Despite all the talk of how little race matters in this campaign, it
is clear that race is still a big deal in biracial campaigns," argued
David Kuo, a former policy adviser to U.S. President George W. Bush.
"And it has showed up for the first time in a measurable way in the
2008 presidential race."
Go to: http://www.afamreport.com/
Click on: 'News Stories' at the top, scroll to NH Voters and Race
I disagree, Obama isn't 'Black' enough for people
to discriminate. He grew up in Hawaii, he doesn't
represent pacific peoples or black America.
Clinton is however very representative of Women,
Motherhood and has experience. It won't be the
Bush oil man syndrome of a fighter pilot who
never saw action and never found oil.
Obama seems to be all hype and we know hat happened
the last time a wraith become President.
> and we know hat happened
> the last time a wraith become President.
Obama (as a person) is pretty irrelevant [just like the other candidates] given
the manner in which things are being reported by the mainstream media.
Tell me, have you heard *anthing* during the reporting of the recent caucuses
that pertained to the actual character, service, and voting history of **ANY** of
the candidates?? Not jack squat has been reported about their record, policies,
or their views / platforms. The ONLY thing being reported is how much money
the candidate has, can raise, or are already spending of purchasing their sound
bites. I know these people have spoken for HOURS over the past few weeks,
but for the past two days I've heard nothing but the same quotes over and over
and over and over.... none of it relative to politics.
That's how the wraith George W. Bush became president.... he BOUGHT it.
;-)
Poll: Bullshit Is Most Important Issue For 2008 Voters
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/poll_bullshit_is_most_important
For a majority of likely voters, meaningless bullshit will be the most
important factor in deciding who they will vote for in 2008.
*
> Some pundits say the "Bradley effect," may explain why the polls
> were so wrong in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, where Hillary
> Clinton won a stunning come-from-behind victory over Barack Obama.
Maybe it's time to point out that Obama didn't really "lose" in New
Hampshire, and neither did Clinton "win".
New Hampshire primaries are not winner-take-all.
Obama and Clinton each claimed 9 delegates, so they actually tied.
--
Bert Hyman | St. Paul, MN | be...@iphouse.com
how true.