View Full Version : President Bush worships Satan
eire1274
01-23-2005, 02:22 AM
http://omaha.cox.net/cci/apimages/ap-image-NY11701211526.jpg
President Bush gestures the ""Hook 'em, 'horns" salute of the University of Texas Longhorns as he and his family watch the Inaugural Parade Thursday Jan. 20, 2005, in Washington. President Bush's "Hook 'em, 'horns" salute got lost in translation in Norway, where shocked people interpreted his hand gesture during his inauguration as a salute to Satan.
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhgite)
Hmmm... maybe he really does.
JCYC5
01-23-2005, 03:22 AM
Jenna did it too...
egarrard
01-23-2005, 07:26 AM
(Wait...I though he WAS the Devil. :lmao)
All this beef over nothing. It's just a Texas thang... :rofl2
wazman
01-23-2005, 02:29 PM
Actually, Ronnie James Dio invented it. It's been a heavy metal staple for years and years.
Bush just appropriated it for the occasion.
Actually, Ronnie James Dio invented it. It's been a heavy metal staple for years and years.
Bush just appropriated it for the occasion.
Il Cornuto!
:devil
egarrard
01-23-2005, 07:29 PM
Actually, Ronnie James Dio invented it. It's been a heavy metal staple for years and years.
Bush just appropriated it for the occasion.I think it goes back much further than that. It's the hand sign of the University of Texas Longhorns. (Somewhere Artcwolf is laughing at y'all... :lmao) Bush is just being a Texan.
bejohnson
01-23-2005, 07:32 PM
Hook'em Horns (http://www.mackbrown-texasfootball.com/pages/proudtrads/hookem.html)
http://www.mackbrown-texasfootball.com/images/2001_02/main_images/structure_images/proudtrads/hookem_300.jpg
University of Texas at Austin cheerleader Harley Clark knew what he was going to teach football fans at a 1955 pep rally was going to catch on faster than poodle skirts and leather jackets. It had to. After all, the Texas A&M Aggies' "Gig 'em" gesture had been around for years.
Clark sold the student body on the symbolic approximation of the horns of Longhorn mascot Bevo and, thus, began the "Hook 'em Horns" hand signal.
The salute quickly took its place beside the university traditions of singing The Eyes of Texas and lighting the Tower orange.
Fellow student Henry Pitts, who had come up with the Longhorn sign during an inspired game of shadow casting, had shown Clark the sign three days before the Texas Christian University game.
At the Gregory Gym pep rally for that game, Clark showed everyone how to make the Horns hand sign and then proclaimed it to be used from that time forward. By the thousands, the university faithful extended their pinkies and index fingers toward heaven.
"A lot of my friends thought it would be too corny, but I thought it was perfect," said Clark in a recent interview. "Everyone walked out of Gregory Gym that night crazy with it."
The next day at the game, Clark watched the "Hook 'em Horns" gesture surge around the stadium from one side to the other. "TCU had a fine team," he said. "We had to make up in spirit what we lacked on the football field."
In the mid-1950s, Clark was head cheerleader at the university, a position that was elected by the student body.
"It was second only in importance to the Texas governor," he laughed. "I loved the university so much I stayed for nine years (earning undergraduate and master's degrees in government and a law degree)."
A major influence on his life was the late historian and university Professor Walter Prescott Webb.
A retired state district judge, Clark now lives in Dripping Springs, where he grows flowers and vegetables.
He was the judge who ruled in 1987 the state's system of public school finance was unconstitutional because it discriminated against students in property-poor districts. When he hung up his robes in 1989, Clark joined the Austin office of the Houston-based law firm of Vinson &Elkins for 10 years.
He remains connected to the university through the Friar Society, Tejas Club, the Ex-Students' Association and the Cowboys Alumni group.
Clark still is introduced at university events as the person who introduced the "Hook 'em" sign. At the recent 2001 Gone to Texas event for new students, Clark recalled the birth of the gesture to the crowd:
"Our team, the band and the cheerleaders were on the stage at Gregory Gym. After conducting the regular pep rally, I got the crowd quiet and began explaining to them: 'You know how the Aggies have the "Gig 'Em" thumbs-up hand sign (doing it as I spoke). I do not know of any other college with a hand signal. But it is time we had one, too.'"
And, as they had done 46 years before, a roar went up from the crowd and everyone happily and friskily waved "Hook 'em Horns."
© 1998 - 2005 University of Texas
wazman
01-24-2005, 07:19 AM
I think it goes back much further than that. It's the hand sign of the University of Texas Longhorns. (Somewhere Artcwolf is laughing at y'all... :lmao)
Well, you know what I think about that...
eire1274
01-24-2005, 07:29 AM
Well, you know what I think about that...
Crap on someone else's thread, please. Or just don't do it at all.
CyberGuy
01-24-2005, 08:20 AM
I've taken (and used) that sign (or one insignificantly similar - hand turned around) to mean something else altogether since I was a wee pup. And it had absolutely nothing to do with football or the devil. :lmao
wazman
01-24-2005, 09:49 AM
Crap on someone else's thread, please. Or just don't do it at all.
Wow... If you think that's thread crapping...
Sorry for drawing breath.
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