McCain/Palin are not only incompetent, they are highly partisan and a
threat to our country.

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On Sep 22, 7:45 am, jgg1000a <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> American has and will go through crisis, that is part of life....  The
> question here is who can provide the needed bi-partisan
> LEADERSHIP...    And that requires deeds matching your words...
> Obama so far has failed in that test...  Add in his inexperience, and
> his proclivity toward Chicago style "insider Status Quo" politics, he
> is NOT A RATIOANLA nore REASONED choice...   To change Washington you
> must change how Congress has functioned the last 16 years -- Obama
> offers just "more of the same"...
>
> On Sep 22, 10:27 am, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The whole country is in a debacle, its falling apart at the seams and
> > your so pleased that Obama is loosing support. Who cares? Are you
> > loosing your mind?
>
> > On Sep 23, 12:23 am, jgg1000a <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Obama should listen, instead he will stey the course using his
> > > standard Chicago Politics as usual model...
>
> > >http://jaltcoh.blogspot.com/2008/09/how-obama-lost-me.html
>
> > > >>> So in what sense did he "lose me"? As with my mom's "How Kerry lost 
> > > >>> me," I haven't gone from supporter to non-supporter. What I mean is 
> > > >>> that I used to hold these beliefs:
>
> > >     * I thought he was clearly, dramatically preferably to Hillary
> > > Clinton.
>
> > >     * I thought he was virtually the dream candidate for 2008, with
> > > the obvious but overlookable exception of his thin resume.
>
> > > I now believe that I was wrong. Specifically:
>
> > >     * He's probably better than Hillary would have been, but it's at
> > > least really close, and I'm even open to the idea that she would have
> > > been better.
>
> > >     * I still support Obama, but not particularly more strongly than
> > > I'd be supporting any other mainstream Democratic candidate who was
> > > the nominee.
>
> > >     * He's just not a good enough candidate. Democrats are entitled to
> > > feel very disappointed about this.
>
> > > It's taken me a long time to get to this point because there's no
> > > single issue or moment that decisively turned me off from him.
>
> > > Rather, it's a long list of things that add up to the "He's not good
> > > enough" conclusion. Here are the ones that most stand out to me:
>
> > > 1. "It's not surprising that they get bitter. They cling to guns or
> > > religion or antipathy towards people who aren't like them or anti-
> > > immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment, as a way to explain their
> > > frustrations."  (#28 in my list of campaign moments, by the way)
>
> > > 2. His answer about "evil" in Rick Warren's Saddleback Forum
>
> > > 3. Saying he would personally meet with dictators in his first year
> > > without preconditions
>
> > > 4. I think he got a bad rap for supposedly flip-flopping and moving to
> > > the center immediately after he clinched the nomination, but his
> > > timing and PR could hardly have been worse.
>
> > > 5. The Palin pick seemed to catch them utterly by surprise.
>
> > > I have more points to add to this list -- about race, foreign policy,
> > > and the idea that he hasn't given enough specifics on policy. But they
> > > won't all fit in one blog post, so I'll have to continue the list
> > > later this week.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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