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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: SC]
#515735
10/15/08 09:11 PM
10/15/08 09:11 PM
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984 California
The Italian Stallionette
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 25,984
California
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McCain avoids answering questions and instead attacks Obama at every turn (which I guess he has no choice at this point). But, I think Obama is explaining things (like his health care) and McCain tries to answer , but then goes on to his stump speeches like "we can do it", "I know how to do it"....Know what I mean? If you are watching CNN it has the audience meter, and everytime John mentions "Joe the Plumber" the line goes way down. Notice? It's not working. Obama won this won handily too IMHO!! Seriously, who looks and acts more Presidential????? No contest. TIS
"Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind. War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same reputation and prestige that the warrior does today." JFK
"War is over, if you want it" - John Lennon
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: dontomasso]
#515785
10/15/08 11:27 PM
10/15/08 11:27 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 8,389 Staten Island / New Jersey
Just Lou
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 8,389
Staten Island / New Jersey
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Report: Obama Mega-Ad Could Delay World Series Game
Barack Obama has secured three networks to air his 30-minute ad in late October, and it may even cut into World Series time
FOXNews.com
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
At least three of the major broadcast television networks have agreed to air a 30-minute ad from the Barack Obama campaign in late October, according to a report in Advertising Age.
The article also says that if there is a sixth game of the World Series, Major League Baseball will push the game's start later by 15 minutes so the FOX network can air the ad on Oct. 29. The start time was moved from 8:20 to 8:35 p.m.
According to Advertising Age, the Obama campaign is spending close to $3 million to air the 8 p.m. program on FOX, CBS and NBC.
The Republican National Committee scolded Obama on Wednesday for interfering with professional baseball's proceedings.
"It's unfortunate that the World Series' first pitch is being delayed for Obama's political pitch. Not only is Obama putting politics before principle, he's putting it before our national pastime," spokesman Alex Conant said.
The Obama campaign has not revealed the content of the half-hour ad.
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: Just Lou]
#515786
10/15/08 11:33 PM
10/15/08 11:33 PM
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902 New York
SC
Consigliere
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Consigliere
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 22,902
New York
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The Obama campaign has not revealed the content of the half-hour ad. "McCain's a liar, pants on fire". Fuck that... play ball!!!
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: Mignon]
#515803
10/16/08 01:13 AM
10/16/08 01:13 AM
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 11,797 Pennsylvania
klydon1
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 11,797
Pennsylvania
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My question is: Is Joe The Plumber a Maverick? Can I vote for him? Meet Joe The Plumber: That's Mr. Clean. I turned on the debate during commercials of the ball game. McCain had a good line in distancing himself from Obama's comparison of him to Bush ("If you want to run against Bush, you should have run 4 years ago"). But this response is a little late as Obama has been hammering this comparison away since the convention. I watched the meter too, TIS, and Obama has been much more popular than McCain on the healthcare issue. It's kind of hard for the American people to look past the McCain proposal to tax people's healtcare benefits. I get the impression that the negative campaigning came from campaign advisors within the Republican Nat. Com. as they saw the gap in the polls widen and realized they were getting beat on the issues. McCain seems very uncomfortable with it. I think he also did not take kindly to the recent suggestions from supporters in crowds, admonishing him to fight and get tough. It is embarrassing and unpresidential to be told by a guy off the street that you have to toughen up. By the way, Obama gave another gratuitous shout out to Scranton as he's looking to soldify the blue collar support that Biden is working hard for.
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: klydon1]
#515812
10/16/08 01:33 AM
10/16/08 01:33 AM
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Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,310 New Jersey, USA
J Geoff
The Don
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The Don
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 31,310
New Jersey, USA
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I actually thought McCain came out of the gate with guns blazing, on full attack. He was doing okay challenging Obama, until he started losing it around the middle, and then floundering in desperation at the end. Keep in mind they are BOTH politicians, therefore they're both liars and conniving jerkoffs.
I studied Italian for 2 semesters. Not once was a "C" pronounced as a "G", and never was a trailing "I" ignored! And I'm from Jersey! lol Whaddaya want me to do? Whack a guy? Off a guy? Whack off a guy? --Peter Griffin My DVDs | Facebook | Godfather Filming Locations
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: ronnierocketAGO]
#515828
10/16/08 07:15 AM
10/16/08 07:15 AM
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 6,762 Anytown, USA
goombah
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 6,762
Anytown, USA
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I thought McCain did better, but he really had nowhere to go but up after his first two debates. His line about not being George Bush was good, but he should have been saying that months ago. I heard a lot of fluff, but never did I get the impression that McCain had full confidence in Palin.
Obama let McCain off the hook by not throwing the "fundamentals of the economy are strong" comment back in McCain's face. That statement summarizes how out-of-touch McCain has been with the financial crisis. I also thought Barack should have pressed the point of how Palin did nothing to quell the "kill him" shouts at recent rallies. I may have missed something, but I think even McCain asked the crowd only to reign it in when someone shouted "terrorist," not when "kill him" was shouted.
McCain's flippant comment about the "health" of a woman in an abortion should come back to bite him in the ass with some of his base, not to mention many women voters.
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Re: CAMPAIGN 2008
[Re: goombah]
#515842
10/16/08 10:02 AM
10/16/08 10:02 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
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This from Fox News. Even they're saying it's over.
McCain Sees His Chances Slip Away Thursday, October 16, 2008
By Susan Estrich
You can count them on one hand. Alabama, Kansas, Georgia and South Carolina. Every morning, realclearpolitics.com lists all the public polls, both state and national, released that day. Since Saturday, John McCain has been behind in every single national poll. He has also been behind in every major swing state. He’s down by double digits in Pennsylvania and Virginia, down by 13 in New Mexico, down by 10 in Virginia.
The “safe” states for McCain are few and far between, and not even close to a majority in the electoral college.
McCain’s defenders call it a “mid-single digit” deficit. Presidential elections don’t work like horsehoes. A “mid-single digit” defeat means you get clobbered. A “high-single digit” defeat means a landslide.
Right now, the race is somewhere between clobbered and landslide, somewhere between 1988 (seven points/clobbered) and 1980 (nine points/landslide). Not close. Not pretty.
Wednesday night was John McCain’s last big chance to change things. It was the last moment that a significant percentage of Americans will tune in to see the two candidates. It was the last chance for McCain to take on Barack Obama on an even playing field.
Starting Thursday, and for the 18 days that follow, Obama will be outspending McCain everywhere that matters by 2-1 or 3-1 – or more. Starting Thursday, Republicans everywhere will be covering their rear ends, trying to make sure that they are not swept up in what looks like a wave; trying to cut their losses, avoid taking people with them.
Wednesday night was McCain’s last best chance to avoid triage. He needed to make something happen. He didn’t. Wednesday night was not a “game-changer.” Don’t take my word for it. Ask Republican Mike Huckabee. He said it, and he’s right.
Joe the Plumber may be the new icon of the campaign, but Obama’s comment that we need to “spread the wealth around” is not going to cost him this election. It’s not that kind of year. It’s the kind of year where people who never worry are worried, where economic insecurity is rampant, where the problem is not too much government but not enough. By all means spread the wealth around, if there is any to spread around.
Maybe there was nothing McCain could have said to change things. Maybe the die was cast when the housing bubble exploded, when the Dow dropped, when the credit market froze. It may well be that we’ll look back and say, as we did in 1980, that thinking this would be a close election was a denial of economic reality; that all people needed was the barest reassurance that it was safe to say no to the incumbent party, and the party was over.
Maybe we’ll say that no matter who McCain picked, or how much he raised, or what he did, the end would have been the same, that Mitt Romney could not have done any better, in the first or second spot; that that when the percentage of Americans who think the country is heading on the right track is in the single digits, a single-digit defeat is the best the incumbent party can expect.
The Republican talking heads are all saying that McCain “won” on Wednesday night. What they mean is that they liked what they heard. As well they should. McCain played to his base on Wednesday night, and played hard. He played to avoid having the floor fall out from under him. He played for a single-digit defeat, not a victory.
October is not the time to play to your base. October is not the time for liberals to be proud of being liberals, or conservatives to be proud of being conservatives. That’s August. September, latest.
October is the time for Democrats to point out that abortion is a difficult issue, that reasonable people can disagree; that’s what Obama did Wednesday night. He was playing to the middle, because his base is secure.
As Jimmy Carter once said, life isn’t fair. It isn’t. Hillary Clinton supporters now understand that all that stood between her and the White House was a failed caucus strategy; that she, too, could have beaten John McCain, and would have.
True enough. John McCain supporters, particularly those who were with him eight years ago, must be pained by the realization that the man who beat them, slammed them, threw mud at them then is costing their man the election now. Wednesday night, at long last, John McCain insisted that he wasn’t George Bush, that if Barack Obama wanted to run against George Bush, he should have run four years ago.
It was a good line. It was a long overdue effort to draw a line in the sand. But it doesn’t work. Politics is not about fairness.
It may not be George Bush’s fault that the economy is in the toilet, but it happened on his watch. He would have taken credit for peace and prosperity. So he gets blamed for their absence. And so does his party, and its new leader. Live by the sword and die by the sword, even if it’s someone else’s sword.
Barack Obama is a very lucky guy. But it is also the case that he made his luck. The fat lady has yet to sing, but she is definitely getting ready.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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