Sounds to me like a fancy way of saying, Project into them whatever it is you want :PQuote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
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Sounds to me like a fancy way of saying, Project into them whatever it is you want :PQuote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
Again...Quote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
It is from reading the memoirs of people who worked INSIDE the Clinton administration, not talk radio or some "conservative" outlet. People who share most of the Clinton's viewpoints on the issues still view Bill as a hothead and Hillary as a bitch. Claiming that viewpoint only comes from Limbaugh or O'Reilly is ignoring the facts.
Her own party has been yelling and screaming at her and Bill to tone it down the last few weeks. Maybe you've missed it. But I guess those people are all part of conservative talk radio.
Hillary has been a bitch in this campaign? I'd give her the Miss Congeniality Award.Quote:
Originally Posted by The Leaper
OK, you scored a couple points here, but its still early rounds.Quote:
Originally Posted by hoosier
I am mad as hell. In West Virginia, the McCain supporters in caucuses voted for Huckabee so that Romney would end up getting no delegates.
What a corrupt subversion of democracy!
Leaper & JustinHarrel argued that Huckabee's voters are all mormon-hating evangelicals, but the exit polls and analysts are unequivicol: Huckabee is running interference for McCain in the South, taking voters who would mostly fall to Romney.
I hate Mitt. I like Mike. But I can't stand the spoiler role that Huckabee is playing. I'm glad that Edwards got out of the race, even though most of his supporters have evidently fallen to Obama. Let the people have the say!
Huckabee is winning in the south tonight, which probably guarantees that Huckabee will be McCain's running mate. McCain will need him in the general election. With the numbers of new voters that the Dems are bringing in, the Repubs can not assume a clean sweep in the south in the general election.
I do not think Huckabees strong showing means he will be the VP. Whoever the presidential nominee gets to choose his own VP. McCain might be wise to ask Huckabee to be his VP in the fall to get all those states in the Bible belt.Quote:
Originally Posted by Joemailman
He wouldn't be a bad choice. Boy would it piss the party establishment off, though, the Country Club Republicans don't much like him either.Quote:
Originally Posted by Joemailman
Clinton's having a decent showing so far. Obama needs to win Connecticut, so far he has won only states in the Eastern section of country with high African American population: Deleware, Georgia, Alabama.
Bottom line, I'm convinced the winner of California will win the nomination, and we won't know that until midday tomorrow. I'd bet on Obama, he really surged in the last couple days. There are a couple wild cards that could help Hillary: 2.6 absentee ballots were cast mostly prior to Obama's upswing, and Hispanics are voting (so far this evening) very strongly for Hillary, there's been zero erosion of her support. Most analysts thought Barak was making inroads with Hispanics.
Come on you beautiful brown people! Hillary loves the Mexicans!!
We're fucked no matter what.
true enough. the government is already stealing our precious bodily fluids.
You too? I thought they were aliens. Turns out they were just illegals hired by Hillary to collect my DNA to predict my voting tendencies.Quote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
Quote:
Originally Posted by SkinBasket
I knew there was nothing that woman wouldn't resort to.
Arizona called for Hillary.
I am very nervous about Cali. I'm feeling a big number for Hillary.
We need to head underground.......Quote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
Your last sentence is what I was suggesting. McCain may well pick Huckabee as his running mate to help him in the south.Quote:
Originally Posted by LL2
Chuckie T on MSNBC has the delegate count at 841-837 (margin of error +/- 10.
Tonight was undoubtedly a tie.
That's because they are both equally terrible candidates! :rs:
How do we get Obama & Clinton together on a ticket?
The analysts say its a dumb move, too much total risk with two tradition breakers, no geographical advantage with Illinois and New York already in the bag. I see things in emotional terms, both of these candidates have such passionate support.
Clinton clearly gains politically as a candidate with Obama as her VP.
Clinton's value to Obama as a VP is far less clear, and certainly many of his supporters reject her and her generation. But I think Obama would benefit hugely from her once he got elected. I suspect Obama appreciates her talents, and I guess she would be willing to do it.
I stole line from movie "Doctor Strangelove"Quote:
Originally Posted by BallHawk
I could see a Clinton Obama ticket. It would help to make sure that the new young Obama supporters will show up on election day. Obama is young enough to wait another 8 years run for President, at which point he would be the Dem front-runner.Quote:
Originally Posted by Harlan Huckleby
I don't see a Obama/Clinton ticket. I just don't see her being anyone's VP. I think she'd rather be Senate majority leader. I think Obama would probably pick someone with a lot of foreign policy experience. Joe Biden perhaps.