That’s a Hint by Kevin

Wow:

Jenny Sanford, the estranged wife of South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, told Barbara Walters in an ABC interview that her husband insisted they take the fidelity clause out of their marriage vows.

8 Comments

LouFebruary 3rd, 2010

I wonder if Spitzer, Jesse Jackson, Edwards, etc. had it in their marriage vows.

tgirschFebruary 3rd, 2010

Lou:

Find where Kevin defended any of their infidelities, and maybe you’d have a point. But we’ve known for a long time that your contributions never exceed the maturity level of “I know you are, but what am I?”
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LouFebruary 4th, 2010

You’re absolutely right. It’s immature of me to point out the infidelities of democrats. What was I thinking? Thanks for your mature guidance.

Dan M.February 4th, 2010

Ignorant question. Are there any politicians who were elected while they were openly polyamorous? Or are they even further behind gays on the “tell other people who to have sex with” scale?

I ask because if admitted to having an open marriage is guaranteed to end your career, that just might have a teeny tiny effect on how many healthy non-monogamous politicians there are.

Dan M.February 5th, 2010

Hm, my last comment is still in moderation and has no links in it. Ping? Maybe if I just say “thesis writing” it’ll get through.

BarryFebruary 7th, 2010

What I can’t understand, why would the wife go ahead with the marriage when he wanted the fidelity clause removed from their vows?

LouFebruary 8th, 2010

“Ignorant question. Are there any politicians who were elected while they were openly polyamorous? Or are they even further behind gays on the “tell other people who to have sex with” scale?”

Yes, that was an ignorant question you asked. In fact, it was two ignorant questions. Why do keep asking obviously ignorant questions?

Dan M.February 8th, 2010

An ignorant question is one that shows you don’t have enough data to draw useful conclusions.

A stupid question is one that shows disinterest in being able to drawn conclusions.

Thanks for the clear demonstration of the second kind, Lou.