US Election Coverage 2008

US Election Coverage 2008

Interesting stuff, kuna mtu yoyote ameishika hii au nimeshaanza kulag....?slowly hizi kampeni zitaanza kubore.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton did something Wednesday night that she almost never does. She apologized. And once she started, she didn't seem able to stop.

The New York senator, who is in a tight race with Illinois Sen. Barack Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination, struck several sorry notes at an evening forum sponsored by the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a group of more than 200 black community newspapers across the country.

Her biggest apology came in response to a question about comments by her husband, Bill Clinton, after the South Carolina primary, which Obama won handily. Bill Clinton said Jesse Jackson also won South Carolina when he ran for president in 1984 and 1988, a comment many viewed as belittling Obama's success.

"I want to put that in context. You know I am sorry if anyone was offended. It was certainly not meant in any way to be offensive," Hillary Clinton said. "We can be proud of both Jesse Jackson and Senator Obama."

"Anyone who has followed my husband's public life or my public life know very well where we have stood and what we have stood for and who we have stood with," she said, acknowledging that whoever wins the nomination will have to heal the wounds of a bruising, historic contest.

"Once one of us has the nomination there will be a great effort to unify the Democratic party and we will do so, because, remember I have a lot of supporters who have voted for me in very large numbers and I would expect them to support Senator Obama if he were the nominee," she said.

The Clintons long have enjoyed overwhelming support from black voters, but that has been eclipsed during the primaries and caucuses by enthusiasm and support for Obama, who has pulled huge margins among black voters. Arguments over the role of race and gender have flared up repeatedly throughout the contest between Obama, who would be the nation's first black president, and Clinton, who would be its first female one.

Earlier in the day, Hillary Clinton supporter and fundraiser Geraldine Ferraro gave up her honorary position with Clinton's campaign after she said in an interview last week that Obama would not have made it this far if he were white. Obama said Ferraro's remarks were "ridiculous" and "wrong-headed."

Of Ferraro's comment, Hillary Clinton told her audience: "I certainly do repudiate it and I regret deeply that it was said. Obviously she doesn't speak for the campaign, she doesn't speak for any of my positions, and she has resigned from being a member of my very large finance committee."

As first lady and senator, Clinton rarely cedes an inch to her critics. On the issue of her vote to authorize the Iraq war, for instance, she steadfastly has refused to apologize, coming close by saying she regrets it, despite calls from many anti-war voters in the party to make a more explicit mea culpa.

Her third conciliatory statement of the evening was more in keeping with that fighting stance.

Asked about the government's efforts in the Gulf States after Hurricane Katrina, Hillary Clinton turned an apology into a criticism of President Bush, who happened to be speaking at a Republican event in another room at the same hotel.

"I've said it publicly, and I say it privately: I apologize, and I am embarrassed that our government so mistreated our fellow citizens ... It was a national disgrace," she said.
 
.....zi-bore mara ngapi?? hivi umeona lile dongo la 'organizing principle' wakati Obama anajibu swali juu ya rants za Ms. Ferraro?

Mark Penn, kafungua domo lake leo.......pumba tupu, imebidi Wolfson aje ku-clean up!! hii ishakuwa Nightmare, anaye-enjoy hapa ni Nyani Ngabu pekeyake, kwasababu yeye amezoea na kuzimia "mipasho."
Mzaramo flani hivi, itabidi brazameni ampe mwaliko wa kwenda ngomani London!! LOL.
 
na wewe si upost za Obama na akina Hannity, Coultier, Limbaugh...ngoja niende kusikiliza nyimbo za B***y club sasa wekeend hii watu wanaingizana Pink Sleeve

Kesho payday nini mwenzangu...?Lol
 
Kesho payday nini mwenzangu...?Lol

Nageuka kuwa kama Spitzer lol... mkuu ukikalia sana siasa unaweza kutoka mamvi kama ya Lowassa ukiwa bado kijana...Mambo ya Clinton na Obama nayaweka kando mpaka vijembe vikichanganya uko Penn.
 
Nimeshangaa sana kusikia Tom Daschle yuko kwenye kampeni ya Obama, ni mmoja kati ya heavy weights wa Democrats, Lakini inaonekana Bibi ameweza kuihandle timu ya wajanja.

Machi 6 Polls Rasmussen zilionesha Clinton asilimia 52 Obama 37
machi 13 Clinton 51 Obama 38 and the war goes on. Hopefully Clinton atashinda lakini sijui itakuwa kwa margin gani!
 
Nimeshangaa sana kusikia Tom Daschle yuko kwenye kampeni ya Obama, ni mmoja kati ya heavy weights wa Democrats, Lakini inaonekana Bibi ameweza kuihandle timu ya wajanja.

Machi 6 Polls Rasmussen zilionesha Clinton asilimia 52 Obama 37
machi 13 Clinton 51 Obama 38 and the war goes on. Hopefully Clinton atashinda lakini sijui itakuwa kwa margin gani!

Hizi polls zitakuchanganya akili, na Apil 22 ni mbaali sana, anything can happen.

Nadhani ni bora tuendelee kusikiliza debates watakazofanya maana naona Mama anataka 15 minutes of fame iendelee na aonekane kwamba yumo.

Taking the stage for the 21st and possibly 22nd time, Sens. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and Barack Obama, D-Ill., could debate at least twice more before the critical Pennsylvania primary on Tuesday, April 22.

Both candidates have accepted an ABC News debate in Philadelphia and Obama has accepted a similar invitation from CBS News to debate at a location to be determined in North Carolina.

The CBS News debate would be their first debate of the 2008 campaign season.

ABC News hosted two debates in January -- only two days after the Iowa caucuses and three days before the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primary.

In partnership with Facebook and New Hampshire affiliate WMUR, ABC News anchor Charlie Gibson moderated back-to-back Republican and Democratic debates, at that time featuring six GOP contenders and four Dems including Obama, Clinton, former senator John Edwards, D-N.C., and Governor Bill Richardson, D-N.M.
 
Two words: Jeremiah Wright

Two words in reply: OLD STORY

Ukiangalia watu wameshaiongelea na ni marudio tu. Hata sermons that they are using from Wright were made in December and Obama had already reacted to it, long time ago.
This is a desperate attempt to try to keep the issue on race alive, lakini hawatafanikiwa, you know why?
ABC and CNN gave it importance (well, story number 5 for ABC and story number 11) but ukiangalia most of the people are staying away from it. Hata Clinton campaign has not responded in fact they said, "No comment".
This is a non issue, and Jaluo is playing the game well, yeye yuko busy na senate, amemchallenge Clinton about earmarks. Ukiangalia amedominate the headlines with a lot of positive news: amekubali debate in Philly na amemchallange Bibi for another debate in North Carolina, he has released his earmarks, there was the senate session and porkbarreling, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck to help produce ad for him, yaani Jaluo is back in charge!
Mzee Wright amesh-retire so it is non issue and people have actually started questioning why and who brought this up again wakati imeshazungumzwa kwa kiina before? Hmmm, I think that if the attacks on Obama become again racial there will be problems in Democratic Party. And Pelosi et al are all aware, nakwambia Hillary wamemwacha aende until the end lakini Obama ameshaambiwa a-concentrate on McCain and that's what he is doing, ukiangalia amemcritize for back pedalling on tax issues.
So let's see how much traction Wright will get, but I tell you, not much.
 
Two words in reply: OLD STORY

Ukiangalia watu wameshaiongelea na ni marudio tu. Hata sermons that they are using from Wright were made in December and Obama had already reacted to it, long time ago.
This is a desperate attempt to try to keep the issue on race alive, lakini hawatafanikiwa, you know why?
ABC and CNN gave it importance (well, story number 5 for ABC and story number 11) but ukiangalia most of the people are staying away from it. Hata Clinton campaign has not responded in fact they said, "No comment".
This is a non issue, and Jaluo is playing the game well, yeye yuko busy na senate, amemchallenge Clinton about earmarks. Ukiangalia amedominate the headlines with a lot of positive news: amekubali debate in Philly na amemchallange Bibi for another debate in North Carolina, he has released his earmarks, there was the senate session and porkbarreling, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck to help produce ad for him, yaani Jaluo is back in charge!
Mzee Wright amesh-retire so it is non issue and people have actually started questioning why and who brought this up again wakati imeshazungumzwa kwa kiina before? Hmmm, I think that if the attacks on Obama become again racial there will be problems in Democratic Party. And Pelosi et al are all aware, nakwambia Hillary wamemwacha aende until the end lakini Obama ameshaambiwa a-concentrate on McCain and that's what he is doing, ukiangalia amemcritize for back pedalling on tax issues.
So let's see how much traction Wright will get, but I tell you, not much.

It may not be much of an issue in the primary but I'd put a wager it will be in the general election.
 
BTW, McCain naye Pastor wake alisema controversial things about Islam and Muslims, so what is important is what does the faithful leave with and how does he realize it in his life.
I think that Obama's life and faith is out there for all to read. If you are black in America you might actually realize that some things he says are relevant to you but not to a wealthy, white New Yorker. Link hii hapa ya story iliyotolewa na New York times almost a year ago in April 2007. Nothing new as I said. Sasa judge for yourself

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/30/u...p=9&adxnnlx=1205496396-z44hgySfpARezq10Aw3haQ
 
BTW, McCain naye Pastor wake alisema controversial things about Islam and Muslims, so what is important is what does the faithful leave with and how does he realize it in his life.
I think that Obama's life and faith is out there for all to read. If you are black in America you might actually realize that some things he says are relevant to you but not to a wealthy, white New Yorker. Link hii hapa ya story iliyotolewa na New York times almost a year ago in April 2007. Nothing new as I said. Sasa judge for yourself

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/30/u...p=9&adxnnlx=1205496396-z44hgySfpARezq10Aw3haQ

No no no! First of all I don't think the so called McCain's pastor is his pastor like Obama's pastor is to Obama. Jeremiah Wright is more than just a pastor to Obama. That is his spiritual mentor/ advisor. He married him and Michelle. He baptised his daughters and he is also a member of one his campaign committees let alone he (Obama) has been attending his church for over a decade. I wouldn't go to a church for that long if the message didn't resonate with me. So clearly Wright's message resonates with Obama. He has some explaining to do. Big up to Sean Hannity for bringing this to the limelight. Now everybody from MSNBC to CNN they are talking about it...that's what's up!!
 
Nyani,
You are still at it? I thought by now you would have switched camps and join us? Especially after our win in Texas?
 
Mimi sasa nimeshachoka na haya maneno bwana, nasubiri tu Hillary, the fighter, atakavyokandamiza huko Penny.
 
No no no! First of all I don't think the so called McCain's pastor is his pastor like Obama's pastor is to Obama. Jeremiah Wright is more than just a pastor to Obama. That is his spiritual mentor/ advisor. He married him and Michelle. He baptised his daughters and he is also a member of one his campaign committees let alone he (Obama) has been attending his church for over a decade. I wouldn't go to a church for that long if the message didn't resonate with me. So clearly Wright's message resonates with Obama. He has some explaining to do. Big up to Sean Hannity for bringing this to the limelight. Now everybody from MSNBC to CNN they are talking about it...that's what's up!!

NN, usije ukachanganya issue ya Hagee - huyo ana alimendorse John McCain na ana issue na wakatoliki.

Huyu ni Spiritual guide wa McCain - Rod Parsley! Nasubiri sasa ujitetee tena

Senator John McCain hailed as a spiritual adviser an Ohio megachurch pastor who has called upon Christians to wage a "war" against the "false religion" of Islam with the aim of destroying it.

On February 26, McCain appeared at a campaign rally in Cincinnati with the Reverend Rod Parsley of the World Harvest Church of Columbus, a supersize Pentecostal institution that features a 5,200-seat sanctuary, a television studio (where Parsley tapes a weekly show), and a 122,000-square-foot Ministry Activity Center. That day, a week before the Ohio primary, Parsley praised the Republican presidential front-runner as a "strong, true, consistent conservative." The endorsement was important for McCain, who at the time was trying to put an end to the lingering challenge from former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, a favorite among Christian evangelicals. A politically influential figure in Ohio, Parsley could also play a key role in McCain's effort to win this bellwether state in the general election. McCain, with Parsley by his side at the Cincinnati rally, called the evangelical minister a "spiritual guide."
The leader of a 12,000-member congregation, Parsley has written several books outlining his fundamentalist religious outlook, including the 2005 Silent No More. In this work, Parsley decries the "spiritual desperation" of the United States, and he blasts away at the usual suspects: activist judges, civil libertarians who advocate the separation of church and state, the homosexual "culture" ("homosexuals are anything but happy and carefree"), the "abortion industry," and the crass and profane entertainment industry. And Parsley targets another profound threat to the United States: the religion of Islam.

In a chapter titled "Islam: The Deception of Allah," Parsley warns there is a "war between Islam and Christian civilization." He continues:


I cannot tell you how important it is that we understand the true nature of Islam, that we see it for what it really is. In fact, I will tell you this: I do not believe our country can truly fulfill its divine purpose until we understand our historical conflict with Islam. I know that this statement sounds extreme, but I do not shrink from its implications. The fact is that America was founded, in part, with the intention of seeing this false religion destroyed, and I believe September 11, 2001, was a generational call to arms that we can no longer ignore.
Parsley is not shy about his desire to obliterate Islam. In Silent No More, he notes—approvingly—that Christopher Columbus shared the same goal: "It was to defeat Islam, among other dreams, that Christopher Columbus sailed to the New World in 1492…Columbus dreamed of defeating the armies of Islam with the armies of Europe made mighty by the wealth of the New World. It was this dream that, in part, began America." He urges his readers to realize that a confrontation between Christianity and Islam is unavoidable: "We find now we have no choice. The time has come." And he has bad news: "We may already be losing the battle. As I scan the world, I find that Islam is responsible for more pain, more bloodshed, and more devastation than nearly any other force on earth at this moment."

Parsley claims that Islam is an "anti-Christ religion" predicated on "deception." The Muslim prophet Muhammad, he writes, "received revelations from demons and not from the true God." And he emphasizes this point: "Allah was a demon spirit." Parsley does not differentiate between violent Islamic extremists and other followers of the religion:

There are some, of course, who will say that the violence I cite is the exception and not the rule. I beg to differ. I will counter, respectfully, that what some call "extremists" are instead mainstream believers who are drawing from the well at the very heart of Islam.

The spirit of Islam, he maintains, is one of hostility. He asserts that the religion "inspired" the 9/11 attacks. He bemoans the fact that in the years after 9/11, 34,000 Americans "have become Muslim" and that there are "some 1,209 mosques" in America. Islam, he declares, is a "faith that fully intends to conquer the world" through violence. The United States, he insists, "has historically understood herself as a bastion against Islam," but "history is crashing in upon us."

At the end of his chapter on Islam, Parsley asks, "Are we a Christian nation? I say yes." Without specifying what actions should be taken to eradicate the religion, he essentially calls for a new crusade.

Parsley, who refers to himself as a "Christocrat," is no stranger to controversy. In 2007, the grassroots organization he founded, the Center for Moral Clarity, called for prosecuting people who commit adultery. In January, he compared Planned Parenthood to Nazis. In the past Parsley's church has been accused of engaging in pro-Republican partisan activities in violation of its tax-exempt status.

Why would McCain court Parsley? He has long had trouble figuring out how to deal with Christian fundamentalists, an important bloc for the Republican Party. During his 2000 presidential bid, he referred to Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell as "agents of intolerance." But six years later, as he readied himself for another White House run, McCain repudiated that remark. More recently, his campaign hit a rough patch when he accepted the endorsement of the Reverend John Hagee, a Texas televangelist who has called the Catholic Church "the great whore" and a "false cult system." After the Catholic League protested and called on McCain to renounce Hagee's support, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee praised Hagee's spiritual leadership and support of Israel and said that "when [Hagee] endorses me, it does not mean that I embrace everything that he stands for or believes in." After being further criticized for his Hagee connection, McCain backed off slightly, saying, "I repudiate any comments that are made, including Pastor Hagee's, if they are anti-Catholic or offensive to Catholics." But McCain did not renounce Hagee's endorsement.
McCain's relationship with Parsley is politically significant. In 2004, Parsley's church was credited with driving Christian fundamentalist voters to the polls for George W. Bush. With Ohio expected to again be a decisive state in the presidential contest, Parsley's World Harvest Church and an affiliated entity called Reformation Ohio, which registers voters, could be important players within this battleground state. Considering that the Ohio Republican Party has been decimated by various political scandals and that a popular Democrat, Ted Strickland, is now the state's governor, McCain and the Republicans will need all the help they can get in the Buckeye State this fall. It's a real question: Can McCain win the presidency without Parsley?

The McCain campaign did not respond to a request for comment regarding Parsley and his anti-Islam writings. Parsley did not return a call seeking comment.

"The last thing I want to be is another screaming voice moving people to extremes and provoking them to folly in the name of patriotism," Parsley writes in Silent No More. Provoking people to holy war is another matter. About that, McCain so far is silent.

http://www.motherjones.com/washington_dispatch/2008/03/john-mccain-rod-parsley-spiritual-guide.html

Satisfied? This more vitriolic and controversial than what Wright said, niko tayari tuweke this sermon and ile ya Wright side by side, tuone ipi ni more dangerous, bigot, racist and full of hatred.

Hapa ni 1-1 hakuna atakayefunga goli in this topic kwenye general election. Si Obama au McCain.
Na ukisema Farrakhan, I say Hagee tena 1-1.
We kapumzike tu weekend tutaendelea j3
 
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