Radical Left handing votes to Mac

Discussion in 'Politics' started by CaptainObvious, Sep 4, 2008.

  1. Quote from JWS11:

    "Just another coward, I knew it! :D"

    LOL JWS11. I know for a fact that I would eat you alive if it came for us to face each other.

    Rant away bro..Rant away.
     
    #41     Sep 10, 2008
  2. JWS11

    JWS11

    Delusional too --- LMAO :D :D
     
    #42     Sep 10, 2008
  3. Obama brought a knife to a gun fight this past week. Mac is gunning him down on every issue.
    It's amazing how much damage the radical left has inflicted on Obama this past week. They managed to insult and piss off women day after day. They have insulted every person in rural America. Seniors are furious at the implication that they are too old to think for themselves.
    Mac is coming in at tree top level with a full load of napalm. Smells like victory! Run lefties...RUN!
     
    #43     Sep 10, 2008
  4. CaptionOblivious speaks!

    no one listens! :eek:

    story of her life!
     
    #44     Sep 10, 2008
  5. Yannis

    Yannis

    IMAO: Lipstick on an Obama

    "I don't know about the McCain campaign making such a big deal about the "lipstick" comment. They already have an ad about,

    http://it.youtube.com/watch?v=yZd_Y...masmedia.com/instapundit/archives2/024114.php

    and I'm afraid of them looking thin-skinned. Palin should have just come out and said, "Yeah, Obama is a douche. What are you gonna do about it?" Or she could have come back with a joke of her own:

    "What do you get when you put lipstick on an Obama? A damn ugly transvestite. I mean, have you seen that guy's ears? He looks like a Ferengi."

    Now, many people think the "lipstick on a pig" was not meant as an insult directed toward Palin as it is a common colloquialism and Obama is kinda stupid. If you watch the video, Obama is lacking a teleprompter and sounds like his usual befuddled self. When he says the line and the audience, interpreting it as a an attack on Palin, start cheering wildly, Obama just has the childlike grin of non-comprehension on his face. He's just a little guy in a big campaign, so let's not be too harsh on him."

    :) :) :)
     
    #45     Sep 10, 2008
  6. Of course he wasn't referring to Palin. That's what makes this so much fun. This kind of silliness is the result of the thought and speech police. And where did they originate? The radical left college professors, thats where. They were the ones who had everyone watching every single word. They were the ones who were looking to be offended. They are the ones responsible for all the bullshit that permeates our society. NOW, the worm has turned and they must eat their own shit. How does it taste lefties? Choke on it you stupid fucks, you deserve it.

     
    #46     Sep 10, 2008
  7. Yannis

    Yannis

    OBAMA VS. OBAMA

    By DICK MORRIS

    "Now that the conventions are over, it is evident that the battle of John McCain is over (McCain won) and the battle of Barack Obama will determine the outcome of the election.

    Now that McCain has definitively, and I suspect irreversibly, separated himself from Bush, he has become an acceptable alternative to Obama for voters seeking change. The question now is whether Obama’s extra quotient of change — or the different direction that change will take — is worth the risk of electing him.

    Obama was wrong to invest so much in the Bush-McCain linkage. Any candidate can define himself at his convention. And if McCain chose, as he did, to use the gathering to distance himself from Washington and from the Bush administration, there was really nothing that Obama could do to stop him. He should have focused very specifically on McCain himself and taken shots at specific votes and bills that he introduced.

    Now, after the massive exposure McCain got at his convention and the demonstrable commitment to change embodied in the selection of Sarah Palin, it is too late.

    The Obama campaign doesn’t seem to get that it is running against McCain, not Sarah Palin. They spent the entire Republican convention and the week since attacking the vice presidential candidate. That’s like stabbing the capillaries instead of the arteries. Nobody is going to vote for or against McCain because they want Sarah Palin to be vice president of the United States, or don’t. But Palin has served, and will serve, a key purpose in illustrating and demonstrating what kind of a man John McCain is. She stands as a tribute to his desire to bring change, his willingness to cut loose from the past, and his courage in attempting innovation. No amount of criticism of Palin is going to stop that process. Obama needs to remember who his opponent is.

    Now the election will hinge on a referendum on Obama. Is the extra healthcare coverage he would pass worth the huge tax increases he will impose? Nobody buys his claim that he will only increase taxes on a few rich people and give the rest of us tax cuts. Voters can add, and they realize that his spending plans and tax-cut promises come to a trillion dollars and that his tax increases represent only one-tenth as much. They know that everyone who pays taxes will end up paying more if Obama is elected. The question will be: Is it worth it?

    Is his commitment to income redistribution and increasing tax “fairness” worth the risk his tax plans pose for the economy?

    Is his plan to pull out of Iraq and his commitment to multilateralism in foreign policy worth the risk of putting someone with virtually no foreign policy experience in charge of our international relations in the middle of a war? Is his promise to respect the Constitution and ratchet back the intrusions of the Bush homeland security measures worth the extra risk of terror attack?

    The answer to these questions will only partially depend on what Obama is proposing and on how sound we think his judgment is. They will also depend on the events that will transpire between now and Election Day. If Iran moves closer to getting nuclear weapons or Israel attacks Iran to forestall that development, things could change in a hurry. If the current atmosphere of economic uncertainty and impending possible crisis — signaled by the federal takeover of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae — deepens, it may make voters less willing to risk the high taxes and big spending that Obama will bring in his wake. If Russia continues to assert its imperial right to dominate Eastern Europe and restore a Soviet-style satellite empire, voters will wonder if they can take a chance on Obama.

    But if things are relatively peaceful and uneventful, voters may bristle at the stagnation and turn to Obama in the hopes of change.

    The key point is that this race is now not about Bush or McCain or Clinton or Palin. It’s all about Obama."
     
    #47     Sep 10, 2008
  8. cuz69

    cuz69

    Regardless of whether he was talking about Palin or not(and I don't think he was) and I can't stand him...

    Palin is obviously deeply imbedded in what that man calls a brain.
    Way to go Sarah!
     
    #48     Sep 10, 2008
  9. Mercor

    Mercor

    Lipstick on an Obama
    Palin could have come back with a joke of her own

    It would take a Goverment agency to find all the lipstick needed to do Obama's lips?

    Look at Bush's favorable ratings it has gone up 5 points(33) since Palin. If he gets close to 40 by November look for republican
    improvment in the other races
     
    #49     Sep 10, 2008