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Very Hot Topic (More than 100 Replies) Presidential Candidates (Read 103054 times)
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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #75 - Jan 21st, 2008 at 3:03pm
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Pfft, I aintz got times to worry bout no grammerz.


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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #76 - Jan 23rd, 2008 at 4:37am
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Richardson raising money to retire debt

By BARRY MASSEY, Associated Press Writer Tue Jan 22, 7:15 PM ET

SANTA FE - Gov. Bill Richardson is gone from the Democratic presidential race, but he's still raising money: to retire a campaign debt.
ADVERTISEMENT

His campaign e-mailed supporters Tuesday with an appeal for money.

"Will you please make one final contribution to my campaign so we can officially 'zero out' that debt," said the governor's request.

Richardson has said he raised about $22 million for his campaign.

Amanda Cooper, who was Richardson's deputy campaign manager, said no debt figure would be released until the campaign filed a report with the Federal Election Commission at the end of the month. The report will disclose contributions and expenditures during the final three months of 2007, and reflect the campaign's finances through the end of the year.

Because Richardson's fundraising is for the presidency, his latest appeal does not violate a state ban on campaign fundraising during the legislative session.

State law prohibits lobbyists from giving money to the governor and gubernatorial candidates from Jan. 1 through the 20th day after adjournment of the Legislature. State law also prohibits the governor from soliciting contributions during that time.

Federal law governs fundraising for the presidency, according to state Attorney General Gary King's office.


If this isn't a great example of what Democrats want to do with everyone.  Spend more than you have and leave it to the average jane and joe to make up the difference.

This is called irony right here.

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #77 - Jan 23rd, 2008 at 8:32am
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I would do the same thing I did when Mich Tech sent me the letter asking for more money.  I would laugh and say, "sucks to be you."
  
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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #78 - Jan 26th, 2008 at 4:54pm
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTxY8DU16v8&feature=related



yaaaay, politics.


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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #79 - Jan 27th, 2008 at 2:32pm
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That was the saddest video ever...
  

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #80 - Feb 5th, 2008 at 9:25am
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AHHH I AGREE WITH SHAUN HANNITY!!!!!

http://hotair.com/archives/2008/02/04/hannity-to-pro-obama-luntz-focus-group-nam...

AHHH!!!! I THINK HE ASKED A GREAT QUESTION!!!!!

EDIT - Here's also a great clip of Bizzoro McCain - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPyKpcivQYQ&eurl=http://www.antiwar.com/blog/2008...

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #81 - Feb 12th, 2008 at 5:09pm
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Check out this lovely screen grab of an interview at Obama's Houston headquarters.  It's nice to know that Obama is flying a Cuban flag with Che frickin' Guevara on it.

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #82 - Feb 12th, 2008 at 6:50pm
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Che has become the McDonalds' arch of our generation.  People wear and fly the stuff with him on it and have no clue what he stood for other than rebellion.

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #83 - Feb 13th, 2008 at 8:48am
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Yeah, I can't help but to cringe every time I see some skater punk wearing a t-shirt with a picture of that communist idiot.  I bet most of them don't even know his name, let alone what kind of atrocities he committed during the Cuban revolution.

Great job on that revolution, by the way.  Where's Cuba now, Che?

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #84 - Feb 13th, 2008 at 4:58pm
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Quote:
www.familysecuritymatters.org/challenges.php?id=1386596
Cliff Kincaid

A nice-sounding bill called the “Global Poverty Act,” sponsored by Democratic presidential candidate and Senator Barack Obama, is up for a Senate vote on Thursday and could result in the imposition of a global tax on the United States. The bill, which has the support of many liberal religious groups, makes levels of U.S. foreign aid spending subservient to the dictates of the United Nations.

Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has not endorsed either Senator Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton in the presidential race. But on Thursday, February 14, he is trying to rush Obama’s “Global Poverty Act” (S.2433) through his committee. The legislation would commit the U.S. to spending 0.7 percent of gross national product on foreign aid, which amounts to a phenomenal 13-year total of $845 billion over and above what the U.S. already spends.

The bill, which is item number four on the committee’s business meeting agenda, passed the House by a voice vote last year because most members didn’t realize what was in it. Congressional sponsors have been careful not to calculate the amount of foreign aid spending that it would require. According to the website of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, no hearings have been held on the Obama bill in that body.

A release from the Obama Senate office about the bill declares, “In 2000, the U.S. joined more than 180 countries at the United Nations Millennium Summit and vowed to reduce global poverty by 2015. We are halfway towards this deadline, and it is time the United States makes it a priority of our foreign policy to meet this goal and help those who are struggling day to day.”

The legislation itself requires the President “to develop and implement a comprehensive strategy to further the United States foreign policy objective of promoting the reduction of global poverty, the elimination of extreme global poverty, and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goal of reducing by one-half the proportion of people worldwide, between 1990 and 2015, who live on less than $1 per day.”

The bill defines the term “Millennium Development Goals” as the goals set out in the United Nations Millennium Declaration, General Assembly Resolution 55/2 (2000).

The U.N. says that “The commitment to provide 0.7% of gross national product (GNP) as official development assistance was first made 35 years ago in a General Assembly resolution, but it has been reaffirmed repeatedly over the years, including at the 2002 global Financing for Development conference in Monterrey, Mexico. However, in 2004, total aid from the industrialized countries totaled just $78.6 billion—or about 0.25% of their collective GNP.”

In addition to seeking to eradicate poverty, that declaration commits nations to banning “small arms and light weapons” and ratifying a series of treaties, including the International Criminal Court Treaty, the Kyoto Protocol (global warming treaty), the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The Millennium Declaration also affirms the U.N. as “the indispensable common house of the entire human family, through which we will seek to realize our universal aspirations for peace, cooperation and development.”

Jeffrey Sachs, who runs the U.N.’s “Millennium Project,” says that the U.N. plan to force the U.S. to pay 0.7 percent of GNP in increased foreign aid spending would add $65 billion a year to what the U.S. already spends. Over a 13-year period, from 2002, when the U.N.’s Financing for Development conference was held, to the target year of 2015, when the U.S. is expected to meet the “Millennium Development Goals,” this amounts to $845 billion. And the only way to raise that kind of money, Sachs has written, is through a global tax, preferably on carbon-emitting fossil fuels.

Obama’s bill has only six co-sponsors. They are Senators Maria Cantwell, Dianne Feinstein, Richard Lugar, Richard Durbin, Chuck Hagel and Robert Menendez. But it appears that Biden and Obama see passage of this bill as a way to highlight Democratic Party priorities in the Senate.

The House version (H.R. 1302), sponsored by Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), had only 84 co-sponsors before it was suddenly brought up on the House floor last September 25 and was passed by voice vote. House Republicans were caught off-guard, unaware that the pro-U.N. measure committed the U.S. to spending hundreds of billions of dollars.

It appears the Senate version is being pushed not only by Biden and Obama, a member of the committee, but Lugar, the ranking Republican member. Lugar has worked with Obama in the past to promote more foreign aid for Russia, supposedly to stem nuclear proliferation, and has become Obama’s mentor. Like Biden, Lugar is a globalist. They have both promoted passage of the U.N.’s Law of the Sea Treaty, for example.

The so-called “Lugar-Obama initiative” was modeled after the Nunn-Lugar program, also known as the Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program, which was designed to eliminate weapons of mass destruction in the former Soviet Union. But one defense analyst, Rich Kelly, noted evidence that “CTR funds have eased the Russian military’s budgetary woes, freeing resources for such initiatives as the war in Chechnya and defense modernization.” He recommended that Congress “eliminate CTR funding so that it does not finance additional, perhaps more threatening, programs in the former Soviet Union.” However, over $6 billion has already been spent on the program.

Another program modeled on Nunn-Lugar, the Initiatives for Proliferation Prevention (IPP), was recently exposed as having funded nuclear projects in Iran through Russia.

More foreign aid through passage of the Global Poverty Act was identified as one of the strategic goals of InterAction, the alliance of U.S-based international non-governmental organizations that lobbies for more foreign aid. The group is heavily financed by the U.S. Government, having received $1.4 million from taxpayers in fiscal year 2005 and $1.7 million in 2006. However, InterAction recently issued a report accusing the United States of “falling short on its commitment to rid the world of dire poverty by 2015 under the U.N. Millennium Development Goals…”

It’s not clear what President Bush would do if the bill passes the Senate. The bill itself quotes Bush as declaring that “We fight against poverty because opportunity is a fundamental right to human dignity.” Bush’s former top aide, Michael J. Gerson, writes in his new book, Heroic Conservatism, that Bush should be remembered as the President who “sponsored the largest percentage increases in foreign assistance since the Marshall Plan…”

Even these increases, however, will not be enough to satisfy the requirements of the Obama bill. A global tax will clearly be necessary to force American taxpayers to provide the money.



Obama's priority is to give more of our money away to the UN with no strings attached?  At least when we dole out money to other nations individually, we have some level of expectation of return on our investment.

This guy is off his rocker.

-b0b
(...bets Hillary will try to one-up him.)
  

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #85 - Feb 14th, 2008 at 9:04am
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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #86 - Feb 14th, 2008 at 10:50am
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Quote:
In election 2008, don’t forget Angry White Man
Gary Hubbell
February 9, 2008

There is a great amount of interest in this year’s presidential elections, as everybody seems to recognize that our next president has to be a lot better than George Bush. The Democrats are riding high with two groundbreaking candidates — a woman and an African-American — while the conservative Republicans are in a quandary about their party’s nod to a quasi-liberal maverick, John McCain.

Each candidate is carefully pandering to a smorgasbord of special-interest groups, ranging from gay, lesbian and transgender people to children of illegal immigrants to working mothers to evangelical Christians.

There is one group no one has recognized, and it is the group that will decide the election: the Angry White Man. The Angry White Man comes from all economic backgrounds, from dirt-poor to filthy rich. He represents all geographic areas in America, from urban sophisticate to rural redneck, deep South to mountain West, left Coast to Eastern Seaboard.

His common traits are that he isn’t looking for anything from anyone — just the promise to be able to make his own way on a level playing field. In many cases, he is an independent businessman and employs several people. He pays more than his share of taxes and works hard.

The victimhood syndrome buzzwords — “disenfranchised,” “marginalized” and “voiceless” — don’t resonate with him. “Press ‘one’ for English” is a curse-word to him. He’s used to picking up the tab, whether it’s the company Christmas party, three sets of braces, three college educations or a beautiful wedding.

He believes the Constitution is to be interpreted literally, not as a “living document” open to the whims and vagaries of a panel of judges who have never worked an honest day in their lives.

The Angry White Man owns firearms, and he’s willing to pick up a gun to defend his home and his country. He is willing to lay down his life to defend the freedom and safety of others, and the thought of killing someone who needs killing really doesn’t bother him.

The Angry White Man is not a metrosexual, a homosexual or a victim. Nobody like him drowned in Hurricane Katrina — he got his people together and got the hell out, then went back in to rescue those too helpless and stupid to help themselves, often as a police officer, a National Guard soldier or a volunteer firefighter.

His last name and religion don’t matter. His background might be Italian, English, Polish, German, Slavic, Irish, or Russian, and he might have Cherokee, Mexican, or Puerto Rican mixed in, but he considers himself a white American.

He’s a man’s man, the kind of guy who likes to play poker, watch football, hunt white-tailed deer, call turkeys, play golf, spend a few bucks at a strip club once in a blue moon, change his own oil and build things. He coaches baseball, soccer and football teams and doesn’t ask for a penny. He’s the kind of guy who can put an addition on his house with a couple of friends, drill an oil well, weld a new bumper for his truck, design a factory and publish books. He can fill a train with 100,000 tons of coal and get it to the power plant on time so that you keep the lights on and never know what it took to flip that light switch.

Women either love him or hate him, but they know he’s a man, not a dishrag. If they’re looking for someone to walk all over, they’ve got the wrong guy. He stands up straight, opens doors for women and says “Yes, sir” and “No, ma’am.”

He might be a Republican and he might be a Democrat; he might be a Libertarian or a Green. He knows that his wife is more emotional than rational, and he guides the family in a rational manner.

He’s not a racist, but he is annoyed and disappointed when people of certain backgrounds exhibit behavior that typifies the worst stereotypes of their race. He’s willing to give everybody a fair chance if they work hard, play by the rules and learn English.

Most important, the Angry White Man is pissed off. When his job site becomes flooded with illegal workers who don’t pay taxes and his wages drop like a stone, he gets righteously angry. When his job gets shipped overseas, and he has to speak to some incomprehensible idiot in India for tech support, he simmers. When Al Sharpton comes on TV, leading some rally for reparations for slavery or some such nonsense, he bites his tongue and he remembers. When a child gets charged with carrying a concealed weapon for mistakenly bringing a penknife to school, he takes note of who the local idiots are in education and law enforcement.

He also votes, and the Angry White Man loathes Hillary Clinton. Her voice reminds him of a shovel scraping a rock. He recoils at the mere sight of her on television. Her very image disgusts him, and he cannot fathom why anyone would want her as their leader. It’s not that she is a woman. It’s that she is who she is. It’s the liberal victim groups she panders to, the “poor me” attitude that she represents, her inability to give a straight answer to an honest question, his tax dollars that she wants to give to people who refuse to do anything for themselves.

There are many millions of Angry White Men. Four million Angry White Men are members of the National Rifle Association, and all of them will vote against Hillary Clinton, just as the great majority of them voted for George Bush.

He hopes that she will be the Democratic nominee for president in 2008, and he will make sure that she gets beaten like a drum.


Wow, I couldn't have said it any better if I wrote it myself.  Bravo!

-b0b
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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #87 - Feb 14th, 2008 at 11:24am
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I'm not surprised Obama is in league with the UN...after all...his wife is a member of Council of Foreign Relations which also has as its members Cheney, both Clintons, and 80% of the staff of the last two administrations.

Quote:
  Maverick Fails The Test: McCain Votes Against Waterboarding Ban

Think Progress
Thursday February 14, 2008

Today, the Senate brought the Intelligence Authorization Bill to the floor, which contained a provision from Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) establishing one interrogation standard across the government. The bill requires the intelligence community to abide by the same standards as articulated in the Army Field Manual and bans waterboarding.

Just hours ago, the Senate voted in favor of the bill, 51-45.

Earlier today, ThinkProgress noted that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), a former prisoner of war, has spoken strongly in favor of implementing the Army Field Manual standard. When confronted today with the decision of whether to stick with his conscience or cave to the right wing, McCain chose to ditch his principles and instead vote to preserve waterboarding:

    Mr. McCain, a former prisoner of war, has consistently voiced opposition to waterboarding and other methods that critics say is a form torture. But the Republicans, confident of a White House veto, did not mount the challenge. Mr. McCain voted “no” on Wednesday afternoon.

(Article continues below)

The New York Times Times notes that “the White House has long said Mr. Bush will veto the bill, saying it ‘would prevent the president from taking the lawful actions necessary to protect Americans from attack in wartime.’”

After Bush vetoes the bill, McCain will again be confronted with a vote to either stand with President Bush or stand against torture. He indicated with his vote today where he will come down on that issue.

John McCain: He was against waterboarding before he was for it.


Ya know...a lot of people I talk to who support McCain think he's going to be a better President than Bush because he knows the "horrors of war" and might not be so quick to get involved.  Also he was a POW and supposedly knows the horrors of war.  Then we see things like him supporting torture, or calling for us to stay in Iraq for 100 years, or bombing Iran.  This guy sounds nothing like a change and it's going to be funny seeing Obama kick his tail.

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #88 - Feb 14th, 2008 at 12:08pm
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That sounds like a bunch of partisan bull.  Did McCain vote "no" because of the waterboarding addendum, or did he vote no because the rest of the bill was crap?

I hate McCain and sincerely hope he isn't the republican nominee, but I see this same kind of thing all the time.  A senator or representative votes for or against a bill, and some small segment of it is used to demonize them.  It's not fair.

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(...would love to hear McCain's explanation before the torches come out.)
  

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Re: Presidential Candidates
Reply #89 - Feb 15th, 2008 at 1:56pm
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Quote:
AI

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press

MILWAUKEE - Barack Obama said Friday that the country must do "whatever it takes" to eradicate gun violence following a campus shooting in his home state, but he believes in an individual's right to bear arms.

Obama said he spoke to Northern Illinois University's president Friday morning by phone and offered whatever help his Senate office could provide in the investigation and improving campus security. The Democratic presidential candidate spoke about the Illinois shooting to reporters while campaigning in neighboring Wisconsin.

The senator, a former constitutional law instructor, said some scholars argue the Second Amendment to the Constitution guarantees gun ownerships only to militias, but he believes it grants individual gun rights.

"I think there is an individual right to bear arms, but it's subject to commonsense regulation" like background checks, he said during a news conference.

He said he would support federal legislation based on a California law that would facilitate immediate tracing of bullets used in a crime.
He said even though the California law was passed over the strong objection of the National Rifle Association, he thinks it's the type of law that gun owners and crime victims can get behind.

Five people, including the shooter, were killed during Thursday's ambush inside a lecture hall. Authorities said the two guns used were purchased legally less then a week ago.

"Today we offer them our thoughts and prayers, but we also have to offer them our determination to do whatever it takes to eradicate this violence from our streets, from our schools, from our neighborhoods and our cities," Obama said. "That is our duty as Americans."

Although Obama supports gun control, while campaigning in gun-friendly Idaho earlier this month, he said he does not intend to take away people's guns.

At his news conference, he voiced support for the District of Columbia's ban on handguns, which is scheduled to be heard by the Supreme Court next month.

"The notion that somehow local jurisdictions can't initiate gun safety laws to deal with gang bangers and random shootings on the street isn't born out by our Constitution," Obama said.


Damn, John Kerry, which way is it?

The right to keep and bear arms is constitutionally protected, yet it is okay to completely ban handguns even in private homes?  Am I the only one that see an error in logic here?

-b0b
(...it's Flipper 2.0!)
  

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