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From the state Capitol to a girl in the checkout line
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Eons ago, Charles “Chuck” Walston was a refugee from Journal-Constitution-style journalism who became a speech-writer for Gov. Roy Barnes.
Something about the pre-speech before the one about the Confederate battle emblem comes to mind.
So, soon afterwards, there was this ugly 2002 election, and Barnes was suddenly out of a job. Walston joined him.
Old-timers will remember that Walston had a part-time band in Atlanta, called The Vidalias. But Washington doesn’t like onions. The layer-by-layer stuff is too complicated.
So Walston now fronts for something called the Bourbon Dynasty. Booze is something comforting and familiar to D.C.
Here is Walston’s latest effort, something called “Girl in the Checkout Line.”
We will slap the video with a PG-13 rating — catchy, with an unassailable moral: Lose an election, and see yourself doomed to ogling young girls who have yet to make the first payment on their college tuition loan.



DEL.ICIO.US


Comments
By Will Jones
October 26, 2007 8:52 AM | Link to this
Had he known the operative symbol of the CBF, the Cross of St. Andrew, stands for “Protestantism Overseas:” that for which White and Black Southerners were willing to fight and die, attempting to stem the rising tide of immigrant Yankee Romanism/”Black Republicanism”(crony/corrupt/criminal faction of the “Republican Party” and its secret societies, Gov. Barnes would have beaten the spread from Diebold’s fraud. As it is he’s not aging gracefully manifesting an aspect of the “lisp” put into Castillian Spanish by the original Bourbon Dynasty.
By Uncle Jessie
October 26, 2007 10:11 AM | Link to this
Chuck bring the Bourbon Dynasty down to Dublin next year fer the Red Neck Games. We’ll show yall plenty a Rebel flags, homemade likker and more Daisy Dukes than you ken shake a stick at.