Yeah! Heaven forbid he should put his money where his mouth is. Much better to have empty words and empty gesture.ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
Yeah! Heaven forbid he should put his money where his mouth is. Much better to have empty words and empty gesture.ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
Tamanon said:Um....Jonathan Martin is definitely not "the left":lol
ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
It's all that elitist edumacashun we gots.Incognito said:Us liberals are just awash with money to give away!
ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
My response was to the poster saying she wasn't using a teleprompter today. I said nothing about the fact of whether she should use a teleprompter or not. I could care less.Kolgar said:Yes, and I'm sure you would too, being suddenly thrust into the national spotlight with the Republican party's entire 2008 campaign on the line. If she had fucked up even once, one single thing, people on all sides would have pounced and McCain's run would be OVER.
Jesus. We don't know if the teleprompter was working properly. All we have are some people saying it was, and others countering that it wasn't. Both sides lie. It's very interesting how the right is rallying around Palin and the left is bending over backwards to discredit everything about her.
Frank the Great said:By the way, Milton Friedman - the father of libertarian thinking and a huge influence on the Goldwater conservative movement in the Republican party which is still alive today - thought that all roads should be developed by private companies, not the government, and paid for by tolls. If the government building roads is considering communist, then hand me my hammer and sickle baby!
ralexand said:My response was to the poster saying she wasn't using a teleprompter today. I said nothing about the fact of whether she should use a teleprompter or not. I could care less.
ComputerNerd said:It's scary how much you guys love wasting your money. Aren't there bills to be paid?
ComputerNerd said:Well, private roads are built better, and are more efficient cost-wise.
You just don't realize the inefficiency of the public road system because it's hidden away in taxes.
ralexand said:My response was to the poster saying she wasn't using a teleprompter today. I said nothing about the fact of whether she should use a teleprompter or not. I could care less.
ComputerNerd said:Well, private roads are built better, and are more efficient cost-wise.
You just don't realize the inefficiency of the public road system because it's hidden away in taxes.
MassiveAttack said:It's coming. I honestly expect the Biden-Palin debate to be one of the most embarrassing and humiliating spectacles in the entire history of US politics. Just make sure to record it for posterity.
AniHawk said:What leads you to believe a transformers reference would be anything but terrible?
ComputerNerd said:Well, private roads are built better, and are more efficient cost-wise.
You just don't realize the inefficiency of the public road system because it's hidden away in taxes.
reilo said:Might pointing out any major roads that have been built in the US using private funds?
monchi-kun said:oh the irony...being told what to do with one's own money
The difference is Obama never claimed he was the earmark killer like the republican ticket is claiming.Kolgar said:Crossed wires; I'd moved on from the teleprompter incident specifically and was speaking more in general.
Fact remains, it's hard to trust anything you hear unless you hear it directly from the person's mouth or see it firsthand.
Edit: The war of words continues. After Obama told his crowd today that McCain and Palin cannot seriously present themselves as agents of change, and that "they must think you're stupid," the McCain campaign fired back about earmarks, saying Obama has received an amount of earmarks worth $1 million for every day he's served.
True or not? Hell if I know.
ComputerNerd said:It was just some advice. I'm not forcing him to do anything.
I've just thought that giving money to political candidates to be a waste of money. I've never given money to a political campaign, and I never will.
No matter how much you give, your money won't make a difference in the outcome of the election.
ComputerNerd said:Well, private roads are built better, and are more efficient cost-wise.
ComputerNerd said:You just don't realize the inefficiency of the public road system because it's hidden away in taxes.
ComputerNerd said:No matter how much you give, your money won't make a difference in the outcome of the election.
monchi-kun said:i dunno man, see there's this group called evangelicals, they had lots of followers with money and they pretty much funneled most of it to the Bush/Cheney campiagn. and, correct me if i'm wrong but...i think they got elected into office.
gkrykewy said:Everyone knows that evangelicals give generously to christian charities, supporting the poor and downtrodden around the world in a very christ-like way.
reilo said:Wait, what?
You are arguing that the $10mil Barack received after Palin gave her speech made no difference? Not to mention the $50mil/mo he's been racking up?
I think you've moved past the point of intellectual dishonesty, to straight up ignorance.
grandjedi6 said:Wow the Daily Show "Sarah Palin Gender Card" video has been seen over 2 million times online alone.![]()
theviolenthero said:WTF??
Can you explain to me the difference between a toll and a tax?
ComputerNerd said:It was just some advice. I'm not forcing him to do anything.
I've just thought that giving money to political candidates to be a waste of money. I've never given money to a political campaign, and I never will.
No matter how much you give, your money won't make a difference in the outcome of the election.
ComputerNerd said:And three, private roads are better kept than public roads.
ComputerNerd said:It was just some advice. I'm not forcing him to do anything.
I've just thought that giving money to political candidates to be a waste of money. I've never given money to a political campaign, and I never will.
No matter how much you give, your money won't make a difference in the outcome of the election.
ComputerNerd said:There's also many areas where different roads will compete. That will keep toll rates in check.
ComputerNerd said:Well, for one, with a toll, the people that use the road are the ones that pay for it. With a tax, I'm paying for highway up in San Fransisco that I'll never use.
And two, private enterprises are more concerned where their money is going. Unlike the government, they normally just don't throw around money hoping something will get done. They make sure it gets done, and in the most cost-efficient manner possible.
There's also many areas where different roads will compete. That will keep toll rates in check.
And three, private roads are better kept than public roads.
ComputerNerd said:Well, for one, with a toll, the people that use the road are the ones that pay for it. With a tax, I'm paying for highway up in San Fransisco that I'll never use.
numble said:Can we forbid any talk about the public financing "issue"?
John McCain is now "forbidden" from taking money since he's received the nomination and now he's taking public financing money. But his website is still accepting contributions, initially they lead you to believe that it will go for the federally allowed Compliance Fund, since one of the first things it says on his donation page is:
"However, federal law allows the McCain-Palin Campaign's Compliance Fund to defray legal and accounting compliance costs and preserve the Campaign's public grant for media, mail, phones, and get-out-the-vote programs. Contributions to McCain-Palin Victory 2008 will go to the Compliance Fund, and to participating party committees for Victory 2008 programs."
But read the fine print and you get this:
"For Individuals- The first $28,500 will go to the RNC, the next portion will be divided evenly between the Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, and Pennsylvania state parties' federal accounts up to a maximum of $9,250 for each Committee, and the final $2,300 will go to the Compliance Fund."
https://secure.donationreport.com/donation.html
So yes, you will be donating to the Compliance Fund, only after you have donated $65,500 to either the RNC or Republican party funds in the battleground states.
The McCain max out point is $70,100. $2,300 primary + $28,500 RNC + $9,250 Michigan Republicans + $9,250 Missouri Republicans + 9,250 Ohio Republicans + 9,250 Pennsylvania Republicans + $2,300 Compliance Fund.
Meanwhile, the Obama donation page is simple:
"An individual may contribute a maximum of $2,300 per election (the primary and general are separate elections). By submitting your contribution, you agree that the first $2,300 is designated for the primary, and any additional amount up to $2,300 is designated for the general election."
The Obama max out point is $4,600. $2,300 primary + $2,300 general.
https://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/main
kevm3 said:Private roads would be more efficient? Maybe for corporations who will be reaping huge profits... But with toll roads all over the place, prepare for tons of traffic jams. No thanks. "Inefficient roads" is something I'm perfectly fine with.
ComputerNerd said:Well, for one, with a toll, the people that use the road are the ones that pay for it. With a tax, I'm paying for highway up in San Fransisco that I'll never use.
Zeliard said:You do realize you can substitute "money" for "vote" in that post, yes?
New GOP Spin: Palin's Not Ready
Todd Harris, a GOP strategist who is close to the McCain campaign, says Palin won't be available to the press for about two weeks. His defense? She might make "a mistake."
"If she goes out and makes a mistake, that is something that [voters will] care about, and that's something that will haunt [McCain] for awhile, so I think this is a smart move."
This has got to be one of the craziest messaging decisions ever: Harris is conceding that Palin's not even ready to be a vice presidential candidate, let alone be president.
I just don't see how they can sustain two weeks of keeping Palin in hiding. Every day the McCain campaign keeps her away from reporters just highlights the fact that they don't think she's ready.
This strikes me as a pretty impressive strategic blunder.
With time running out on its push to register thousands of new voters in Virginia, the Obama campaign is picking up the pace. State election officials told the campaign Friday that 49,000 new voters signed up in August, a sharp increase from the 36,500 who signed up in July and the 28,000 who registered in June.
The campaign had predicted that its August numbers could lag given the difficulty of reaching residents during vacation season. But the August gain puts the Obama campaign very much on track toward its goal of signing up 150,000 new voters by the early October voter registration deadline, on top of the 142,000 new voters who registered during primary season.
WILMINGTON, Del. -- With Cheney-esque stealth, Biden made a surprise appearance this morning at the Constitutional law class he had been scheduled to teach before his selection as Barack Obama's running mate.
The campaign had not publicly announced Biden's trip to the Widener School of Law this morning. In fact, Biden spokesperson David Wade seemed unaware of it himself until after the fact.
"What???" Wade said in an email when told about Professor Biden's activities. "He needs to tell me this stuff."
It was unclear if any other advisers were informed, but Secret Service did accompany the Delaware senator. A university spokesperson said they had hoped to keep his visit out of the press. Reporters were not allowed in the classroom when they arrived, but did see Biden in his SUV as he left shortly after 11 a.m.
Biden has taught the same class, Topics in Constitutional Law, since 1991. He was scheduled to begin a new semester there on Aug. 23, but had to cancel at last minute and head to Springfield, Ill., for his official unveiling as Obama's running mate.
"We really were surprised to hear the announcement, when the text message went out," said Bob Hayman, Biden's co-professor for the last five years. "Even that morning, even after he was the nominee, we didn't know whether he'd be coming to class or not."
Biden wanted to visit today as an apology of sorts, since he expects to be actively campaigning through Election Day. Hayman said he is hopeful Biden can return after, however.
"We were all thrilled to see that he came this morning," said Christell Hershey, one of the students enrolled in the class. "He's very relaxed with the students and, as you can tell, he enjoys teaching which made it fun for all of us."
Hayman said there was surprisingly little talk of the campaign during the session.
"We talked about separation of powers, we talked about the framers' vision of the Constitution," he said. "I think maybe today was refuge from the campaign for him, to some extent, a time for him to be a teacher again."
Tommie Hu$tle said:Is someone really thinking about seriously priviatizing the national highways and interstates?
numble said:For every dollar your state sends to DC, here's how much you get back:
District of Columbia $6.64
New Mexico 1.91
Alaska 1.80
West Virginia 1.75
Mississppi 1.70
Alabama 1.64
North Dakota 1.64
Virginia 1.60
Hawaii 1.54
Montana 1.51
Arkansas 1.43
Oklahoma 1.43
South Dakota 1.43
Kentucky 1.41
Louisiana 1.41
Maryland 1.41
Maine 1.36
South Carolina 1.35
Tennessee 1.29
Arizona 1.28
Missouri 1.27
Idaho 1.25
Utah 1.14
Kansas 1.11
Vermont 1.11
Iowa 1.10
North Carolina 1.10
Wyoming 1.09
Pennsylvania 1.07
Nebraska 1.06
Rhode Island 1.03
Ohio 1.02
Florida 1.01
Donor States
Georgia 0.99
Indiana 0.99
Texas 0.98
Oregon 0.97
Washington 0.91
Michigan 0.88
Wisconsin 0.85
Colorado 0.84
New York 0.84
California 0.83
Delaware 0.83
Massachusetts 0.82
Nevada 0.78
Illinois 0.77
Connecticut 0.73
Minnesota 0.73
New Hampshire 0.73
New Jersey 0.63