Barack Obama

February 12, 2010

Giuliani Vs. Obama: The SOTU Terrorism Speech That Wasn’t?

more at foxnews.com, cnn.com; January 27-28, 2010

Duration : 0:1:22

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January 30, 2010

Would Notre Dame students have protested against Rudy Giuliani making a speech there instead of Obama?

Filed under: obama speech — Tags: Good Question, Notre Dame, obama, Pro Choice, protest, Rudy Giuliani — admin @ 5:31 am

They protested obama’s speech simply for one reason: he’s pro-choice.

Rudy Giuliani is pro-choice.
If he made a speech there, would he be held to the same standard?

That really is a good question. I assume that some of the same students would and other students that didn’t protest Obama would protest Giuliani for other reasons. The do have that right..

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January 27, 2010

Campaign and Suffering

Campaign and Suffering
Capitol Steps, a group of former Capitol Hill staffers, are up to their usual hijinks with the hilarious musical parodies released in the midst of the 2008 primary campaign. “76 Unknowns” (based on “76 Trombones” lampoons the numerous presidential hopefuls whose campaigns quickly fell apart, while “Huckabee” is a hilarious sendup of “Let It Be,” about the last G.O.P. presidential candidate to fight Senator John McCain for the nomination. President George W. Bush, known for his many vocal stumbles in public appearances, becomes Kermit the Frog in “The BrainMouth Connection,” while “The Rain in Spain Lies Clearly on the Plain” is transformed into “McCain’s Campaign,” describing the unexpected rebound of the Senator’s campaign, which was nearly out of money and thought to be on the verge of collapse in 2007. “obama Meets Osama” (using the music of “Black and White”) envisions a meeting between Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama and terrorist Osama Bin Laden. Former Massachusetts Mitt Romney” is the target in “Help Me Fake It to the Right,” former New York City mayor and flop presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani is skewered with “Relying on NineEleven,” borrowing the music from “Stairway to Heaven.” Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, whose shortcomings as a presidential candidate were revealed with one of the most inept campaigns in history, is the focus of “Hillary’s Way,” an amusing send up of Frank Sinatra’s hit “My Way.”Current topics are also covered. “Buy, Buy American Pie” laments the lack of homemade (in other words, U.S.raised ingredients) in food products. “Ten Pills and You’re Fine” ridicules the outpouring of medicines for diseases and conditions that people had never heard of, set to Michel Legrand’s “The Windmills of Your Mind” (with one line being “Cause Levitra and my Cialis keep my husband up all night”). The vocalists do a great job with their impressions (particularly of Bush and exPresident Bill Clinton. This terrific CD, like many earlier efforts by the Capitol Steps, ought to be required listening for history classes in the future.

- Ken Dryden, All Music Guide

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January 21, 2010

2008 Topps Series 1 Baseball Sealed Hobby Box

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2008 Topps Series 1 Baseball Sealed Hobby Box36 packs per box, 10 cards per pack Topps has done it again!! Just like last years’ story with the Derek Jeter card with George W. Bush and Mickey Mantle on it, Topps has another “error” card for 2008. This time featuring former New York City mayor and self-proclaimed life long Yankees fan Rudy Giuliani, added in with the Yankees hated rival, the Boston Red Sox, World Series Championship celebration! Take a look at the story on Beckett.com Topps has short printed this card and inserted in about 1 in every 70 packs!!!Look for ALL NEW Campaign 2008 Cut Signature Cards from some of the top ‘08 Presidential Candidates including John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Fred Thompson, Barrack Obama, and John Edwards!!Also look for various Autographed and Game Used Memorabilia Cards, Printing Plates, and Mini-Jersey Cards!!Key Rookies: Brandon Jones, Wladimir Balentien, Ross Detwiler, Ross Ohlendorf, Luke Hochevar, Joe Koshansky, Bronson Sardinha, Daric Barto

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July 23, 2009

The Romney Run

While pundits and analysts keep touting first Huckabee, then McCain, Mitt Romney has slowing and quietly moved from a slow gait to a full-fledged run. He was written off after Iowa. He was further pushed back after New Hampshire. And yet here he is leading the pack in Florida in the latest Rasmussen poll. How’d that happen? The Las Vegas odds are changing!

Well, for starters, he won Wyoming. Then he won his dad’s state of Michigan. This weekend he trounced everyone in the Nevada caucus. So, who is it that stands at the top of the delegate count even after a 4th place finish in South Carolina? Mitt Romney.

Who is it that has the greatest financial resources to compete in Florida an Super Tuesday? Mitt Romney.

The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey finds Mitt Romney with a slight lead in Florida’s Republican Presidential Primary. John McCain and Rudy Giuliani are close behind in what may develop into a three-man race. It’s Romney at 25%, McCain at 20%, and Giuliani at 19%. Romney has picked up seven points over the past week while McCain and Giuliani each inched up a point.

So, is Fred fried? Is Guiliani done come Super Tuesday? Is McCain really a Republican? Have the evangelicals burned out over the Huck-a-wannabe effort?

As Rasmussen reports, Florida represents both a major challenge and a major opportunity for McCain. Both result from the fact that Independent voters are not allowed to participate in Florida’s Republican Primary. In McCain’s earlier victories, he has been competitive among Republican voters but won with the votes of Independents. If he is to win the GOP nomination, McCain must sooner or later show that he can win among Republicans. On the other hand, if McCain can win a Republican-only Primary in Florida, he will have a major advantage heading into Super Tuesday a week later.

Two weeks from now who will be the last one or two standing? And who will that person face in November? obama, Hillary, and Bloomberg? Maybe two of those three?

Ernie Fitzpatrick
http://www.articlesbase.com/politics-articles/the-romney-run-311708.html

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June 2, 2009

Is Barak Obaba a viable Presidential candidate? What advise and concerns should Obama address?

What Presidential candidate has your interests?

Barak Obama/Hillary Clinton …Democrats
vs.
Rudy Giuliani/John McCain…….Republicans

Would it make for an interesting race for the White House?…Contravercial?

Obama Ties '08 Bid to Lincoln's Legacy

Last Edited: Saturday, 10 Feb 2007, 4:05 PM PST
Created: Saturday, 10 Feb 2007, 9:17 AM PST

U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill. waves to spectators as he arrives to announce his candidacy for president of the United States at the Old State Capitol in Springfield, Ill., Saturday, Feb. 10, 2007. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) By NEDRA PICKLER
Associated Press Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Barack Obama announced his bid for president Saturday, a black man evoking Abraham Lincoln's ability to unite a nation and a Democrat portraying himself as a fresh face capable of leading a new generation.
"Let us transform this nation," he told thousands shivering in the cold at the campaign's kickoff.

obama, 45, is the youngest candidate in the Democrats' 2008 primary field dominated by front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and filled with more experienced lawmakers. In an address from the state capital where he began his elective career 10 years ago, the first-term U.S. senator sought to distinguish himself as a staunch opponent of the Iraq war and a White House hopeful whose lack of political experience is an asset.

"I know I haven't spent a lot of time learning the ways of Washington. But I've been there long enough to know that the ways of Washington must change," Obama said to some of the loudest applause of his 20-minute speech.

Obama is looking to cap his remarkable, rapid rise to prominence with the biggest political prize of all — the presidency. His elective career began just 10 years ago in the Illinois Legislature. He lost a bid for a U.S. House seat, then won the Senate seat in 2004, a relatively smooth election made easier by GOP stumbles.

In his speech, Obama did not mention his roots as the son of a man from Kenya and a woman from Kansas, his childhood in Hawaii and Indonesia or the history he would make if elected. That compelling biography has turned him into a political celebrity.

I think the key is that Bush trashing has "legs" – whichever party that can spin that the best will win, but either a minority or a woman must be on the ticket as that is anti-establishment as well. I personally would have a hard time deciding between McCain/Giuliani, Giuliani/McCain, Giuliani/Rice or McCain/Rice.

On the Democratic side Obama has the most anti-Bush "legs" but the feeling for him fades in the heartland. So Clinton/Obama (and this time the prez/veep order must be maintained, not for political correctness but so Hillary's toes do not get stepped on) would to me be the most formidable ticket for Democrats.

It's going to be very interesting and unless there is a severe act of War on Iran's part you should expect to see Hillary as our next President with Obama as Veep, but by about the same margin as in the last election as this country (as if you hadn't noticed) is getting about as polarized as it was right before the War Between the States, so there will be no landslides for the forseeable future, but definitely a Democratic Legistative bias for at least the next five years.

As far as what issues Obama should address, he has to come off as a healer of this great divide forming in our country as well as a person willing to moderate and compromise; he cannot come off as "everyone, if they were smart enough, would realize they should be a Democrat because all Dems are good while even a blind man could see that all Republicans are evil" – that stuff is passe and any such imflammatory rhetoric could only add to the momentum that is building today towards a new Civil War.

Next he has to mention the economy and must make a watershed announcement that some aspect of the Welfare system needs to be overhauled – what better way to start the change than to have the party (Roosevelt's) that started this Big Brother concept to admit that it somehow, as well-intentioned as it was, took a slighly wrong approach and must change tactics to better "promote the general welfare", and in so doing he must address spousal abuse, medical insurance and gangs, and propose better ways to get a handle on such things.

Then he must mention that, as distasteful as the War in Iraq has been (all could agree on that), that the concept of "providing for the common defense" must always be at the heart of our purpose of having a Government in the first place and he must not shrink from the duty of a War with Iran if necessary.

Then he must stop taking as an insult the fact that he has been labeled "eloquent" as a racial slur. As for me I always prefer eloquence to poor grammatical standards. He needs to imagine than nobody can see the color of his skin when they hear him talk (or even care about it as is my own tendency).

Then he must mention that the jury is still not out on Global Warming – that 50% of the professional scientists, although they are obviously aware that polar caps have been melting at an alarming rate, are still not convinced that it is solely the work of Man rather than being caused by nature and merely exaggerated by man – indeed, some still are not willing to conclude that man is indeed exacerbating it – after all, by scientific analysis of the ice layers in Antarctica it can be established that previous global warming has occurred in the past – so it would be a stretch to assume that each and every one of these previous Ice cap meltings were cause solely by man, who vanished and reappeared each time with perhaps a 2-3% remnant population base that learned absolutely nothing about its previous wrong behavior.

Then he must tackle Immigration – and must mention that, although he thinks Bush's policies have been misguided, he must make a real solution to the problem that is good enough to garner him the Nobel prize and not play into the hands of the radical Mexican protesters or the Ku Klux Klan.

Finally, he needs to say that although the ways of Washington must change in general, he must not make it a threat to throw the baby out with the bathwater – he must preserve those institutions he feels are working, and he must solicit the opinions of those across the aisle to help him fix what he perceives to be wrong.

He must also be gracious if the Dems draft Hillary as President with him Vice-President, and must not be angry that he was not nominated in her place; after all, wouldn't you rather have your party elected than ego gratification?

In short – he has a tall order.

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