Obama's 100 days, 100 mistakes

Discussion in 'Politics' started by jficquette, Apr 29, 2009.

  1. yes he's been living way beyond his means, so why the fuck doesn't he have to make any adjustments to his fucking life style?

    fuck this hypocrite, and fuck his stupid bullshit theories which he just pulls out of his or nancy's ass
     
    #11     Apr 29, 2009
  2. how the fuck does a university degree regardless of the school and/or the grade prove ones level of intelligence

    you're so fucking stupid you still don't understand that a university degree does not spell intelligence, with a country full of shit-heads like you, I don't see a future for it
     
    #12     Apr 29, 2009
  3. We have never seen his school records. For all we know they were fabricated just like his Hawaiian birth.

    Here is info on grade inflation at Harvard, other Ivy League Schools.


    Ivy League grade inflation


    Evidence of grade inflation at Ivy League schools:
    In 1966, 22% of Harvard undergraduate students earned A's. By 1996, that figure rose to 46%. That same year, 82% of Harvard seniors graduated with honors.
    In 1973, 31% of all grades at Princeton were A's. By 1997 that rose to 43%. In 1997, only 12% of all grades given at Princeton were below the B range.
    Source: American Academy of Arts & Sciences


    When a report found recently that eight out of every 10 Harvard students graduate with honors and nearly half receive A's in their courses, the news prompted plenty of discussion and more than a few jokes. But is grade inflation worth worrying about?


    http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/2002/02/08/edtwof2.htm

    So Bush goes to Harvard when an A was an A and queerbait gets all of his grades scaled or just assigned based on him being a foreign exchange student and Muslim.
     
    #13     Apr 29, 2009
  4. What about being President of the Harvard Law Review


    Alumni

    Prominent alumni of the Harvard Law Review include:




    United States Presidents

    Barack Obama, President of Volume 104[4]




    Supreme Court Justices

    Stephen Breyer, served as Articles Editor of Volume 77[5]
    Felix Frankfurter[6] (1882-1965)
    Ruth Bader Ginsburg, served as editor for one year before transferring to Columbia Law School[7]
    John G. Roberts, Jr., served as Managing Editor for Volume 92[8]
    Antonin Scalia, served as Notes Editor for Volume 73[9]
    Edward Sanford (1865-1930)



    Other Jurists

    Michael Boudin, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, served as President of Volume 77[10]
    Henry Friendly, late judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, served as President[11]
    Pierre Leval, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, served as Notes Editor[12]
    Debra Ann Livingston, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit[13]
    James L. Oakes, late judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit[14]
    Richard Posner, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, served as President of Volume 75[15]





    Cabinet Secretaries

    Dean Acheson, Secretary of State[16]
    Michael Chertoff, Secretary of Homeland Security and former judge on United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit[17]
    William Coleman, Jr., Secretary of Transportation, Brown v. Board of Education attorney, and first African-American Supreme Court clerk[18]
    Elliot Richardson, Attorney General, Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of Commerce, served as Law Review President (1947)[19]
    Other U.S. Government Officials

    Paul Clement, former U.S. Solicitor General, served as Supreme Court Editor[20]
    Archibald Cox, late U.S. Solicitor General[21]
    Chris Cox, former Chairman of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission[22]
    Viet Dinh, former Assistant Attorney General, served as Bluebook editor[23]
    Michael Froman, deputy assistant to the president and deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs in the Obama Administration[24]
    Julius Genachowski, chairman-designate of the Federal Communications Commissions[25]
    Erwin N. Griswold, a dean of the Harvard Law School and Solicitor General under presidents Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon[26]
    Alger Hiss, former U.S. State Department Official and accused spy[27]
    Elena Kagan, Solicitor General in the Obama Administration[28][29]; formerly dean of Harvard Law School[30]
    Michael Leiter, current Director of the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center[31], President of Volume 113[32]
    Other Government Officials

    Preeta D. Bansal, former New York State Solicitor General, served as Supervising Editor[33]
    Allan Gotlieb, former Canadian Ambassador to the United States[34]
    Eliot Spitzer, former New York Governor[35]




    Academics

    Derek Bok, former Harvard University President[36]
    Kingman Brewster, late Yale University President, served as Law Review Treasurer[37]
    Charles Hamilton Houston, former Dean of Howard University Law School and NAACP Litigation Director[38]
    Harold Koh, Dean of Yale Law School[39]
    David Leebron, President of Rice University, served as Law Review President[40]
    William C. Powers, President of University of Texas, served as Managing editor[41]
    John Sexton, President of New York University[42]




    Writers and Journalists

    Archibald MacLeish, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet[43]
    Jeffrey Toobin, print and broadcast journalist[44]
    Other Alumni/ae

    Nadine Strossen, former American Civil Liberties Union President[45]
     
    #14     Apr 29, 2009
  5. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    B I N G O !
     
    #15     Apr 29, 2009
  6. reg

    reg

    Maybe you should have left out Alger Hiss and Eliot Spitzer to spruce up your list a bit.
    Did you just copy and paste from Wikipedia without reading it first? :D
     
    #16     Apr 29, 2009
  7. Shagi

    Shagi

    Go long tissue manufacturing stocks - sob here and a sob there - we are running out & its gonna be a long 4yeras!!!!:D
     
    #17     Apr 29, 2009
  8. That Editors position is just a political thing anyway. Had Barryella been White he would wouldn't have been named as Editor, in fact, he would never have gotten into school.
     
    #18     Apr 29, 2009
  9. Definitely. George W. Bush is probably the smartest President we have had in the White House, ever. Nixon may have come close to GWB in terms of IQ. Nobody seems to get it that GWB was putting on a big act to make people underestimate him. Look how that worked out for Saddam Hussein!

    Obama got into Harvard because he's black. He failed all his courses but they graduated him anyhow because that's what they do. That bullshit position he had, editor of the Harvard Law Review or whatever, was a fucking joke. The guy probably has an IQ of less than 90. Unreal that he is in the White House. His wife is apparently illiterate as well, the permanent staff there are saying that she can't read the signs in the White House.

    Don't forget that Obama has direct links to Africa and was around when the HIV virus first came here. You think that's a coincidence? You think it's a coincidence that they found military explosive in the wreckage of Building 7?

    Yeah, I thought so.
     
    #19     Apr 29, 2009