MassiveAttack said:
Good... haven't you seen The Thing?
MassiveAttack said:
gcubed said:i am sure thats why Oprah didnt let her on the show. Most of these people go on shows like that with preconditions, and being a voice for women, I am sure Oprah wanted to grill her on everything, which was probably deemed off limits.
suaveric said:Ask her about spending tax payer's money on preserving the right to shoot wolves from airplanes. That will go over well I'm sure.
Would that make a difference to you?Gaborn said:Do you have a source that she actually participated in it rather than supporting an individual's right to do it?
JayDubya said:That story pisses me off both ways.
She should not have the authority to spend taxpayer money like that.
Government doesn't have the authority to say people can't do that.
I agree it was a great game....but wrong thread?? :lol_dementia said:Mars Martix was amazing. Everyone thinks I'm crazy, but I prefer playing with one button. Mash for rapid fire, press rhythmically or the shotgun blast, hold for shield and Gravity Hole Bomb.
_dementia said:Mars Martix was amazing. Everyone thinks I'm crazy, but I prefer playing with one button. Mash for rapid fire, press rhythmically or the shotgun blast, hold for shield and Gravity Hole Bomb.
minus_273 said:hmm..
McCain TV Ratings Beat Obama in Preliminary Numbers
http://www.tvweek.com/news/2008/09/mccain_tv_ratings_beat_obama_i.php
How does the town feel about this? Did she drag the little one-horse town into the big time? Is it improved? We laugh at the pictures of the "city hall" and that one street, but I've never seen a photo of the sports complex, and whatever else the money went towards. If the debt did little more than polish a turd, then it was a waste and she should be called on it, but if it really improved the town and created jobs, infrastructure, and fostered opportunity for the citizens to improve, then it was a good decision.Aaron said:A small town that's now $20 million in debt. This is the sort of 'experience' you want for a VP?
That makes no sense to me..artredis1980 said:that is actually good, the more they watch McCain and Palin, the more they will support Obama
Not really.artredis1980 said:that is actually good, the more they watch McCain and Palin, the more they will support Obama
minus_273 said:hmm..
McCain TV Ratings Beat Obama in Preliminary Numbers
http://www.tvweek.com/news/2008/09/mccain_tv_ratings_beat_obama_i.php
artredis1980 said:that is actually good, the more they watch McCain and Palin, the more they will support Obama
artredis1980 said:that is actually good, the more they watch McCain and Palin, the more they will support Obama
Bad idea.artredis1980 said:Here is my Idea for a new Ad for Obama:
Fade In
Show pictures of Obama doing community organizing
Fade out
Fade In
Show midwest farmer 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show small business owner 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a college student 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a gun totting hunter 'I am Barack Obama'
Then zoom out with first a dozen small frames, all with people saying 'I am Barack Obama', then zoom out with a 100's of small frames, all with People saying 'I am Barack Obama' and when all the image frames zoom out they make up the Full screen Image of Barack Obama saying 'I am Barack Obama and I approve this message'
Door2Dawn said:That makes no sense to me..
MassiveAttack said:Would that make a difference to you?
![]()
artredis1980 said:the more people (independents and democrats) watch palin and mccain, they more they will move to Obama. thier views will only sway the independent thinkers away.
Ahh I knew something was missing.Diablos said:This is getting so fucked up.
artredis1980 said:Here is my Idea for a new Ad for Obama:
Fade In
Show pictures of Obama doing community organizing
Fade out
Fade In
Show midwest farmer 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show small business owner 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a college student 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a gun totting hunter 'I am Barack Obama'
Then zoom out with first a dozen small frames, all with people saying 'I am Barack Obama', then zoom out with a 100's of small frames, all with People saying 'I am Barack Obama' and when all the image frames zoom out they make up the Full screen Image of Barack Obama saying 'I am Barack Obama and I approve this message'
minus_273 said:actually it seems to be going the other way:
Palin Power: Fresh Face Now More Popular Than Obama, McCain
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/pub...fresh_face_now_more_popular_than_obama_mccain
Ahh I knew you'd not even understand what I was trying to say.Door2Dawn said:Ahh I knew something was missing.
Saw it earlier, site's getting hammered.tanod said:Link doesn't work. Site is getting hammered or link is fake.
tanod said:Link doesn't work. Site is getting hammered or link is fake.
artredis1980 said:Here is my Idea for a new Ad for Obama:
Fade In
Show pictures of Obama doing community organizing
Fade out
Fade In
Show midwest farmer 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show small business owner 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a college student 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a gun totting hunter 'I am Barack Obama'
Then zoom out with first a dozen small frames, all with people saying 'I am Barack Obama', then zoom out with a 100's of small frames, all with People saying 'I am Barack Obama' and when all the image frames zoom out they make up the Full screen Image of Barack Obama saying 'I am Barack Obama and I approve this message'
gkrykewy said:I'd be curious about the geographic distribution of viewership. It really seems that conservative America is almost euphoric over Palin, and would watch at an extraodinary rate, but there's no polling that yet indicates a positive response among moderates.
Even the Rasmussen article linked above - she has 58% favorability, compared to 57% for McCain and Obama. But hers owes largely to almost unanimous support among conservatives (85%).
They're moving up the date of the troopergate findings in reaction to Palin's stalling tactics.Deku said:Are there any actual news?
Obama-Age GAF bracing for slipping poll numbers is a hard read![]()
Deku said:Are there any actual news?
Obama-Age GAF bracing for slipping poll numbers is a hard read![]()
artredis1980 said:Here is my Idea for a new Ad for Obama:
Fade In
Show pictures of Obama doing community organizing
Fade out
Fade In
Show midwest farmer 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show small business owner 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a college student 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a gun totting hunter 'I am Barack Obama'
Then zoom out with first a dozen small frames, all with people saying 'I am Barack Obama', then zoom out with a 100's of small frames, all with People saying 'I am Barack Obama' and when all the image frames zoom out they make up the Full screen Image of Barack Obama saying 'I am Barack Obama and I approve this message'
Senator Barack Obama will increasingly lean on prominent Democratic women to undercut Gov. Sarah Palin and Senator John McCain, dispatching Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton to Florida on Monday and bolstering his plan to deploy female surrogates to battleground states, Obama advisers said Thursday.
Mrs. Clintons campaign event in Florida, her first for Mr. Obama since the Democratic convention, will serve as a counterpoint to the searing attacks and fresh burst of energy that Ms. Palin injected into the race with her convention speech on Wednesday, Obama aides said.
With the McCain-Palin team courting undecided female voters, including some who backed Mrs. Clinton in the Democratic primaries, Obama aides said they were counting on not only Mrs. Clinton but also Democratic female governors to rebut Ms. Palin and, by extension, Mr. McCain. Those governors include Janet Napolitano of Arizona and Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas.
Still, within the Obama campaign and among Democratic officials nationwide, talks are well under way about how the party should treat Ms. Palin in the campaign and what Mr. Obama and his running mate, Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., need to do to regain the offensive after the Republican convention.
Some Democrats were urging Mr. Obamas campaign not to underestimate the potential power of Ms. Palins speech, even among voters not aligned with either party: On liberal talk-radio shows and on left-leaning blogs, some Democrats said the Obama campaign should fight back hard to avoid being caricatured as Senator John Kerry was four years ago when he ran against President Bush. Some party strategists warned that Mrs. Palins personal narrative as a hockey mom with a special-needs child, would appeal to some undecided women voters.
What McCain has done with Governor Palins nomination is aim right at a demographic that Obama needs to address quickly: noncollege-educated women, said Mike McCurry, a former spokesman in the Clinton White House. They need to maximize Bidens ability to reach out to them, but at the end of the day, it is Obama who has to get that very, very critical group.
Advisers to Mr. Obama predicted that the buzz over Ms. Palin would fade and that the race would quickly turn back into a contest between Senators McCain and Obama, despite the McCain campaigns efforts to compare Mr. Obamas experience unfavorably to Ms. Palins. At the same time, even as Democratic researchers pore over Ms. Palins record in Alaska, a rapid response team is being created in Chicago to dispatch female surrogates around the country.
David Axelrod, the Obama campaigns chief political strategist, said Mr. Obama would not raise questions about Ms. Palins experience. Mr. Axelrod said the campaign would work instead to impress upon voters the seriousness of the race and continue to try to link the McCain-Palin team to President Bush.
While Mr. Obama did not aggressively challenge Ms. Palin, his advisers opened a new line of criticism to brand her as part of the Republican establishment.
For someone who makes the point that shes not from Washington, she looked very much like shed fit in very well there when you see how she brings the attacks, Mr. Axelrod said. They all felt very familiar to Americans who are used to this kind of thing from Washington.
Advisers to Mrs. Clinton said that she stood ready to help the Obama-Biden ticket, but they urged the campaign not to overestimate the impact Mrs. Clinton could have, noting that she had other commitments this fall, like campaigning and raising money for Senate candidates. Obama aides said the Clinton trip had been in the works before Ms. Palin was named the running mate.
Still, Mo Elleithee, a Clinton spokesman, said he believed she could make a difference with some voters who feel lost in the current economy and who want to see a federal role enacting universal health insurance.
Anyone who was inclined to support Hillary Clinton typically did so because of her focus on middle-class, bread-and-butter issues, Mr. Elleithee said. Her message for Barack Obama on those issues could certainly help the Democratic ticket at the ballot box.
The Obama camp also plans to keep Mr. Biden campaigning steadily in swing states. Obama advisers said that one advantage they had was that Mr. Biden, as a six-term senator and former presidential candidate, is well-prepared for his single debate with Ms. Palin, in October.
With both conventions seen largely as successes for their tickets, the importance of the three presidential debates the first of which is Sept. 26 and the one vice-presidential debate become even more crucial for either side to gain a political advantage, Democratic strategists and elected officials said.
Mr. Obama, speaking to reporters on Thursday at a campaign stop in York, Pa., brushed aside any worry that he might have about Ms. Palins criticism of his biography and political record in her convention speech.
Ive been called worse on the basketball court, so its not that big of a deal, he said.
Yet Ms. Palin seemed to be on Mr. Obamas mind. At a rally in Lancaster, Pa., Mr. Obama asked an audience of several thousand people if they had caught any of the performances at the Republican convention.
Mr. Obama did not mention Ms. Palin by name, but added, They may have found some new faces to present their message, but its the same old message.
artredis1980 said:Here is my Idea for a new Ad for Obama:
Fade In
Show pictures of Obama doing community organizing
Fade out
Fade In
Show midwest farmer 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show small business owner 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a college student 'I am Barack Obama'
Fade out
Fade in
Show a gun totting hunter 'I am Barack Obama'
Then zoom out with first a dozen small frames, all with people saying 'I am Barack Obama', then zoom out with a 100's of small frames, all with People saying 'I am Barack Obama' and when all the image frames zoom out they make up the Full screen Image of Barack Obama saying 'I am Barack Obama and I approve this message'
I don't expect her to consistently stay that high. Nobody knew anything about her (and quite frankly still doesn't), so her speech really fired up the base; of course they'd be more eager to say they like her, because Obama fans have been giving high praise for months and months and months. Palin is riding in on a really big wave; it's going to weaken eventually.gkrykewy said:I'd be curious about the geographic distribution of viewership. It really seems that conservative America is almost euphoric over Palin, and would watch at an extraordinary rate, but there's no polling that yet indicates a positive response among moderates.
Even the Rasmussen article linked above - she has 58% favorability, compared to 57% for McCain and Obama. But hers owes largely to almost unanimous support among conservatives (85%).
Acid08 said:Did Palin make fun of San Francisco? If so, fuck her, SF is greater than the entire state of Alaska.
FitzOfRage said:I can't imagine that kind of cult of personality celebrity ad coming back to hurt him at all...
Maybe the giant image of Obama could say "This election has never been about me. Its been about you being me."
"I am Barack Obama, I approve this message, and I'm watching over you [insert laugh]."
AniHawk said:They're moving up the date of the troopergate findings in reaction to Palin's stalling tactics.
Only because the Justice Department is full of Palin loyalists.ALeperMessiah said:Didn't Palin's Office ask that the State's Justice Department get involved so there would be a faster resolution?
ALeperMessiah said:Didn't Palin's Office ask that the State's Justice Department get involved so there would be a faster resolution?
ALeperMessiah said:Didn't Palin's Office ask that the State's Justice Department get involved so there would be a faster resolution?