And once they do know they have it, the stigma of getting treated is there.

"I'm going to be a public figure who takes the stigma away from having the virus," he said.
 
Looks serious...

Should a person in this condition, regarding his mental status (i.e. ability to think straight, etc) affected by this condition be allowed to even vote on bills and such? And make decisions that could affect people?
 
Looks serious...

Should a person in this condition, regarding his mental status (i.e. ability to think straight, etc) affected by this condition be allowed to even vote on bills and such? And make decisions that could affect people?

good question.

hhmm..... makes me wonder about GWB's state of mind and his mental health due to his history of substance abuse.... :hmm:

most interesting point you brought up...
 
good question.

hhmm..... makes me wonder about GWB's state of mind and his mental health due to his history of substance abuse.... :hmm:

most interesting point you brought up...

That also applies to Obama with his use of cocaine and marijuana.
 
That also applies to Obama with his use of cocaine and marijuana.

true.

Since he was the first Presidential candidate to admit trying cocaine... I guess that's some transparency right there, yes? But then... I doubt it's as bad as GWB's history of substance abuse where the damage was clearly visible during his Presidency. Obama grew up poor and lived a poor life.

So... a poor fella and cocaine? You figure it out.
 
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