ALeperMessiah
Member
AniHawk said:Oh... yeah. Looks like absolutely nothing's wrong then.![]()
didn't say nothing was wrong, just said I thought there reasoning was a faster resolution.
AniHawk said:Oh... yeah. Looks like absolutely nothing's wrong then.![]()
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'
Jobless rate soars
The unemployment rate soared to a nearly five-year high in August, topping 6 percent, as employers trimmed jobs for the eighth straight month. CNNMoney.com reports there was a net loss of 84,000 jobs in August. full story
That is not the reason though. At all. It is purely for personal reasons.ALeperMessiah said:didn't say nothing was wrong, just said I thought there reasoning was a faster resolution.
funny how these talking points interchange between parties.syllogism said:That's because she is a celebrity, not a politician so there's no deep partisan divide yet
The end of the ad could show Obama saying, "I'm Barack Obama, and you're not."minus_273 said:yup, he should also have an ad about the environment with this "this is the moment the earth healed" speech. that cant hurt at all either.
artredis1980 said:Obama raised 8 million after Palin speech
RNC raised 1 million after Palin speech
= Palin speech fired up the democrats
http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2008/09/04/donations-pour-in-to-rnc-after-palin-speech/
since Dean came in he has been quick to dispense money as a part of the 50-state strategy and keep very little cash on hand.Soybean said:I'm a little worried about Obama's fundraising capability. He's spending faster than money comes in, unless August was amazingly awesome. But even so, the DNC itself is having trouble matching their bank account levels to the RNC's. That and the Palin popularity have me pretty worried. The lack of Obama ads during the RNC (unlike McCain's plentiful ads during the DNC) add to my financial concern.
I'm holding a gaming & debate watch party at my house as a fundraiser on the 26th. So far I'm only averaging $22 per attendee, but hopefully that number will go up as my, shall we say, less poor friends start signing up.
Slurpy said:Show seems like Joe 'ISRAEL ISRAEL ISRAEL ISRAEL' Lieberman is teaching Palin the ropes on Foreign policy. Aweome.
Kintaco said:Wow that is a bad idea for an ad. I'm probably vote McCain if they made something like that. They should make an ad showing Rudy and Palin belittling "Community Organizers" then showing all the great "community organizers" of the past.
Well be hearing a thundering denunciation from the McCain camp.....right?ST. PAUL, Minn. -- U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, said Thursday that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obamas upbringing was devoid of patriotism or the principles that make the United States a great country.
King, who represents western Iowa and is known for making provocative statements, made a speech here asking the Iowa GOP delegation what part of Obamas upbringing, relationships and education would be appropriate for someone who wanted to be president.
There is no part of that that I would subject a child, a young man or woman to. I dont think that theres a nurture there that shows a thread of patriotism or a sense of appreciation of free market capitalism or the destiny of America or what has made this country great, he said.
Republicans have been increasingly questioning Obamas patriotism.
King also criticized Obama for not putting his hand over his heart in 2007 when the National Anthem was played at Sen. Tom Harkins annual Steak Fry fundraiser. He said that stemmed from his nurturing, too.
Obama, whose grandfather was a World War II veteran, has said he was taught that you stand at attention during the National Anthem and put your hand over your heart during the Pledge of Allegiance.
Obama spokesperson Jenni Lee called Kings claim ridiculous.
As opposed to offering any real solutions to fix our economy or get working families affordable health care, the Republicans are resorting to Washington-style name calling and personal attacks, she said.
artredis1980 said:words used at conventions
Soybean said:I'm a little worried about Obama's fundraising capability. He's spending faster than money comes in, unless August was amazingly awesome. But even so, the DNC itself is having trouble matching their bank account levels to the RNC's. That and the Palin popularity have me pretty worried. The lack of Obama ads during the RNC (unlike McCain's plentiful ads during the DNC) add to my financial concern.
artredis1980 said:words used at conventions
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/images/us/20080905_WORDS_GRAPHIC/words_for_web.gif[IMG][/QUOTE]
That's really cool. Shows you who focused on what, and who was just blowing smoke.
adamsappel said: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.
Fatalah said:Thanks! I was waiting for this last night!
Door2Dawn said:They only mentioned the economy 15 times?
Sad sad and sad..
Door2Dawn said:They only mentioned the economy 15 times?
Sad sad and sad..
typhonsentra said:9/11 was mentioned more at the DNC than at the RNC? So they're only counting "Main" speakers, right?
It's depressing and offensive. Just watch Olberman's reaction.tanod said:Doesn't count a 3 minute video either.
Still haven't watched it and don't want to.
GhaleonEB said:It's depressing and offensive.
Same. The speech I saw the most of was McCain's, but I largely tuned out about the halfway mark.ChrisGoldstein said:The whole RNC was that. I couldn't stomach any of it, I just saw highlights...if you want to call them that.
GhaleonEB said:It's depressing and offensive. Just watch Olberman's reaction.
lawblob said:Pro-Obama GAF, I have some positive anecdotal evidence to report.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHJo2BRHLVIlawblob said:Pro-Obama GAF, I have some positive anecdotal evidence to report. I just spoke with my dad about the RNC this week. He is a life-long Republican, and has never voted Democrat. He called the event "tired" and "embarrassing." He has always voted Republican because he is socially conservative and has a high income, but it honestly sounds like this might be the first time he will ever vote Democrat.
Who knows how many other Republicans are feeling the same way, but with any luck McCain will lose more supporters with the RNC spectacle than he will pick up.
BirdBomb said:Barack seems to have trouble admitting when he is wrong, almost at a Bush level :lol
BirdBomb said:Just watched the O Reilly interview with Obama.
Barack seems to have trouble admitting when he is wrong, almost at a Bush level :lol
Fatalah said:My friend's older brother, who's a cocky jock, was previously leaning toward McCain but was turned off by the Palin pick. He's now for Obama. I'm thinking Palin might lose McCain some of those manly men votes the Republicans usually get easily.
Because shes fucking hot,thats why.Clevinger said:Ironically, all the polls so far have said that Palin is more popular with men than women.
lawblob said:Pro-Obama GAF, I have some positive anecdotal evidence to report. I just spoke with my dad about the RNC this week. He is a life-long Republican, and has never voted Democrat. He called the event "tired" and "embarrassing." He has always voted Republican because he is socially conservative and has a high income, but it honestly sounds like this might be the first time he will ever vote Democrat.
Who knows how many other Republicans are feeling the same way, but with any luck McCain will lose more supporters with the RNC spectacle than he will pick up.
OuterWorldVoice said:O'Reilly wants him to admit he was wrong about answer 46 in a 100 answer quiz that he otherwise aced. Why should he play along with that red faced blowhard's absurd rhetorical trap?
Why didn't O'Reilly admit that he was dead wrong about every aspect of the war?
Fatalah said:You never admit your wrong while your campaigning to be President.
Unless you want to be a........flip flopper!