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View Poll Results: Who will take the White House? | |||
Obama | 151 | 68.95% | |
McCain | 63 | 28.77% | |
Surprise? (Maybe Mr. Trout?) | 5 | 2.28% | |
Voters: 219. You may not vote on this poll |
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07-20-2008, 04:51 PM | #501 |
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Axxon, libertarian principles and policies would be all over the spectrum - with some positions further right than the Rep. I can understand how one can equate libertarians with conservatism since one of the key points is anti-socialism (i.e., smaller government, oppose government bureacracy and taxes). But I try to balance that in advocating personal responsibilites and promoting private charity. I have always been anti-union and do support freer trade, so I guess that can be a conservative position, but I also have taken a stand against the Patriot Act and against nation-building (i.e., stupid govt. misappropriations and incompetence), apart from me talking in historical perspectives.
I can see why those that are left-leaning would lump libertarians into the conservative broad-brush but I think that is unfortunate since everyone has come to identify conservatism with Bush2, Rush and their ilk. Those that are right-leaning accuse libertarians of being irrelevant and anti-patriots while we fight for security and strong defense build-ups. They are hypocrites in that they employ the same tactics used in other War on [stuff] but pretend that what they do is better government. I do support fighting terrorism but also believe in an nonintervention foreign policy (and removing many troops from foreign soils). That is also at odds with some groups that believe we should be the world's enforcers. However, you mentioned my thread from a while back on libertarianism and I have to revisit that to better frame my arguments. I can understand now why anti-socialistic positions can be construed as conservative in the age of oppositional/black&white politics but there's more to it than that and I need to emphasize the positive differences more. As far as the short-term (i.e., the upcoming election), I can certainly understand the need to change away from what we are doing - I have mentioned that numerous times as in history repeating itself. But I have an idea of what Congress is waiting to do and that bothers me. Obama with a better foreign policy and working more with other leaders will be a good thing, or at least interesting to see. However, whatever mandates the Dems will feel they have, or what bi-partisanships will do, can only mean more of the things that libertarians will be against. |
07-20-2008, 04:56 PM | #502 |
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I'm glad that we can agree on the fact that few educated people from either party are taking the cover for more than it is. I just think it's a mistake to categorize the cover as showcasing stereotypes or beliefs of the entire right wing all at once. Sure, no liberal is going to even think those things of Obama and of course it's a jab at alleged right wing stereotypes. I just take issue with the implication, at least in this thread, that all right wingers stereotype Obama (if you're going to disagree with him, do it over the issues, not stereotypes) and think any and all of those stereotypes on the cover are actually true. I'm not saying you said that, Axxon, but it seems to be the general sentiment here and elsewhere in the media. It's always wrong to paint a party or political philosophy in such broad strokes.
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07-20-2008, 05:54 PM | #503 | |
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It can be useful though to do so. It can tend to keep a group of people honest and marginalize their own fringe. If enough right leaners condemn this sort of thing so they're not "guilty by association" maybe they can begin to educate their fringe into thinking about the candidates and the issues. We can only hope. This is really an extremely important election and it behooves everyone who's going to bother to vote to really consider who they're voting for and why and not give up that responsibility to others.
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07-20-2008, 06:06 PM | #504 |
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07-20-2008, 06:13 PM | #505 | |
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Bucc,
I had never really equated libertarian with republican until the time of that conversation. I don't know where the idea came from and it probably wasn't you but I didn't know very much about the party before then and took some time to get to know it and that concept came from that activity. It seemed to me that ( very roughly speaking ) the libertarians were spun out of the republican party because the core ideals of that party ( smaller government, personal responsibility ect ) were only given lip service by that party. I found this on the wiki under left libertarianism and I found it interesting. Quote:
I don't believe this but I believe precisely that since we allow private ownership of resources that we owe it as a society to see that the resources needed for survival, specifically food, shelter and clothing are available to those that need them so no citizen needs for these basic necessities they no longer can freely get due to the principle of ownership. I don't know what that view makes me but I had a great time defending the position on usenet many many moons ago. It seems that the europeans agreed with me and the americans hated it. No one called it socialist though but we weren't that label minded then. It'd be interesting if that view fit somehow into the libertarian ideal though because I do agree with quite a few of their positions as shown on the wiki but I strongly believe that it's a governmental responsibility, if they defend private ownership to ensure the most needed resources are available to those who don't own them and I'm not willing to give those specific responsibilities to private charity.
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07-20-2008, 06:14 PM | #506 | |
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I know, but since who ever wins is going to claim a mandate I'd like it to at least be a well thought out one.
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07-20-2008, 06:21 PM | #507 | |
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It's kinda a seque but here's one of my favorite examples of people not thinking their positions through. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uk6t_tdOkwo
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07-20-2008, 06:24 PM | #508 |
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Axxon, I think the left libertarian and right libertarian thing is interesting. I am still learning more about but overall I think it points to a different way/mindset than what is promoted by the traditional parties. I think both tenets have some great ideas and all we need are: 1) grassroots efforts to get like-minded individuals in the various legislative branches and 2) a charismatic, likeable leader promoting such values. I have always believe that is doesn't have to be a third-party for either party can take up these values if they can shake their niche special interests. Sen. Proxmire did this to some extent within the Dem party and Ron Paul with the Rep party. It's the caucasing and oppositional politics that tends to kill any alternate thinkings and marginlizes such different approaches to policies, since they do not conform to compartmentalization we like to place everything in.
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07-20-2008, 06:30 PM | #509 | |
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Interesting. I certainly think that if there's room for my ideas within a framework that I already more or less agree with that this is a party I should learn more about. Of course, what your last point was that 80% of the voters wouldn't get it.
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07-20-2008, 06:30 PM | #510 | |
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That's part of the 80% and there's still a lot of single-issue voters, from all points of the political spectrum. Anti-abortionists are no different than the abolitionists of old, or the "most important issue" environmental, terrorism, race, military, union voters of today. Like I started off in my earlier post, the choice is either A or B or neither, not A or B with qualifiers. |
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07-20-2008, 06:38 PM | #511 | |
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It's interesting because Ron Paul is someone who resonated with me and in some ways I'm glad he didn't win the nomination because my desire not to vote republican this time would have been severely tested had he been the nominee and I wouldn't like to have to make the decision ( if his positions held up to scrutiny ) between him and Obama but it would have been a time when I wouldn't have minded losing so much either way. I don't think there's been an election in my lifetime, including those I was too young to understand at the time, that I could say that. I could say it about Kennedy Nixon though but I wasn't born yet.
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07-22-2008, 09:15 AM | #512 | |
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Time: Never Underestimate McCain, But...
Excerpt: Quote:
New Polls: Alaska: Obama=40% McCain=45% Rasmussen Georgia Obama=39% McCain=48% Rasmussen Michigan Obama=43% McCain=41% EPIC-MRA New Hampshire Obama=46% McCain=43% U. of New Hampshire Mostly good news for McCain. While it's not good for McCain that Obama's within 5 in Alaska, he's certainly keeping it close in Michigan & New Hampshire, which were two Kerry states. We continue to see Georgia polled a lot, I think because pollsters think it would be fun to see Bob Barr play spoiler. |
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07-22-2008, 09:48 AM | #513 | |
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I have to think that's an overstated hope, since a large number of those who might have been Barr supporters at some time in the past have pretty much reached the conclusion that he's flipped his lid in the past couple of years. And that's just the one's who had any idea who he was/is in the first place. I just can't see him being enough of a factor to be a difference maker even in his home state.
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07-22-2008, 12:12 PM | #514 | |
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McCain refers to Czechoslovakia again (a country that ceased to exist in 1993). He's done this repeatedly since 1994, even to the point that George W. Bush pointed it out in debates in 2000.
Then there's this: Quote:
Iraq & Pakistan do not share a border. As previously noted, he continues to mix up Shiites and Sunnis. In conclusion, McCain's not doing his "foreign policy credentials" a lot of good. |
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07-22-2008, 07:43 PM | #515 |
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It will be interesting to see if McCain and Obama will actually have a legitimate debate (where they can actually question one another, rather than tee up on softballs from moderators).
McCain has stuck to his guns about the surge working and "winning" in Iraq (equating Obama's pull out plans to "losing"). I would like to hear some substance on these two issues from McCain. For example, on a surge, is it really that surprising that adding unlimited supplies/dollars/manpower would improve things? And, what exactly does "winning" in Iraq entail? |
07-22-2008, 09:27 PM | #516 |
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Forget about Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as McCain's VP. It looks like she's going to be under investigation for pressuring the police commissioner to fire a trooper who was divorcing Palin's sister at the time.
Apparently the local GOP and right-wing radio are even calling for investigations. The Alaska GOP now has problems with Governor Sarah Palin, Senator Ted "FBI Investigation, Internet Tubes & Bridge to Nowhere" Stevens and Rep. Don "I take bribes" Young, so maybe the state will be in play anyway. It looks like Stevens' Senate seat and Young's Congressional seat (Alaska's only one) are good Democratic targets, at least. |
07-22-2008, 09:34 PM | #517 | |
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McCain must be tired of losing all this week's airtime to Obama, so he's decided to agree with Obama & Iraq's prime minister Al-Maliki about withdrawing troops from Iraq:
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07-22-2008, 10:27 PM | #518 | |
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A blow to her. I thought she has some real qualities, and in a way, is the anti-Hillary. Now, regardless of the outcome, she will take a hit. |
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07-22-2008, 10:58 PM | #519 | |
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The other side of the Palin story can be found here:
http://community.adn.com/adn/node/127543 This part, I'm assuming, is about the trooper divorcing Palin's sister. Quote:
It also sounds like the local GOP and talk radio might be calling for investigations to clear Palin's name, not because they believe the fired DPS chief.
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07-23-2008, 06:52 AM | #520 |
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07-23-2008, 08:50 AM | #521 | |
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This isn't that much of a surprise, is it? From what I've gathered, the trend was expected to be a big early lead for Obama with that lead shrinking, then getting a boost from the Dem. convention, followed by another McCain surge during the Repub. convention. |
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07-23-2008, 09:00 AM | #522 | |
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I don't know if it was generally expected or not. I figured that it was inevitable. I actually think that during at least one point between now and November McCain will have a better than even chance of winning (even if it is right after the GOP convention). I keep coming back to the 2004 election. The closeness of Ohio masked the fact that Bush won solidly across the board. A lot of this country either wants to vote Republican or wants to vote anti-Democrat. It will be hard for Obama to overcome that. |
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07-23-2008, 09:05 AM | #523 |
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It's very hard to know where Ohio stands. In two days their were two polls, one Obama +8 and one McCain +10, both from reputable polling firms.
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07-23-2008, 09:17 AM | #524 | |
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IMO, you can take those result and basically understand that it's a toss-up state, which shouldn't be a surprise to anyone. |
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07-23-2008, 09:35 AM | #525 | |
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If you go over to the KTVA website (a local TV station, apparently), it's a much different story. Do we have anyone from Alaska on FOFC? Anyway, must have been one heck of a messy divorce.... |
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07-23-2008, 09:59 AM | #526 |
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07-23-2008, 10:04 AM | #527 | |
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I have always said it was going to be close. Yes, there will be a lot of Rep and anit-Dem voters, just liike a lot of Dem and tons of anti-Rep voters. Both candidates have some big negatives going against to the general population and as usual, it will come down to turnout. For those on the left and right, there will be a lot of "hold your nose" and vote, just like in 2004, because they just don't want the other guy to win. However, independents may play a bigger role this time, if they can get excited about either one. |
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07-23-2008, 10:24 AM | #528 | |
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Over at 538 there's a post about the demographics, but his analysis of the internals didn't find enough difference to explain an 18 point spread. This far out it doesn't really matter, but at least one of these polling firms is completely out to lunch.
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07-23-2008, 10:54 AM | #529 | |
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In theory, couldn't this ultimately be a case of where the "truth" is about halfway between the two points and that both ended up with somewhat fluky swings in their results? Basically that they both missed the mark in opposite directions by the maximum amount. I didn't look at it all that closely, what's the combined margin for error of the two differing polls? Point being, maybe neither are completely out to lunch but rather both just headed out the door toward lunch?
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07-23-2008, 02:02 PM | #530 | |
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McCain's chummy relationship with the press might be fading (as it's replaced by the media's collective swoon over Obama). From NEWSWEEK:
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07-23-2008, 02:44 PM | #531 | |
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And after all of that, there will likely be another wildcard on election day (as we saw in the Democratic primaries). That's when the person goes into the privacy of the election booth and casts their ballot, instead of verbally responding to a pollster. |
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07-24-2008, 08:59 AM | #532 |
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New Polls:
Florida Obama=46% McCain=45% Rasmussen Minnesota Obama=49% McCain=37% Rasmussen New Jersey Obama=50% McCain=36% Monmouth U No surprise in MN or NJ. Florida's a statistical dead heat. |
07-24-2008, 10:49 AM | #533 | |
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Poll
5 a: a questioning or canvassing of persons selected at random or by quota to obtain information or opinions to be analyzed |
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07-24-2008, 10:57 AM | #534 | |
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Perhaps I should have explained further, as I was referring to the fairly consistent trend of Obama's actual vote numbers underperforming his poll numbers during the primary. It appears that some people are willing to say that they'll vote for him if polled, but not when they actually cast their ballot in the privacy of the election booth. |
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07-24-2008, 12:04 PM | #535 |
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I think he's saying that people are less likely to vote for a black guy than they are to say they'll vote for one over the telephone.
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07-24-2008, 01:38 PM | #536 | ||
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In what's been an absolutely terrible week for McCain, his foreign policy gaffes continued with his complete blunder on the history of the "Surge".
In a CBS interview on Tuesday: Quote:
Unfortunately, there's plenty of historical evidence to show that the Anbar Awakening started well before the surge. In fact, the Colonel MacFarland that McCain refers to is on record as describing the Anbar Awakening as early as September, 2006, which is months before the Surge was announced or Petraeus was even in-country to lead the Surge. So that's pretty bad - McCain can't even remember what's happened in Iraq in the past two years. It gets worse, though. That sheik the surge "protected", mentioned by McCain above? Well, he was killed by Al-Qaeda during the surge. McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds: Quote:
So... yeah.... Makes Jindal removing his name from VP contention and McCain cancelling an oil rig photo op due to an oil spill on the Mississippi (all this week!) look like small potatoes. |
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07-24-2008, 03:20 PM | #537 | |
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You can take a look at the average margin of error for all of the different pollsters and decide for yourself which polls to trust. The reason a poll is off doesn't make a damn bit of difference. FiveThirtyEight.com: Electoral Projections Done Right: Pollster Ratings, v3.1.1 |
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07-24-2008, 03:47 PM | #538 | |
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Somewhat rhetorically I wonder ... could even 1 of 10 Americans put say half of 10 significant events in Iraq in the proper timeline? Could 1 of 10 Congressmen? My bet would be no, which means this might be more talking point for the already convinced than influential on anyone who might change their mind.
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07-24-2008, 04:29 PM | #539 |
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I think what Vic was talking about is the so-called Bradley effect where people are less likely to vote for the opposite race than they claim. However, some recent studies on that have shown the gap between polled and actual has shrunk to be statistically insignificant over the past twenty years.
Of course we've never had such a high profile minority candidate, so who knows what will happen this year.
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07-24-2008, 05:05 PM | #540 | |
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However most people aren't running for president on the credentials that they know how to handle Iraq. |
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07-24-2008, 05:17 PM | #541 |
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god forbid we hold people in office to a higher standard than the average person. (shrug)
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07-24-2008, 05:29 PM | #542 |
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You guys are missing JIMGA's point. You are saying that McCain's gaffe operates as a negative that should cause people to consider voting against him. And you are right. It does. This kind of misunderstanding, by someone who has every incentive to know this stuff backwards and forwards, demonstrates that McCain lacks the basic skill set to deal with Iraq.
But that isn't Jon's point. Jon is pointing out that that to the average American, this will seem like an easy mistake. Something that they need explained to them in depth before they can even see why McCain was wrong. People (who we should not overestimate) won't ever get to the "Wait, just because I don't know about this does not mean that McCain should not know about this." Their brains will shut off as soon as people start talking about timelines of events about which they never knew. It lacks the punch of "John McCain can't find Iraq on a map" or some other such gaffe that would resonnate (sp?) with folks. (I note, of course, that the average American can't find Iraq on a map, either. But s/he thinks that s/he can. And it makes an easy soundbite that is hard to spin away. That would make the difference.) This--just noise and wonk. |
07-24-2008, 05:48 PM | #543 |
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we ought to do something about the border between Iraq and Afghanistan, LOL
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07-24-2008, 05:54 PM | #544 |
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The question is when does a "Gaffe" become something that's actually relevant to the campaign. I don't care about McCain referencing Checkoslvakia or getting his events mixed up.
Just like I'm not concerned about Obama's claim that he's "visited 57 states", or that he referred to the Senate Banking Committee as "his Committee" (when he's not actually on that committee), or when he referenced the "President of Canada", or that the Burma typhoon "may have killed 100 million people" (closer to 100,000). Barack Obama not so sure what Senate committee he's on | Top of the Ticket | Los Angeles Times These guys say lots of shit every day, some of it is bound to be wrong - McCain will be judged far more harshly than Obama though, because of his age. Last edited by molson : 07-24-2008 at 06:11 PM. |
07-24-2008, 05:58 PM | #545 |
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All I know, is that the last time a "Messiah" ran for president, we ended up with Jimmy Carter. Don't care to repeat that one. Holding my nose and voting for McCain...if I vote, that is.
Last edited by SFL Cat : 07-24-2008 at 05:59 PM. |
07-24-2008, 07:14 PM | #546 |
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albionmoonlight - thanks for taking a stab at trying to explain what I was getting at. You did about as good a job as I could have & I'm the guy who said it in the first place.
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07-24-2008, 07:24 PM | #547 |
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Obama's speech in Berlin. Worth watching. |
07-24-2008, 07:24 PM | #548 | ||
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I have managed to avoid this thread so far, but I feel it is my patriotic duty to throw in a vote for trout. One of those singing fish that you can put on the wall, leave alone for awhile, and it is still singing when you come back.
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07-24-2008, 07:35 PM | #549 |
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Can't open it now. Was President Putin of Germany there?
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07-24-2008, 07:58 PM | #550 |
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He did talk about Russia's shadow a bit.
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