1
   

"Scooter" Libby Not Only a Perjurer but a Real Sick F***

 
 
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 05:59 pm
Here is what this pervert wrote in his 1996 novel:

Quote:
At age ten the madam put the child in a cage with a bear trained to couple with young girls so the girls would be frigid and not fall in love with their patrons. They fed her through the bars and aroused the bear with a stick when it seemed to lose interest.


One common trait I find with conservative men.They are sick f***s.
  • Topic Stats
  • Top Replies
  • Link to this Topic
Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 3,806 • Replies: 61
No top replies

 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 06:14 pm
While Bill O'Reilly writes about crack dealers forcing oral sex on their buyers:

Quote:
Put down that pipe and get my pipe up.


Conservative men. Sick ****s!
0 Replies
 
Steppenwolf
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 06:41 pm
Do you usually take events written in novels as a reflection of authors' personal characters?

As for O'Reilly, the comment doesn't warrant any generalizations. It also seems kind of funny Wink
0 Replies
 
kuvasz
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 07:41 pm
least we forget about lynne cheney's the numerous steamy lesbian couplings in her own book.

let us be honest, if the right wing nuts have to write about their the fantasies in god-aweful books, then they are not doing it. which is a good thing for the sake of both pandas and little girls.
0 Replies
 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 09:01 pm
Steppenwolf wrote:
Do you usually take events written in novels as a reflection of authors' personal characters?



Only a real sick **** could think of having bears rape ten-year old girls to make them frigid. Then the the stick thing! Sicko!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
0 Replies
 
Lightwizard
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:03 pm
Has anybody considered that it's not anything inserted (sic) into any novel but that the writing is ridiculously inept in the first place?
0 Replies
 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:05 pm
Inept and sick.

Try visulizing this sick scene.
0 Replies
 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:35 pm
Quote:
Of all the scribbled sentences that have converged to create the Valerie Plame affair, the most remarkable, in literary terms, may belong to Scooter Libby, Dick Cheney's recently deposed chief of staff. "Out West, where you vacation, the aspens will already be turning. They turn in clusters, because their roots connect them. Come back to work?-and life," he wrote in a jailhouse note to Judith Miller. Meant as a waiver of confidentiality, the letter touched off the sort of fevered exegesis more often associated with readings of "The Waste Land" than of legal correspondence. For even more difficult prose, however, one must revisit an earlier work. "The Apprentice"?-Libby's 1996 entry in the long and distinguished annals of the right-wing dirty novel?-tells the tale of Setsuo, a courageous virgin innkeeper who finds himself on the brink of love and war.

Libby has a lot to live up to as a conservative author of erotic fiction. As an article in SPY magazine pointed out in 1988, from Safire ("[She] finally came to him in the bed and shouted ?'Arragghrrorwr!' in his ear, bit his neck, plunged her head between his legs and devoured him") to Buckley ("I'd rather do this with you than play cards") to Liddy ("T'sa Li froze, her lips still enclosing Rand's glans . . .") to Ehrlichman (" ?'It felt like a little tongue' ") to O'Reilly ("Okay, Shannon Michaels, off with those pants"), extracurricular creative writing has long been an outlet for ideas that might not fly at, say, the National Prayer Breakfast. In one of Lynne Cheney's books, a Republican vice-president dies of a heart attack while having sex with his mistress.

It took Libby more than twenty years to write "The Apprentice," which is set in a remote Japanese province in the winter of 1903. The book is brimming with quasi-political intrigue and antique locutions?-"The girl who wore the cloak of yellow fur"; "one wore backward a European hat"?-that make the phrase a "former Hill staffer," by comparison, seem straightforward.

Like his predecessors, Libby does not shy from the scatological. The narrative makes generous mention of lice, snot, drunkenness, bad breath, torture, urine, "turds," armpits, arm hair, neck hair, pubic hair, pus, boils, and blood (regular and menstrual). One passage goes, "At length he walked around to the deer's head and, reaching into his pants, struggled for a moment and then pulled out his penis. He began to piss in the snow just in front of the deer's nostrils."

Homoeroticism and incest also figure as themes. The main female character, Yukiko, draws hair on the "mound" of a little girl. The brothers of a dead samurai have sex with his daughter. Many things glisten (mouths, hair, evergreens), quiver (a "pink underlip," arm muscles, legs), and are sniffed (floorboards, sheets, fingers). The cast includes a dwarf, and an "assistant headman" who comes to restore order after a crime at the inn. (Might this character be autobiographical? And, if so, would that have made Libby the assistant headman or the assistant headman's assistant?)

When it comes to depicting scenes of romance, however, Libby can evoke a sort of musty sweetness; while one critic deemed "The Apprentice" "reminiscent of Rembrandt," certain passages can better be described as reminiscent of Penthouse Forum. There is, for example, Yukiko's seduction of the inexperienced apprentice:

He could feel her heart beneath his hands. He moved his hands slowly lower still and she arched her back to help him and her lower leg came against his. He held her breasts in his hands. Oddly, he thought, the lower one might be larger. . . . One of her breasts now hung loosely in his hand near his face and he knew not how best to touch her.

Other sex scenes are less conventional. Where his Republican predecessors can seem embarrassingly awkward?-the written equivalent of trying to cop a feel while pinning on a corsage?-Libby is unabashed:

At age ten the madam put the child in a cage with a bear trained to couple with young girls so the girls would be frigid and not fall in love with their patrons. They fed her through the bars and aroused the bear with a stick when it seemed to lose interest.

And, finally:

He asked if they should **** the deer.

The answer, reader, is yes.

So, how does Libby stack up against the competition? This question was put to Nancy Sladek, the editor of Britain's Literary Review, which, each year, holds a contest for bad sex writing in fiction. (In 1998, someone nominated the Starr Report.) Sladek agreed to review a few passages from Libby. "That's a bit depraved, isn't it, this kind of thing about bears and young girls? That's particularly nasty, and the other ones are just boring," she said. "God, they're an odd bunch, these Republicans." Unlike their American counterparts, she said, Tories haven't taken much to sex writing. "They usually just get caught," she said.



?- Lauren Collins

source
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:44 pm
Er......they write these books to be published? They WERE published?
0 Replies
 
kuvasz
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 06:23 am
Ah, I remember my first published work.

"Hi, I am a grad student at a large university in the southeast, and i never thought this would happen to me, but........."

and a note of caution, and take it from me and past experience, it might not be wise to list on your resume those publications like penthouse letters if you are trying to get a teaching job.
0 Replies
 
Steppenwolf
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 07:55 am
kuvasz wrote:
Ah, I remember my first published work.

"Hi, I am a grad student at a large university in the southeast, and i never thought this would happen to me, but........."

and a note of caution, and take it from me and past experience, it might not be wise to list on your resume those publications like penthouse letters if you are trying to get a teaching job.


Laughing
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:27 pm
Steppenwolf wrote:
Do you usually take events written in novels as a reflection of authors' personal characters?

As for O'Reilly, the comment doesn't warrant any generalizations. It also seems kind of funny Wink


Chrissee (the author of this thread) once accused me of being a misogynist, simply because she considers Schwarzenegger to be one.

This is the same kind of thinking that had these people criticizing Arnold politically for lines he delivered in some of his movies.
0 Replies
 
Steppenwolf
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:34 pm
Ticomaya wrote:
Steppenwolf wrote:
Do you usually take events written in novels as a reflection of authors' personal characters?

As for O'Reilly, the comment doesn't warrant any generalizations. It also seems kind of funny Wink


Chrissee (the author of this thread) once accused me of being a misogynist, simply because she considers Schwarzenegger to be one.

This is the same kind of thinking that had these people criticizing Arnold politically for lines he delivered in some of his movies.


As Bert is well known for misogyny and misanthropy, I may be in trouble...
0 Replies
 
Steppenwolf
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:35 pm
edit: Double post
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:53 pm
I think the Steppenwolf part will be enough, in some circles....heehee...
0 Replies
 
Steppenwolf
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 05:06 pm
dlowan wrote:
I think the Steppenwolf part will be enough, in some circles....heehee...


True true...
0 Replies
 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 10:13 pm
Do you guys often think about grizzly bears raping ten year old girls to make them frigid? Maybe this is just a normal male fantasy since no one seems to agree this guy is a sick perv for writing such a thing.
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Sat 5 Nov, 2005 12:40 am
It's just art, right? If he was a liberal, there'd be an endowment throwing money at him to come up with that.
0 Replies
 
dlowan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 5 Nov, 2005 01:15 am
So, if he were a liberal you wished to attack, what would you be saying about that writing, Tico?
0 Replies
 
Ticomaya
 
  1  
Reply Sat 5 Nov, 2005 01:23 am
dlowan wrote:
So, if he were a liberal you wished to attack, what would you be saying about that writing, Tico?


You'll have to worry about that when it comes up. I'm pointing out the left's hypocrisy at the present.
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

Obama '08? - Discussion by sozobe
Let's get rid of the Electoral College - Discussion by Robert Gentel
McCain's VP: - Discussion by Cycloptichorn
The 2008 Democrat Convention - Discussion by Lash
McCain is blowing his election chances. - Discussion by McGentrix
Snowdon is a dummy - Discussion by cicerone imposter
Food Stamp Turkeys - Discussion by H2O MAN
TEA PARTY TO AMERICA: NOW WHAT?! - Discussion by farmerman
 
  1. Forums
  2. » "Scooter" Libby Not Only a Perjurer but a Real Sick F***
Copyright © 2026 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.03 seconds on 03/17/2026 at 03:52:31