Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

OT: Santorum Out!

19 views
Skip to first unread message

Wilhelm Kuhlmann

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 2:19:17 PM4/10/12
to
Keep your powder dry for 2016 and preserve your chances for a VP nod.
You came a long way and vastly exceeded expectations. With virtually
no staff or money, you made Romney sweat.


William Coleman (ramashiva)

FangBanger

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 4:36:49 PM4/10/12
to
no he didnt .. romeny was NEVER in jeopardy ..ever


I know the 2 billion is an inflated number, but no one has come up
with a figure that is accurate.

Alim acknowleding that he is full of shit

------- 


Wilhelm Kuhlmann

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 4:41:18 PM4/10/12
to
On Apr 10, 1:36 pm, "FangBanger" <a29b...@webnntp.invalid> wrote:

> On Apr 10 2012 1:19 PM, Wilhelm Kuhlmann wrote:

> > Keep your powder dry for 2016 and preserve your chances for a VP nod.
> > You came a long way and vastly exceeded expectations.  With virtually
> > no staff or money, you made Romney sweat.

> no he didnt .. romeny was NEVER in jeopardy ..ever

Of course he was. Romney narrowly won Michigan and Ohio. If Santorum
had won those two, it would have been a dogfight all the way to the
convention.

Please keep your mouth shut on matters about which you know absolutely
nothing. In other words, just shut up.


William Coleman (ramashiva)

bratt

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 10:01:35 PM4/10/12
to
On Apr 10 2012 1:19 PM, Wilhelm Kuhlmann wrote:

I listened to his speech. He seems to be a very honest man, with
heartfelt convictions.


------------------------------------------------------------------------
On Nov 8 2011 2:11 PM, VegasJerry wrote:
Jerry (almonst worthless) 'n Vegas

------ 


arseniccollection

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 11:17:52 PM4/10/12
to
On 4/10/2012 19:01, bratt wrote:

>
> I listened to his speech. He seems to be a very honest man, with
> heartfelt convictions.
>

Geeez. I used to live in PA when he was a mere Senator. Even back then,
his creepiness turned people off. He has convictions all right, and they
are the same ones which led PA voters to thoroughly trash him last
go-around.

Santorum is done, completely. He can cash in with Fox soon, but as a
political force he will never surface again. The very fact of his
current prominence highlights the problems of Republicans on the
national level. Obmama will get re-elected in a landslide.


Clave

unread,
Apr 10, 2012, 11:26:42 PM4/10/12
to
"bratt" <a89...@webnntp.invalid> wrote in message
news:v85f59x...@app-01.ezprovider.com...
> On Apr 10 2012 1:19 PM, Wilhelm Kuhlmann wrote:
>
>> Keep your powder dry for 2016 and preserve your chances for a VP nod.
>> You came a long way and vastly exceeded expectations. With virtually
>> no staff or money, you made Romney sweat.
>>
>>
>> William Coleman (ramashiva)
>
> I listened to his speech. He seems to be a very honest man, with
> heartfelt convictions.

And religiously insane.

Jim



bratt

unread,
Apr 11, 2012, 7:16:36 AM4/11/12
to
I am not disagreeing. What I am saying is that he knows what he believes
in and stands up for same. Whether right or wrong. It is refreshing to
see a politician of either ilk do that.

Mossingen

unread,
Apr 11, 2012, 11:29:20 AM4/11/12
to
"bratt" <a89...@webnntp.invalid> wrote in message
news:kp5g59x...@app-01.ezprovider.com...


> I am not disagreeing. What I am saying is that he knows what he believes
> in and stands up for same. Whether right or wrong. It is refreshing to
> see a politician of either ilk do that.


Yep. It seems to be the simplest of things, and it's easy to see it when
someone actually does it, which is why it's so odd that it's almost
impossible to find a politician that actually does it. I think George W.
Bush had a lot of that quality, which carried him through his presidency and
made him popular with for the most part with the people who agreed with him.
He wasn't a bright man or ever seemed to me to be that qualified to be
President, but he decided on a course and saw it through with no apologies.


Mossingen

unread,
Apr 11, 2012, 11:34:55 AM4/11/12
to
"arseniccollection" <g...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:FJ6hr.172$0l7...@unlimited.newshosting.com...
It's like the major political parties are trying to out-stupid each other.
No one really likes President Obama. He's never really energized his base,
never shown any grit or tough leadership, always too eager to compromise,
never has done much to attract independents, and conservatives certainly
don't like anything about him.

No one likes him at all. And he's going to win in a landslide.


VegasJerry

unread,
Apr 11, 2012, 11:48:31 AM4/11/12
to
On Apr 11 2012 8:34 AM, Mossingen wrote:

> "arseniccollection" <g...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:FJ6hr.172$0l7...@unlimited.newshosting.com...
> > On 4/10/2012 19:01, bratt wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> I listened to his speech. He seems to be a very honest man, with
> >> heartfelt convictions.
> >>
> >
> > Geeez. I used to live in PA when he was a mere Senator. Even back then,
> > his creepiness turned people off. He has convictions all right, and they
> > are the same ones which led PA voters to thoroughly trash him last
> > go-around.
> >
> > Santorum is done, completely. He can cash in with Fox soon, but as a
> > political force he will never surface again. The very fact of his current
> > prominence highlights the problems of Republicans on the national level.
> > Obmama will get re-elected in a landslide.
>
>
>
> It's like the major political parties are trying to out-stupid each other.
> No one really likes President Obama.

Really? And you base this on what?


Jerry





He's never really energized his base,
> never shown any grit or tough leadership, always too eager to compromise,
> never has done much to attract independents, and conservatives certainly
> don't like anything about him.
>
> No one likes him at all. And he's going to win in a landslide.

_____________________________________________________________________ 


arseniccollection

unread,
Apr 11, 2012, 7:03:44 PM4/11/12
to
On 4/11/2012 08:34, Mossingen wrote:
>
> It's like the major political parties are trying to out-stupid each other.
> No one really likes President Obama. He's never really energized his base,
> never shown any grit or tough leadership, always too eager to compromise,
> never has done much to attract independents, and conservatives certainly
> don't like anything about him.
>
> No one likes him at all. And he's going to win in a landslide.

Obama should've made his stand on at least a few issues, to placate his
base if nothing else. Rolling over in every confrontation with the
opposition no way builds enthusiasm.

Last year Obama certainly looked beatable, with his abysmal approval
numbers and sky-high unemployment. Yet, the serious Republican field
contained jokers like Cain, Gingrich, Santorum and Bachmann.

Romney at least seems competent, but his politically likeability is even
less than Obama's.

Pepe Papon

unread,
Apr 12, 2012, 4:21:02 AM4/12/12
to
On Wed, 11 Apr 2012 04:16:36 -0700, "bratt" <a89...@webnntp.invalid>
wrote:

>On Apr 10 2012 10:17 PM, arseniccollection wrote:
>
>> On 4/10/2012 19:01, bratt wrote:
>>
>> >
>> > I listened to his speech. He seems to be a very honest man, with
>> > heartfelt convictions.
>> >
>>
>> Geeez. I used to live in PA when he was a mere Senator. Even back then,
>> his creepiness turned people off. He has convictions all right, and they
>> are the same ones which led PA voters to thoroughly trash him last
>> go-around.
>>
>> Santorum is done, completely. He can cash in with Fox soon, but as a
>> political force he will never surface again. The very fact of his
>> current prominence highlights the problems of Republicans on the
>> national level. Obmama will get re-elected in a landslide.
>
>I am not disagreeing. What I am saying is that he knows what he believes
>in and stands up for same. Whether right or wrong. It is refreshing to
>see a politician of either ilk do that.

Ron Paul is like that. He'll never get elected, probably for that
very reason. The left has Dennis Kucinich, who's now out of a job,
probably for the same reason.

mo_ntresor

unread,
Apr 12, 2012, 10:43:29 AM4/12/12
to
On Apr 12 2012 2:21 AM, Pepe Papon wrote:

> >I am not disagreeing. What I am saying is that he knows what he believes
> >in and stands up for same. Whether right or wrong. It is refreshing to
> >see a politician of either ilk do that.
>
> Ron Paul is like that. He'll never get elected, probably for that
> very reason. The left has Dennis Kucinich, who's now out of a job,
> probably for the same reason.

kucinich sued the congressional cafeteria operator for $150k when he
chipped his tooth on an olive. nice "principles".

mo_ntresor

------- 


ChrisRobin

unread,
Apr 12, 2012, 2:04:47 PM4/12/12
to
On Apr 12 2012 10:43 AM, mo_ntresor wrote:

> kucinich sued the congressional cafeteria operator for $150k when he
> chipped his tooth on an olive. nice "principles".

I've long been a Kucinich supporter, but that was some bush league
bullshit.

--- 


0 new messages