Skyclad1uhm1
Lifer
- Aug 10, 2001
- 11,383
- 87
- 91
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Where is:
Doesn't matter, McCain wins oval office easily?
Isn't 'A vote for Clinton is a vote for McCain' the Clinton slogan?
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Where is:
Doesn't matter, McCain wins oval office easily?
Huh, clinton has fux0red this campaign way more than him. Hers has hemorrhaged severely months ago. In any case, campaigning for presidency is less important than actually being one; I presume their campaign managers are the key decision makers with things like courting college votes.His inexperience definitely showed when he made that mistake.
Why post anything then?Originally posted by: Lemon law
Why post this now? In 24 hours we will have the only poll that matters.
Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Why post anything then?Originally posted by: Lemon law
Why post this now? In 24 hours we will have the only poll that matters.
It is not like any thread we create matters. Let's just close down P&N and head over to OT and talk about meaningless stuff.
Quite true.Originally posted by: superstition
College kids are notorious for not following through by actually showing up and voting, by the way.
perfectly said.Originally posted by: sirjonk
Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Why post anything then?Originally posted by: Lemon law
Why post this now? In 24 hours we will have the only poll that matters.
It is not like any thread we create matters. Let's just close down P&N and head over to OT and talk about meaningless stuff.
Who drops out of a race after going through over 40 and with only 5 contests remaining? Let the Indianians, North Carolinians and Puerto Ricans have their vote. What she should do is lay off the low blow slams. Since it's so unlikely she'll get the nom, she shouldn't be gutting the eventual nominee. Debate, raise issues, but play fair. It's pissing off a lot of her supporters like me. It would be different if she theoretically could assume first place in delegates and popular vote, but the 2% she's behind just cannot be made up at this point. I cannot see the supers throwing out the results of voters in the primary season. Who'd ever bother voting again?
She wins PA by 5+ but this thing has been over for a long while.
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Where is:
Doesn't matter, McCain wins oval office easily?
Originally posted by: sirjonk
Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Why post anything then?Originally posted by: Lemon law
Why post this now? In 24 hours we will have the only poll that matters.
It is not like any thread we create matters. Let's just close down P&N and head over to OT and talk about meaningless stuff.
Who drops out of a race after going through over 40 and with only 5 contests remaining? Let the Indianians, North Carolinians and Puerto Ricans have their vote. What she should do is lay off the low blow slams. Since it's so unlikely she'll get the nom, she shouldn't be gutting the eventual nominee. Debate, raise issues, but play fair. It's pissing off a lot of her supporters like me. It would be different if she theoretically could assume first place in delegates and popular vote, but the 2% she's behind just cannot be made up at this point. I cannot see the supers throwing out the results of voters in the primary season. Who'd ever bother voting again?
She wins PA by 5+ but this thing has been over for a long while.
Why continue to campaign if there is no chance for you to win the nomination...I would have no problem if Hillary stayed in the race to voice her platform, and ensure that Obama does not ignore the constituency that she represents.Who drops out of a race after going through over 40 and with only 5 contests remaining? Let the Indianians, North Carolinians and Puerto Ricans have their vote. What she should do is lay off the low blow slams. Since it's so unlikely she'll get the nom, she shouldn't be gutting the eventual nominee. Debate, raise issues, but play fair. It's pissing off a lot of her supporters like me. It would be different if she theoretically could assume first place in delegates and popular vote, but the 2% she's behind just cannot be made up at this point. I cannot see the supers throwing out the results of voters in the primary season. Who'd ever bother voting again?
Originally posted by: 351Cleveland
Originally posted by: sirjonk
Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Why post anything then?Originally posted by: Lemon law
Why post this now? In 24 hours we will have the only poll that matters.
It is not like any thread we create matters. Let's just close down P&N and head over to OT and talk about meaningless stuff.
Who drops out of a race after going through over 40 and with only 5 contests remaining? Let the Indianians, North Carolinians and Puerto Ricans have their vote. What she should do is lay off the low blow slams. Since it's so unlikely she'll get the nom, she shouldn't be gutting the eventual nominee. Debate, raise issues, but play fair. It's pissing off a lot of her supporters like me. It would be different if she theoretically could assume first place in delegates and popular vote, but the 2% she's behind just cannot be made up at this point. I cannot see the supers throwing out the results of voters in the primary season. Who'd ever bother voting again?
She wins PA by 5+ but this thing has been over for a long while.
Indianans? Hoosiers... we are called Hoosiers.
Originally posted by: mflacy
Lol, did anyone just catch the exchange on MSNBC between the female newscaster and the guy in charge of precincts in Philadelphia?
MSNBC: Hi Fred, we heard about voting problems in Philadelphia. Machines not working and only 1 or 2 working machines in African American districts.
Philly: (eating cheesesteak in background) That's not happening. There were some problems in the morning just like most primaries, but they have been worked out.
MSNBC: Right, but we've heard that machines not working and only 1 or 2 working machines in African American districts.
Philly: NO, that's completely untrue.
MSNBC: OK, but is there any truth to these claims, Fred?
Philly: (Sighs in desperation)
The entire exchange went on waaaay too long.
Originally posted by: Vic
It will be close and she still won't get out. Hillary's campaign isn't about the good of the country, it's about Hillary.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Vic
It will be close and she still won't get out. Hillary's campaign isn't about the good of the country, it's about Hillary.
Well, I think she really believes she IS what's good for the country, no? I feel like you do and express here, but I don't much like myself for having those suspicions when the only way to know for sure, how much self delusion there is really, would be to actually be inside her head. How much is her ambition driven by the assumptions she has the most to contribute and how much does her ambition not care. I don't really know; I just have only opinions, I think.
Originally posted by: loki8481
if Hillary loses PA, she should drop out.
if Hillary wins PA but loses both Indiana and NC, she should drop out after the last primary.
if Hillary wins PA and either Indiana or NC, I see no reason not to take it to the convention, unless the super delegates crown Obama king before then.
I heard there were three hundred thousand new democratic registrations for the PA primary this year... with numbers like that, can you really argue that the extended primary season is hurting the party? that's three hundred thousand people who are more likely to vote in November and months of forcing the democratic front-runner to build infrastructure in these states that might otherwise get ignored in the fall.
Agreed, this campaign is energizing the Democratic base like no other. The Democratic party will undoubtedly benefit from all these hundreds of thousands of new registrations when the general election comes around.Originally posted by: loki8481
I heard there were three hundred thousand new democratic registrations for the PA primary this year... with numbers like that, can you really argue that the extended primary season is hurting the party? that's three hundred thousand people who are more likely to vote in November and months of forcing the democratic front-runner to build infrastructure in these states that might otherwise get ignored in the fall.
Agreed, this campaign is energizing the Democratic base like no other. The Democratic party will undoubtedly benefit from all these hundreds of thousands of new registrations when the general election comes around.
What usually comes to mind for me:Well, I think she really believes she IS what's good for the country, no?
Originally posted by: RY62
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Vic
It will be close and she still won't get out. Hillary's campaign isn't about the good of the country, it's about Hillary.
Well, I think she really believes she IS what's good for the country, no? I feel like you do and express here, but I don't much like myself for having those suspicions when the only way to know for sure, how much self delusion there is really, would be to actually be inside her head. How much is her ambition driven by the assumptions she has the most to contribute and how much does her ambition not care. I don't really know; I just have only opinions, I think.
I think you're right. Both of the Dem candidates believe passionately that they are what's best for the country. We're just as passionate about who we think would be best for the country. We are also passionately against those who oppose our choice, as if the opposition to our choice opposes what is good for the country.
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: RY62
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: Vic
It will be close and she still won't get out. Hillary's campaign isn't about the good of the country, it's about Hillary.
Well, I think she really believes she IS what's good for the country, no? I feel like you do and express here, but I don't much like myself for having those suspicions when the only way to know for sure, how much self delusion there is really, would be to actually be inside her head. How much is her ambition driven by the assumptions she has the most to contribute and how much does her ambition not care. I don't really know; I just have only opinions, I think.
I think you're right. Both of the Dem candidates believe passionately that they are what's best for the country. We're just as passionate about who we think would be best for the country. We are also passionately against those who oppose our choice, as if the opposition to our choice opposes what is good for the country.
Yes, and there are a number of ways one can go with that. The traditional way, the way that in my opinion is useless, is to demonize the opposition and destroy them, because they are no good.
Another way, the way I think Obama favors, is to look at what both sides have in common and work from there, the desire to do what is best for the nation. I believe that liberals lean in the direction of dissatisfaction with what is wrong with the nation and conservatives are occupied with lot allowing things to get worse. For one change is good and for the other it is bad.
But the truth has nothing to do with change; it's about what kind of change and where. Can we find things both sides want to change, in a common concern for what is best for the nation? Can we begin with the notion of respect that the other side wants what is good too? Can we talk seriously about what is really good and bad as if the cares of both sides were positive?
This is the kind of change I think we need, a change from fighting to working together. It requires that one die to what we've been doing. We have a love for war that may cost us far more than we can imagine.