This is one of the most vile, putrid, ridicules spins I have read,what you have 
posted, raunchy, using the democrat and republican spin switcharoo. Yeah, bye. 


Fits right in with the no ID required to vote in the Iowa primary, when 
everyone is very sensitive to vote fraud, all of a sudden, an ID is not 
necessary? 
http://www.bradblog.com/?p=9016
At the Florida Republican straw poll, no ID was required to vote either, even 
though everyone had to pay $275.00 a person to attend, but who voted? Huh? 


Let me email you an application to join the military right now, because every 
other candidate has war on their minds. I do not think the Maharishi wanted 
war. Jesus, neither. 
 

Psst, Ron Paul is not a racist.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeuSa0oIB6A

PS, my family has given time in the Military for you to be free, so please do 
not say I don't support our troops. I do.




--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "raunchydog" <raunchydog@...> wrote:
>
> Many of the Democrats enthralled with Ron Paul seem to be the same Democrats 
> enthralled with Obama. IMO support for Ron Paul is another gambit into the 
> cult of personality. I never drank the Obama Kool-Aid, so I got called a 
> racist for supporting Hillary in 2008. Ironically, many of those same 
> Democrats now support Ron Paul who *is* a racist. Go figure. Just curious, 
> how many Democrats formerly in love with Obama but now in love with Ron Paul 
> will admit they thought Hillary supporters were racists? Off to caucus 
> "Uncommitted" with the Democrats. Bye.
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "raunchydog" <raunchydog@> wrote:
> >
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > Six Ways Iowa Progressives Will Caucus | The Nation
> > <http://www.thenation.com/blog/165408/six-ways-iowa-progressives-will-ca\
> > ucus>  www.thenation.com <http://www.thenation.com/> "'Uncommitted'  
> > slates have won Iowa caucuses before. In 1972 and 1976, more Democratic 
> > caucus votes were cast for the 'uncommitted' option than for any of the 
> > announced candidates. As recently as 1992, 'uncommitted' beat Bill 
> > Clinton. On the Republican side, 'uncommitted' beat Dob Dole in the 1980
> > caucus race, and Alexander Haig in 1988. This year, an 'Occupy Iowa 
> > Caucus; initiative is urging voters to attend caucuses and back 
> > 'uncommitted' slates."
> > Occupy Iowa Caucus: A Democrat "Uncommitted" in 2012 or Why I Won't
> > Caucus for Obama a Second Time
> > <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dave-murphy/occupy-iowa-caucus-a-demo_b_1\
> > 181722.html>  www.huffingtonpost.com <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/>
> > The  question now for Iowa Democrats is, will they blindly stand by
> > their  man or will they express their dissatisfaction with Obama's
> > complete  failure to follow through on what he promised us during his
> > first tour  through the Iowa countryside?
> > http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dave-murphy/occupy-iowa-caucus-a-demo_b_11\
> > 81722.html
> > <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dave-murphy/occupy-iowa-caucus-a-demo_b_1\
> > 181722.html>
> > 
> > 
> > Jefferson County Democratic Party Caucus
> > Lincoln Elementary School401 W. Stone, Fairfield, IA
> > 
> > 6:00 PM:          The Doors will Open
> > 6:30 PM:          Registration Opens    7:00 PM:          Caucus Called
> > to Order                        Location manager reads agenda for the
> > evening                        2012 Campaign Presentation-       Local
> > surrogate discusses the importance of getting involved and electing
> > Democrats-       President Obama will be calling and live streaming via
> > webcast into sites across the state  7:30 PM*:         Presentation by
> > the Iowa Democratic Party  Letters from elected officials may be read
> > aloud, any officials present may address the caucus  7:45 PM*:        
> > Group splits into individual precincts                        Election
> > of Permanent Precinct Chair and Precinct Secretary
> >                          Election of Delegates and Alternates
> >                          Election of Delegates and Alternates
> >                          Election of Platform & Committee on Committees
> > Members                        Election of Precinct Committee Persons
> > Resolution Discussion and Adoption  8:30 PM*:         Caucus Adjourns
> > *Times may vary depending upon caucus location
> > 
> > Delegate Selection Process  Iowa Democrats who wish to become a delegate
> > to the county, district, state, or national convention must begin that
> > process on caucus night by running in their precinct. Each precinct is
> > apportioned delegates based on the size of their county's convention
> > and past Democratic performance.   Once elected on caucus night, a
> > delegate must attend their county convention and run as a delegate to
> > the district and state convention. From there, they would be elected as
> > a delegate to the national convention in Charlotte, NC.  There will be a
> > total of 1200 delegates elected to the state convention, which will take
> > place on June 16th, 2012 in Des Moines.     Resolution Process  Caucus
> > goers may submit a resolution in their precinct on caucus night. Adopted
> > resolutions will be given to the county platform committee who will
> > determine which resolutions are presented at the county convention.   
> > Preference Groups  Democrats will only form preference groups if at
> > least 15 percent of the attendees wish to do so. If the caucus agrees to
> > form preference groups, delegates are proportionally awarded to any
> > group that meets the viability threshold (15 percent in most precincts).
> > If a group is not viable when preference groups are initially formed,
> > those individuals may realign and support a viable candidate. Delegates
> > are then assigned.      Results ReportingThe Iowa Democratic Party will
> > collect data from caucus locations and make it available to reporters
> > throughout the night. Members of the Iowa Democratic Party media list
> > will receive a link to results once most precincts have reported their
> > data.
> >
>


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