ryutaro's mama
Member
Xeke said:He's very obviously praying.
Yes, but to who?
Xeke said:He's very obviously praying.
Xeke said:God.
Obama is a devout Christian.
There is a picture of me in that huge set somewhere lol. I love checking it though, lots of great pics that fly under the radar.Incognito said:
"I wonder what color drapes I should get for the oval office..."iby.h said:hmm I wonder what he is thinking.
His dirty God's name can only be pronounced by cutting off your tongue. It is un-typeable.ryutaro's mama said:Yes, but to who?
ryutaro's mama said:Annnnnnd you missed my joke.
Lesath said::lol Source?
Xeke said:He's very obviously praying.
Ether_Snake said:He's reading his notes.
You're thinking too much.Krowley said:McCains biggest problem with the economics issue is that none of his suggestions are new.
He doesn't have to suggest dem style economic policies, but you have to come out with something radicaly different than what we have now. People aren't going to believe that doing exactly what we've been doing is going to fix anything. He could go into super radical libertarian territory and that would probably play better than what he's tried so far.
He should be promoting something like the fair tax. Big ideas that get people excited. As long as his economic policy is just "cut taxes, cut spending" people aren't going to buy it. In this kind of environment, you have to be suggesting big changes and fundamental changes to the way the system functions. Newt Gengrich is a good example of a republican who's always full of big ideas. McCain is too careful on domestic policy and he's unwilling to try outlining a bigger vision.
Karma Kramer said:I think the biggest possibly risk for McCain is staying under in polling for much longer. If he doesn't pull up soon... he is going to start losing a lot of support and Republicans are going to get discouraged.
It will definitely have a snowball effect.
Slurpy said:Or, the opposite can happen and it will motivate republicans who weren't that passionate about him to go and vote.
Yep.Trakdown said:I will say this, if Obama stays at 50 or above and McCain ends up going under 40 by the 30 day mark, McCain's done.
Schmidt said the campaign will press two arguments as forcefully as possible in the coming days. One is that Obama is not ready to be commander in chief and that, in a time of two wars, "his policies will make the world more dangerous and America less secure." Second, he said, McCain will argue that, in a time of economic crisis, Obama will raise taxes and spending and "will make our economy worse."
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
Trakdown said:I will say this, if Obama stays at 50 or above and McCain ends up going under 40 by the 30 day mark, McCain's done.
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
:lolmaximum360 said:Family Guy: "Did you know that democrats murder thousands of babies every year? And sometimes they are even put back into the womb so they can be aborted again."
:lol
You crazed libruls.
And that's the argument they've been making for a while now. It was on full display during the debate. The problem is a lot of people saw the debate, and most of them though Obama looked presidential. So all the spin in the world is just going to crash face-first into that.Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
MoxManiac said:Uh, isn't that basically what they've been doing all along?
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
STOCKTON, Calif., Sept. 28 (UPI) -- A Stockton, Calif., newspaper Sunday endorsed Barack Obama for president, ending a 72-year record of endorsing only Republicans for the office.
The Record, which did not endorse a presidential candidate in 1992, has endorsed Republicans in every other White House election since 1940, when it went for Wendell Willkie over President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The newspaper had endorsed Roosevelt over Alf Landon in 1936.
In an editorial, the newspaper said it backs Obama over Republican John McCain because Obama "has demonstrated he will think things through, seek advice and actually listen to it."
"Obama is a gifted speaker," the editorial said. "But in addition to his smarts and energy, possibly his greatest gift is his ability to inspire."
The Record said U.S. politics in the past eight years "has been marked by smears, fears and greed."
"For too long, we've practiced partisanship in Washington, not politics. The result is a cynicism every bit as deep as that which infected the nation when Richard Nixon was shamed from office and when Bill Clinton brought shame to the office.
"This must end, but John McCain can't do it."
Editor Mike Klocke wrote in Sunday's edition of The Record that the editorial board was unanimous in its decision.
EMBee99 said:What will it take to get McCain under 40 at this point, though? Dude makes political theater out of a crisis, acts like Obama is on his lawn during the debate, and has what amounts to an empty vessel that can't hold information for a VP.....
Personally, I think he's polling kinda high at this point.
syllogism said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ctgw9VyV_0
Obama's VA speech yesterday. Probably one of his best stump speeches.
StoOgE said:Well you lost any chance of tactic one working last Friday, and tactic two hasnt worked for the last 3 weeks, so good luck with that.
McCains *real* problem is early voting has started in a ton of states and every week more and more states get in on the early voting. He might close late, but if he cant close quickly he is going to lose some of the swing states before election day.
Ohio for instance has that vote the same day you register thing coming up in a week, if Obama is up 5-6 when that happens, it means McCain has to beat him by that much more come Nov. 4th.
Slurpy said:Schmidt said the campaign will press two arguments as forcefully as possible in the coming days. One is that Obama is not ready to be commander in chief and that, in a time of two wars, "his policies will make the world more dangerous and America less secure." Second, he said, McCain will argue that, in a time of economic crisis, Obama will raise taxes and spending and "will make our economy worse."
Trakdown said:The question is, have the debates been factored in to the polling yet? I don't think they fully have, but it would explain the 8 point lead. If they aren't, and it drops him down by monday, that means he has 6 days to get back above- one of those days is the VP debate.
If McCain drops down on monday, I wouldn't be surprised if it continues trending that way. He pissed off a lot of people with his tone during the debate, and Obama came out looking really damn good. McCain's campaign is in a hell of a slide, and since he's not changing much, he could easily keep trending down.
mckmas8808 said:Hey GAF I feel like I don't live in the same world as the pundits on TV do. Why do all of them keep saying that Obama can't talk about pocket book issues when this whole speech is about pocket book issues?
I mean the 25,000 people in the crowd seem to agree with Obama.
mckmas8808 said:Hey GAF I feel like I don't live in the same world as the pundits on TV do. Why do all of them keep saying that Obama can't talk about pocket book issues when this whole speech is about pocket book issues?
I mean the 25,000 people in the crowd seem to agree with Obama.
Slurpy said:The McCain campaign strategy going forward:
Aren't we creative!
There's a reason they're known as talking heads man.mckmas8808 said:Hey GAF I feel like I don't live in the same world as the pundits on TV do. Why do all of them keep saying that Obama can't talk about pocket book issues when this whole speech is about pocket book issues?
I mean the 25,000 people in the crowd seem to agree with Obama.
PhoenixDark said:It's interesting that now Obama is the one talking about specifics, hammering out details and policies while McCain is the one trotting out his (not so victorious) victory horse, telling stories and promising band-aid solutions for big problems.
:lolLemonz said:
mckmas8808 said:Hey GAF I feel like I don't live in the same world as the pundits on TV do. Why do all of them keep saying that Obama can't talk about pocket book issues when this whole speech is about pocket book issues?
I mean the 25,000 people in the crowd seem to agree with Obama.
Fragamemnon said:It's the narrative they have for Obama, created out of his education and intelligence mixed with his ability to inspire people with lofty ideas-so OBVIOUSLY he can't talk to the average job about pocketbook issues since he doesn't "feel their pain", nor can he "channel their anger" because that would mean "UH OH ANGRY BLACK MAN, GET THE FIRE HOSE".
No way. He's probably praying to his foreign Hawaiian god. Odin or some shit.Xeke said:God.
Obama is a devout Christian.
Cloudy said:http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2008/09/28/Newspaper_ends_72-year_streak_backs_Obama/UPI-60041222648264/
STOCKTON, Calif., Sept. 28 (UPI) -- A Stockton, Calif., newspaper Sunday endorsed Barack Obama for president, ending a 72-year record of endorsing only Republicans for the office.
The Record, which did not endorse a presidential candidate in 1992, has endorsed Republicans in every other White House election since 1940, when it went for Wendell Willkie over President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The newspaper had endorsed Roosevelt over Alf Landon in 1936.
That's cool. Hope this hits the MSM