Stealth Editor said:How about, instead, the loser has to wear a dress for a day
I think Rudy owns more dresses than Clinton.
Stealth Editor said:How about, instead, the loser has to wear a dress for a day
APF said:Obama doesn't give rambling responses in debates? He's been awful in the debates, and partly due to his incoherent blabbing. Wolf Blitzer won't always be there to keep the kid on topic.
harSon said:Could you answer my previous question APF? I'd prefer you to set aside your wittyness and twisting of words. Will anything Obama does short of croaking please you?
APF giveth, taketh away.APF said:terrene: I think your comment about PTSD is way out of line, but agree with the rest of what you say there
http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/04/01/848047.aspxAt a town hall today, a second-grader asked Obama how exactly one gets the opportunity to run for president.
"Here's what you gotta do," the presidential hopeful told the boy, boiling the process down to few simple steps.
1. "You have to work really hard in school and get really good grades."
2. "Who is this your grandma?" Obama asked the boy. "You have to do everything that grandma tells you to do."
3. "When you get out of school, then you gotta go to college."
4. "After you go to college, you have to hopefully find a job that's helping other people, so that people appreciate that you're helping them, and they'll say that Michael will make a good president some day."
"If you do all those things, then you just might be a president some day," Obama told young Michael. The audience seemed to agree with the recipe, cheering wildly.
Obama, pointing to the boy's grandmother, said he and Michael's grandmother would wait and see if he could pull it off.
APF said:Still, the fallout from a debate can definitely crater your run, stop its momentum, or expose vulnerabilities people otherwise wouldn't have thought were there.
APF said:Obama doesn't give rambling responses in debates? He's been awful in the debates, and partly due to his incoherent blabbing. Wolf Blitzer won't always be there to keep the kid on topic.
Yes, one can be hurt if they completely and utterly fail by making a major slip-up on a question that they were utterly unprepared to answer. However, any interpretation is almost completely susceptible to spinning by any pundit.APF said:Still, the fallout from a debate can definitely crater your run, stop its momentum, or expose vulnerabilities people otherwise wouldn't have thought were there.
terrene: I think your comment about PTSD is way out of line, but agree with the rest of what you say there
Good point....people hear more of this spinning in media than they actually hear straight from the candidates. And that, sir, is bogus.Steve Youngblood said:However, any interpretation is almost completely susceptible to spinning by any pundit.
APF said:Tragically, it's impossible for me to refrain from being witty. That's my one flaw.
APF said:I'm an intellectually flawed waster of bandwidth.
Amir0x said:Gallup:
PA Poll: :| with a chance of <:|
Obamawaterbottle.gif: So-so
(CNN) — A key Hillary Clinton supporter appeared to be a bit off message during a recent interview with a Canadian radio station.
"If I had to make a prediction right now, I'd say Barack Obama is going to be the next president," Missouri Rep. Emanuel Cleaver said in a Canadian public radio interview this weekend. "I will be stunned if he's not the next president of the United States."
Cleaver, an African-American, endorsed Clinton's White House bid last year and formally remained aligned with the New York senator even as other black leaders shifted their support to Barack Obama.
But after his district voted for Obama in the February 5 primary, Cleaver did indicate he would consider voting for the Illinois senator at the party's convention if the delegate count was extremely tight between the two candidates.
In the Canadian radio interview, Cleaver made clear he doesn't expect Clinton to overtake Obama, comparing his support of the New York Democrat to that of his hometown losing football team.
“Even though I don't expect the Kansas City Chiefs to beat the Indianapolis Colts, I cheer for the Kansas City Chiefs,” he said.
He also pushed back on the notion Clinton should take her fight for the party's nomination all the way to the August convention — though he acknowledged that is not the position he is supposed to take.
"If I do the party line, I'm supposed to say — and maybe I'll say, just so if anybody hears it they can say well, 'Cleaver did the party line before he told the truth' — we believe that a contest going all the way to the convention is good for America."
But, he added, an actual convention fight would be a “tragedy of tragedies.”
What, like you? The amount of people going OMG I CAN'T BELIEVE APF POSTED SOMETHING !!!!! Vastly overwhelms the amount of bandwidth my humble posts demand.maximum360 said:Seriously, I don't mind debating issues but there's 4 or 5 people that time and time again add nothing to the discussion.
WaPo said:Campaign.USA
With the Internet Comes a New Political 'Clickocracy'
APF said:Tragically, it's impossible for me to refrain from being witty. That's my one flaw.
APF said:What, like you? The amount of people going OMG I CAN'T BELIEVE APF POSTED SOMETHING !!!!! Vastly overwhelms the amount of bandwidth my humble posts demand.
belvedere said:One thing's for sure, you're your biggest fan.
Seth C said:Which is a given, considering he is his only fan.
thefro said:Indiana finally polled... 52/43 Clinton
http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=35417ff6-4985-47ce-8e1b-3fbe566d108d
Granted, they've been camping out here lately.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says he supports DNC Chairman Howard Dean's plan to have super delegates resolve the Democratic nomination battle by July 1, 2008.
In the usual off-camera scrum with reporters that follows his Tuesday news conference, he was asked...
"Do you support [Howard Dean's] proposal to have superdelegates vote by July first or express their preference by July first," the reporter asked.
Reid said, "Either that or before."
Amir0x said:huge Republican lead for Clinton in Indiana. If you took that away, she'd lead by 7 instead of 9. fucking guy
Xeke said:Question: Will the Hardball college tour with Obama be put up on the website tomorrow? Because right now I am torn between going to a campus Obama meeting or watching him on MSNBC.
Xeke said:Question: Will the Hardball college tour with Obama be put up on the website tomorrow? Because right now I am torn between going to a campus Obama meeting or watching him on MSNBC.
How much of that would be honest support, and how much merely to crater Hillary? This is something I'm not sure has been sufficiently asked re: his early support among Republicans.thefro said:It'd be 6, because he used to win Republicans like the Independents before the Rush antics.
APF said:How much of that would be honest support, and how much merely to crater Hillary? This is something I'm not sure has been sufficiently asked re: his early support among Republicans.
Tamanon said:I assume it will be, go see him live?
While in a literal sense what you say is true, I'm not sure what the significance of making that point really is.quadriplegicjon said:there is a difference between voting against someone because you dont like them, versus voting for someone because you think they will lose against your actual chosen candidate in the general.
APF said:While in a literal sense what you say is true, I'm not sure what the significance of making that point really is.
We're talking about the validity of either candidate's alleged Republican support. That's the parallel. You're trying too hard.quadriplegicjon said:you are trying to draw parallels.. and i just dont see them.
APF said:We're talking about the validity of either candidate's alleged Republican support. That's the parallel. You're trying too hard.
Amir0x said:huge Republican lead for Clinton in Indiana. If you took that away, she'd lead by 7 instead of 9. fucking guy
PhoenixDark said:Do you mean "gay" there? If so I'm reporting this
Amir0x said:huge Republican lead for Clinton in Indiana. If you took that away, she'd lead by 7 instead of 9. fucking guy
Should Obama become the Democratic nominee, this could be one of the tougher issues on which to find common ground. Ward Connerlya prominent opponent of affirmative actionis pushing to get referendums on the subject onto ballots in at least five states this fall. It may be difficult for Obama to avoid taking a definitive stance: Affirmative action, says Connerly, "is probably the most difficult race issue [Obama] will have to face." If the candidate denounces affirmative action, Connerly predicts, "his support among blacks will plummet from around 80 to 50 percent. Then, bear in mind that much of his support in Iowa, Vermont, and Wyoming came from white males, who by a margin of 70 to 30 oppose affirmative action."
siamesedreamer said:![]()
Just following the Kosian precedent...
siamesedreamer said: