Instigator said:Or a fake devout Christian, much like the Clintons and a good chunk of the political establishment in the country.
And thank jebus for that. Look what happens when a legitimate evangelical nutjob is in charge.
Instigator said:Or a fake devout Christian, much like the Clintons and a good chunk of the political establishment in the country.
siamesedreamer said:If it is wrong for white politicians to associate with white racists, then how is it acceptable for Obama to associate with black racists like the Rev. Wright?
Tamanon said:Nah, Bush was the worst kind of evangelical. One who believes that God thinks he is right and an arm of Him. Instead of being about the principles, he was about the glory.
Just make sure you correct the spelling mistake when you point it out,or I'm going to have to assume that you are also not the best speller in the world. Otay Mr.Smug?Instigator said:You care enough to reply, twice.
theBishop said:Do you really think that? When his top advisor is on record calling Christian evangelicals "nuts", I have a hard time believing he is sincere.
siamesedreamer said:If it is wrong for white politicians to associate with white racists, then how is it acceptable for Obama to associate with black racists like the Rev. Wright?
Meriam-Webster said:The Merriam-Webster's Dictionary defines racism as a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular racial group, and that it is also the prejudice based on such a belief.
Tamanon said:I dunno, he's said several times he went to war because God told him to, he honestly seems to me to believe he's some instrument of God's judgement.
theBishop said:Do you really think that? When his top advisor is on record calling Christian evangelicals "nuts", I have a hard time believing he is sincere.
VanMardigan said:Good piece, and it goes back to what I said like 5 pages ago. It wasn't the "bitter" part that was bothersome, it was the implication that the bitterness is why we "cling" to religion. Definitely the one time where I felt that Obama misfired. Personally, that statement bothered me a lot.
gkrykewy said:He's in favor of ID being taught alongside evolution, and he believes in the rapture. What more do you want, a weekly telethon?
Door2Dawn said:Just make sure you correct the spelling mistake when you point it out,or I'm going to have to assume that you are also not the best speller in the world. Otay Mr.Smug?
PhoenixDark said:He didn't phrase it like that, nor was that his meaning. He said that people in rural areas hit the hardest by the economy turn their attention away from that important issue, and find solace in the things that can't be shipped to China - their faith, guns, etc; people become bitter when they see no change in their lives, and they become even more bitter and cynical when they hear politicians promising the same old stuff year after year, and it never comes to pass. So politicians often exploit that by portraying the opposition as the side that wants to take away their values, whether it's through homophobia or "they're gonna take your guns" scare tactics.
PhoenixDark said:He didn't phrase it like that, nor was that his meaning. He said that people in rural areas hit the hardest by the economy turn their attention away from that important issue, and find solace in the things that can't be shipped to China - their faith, guns, etc; people become bitter when they see no change in their lives, and they become even more bitter and cynical when they hear politicians promising the same old stuff year after year, and it never comes to pass. So politicians often exploit that by portraying the opposition as the side that wants to take away their values, whether it's through homophobia or "they're gonna take your guns" scare tactics.
What matters is, are the undecideds mostly white or black? Because Hillary always tends to win the white vote in these racially divided southern states despite Obama always winning overall.Tamanon said:http://www.jwpcivitasinstitute.org/media/press-releases/obama-widens-lead-clinton
Good lord, 45 to 27 now for Obama in NC. High number of undecideds, but that's still not good to be treading under 30.
BTW, at dinner last night, my stepfather revealed that he would be voting Clinton in the NC election because he got his marching orders from Rush. Not shitting you, that's actually exactly what he said.:lol
I wonder what cause her lead to go down.Tamanon said:http://www.jwpcivitasinstitute.org/media/press-releases/obama-widens-lead-clinton
Good lord, 45 to 27 now for Obama in NC. High number of undecideds, but that's still not good to be treading under 30.
BTW, at dinner last night, my stepfather revealed that he would be voting Clinton in the NC election because he got his marching orders from Rush. Not shitting you, that's actually exactly what he said.:lol
XxenobladerxX said:Some one call the grammar poli-
Oh wait,there already here.
Shit! I've been caught!gkrykewy said:Tell me that was intentional.
PhoenixDark said:He didn't phrase it like that, nor was that his meaning. He said that people in rural areas hit the hardest by the economy turn their attention away from that important issue, and find solace in the things that can't be shipped to China - their faith, guns, etc; people become bitter when they see no change in their lives, and they become even more bitter and cynical when they hear politicians promising the same old stuff year after year, and it never comes to pass. So politicians often exploit that by portraying the opposition as the side that wants to take away their values, whether it's through homophobia or "they're gonna take your guns" scare tactics.
Tamanon said:http://www.jwpcivitasinstitute.org/media/press-releases/obama-widens-lead-clinton
Good lord, 45 to 27 now for Obama in NC. High number of undecideds, but that's still not good to be treading under 30.
XxenobladerxX said:Shit! I've been caught!
apf: oh look another bitter person who's probably going to cling to guns, religion and and become a nativist now.-jinx- said:The media coverage of this non-event over the weekend is starting to make me very, very, VERY angry.
yep.PhoenixDark said:He didn't phrase it like that, nor was that his meaning. He said that people in rural areas hit the hardest by the economy turn their attention away from that important issue, and find solace in the things that can't be shipped to China - their faith, guns, etc; people become bitter when they see no change in their lives, and they become even more bitter and cynical when they hear politicians promising the same old stuff year after year, and it never comes to pass. So politicians often exploit that by portraying the opposition as the side that wants to take away their values, whether it's through homophobia or "they're gonna take your guns" scare tactics.
Where the hell is that chart....Cheebs said:What matters is, are the undecideds mostly white or black? Because Hillary always tends to win the white vote in these racially divided southern states despite Obama always winning overall.
Edit: HUUUUGE swing in PA to hillary according to Arg:
http://americanresearchgroup.com/pres08/padem8-705.html
She was tied with Obama a week ago, now they have her up by 20.
23% of likely Democratic primary voters say that excessive exposure to Obama's advertising is causing them to support Clinton.
Cheebs said:ARG says it was Obama's ads that hurt him most:
Thats the most dumbest thing I have ever heard..Cheebs said:ARG says it was Obama's ads that hurt him most:
Eh? No one said its cause of bittergate. ARG says its cause Obama is overwhelming the state with ads.syllogism said:That ARG poll was conducted too early to attribute the swing as a possible effect of "bittergate".
No, ARG says that's what some Hillary supporters claim was the reason, which certainly doesn't sound believable. It would be interesting to know how the question was phrased, but regardless I'm certain it's nonsense.Cheebs said:Eh? No one said its cause of bittergate. ARG says its cause Obama is overwhelming the state with ads.
Hmmm that could make sense. So you are thinking a good number of Clinton supporters would claim they don't like Obama's ads just purely because they are against Obama? I'd buy that.syllogism said:No, ARG says that's what some Hillary supporters claim was the reason, which certainly doesn't sound believable. It would be interesting to know how the question was phrased, but regardless I'm certain it's nonsense.
To be fair CNN said when including leaners Hillary's lead doubles to 8-9%ToyMachine228 said:I don't buy that poll at all. CNN had it within 4% on Friday and no matter what happens, polls don't swing THAT fast. The whole bitter-gate thing won't move the polls that much, and certainly over advertising won't either:lol
ToyMachine228 said:I don't buy that poll at all. CNN had it within 4% on Friday and no matter what happens, polls don't swing THAT fast. The whole bitter-gate thing won't move the polls that much, and certainly over advertising won't either:lol
Cheebs said:Hmmm that could make sense. So you are thinking a good number of Clinton supporters would claim they don't like Obama's ads just purely because they are against Obama? I'd buy that.
Doesnt explain this wild swing then. While ARG is far from a trust pollster when they have a swing from one of their own polls a week ago it is worth raising an eyebrow over.
To be fair CNN said when including leaners Hillary's lead doubles to 8-9%
MCCAIN: 'HILLARY CAN STILL PULL IT OFF';
SENATOR PREFERS CLINTON CONTEST
Mon Apr 14 2008 10:46:19 ET
**Exclusive**
Republican presidential hopeful John McCain has confided to his inner circle that Hillary Clinton may yet be the Democratic nominee, the DRUDGE REPORT has learned, a development the senator from Arizona would personally welcome!
"Look, I know something about long odds, they had me written off last summer," McCain explained over the weekend, according to a top source.
McCain would prefer to go up against Clinton in the general election, insiders reveal.
He has instructed his campaign staff to "chill out" on countering Hillary Clinton's torrent of claims and promises as primary voting comes to an end over the next 6 weeks.
McCain made the tactical decision to downplay Clinton's tale of Bosnia sniper fire, leaving some McCain staffers frustrated and perplexed.
Instead, the critical focus has been on Barack Obama. McCain's official website features 14 press releases taking on Obama since the first of the year, only 3 for the former first lady.
Developing...
Yeah. I want some post-bittergate PA polls.Tamanon said:Dude, that's pretty much all they do is swing, remember the week before it was tied, and the week before that, Clinton was up double digits. ARG is horrible. Weekly polls and only 600 people![]()
super tuesday was a disappointment for obama?Cheebs said:Yeah. I want some post-bittergate PA polls.
Still the only good thing out of bittergate is it stops expectations from getting out of hand for Obama like they did on Super Tuesday and Ohio/Texas.
Cheebs said:Yeah. I want some post-bittergate PA polls.
Still the only good thing out of bittergate is it stops expectations from getting out of hand for Obama like they did on Super Tuesday and Ohio/Texas.
Don't you remember? In the days leading up to the race the media was claiming he'd win CA and Mass. and force Hillary out of the race.GaimeGuy said:super tuesday was a disappointment for obama?
I think you mean new hampshire?
No? Clinton won more delegates that day still.theBishop said:The funny thing is that Obama came out ahead on Super Tuesday Mark II.