Republicans do not have anywhere near the same number of minorities in office that democrats do Bone Bravo that they elected a few minorities and woman
I don't necessarily have a problem that she wiffed some Peruvian pink or fried up a little Acapulco gold ... but ... chewin' & gaggin' on Botswana black ... that's another story ...
Remember just a few months ago when he posted a national enquirer article which claimed that Sarah Palin didnt like black people, and didnt want her daughter living with them? I got to agree with you on this one, I dont think it hurts her image at all, anyone who would look down on someone because they did drugs, and had promiscous sex while they were in COLLEGE is not the kind of person i would want to be around. Isnt that what college is supposed to be for? Plus im not going to believe a word of this until sources and evidence comes out.
AK, honestly, take your ass-kicking like a man. Things have not gone well for you since November of 2010, and last night's results just confirmed the trend that the progressive movement is fucking dead in the water here in the United States.
You know what else i find funny about this book. This guy was obviously intentionally waiting to see if Sarah Palin would run so that he could release the book right afterwords, to steal her thunder and ruin her campaign. The author of the book got owned, big time. He just wasted three years of his life writing a book to smear an irrelevant person who isnt even running for office.
Thanks for being a stand-up guy. Now go ahead and admit that you would bang Sarah Palin - even if it was out of malice. Nasty hot primal revenge sex.
AK, a suggestion if I may: never appear more intoxicated by the Kool-Aid than those dispensing it. I mean, you are believing the spin when those in the very power structure you are promoting are far more realistic and much more sober than you: Politico Twin defeats spark Democratic fears By: Jonathan Martin and Ben Smith and Jake Sherman September 14, 2011 04:57 AM EDT HOWARD BEACH, N.Y.âThe Democratic Partyâs rare loss of a congressional seat in its urban heartland Tuesday, accompanied by a blowout defeat in a Nevada special election, marked the latest in a string of demoralizing setbacks that threatened to deepen the partyâs crisis of confidence and raise concerns about President Barack Obamaâs political fortunes. In New York, Republican Bob Turner soundly defeated Democrat David Weprin in a House contest that â in the view of party leaders, at least â featured an anemic urban machine, distracted labor unions and disloyal voters. In Nevada, a consequential state for the presidentâs reelection strategy, Democrats suffered a runaway loss rooted in a weak showing in Renoâs Washoe County, a key bellwether. Even before the polls closed, the recriminations â something short of panic, and considerably more than mere grumbling â had begun. On a high-level campaign conference call Tuesday afternoon, Democratic donors and strategists commiserated over their disappointment in Obama. A source on the call described the mood as âawful.â âPeople feel betrayed, disappointed, furious, disgusted, hopeless,â said the source. Less expansive but equally telling were the remarks of House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer, who in a conversation with reporters Tuesday morning said bluntly that Obama would take some blame for the two special election losses. âI think every election reflects on the person in charge, but do I think it is an overall statement on the president alone? No,â said Hoyer. âDo I think it will be interpreted as being a statement on Obama? Thatâs probably correct.â A senior Hill Democratic aide was more direct in attempting to explain the New York loss: âThe approval ratings for the guy at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue cratered.â A Turner consultant, Steve Goldberg, validated that assessment: âIt was all Obama â not even a thought of anything else.â The presidentâs feisty new jobs plan has probably preempted open revolt in his party â though a Bloomberg poll released Wednesday morning found that 51 percent of Americans donât believe it will help lower the unemployment rate. Senior party figures are on board with â or are at least resigned to â the White Houseâs leadership. And some Democratic insiders sought to put a better face on their diminished state â before adding that they wanted to see a tougher Obama. âLetâs face it â it has been a tough summer for Democrats,â said Jack Quinn, a top lobbyist and former White House Counsel to President Clinton. âBut I really do think that people are feeling better.â Quinn said, however, that Obama must confront the GOP. âThey didnât get the House and say, âWe want half a loaf.â Theyâve said, âwe want the whole gâââ oven,ââ he argued. âItâs time for the president to really draw some hard lines here.â Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), among the most senior House Democrats, sketched out those lines. âThe Republicans want us to repeal the 20th century, the New Deal, the Fair Deal, to turn us back to the robber barons running the country, and to eviscerate the environmental and other regulations to protect public health and safety,â said Waxman. âAnd to cut spending in ways that would be very harmful to people who rely on government.â Others welcomed the notion of a new Obama â even if message doesnât seem to have yet made its way north to New York or west to Nevada. Rep. Eliot Engel, a New York Democrat who represents parts of the Bronx and suburban New York, said the âfeisty Barack Obama, the one that we knew and loved and voted for in 2008, reappeared last week.â âI think and I hope that thatâs going to be the Obama were going to see from now to election time,â Engel said Tuesday, before dashing up to New York to help turn out Democratic voters for Weprin. But the partyâs structural weaknesses were on full display in the stunning New York defeat â the partyâs first loss of a Brooklyn or Queens congressional seat in a generation. The Queens Democratic Partyâs decision to nominate Weprin, an Orthodox Jewish member of the state Assembly who lives in another district, was driven by âthe most blatant ethnic politics,â said Mitchell Moss, a professor of urban planning at New York University. It was an old-school play that failed: Turner fought hard for Jewish votes over the issues of Israel and same-sex marriage, and Orthodox leaders were well-represented at his victory party at an Italian restaurant in Howard Beach. Much of New Yorkâs still-powerful labor movement, meanwhile, sat the race out â distracted, demoralized, and with other fish to fry. The labor-backed Working Families Party, a juggernaut in other city races, chose to put its resources Tuesday into a bitter internecine battle with the Brooklyn Democratic organization â leaving Weprin to rely on the rusting party machine. It was a nightmare scenario for Democrats that threatens to repeat itself on the national level, as major unions turn away from their traditional level of engagement. AFL-CIO leaders have talked about focusing their spending on state-level races. The giant SEIU has discussed replacing what had been an all-out campaign for Obama in 2008 with a campaign more focused on the issue of jobs. And labor union leaders in Washington watched with frustration as a heavily Democratic, pro-union, blue-collar district slipped away. âObama needs to reconnect with labor, get in the trenches with us again,â said a veteran labor official. âThere is, among my members, a sense of disconnect with him. He needs to signal to us that he is a labor champion, not just supported by labor.â And so as they eye Obamaâs reelection a year away, many Democratic leaders are taking an unexpectedly passive line. Theyâre pinning their hopes on the chance that the Republican Party nominates a figure who will, essentially, defeat him or herself. Asked who heâd like to see the Republicans nominate, Montana Democratic Governor Brian Schweitzer suggested: âSarah Palin, Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry â those would all be good ones to run against.â Ben Smith reported from Howard Beach, N.Y. Jonathan Martin and Jake Sherman reported from Washington, D.C.