John Quincy Adams most certainly was a part of the Revolutionary War era. He was a young boy but he was actively involved.I try to like Stephanopoulos, despite the fact that he was a top adviser to President Bill Clinton. See, "John Quincy Adams a Founding Father? Michele Bachmann Says Yes" (via Memeorandum). Was John Quincy Adams a Founder as in a signer of our founding documents? No? Was he a member of the Founding generation who would have a substantial impact on the course of American history? Absolutely. Yes.
Wouldn't it be nice if folks like Stephanopoulos went after Democrats just an aggressively?
ADDED: I've got some progressive idiots visiting from Instaputz's stinkhole, and one of these idiots writes: That 57 states gaffe said THREE YEARS AGO is still giving you wingers serious mileage isn't it?Well, folks can check out how many gaffes Bush made, but he never made one like this:
The number of gaffes Obama has made compared to the number of gaffes Bush made... anyone? ...
I wrote on this last week, but Michael Barone points out today the wicked media double standards when it comes to political misstatements, "Mainstream media covers up horrifying Obama mistake" (at Memeorandum):
It’s interesting that mainstream media journalists who are so eager to zing Michele Bachmann for getting John Wayne’s birthplace wrong, have not been interested in asking whether this was a mistake Obama made in ad libbing or whether the White House speechwriters and fact-checkers fell down on the job. You might think that their chief motive is to make Obama look good and to suppress facts that make him look bad.Well, yeah, you might think. Idiots.