Weirdly, the people who are really mad about the Brian Williams Iraq fib don't seem very mad about Dubya and Cheney's Iraq fibs.
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 6, 2015
Brian Williams needs to learn to lie about the right things, like yellowcake uranium.
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 7, 2015
Dirk Benedict has a comic. My fellow @MaltaComicsExpo guests will find much amusement in this. http://t.co/kOvFPfREH8
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 9, 2015
Do you wish the old Battlestar Galactica had run for longer? Or do you think it ended at just the right time?I think George Peppard was a liberal, but yes, there were several more people on the A-Team who were conservative leaning. I guess Marz isn't happy with the comic book approach the series used much of the time. That could explain why he's not flattered Benedict would try publishing comics adventures. But then, it's really weird why Marz wants to write them himself.
Oh no, I think we had a lot of life left in us. But the good thing is that they wrote the part of Face in The A-Team based on what I had done in Battlestar Galactica. But, other than that, playing Starbuck did not help my career one bit. Quite the opposite – suddenly I was known as this politically incorrect guy and that spilled over to real life. It was the same with The A-Team funnily enough. We never got invited to any Hollywood parties. It was because we were from ‘that show’. This was during the Reagan era and Mr T played Santa at the Whitehouse for two Christmases in a row. He was the only black man I know who voted Republican. We were all conservatives on that show, which was unusual for Hollywood. There was no one saying “Do you need to smoke your cigar all the time? Must you fire your guns so much?” Do you know that the teacher’s union tried to get our show off the air? They started a writing campaign because they thought we were too violent. At parties liberals would come up to me and they would whisper, “I watch Battlestar Galactica and The A-Team.” But they didn’t want anybody to hear them say it.
Ugly, ugly news out of North Carolina. #ChapelHillShooting
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 11, 2015
Don't want to jump to conclusions about motive. Hoping #ChapelHillShooting is not the sort of hate crime it appears to be
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 11, 2015
A review of the Facebook page of the man charged in these murders, Craig Hicks, shows a consistent themes of anti-religion and progressive causes. Included in his many Facebook “likes” are the Huffington Post, Rachel Maddow, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Freedom from Religion Foundation, Bill Nye “The Science Guy,” Neil deGrasse Tyson, Gay Marriage groups, and a host of anti-conservative/Tea Party pages.And according to the Intl. Business Times (via The Weekly Standard) he was an atheist who opposed all religions:
Remarkably, one of the four Facebook groups he had joined included “Religious Tolerance”.
The Chapel Hill shooting suspect, Craig Stephen Hicks, who killed three young American Muslim students, including a newly married couple and a teenage girl in North Carolina was opposed to all religions and called himself an "anti-theist."[...]I wonder what Marz thinks now that it's been revealed the man came from his side of the political spectrum? Well, he seems to be avoiding these challenging revelations so far, and can only bring himself to say:
A review of his social media shows him as a supporter of "Atheists for Equality." The consistent theme that figures on his Facebook account is that of anti-religious and progressive causes.
There are people on Twitter who seem relieved or even smug that the #ChapelHillShooting might be rooted in a parking disagreement. Insane.
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 11, 2015
It's almost a reaction of "Oh, see, that's not so bad." That's how accepting of gun violence our society has become.
— Ron Marz (@ronmarz) February 11, 2015