| #1 - Posted 17 September 2008, 12:44 AM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | Lets get ready to Ruuuuuuummmmble lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.4* | |
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| #2 - Posted 17 September 2008, 1:06 AM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal the community organizer state senator who was good at voting present 130 times is now running for the presidency of the USA.....his background is dubious to say the least ....from nutty religous mentors and convicted terrorists and convicted real estate swindlers to the most left wing record in the US senate which has moved quickly to the right as he tries to become more palatable to middle America his career is short and undistinguished to say the least....Let us hope he becomes a footnote like Geraldine Ferraro....A person of color will be president of the USA let us hope it is one with more stature and integrity than the obamanable snow job .......PS his running mate is all about change the political hack Joe "plugs"Biden the plagiarist even says out loud" Obama should have picked hillybilly."....The curtain has been pulled back the Wizard of Obama has been exposed.....an empty suit lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.4* | |
| #3 - Posted 17 September 2008, 1:22 AM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal The broad pattern with Obama is that he's not the reformer he's claimed to be in this election. His whole message of hope and change is a carefully crafted one. It's designed to give people an impression that he's something different from what you typically see in politics. In fact, if you look at his record both in his dealings and the alliances he's made in Chicago, and in the kind of legislation he pushed in Springfield and in Washington, you see a pattern of Senator Obama always choosing to get along rather than fight for positive change. So this idea of him as an agent of positive change is a false one. ....Again the empty suit lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.4* | |
| #4 - Posted 17 September 2008, 2:21 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: February 2008 Member #: 336 Posts: 1585 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal I had begun typing responses but realized the level this must be kept at, so here is some juicy rhetoric. Quote: What if John McCain were a former president of the Harvard Law Review? What if Barack Obama finished fifth from the bottom of his graduating class? What if McCain were still married to the first woman he said “I do” to? What if Obama were the candidate who left his first wife after she no longer measured up to his standards? What if Michelle Obama were a wife who not only became addicted to pain killers, but acquired them illegally through her charitable organization? What if Cindy McCain graduated from Harvard? What if Obama were a member of the “Keating 5”? What if McCain was a charismatic, eloquent speaker? Edited on 9/17/2008 2:22 PM by Manhattanite. |
Post IP: 206.252.74.4* | |
| #5 - Posted 17 September 2008, 2:49 PM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal Quote: Manhattanite previously said: I had begun typing responses but realized the level this must be kept at, so here is some juicy rhetoric. Quote: What if John McCain were a former president of the Harvard Law Review? What if Barack Obama finished fifth from the bottom of his graduating class? What if McCain were still married to the first woman he said “I do” to? What if Obama were the candidate who left his first wife after she no longer measured up to his standards? What if Michelle Obama were a wife who not only became addicted to pain killers, but acquired them illegally through her charitable organization? What if Cindy McCain graduated from Harvard? What if Obama were a member of the “Keating 5”? What if McCain was a charismatic, eloquent speaker? manny thats pretty lame....I expected more from you.....McCain is the right stuff....Obama padded his resume ....please go back to your desk and try again..... lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.3* | |
| #6 - Posted 17 September 2008, 3:01 PM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal "What is a "community organizer"? Spoken with a proper amount of reverence, the term has a tacit nobility to it that immediately shames any opponent into respectful silence, including those who have actually done some good in their lives. Try it sometime: when your parents ask you what you plan to do when you graduate, tell them you're planning on becoming a community organizer. They'll look at you with a worshipful stare as if you volunteered to donate a kidney to a baby seal. This is why everyone thinks Obama is just like Jesus What's-his-name, only cooler!" Edited on 9/17/2008 3:03 PM by gouletcolonial. lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.3* | |
| #7 - Posted 17 September 2008, 6:59 PM | |
Location: Canada, home safe Join date: January 2008 Member #: 268 Posts: 2578 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal Quote: gouletcolonial previously said: Lets get ready to Ruuuuuuummmmble GC you have pushed your rethoric too far in your ill attempt to undermine old barry We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. |
Post IP: 99.234.145.1* | |
| #8 - Posted 17 September 2008, 7:29 PM | |
Location: Canada, home safe Join date: January 2008 Member #: 268 Posts: 2578 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/09/17/mccains_fundamentals_problem.html " By Dan Balz John McCain has a fundamentals problem. It is political as well as economic, and it remains the biggest obstacle standing between the Arizona senator and the White House. McCain didn't single-handedly create this problem but he made it worse Monday when, as Wall Street was melting down, he uttered words -- "the fundamentals of our economy are strong" -- that totally muddied the real message he meant to deliver. Barack Obama has hammered him at every stop since as a man out of touch with reality. Were McCain known as a student of the economy, this instance of a badly delivered statement would matter little. Because he is known as someone who is not, it matters plenty. McCain has responded by ratcheting up his rhetoric about cracking down on Wall Street and Washington. As with his Monday misstep, once again the message is mixed. Guns blazing, McCain is promising to ride into town to -- oversee the creation of a commission to study the problem. He is speaking out in favor of regulation but against a history of opposing a heavy government hand. He has expressed his outrage, but what is the balance he would strike between the old and new McCain? In many ways, the opening to Obama provided by McCain's verbal misstep is the least of his problems. What should worry the McCain camp most is the intersection of the renewed focus on the economy and the underlying political climate that has created such difficulties for McCain and his party all year. McCain's advisers have noted for months that the political environment could hardly be worse for their candidate. None of them has ever suggested that the political fundamentals remain sound. Quite the opposite. President Bush's approval rating appears stuck close to its lowest ever levels -- hovering just above 30 percent. Nearly eight in 10 Americans believe the country is heading in the wrong direction. The Republican Party's image is worse than the Democrats' and well below its levels when Bush won reelection four years ago. McCain's party made some gains after his convention but it's not clear whether that was temporary or lasting. Four years ago on election day, the exit polls showed an electorate at parity between Republicans and Democrats. That's not likely to be the case this November. Combine that with the economic indicators. The stock market's plunge has wiped out recent gains and more. The unemployment rate now stands at 6.1 percent and has risen a full percentage point since March. Four years ago this month it was at 5.4 percent and heading down. The economy has been shedding jobs monthly throughout the year. In the past, the unemployment rate was the most sensitive indicator politically. Today both the jobless rate and the stock market can send shivers of anxiety through the electorate -- as they are this week. Nothing in all of that is good for John McCain's hopes of winning the White House. Only once since World War II has a political party maintained control of the presidency for three consecutive terms, which was from 1981-1993. Eisenhower's eight years were followed by Kennedy's and Johnson's eight years, which were followed by Nixon's and Ford's eight years, which were followed by Carter's four years. Voters would not give Democrats a third term after the Clinton presidency, despite a robust economy and a nation at peace. After the tumult of Bush's eight years, what might compel voters to reward the Republicans with a third consecutive term in control of the White House? McCain has managed to make the best of this terrible environment. His pick of Sarah Palin proved enormously effective in the short term. His party appears newly energized, even enthusiastic about their ticket, even if they still distrust the leader of that ticket. He has reinvented himself for the final stretch of the campaign -- or perhaps found a voice that had been missing throughout this election cycle. As in the primaries, he has been reduced to basics and they have served him well over the past two months. His best hope of winning is to make the campaign a test of character. How long can he sustain all this? Absent external events, he was doing well. With the economic news of this week, the polls hint at a deflation in his position. The playing field has once again tilted slightly toward Obama, who now must take advantage of it. This remains as competitive a race as many had forecast. National polls are tight. Battleground states are tight. But the underlying structure that has governed this campaign from the start has not improved. That is the real fundamentals problem for John McCain. " We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. |
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| #9 - Posted 17 September 2008, 7:57 PM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal How long can he sustain all this? Absent external events, he was doing well. With the economic news of this week, the polls hint at a deflation in his position. The playing field has once again tilted slightly toward Obama, who now must take advantage of it...........so true so true.....tonyj.......I am confounded by the fact that the poll numbers are as they are....I thought Kermit could have been elected but now we have a horse race ...That is good because Obama is a lightweight empty suit Edited on 9/17/2008 7:57 PM by gouletcolonial. lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
Post IP: 66.98.33.3* | |
| #10 - Posted 17 September 2008, 8:34 PM | |
Location: Cuba, it is a secret the censors are looking for me Join date: December 2007 Member #: 9 Posts: 13576 | RE: Obama empty suit or the real deal Quote: gouletcolonial previously said: Quote: Manhattanite previously said: I had begun typing responses but realized the level this must be kept at, so here is some juicy rhetoric. Quote: What if John McCain were a former president of the Harvard Law Review? What if Barack Obama finished fifth from the bottom of his graduating class? What if McCain were still married to the first woman he said “I do” to? What if Obama were the candidate who left his first wife after she no longer measured up to his standards? What if Michelle Obama were a wife who not only became addicted to pain killers, but acquired them illegally through her charitable organization? What if Cindy McCain graduated from Harvard? What if Obama were a member of the “Keating 5”? What if McCain was a charismatic, eloquent speaker? manny thats pretty lame....I expected more from you.....McCain is the right stuff....Obama padded his resume ....please go back to your desk and try again..... "Why disagreeing with Obama is racist. Why insinuating Obama is not qualified to do brain surgery on you is racist. Why things we don't normally think of as racist become racist when doing them gets in Obama's way. Why racism trumps sexism. Why, whenever Obama practices sexism, it is not sexism - and it's racist to think it is. Why and when the words "circular reasoning" are racist." Edited on 9/17/2008 8:35 PM by gouletcolonial. lets get ready to RUUMMMMMMBBBLLLEE |
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