US Election Coverage 2008

US Election Coverage 2008

Hii ya kumchagua Biden ni uppercut, kata funua na Republicans wameachwa wameshangaa.

Hiyo add ya McCain kuwa Biden alisema Obama bado kuwa Raisi tayari imeanza ku-motonyuma, (backfire).

Obama has shown kuwa anaweza kumchagua mtu ambaye ni critic wake lakini wanaweza heshimiana na kufanya kazi.

Najua Nyani na babu yake walikua wanaomba dua wakishinda Bwagamoyo Obama amteue Mama Billary, mmepigwa chenga ya kiuono!

Biden, from Pensylvania, a catholic, strong in foreign affairs and defense matters, a simple blue colar risen average guy!

Match that up Nyani, mleteni Ponjoro Bobi au Polygamist Romney au makeke Gulliani!
 
The countdown has begun....12hrs into being named running mate Bin Biden has already made his firt gaffe of the campaign.....did I hear Biden say Barack America...? bwahahahahaaaaaaa
 
The countdown has begun....12hrs into being named running mate Bin Biden has already made his firt gaffe of the campaign.....did I hear Biden say Barack America...? bwahahahahaaaaaaa

ndio umesikia!! hiyo sio kitu ndio maana huioni popote zaidi ya Fox News....Kuna special countdown leo kuhusu hii pick, kama kawaida Keith atakuwa anakandamiza!!!

Sidhani kama Obama yupo comfortable kivile na chaguo la Biden, lakini itamsaidia sana PA, OH na kwingineko hasa kwa hao blue collar, catholics, middle class white americans.....
 
ndio umesikia!! hiyo sio kitu ndio maana huioni popote zaidi ya Fox News....Kuna special countdown leo kuhusu hii pick, kama kawaida Keith atakuwa anakandamiza!!!

Sidhani kama Obama yupo comfortable kivile na chaguo la Biden, lakini itamsaidia sana PA, OH na kwingineko hasa kwa hao blue collar, catholics, middle class white americans.....

Bwahahahahaaaa....the gaffe-o-meter is on....

Halafu tayari kuna image problem hapa...yaani walivyokuwa pamoja leo pale Springfield ilikuwa wazi nani kakaa ki-presidential zaidi.....

I'm having a field day today with McCain's ads.....kuna moja linamwonyesha Biden akim-diss Obama halafu halafu wanamwonyesha tena akimmwagia misiafa John McCain......hahahahahaaaa....this is kicks mayn!!!
 
Kuanzia leo mpaka Convention tutakuwa tunapost picha tu hapa
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If Obama Loses
Racism is the only reason McCain might beat him.

What with the Bush legacy of reckless war and economic mismanagement, 2008 is a year that favors the generic Democratic candidate over the generic Republican one. Yet Barack Obama, with every natural and structural advantage in the presidential race, is running only neck-and-neck against John McCain, a sub-par Republican nominee with a list of liabilities longer than a Joe Biden monologue. Obama has built a crack political operation, raised record sums, and inspired millions with his eloquence and vision. McCain has struggled with a fractious campaign team, lacks clarity and discipline, and remains a stranger to charisma. Yet at the moment, the two of them appear to be tied. What gives?

If it makes you feel better, you can rationalize Obama's missing 10-point lead on the basis of Clintonite sulkiness, his slowness in responding to attacks, or the concern that Obama may be too handsome, brilliant, and cool to be elected. But let's be honest: If you break the numbers down, the reason Obama isn't ahead right now is that he trails badly among one group, older white voters. He does so for a simple reason: the color of his skin.

Much evidence points to racial prejudice as a factor that could be large enough to cost Obama the election. That warning is written all over last month's CBS/New York Times poll, which is worth examining in detail if you want a quick grasp of white America's curious sense of racial grievance. In the poll, 26 percent of whites say they have been victims of discrimination. Twenty-seven percent say too much has been made of the problems facing black people. Twenty-four percent say the country isn't ready to elect a black president. Five percent of white voters acknowledge that they, personally, would not vote for a black candidate.

Five percent surely understates the reality. In the Pennsylvania primary, one in six white voters told exit pollsters race was a factor in his or her decision. Seventy-five percent of those people voted for Clinton. You can do the math: 12 percent of the Pennsylvania primary electorate acknowledged that it didn't vote for Barack Obama in part because he is African-American. And that's what Democrats in a Northeastern(ish) state admit openly. The responses in Ohio and even New Jersey were dispiritingly similar.

Such prejudice usually comes coded in distortions about Obama and his background. To the willfully ignorant, he is a secret Muslim married to a black-power radical. Or-thank you, Geraldine Ferraro-he only got where he is because of the special treatment accorded those lucky enough to be born with African blood. Some Jews assume Obama is insufficiently supportive of Israel in the way they assume other black politicians to be. To some white voters (14 percent in the CBS/New York Times poll), Obama is someone who, as president, would favor blacks over whites. Or he is an "elitist" who cannot understand ordinary (read: white) people because he isn't one of them. Or he is charged with playing the race card, or of accusing his opponents of racism, when he has strenuously avoided doing anything of the sort. We're just not comfortable with, you know, a Hawaiian.

Then there's the overt stuff. In May, Pat Buchanan, who writes books about the European-Americans losing control of their country, ranted on MSNBC in defense of white West Virginians voting on the basis of racial solidarity. The No. 1 best-seller in America, Obama Nation by Jerome R. Corsi, Ph.D., leeringly notes that Obama's white mother always preferred that her "mate" be "a man of color." John McCain has yet to get around to denouncing this vile book.

Many have discoursed on what an Obama victory could mean for America. We would finally be able to see our legacy of slavery, segregation, and racism in the rearview mirror. Our kids would grow up thinking of prejudice as a nonfactor in their lives. The rest of the world would embrace a less fearful and more open post-post-9/11 America. But does it not follow that an Obama defeat would signify the opposite? If Obama loses, our children will grow up thinking of equal opportunity as a myth. His defeat would say that when handed a perfect opportunity to put the worst part of our history behind us, we chose not to. In this event, the world's judgment will be severe and inescapable: The United States had its day but, in the end, couldn't put its own self-interest ahead of its crazy irrationality over race.

Choosing John McCain, in particular, would herald the construction of a bridge to the 20th century-and not necessarily the last part of it, either. McCain represents a Cold War style of nationalism that doesn't get the shift from geopolitics to geoeconomics, the centrality of soft power in a multipolar world, or the transformative nature of digital technology. This is a matter of attitude as much as age. A lot of 71-year-olds are still learning and evolving. But in 2008, being flummoxed by that newfangled doodad, the personal computer, seems like a deal-breaker. At this hinge moment in human history, McCain's approach to our gravest problems is hawkish denial. I like and respect the man, but the maverick has become an ostrich: He wants to deal with the global energy crisis by drilling and our debt crisis by cutting taxes, and he responds to security challenges from Georgia to Iran with Bush-like belligerence and pique.

You may or may not agree with Obama's policy prescriptions, but they are, by and large, serious attempts to deal with the biggest issues we face: a failing health care system, oil dependency, income stagnation, and climate change. To the rest of the world, a rejection of the promise he represents wouldn't just be an odd choice by the United States. It would be taken for what it would be: sign and symptom of a nation's historical decline.
Jacob Weisberg is editor-in-chief of the Slate Group and author of The Bush Tragedy.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2198397/
 
Oh here we go again with the drive-by media's talking points. Yaani Obama akishindwa ni kwa sababu ya racism? Puh-lease....how can one even say that? Look at Obama's resume....it is thinner than an anorexic twig.....in these challenging times we can't afford a president with credentials like 'community organizer'.....whatever that is....
 
sawa bana, lakini tatizo ni kuwa huna mpya kila kitu ni kile kile toka uanze kuchangia ktk hii thread unabadili maneno tu!! Ile ya Cervical Cancer badala ya Ovarian Cancer kama wewe unaona ni none issue basi matatizo yako ni makubwa kushindwa ninavyofikiria....

nibandikia basi hapa hizo medical records za mama yake Obama...bandika.

OK, so why didn't you ask that first instead you chimp out and hurl racial epiphets? I don't have the poor woman's medical records and neither do you. So my source that says Husein's mother died from Cervical Cancer are just as reliable (or unreliable) as your source that says she died from Ovarian Cancer.
 
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The DREAM TEAM
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Babu yetu alivyochangamka si kama babu yake Nyani:
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The Presidential couples:
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Interesting photos. They show Biden taking the leader position and Obama the lead/follower/listener position. So maybe things won't be so bad if Obama wins because from these pictures it looks like Biden will be the one making the decisions. Obama is just a figure head that will only be reading speeches from the telepromter.
 
It is easy to overstate the meaning of vice presidential picks. After all, rarely does the selection of a running mate significantly tilt the outcome of an election. But it does provide a unique window into the presidential nominee's decision-making instincts and his strategy for winning in the fall.

Here are five things the selection of Joe Biden tells us about Barack Obama:

1. He's fixing for a fight. Obama has been knocked for being too soft and too enthralled with rhetorical fancy. But the past few weeks provided a glimpse of his tough-guy Chicago side. He went negative the moment his campaign felt wobbly. Biden is a brawler — and the Obama camp is eager to unleash him.

2. He's a lot more conventional than advertised. Obama has promised a different and more consensus-oriented brand of politics but more often than not has done what most politicians do: switched positions to soothe voters, dodged the unpredictability of town hall meetings and gone for the jugular when he sees it. The Biden pick — the most important choice Obama has made to date in his public career — was safe and traditional. Two male career politicians from the Senate is hardly transformational.


3. He’s insecure about security. The Georgia-Russia crisis amplified Obama's shortcomings on national security — both his own experience and the perceptions of voters about his own readiness for command. McCain is making that his calling card, and polls show it's working. Biden offers Obama instant help: He knows this stuff and is more than willing to flaunt it.

4. He’s more worried about Lunchbox Joe than Bubba. Obama was not persuaded by arguments that Democrats for the past 60 years have won the presidency only when they've had a Southerner on the ticket. He seems confident he can put a few states in the Old Confederacy in play by stoking African-American turnout. Perhaps. But he also is calculating that his more urgent concern is working-class whites, especially those in the industrial Midwest. Hillary Rodham Clinton clobbered him in these areas — and white men remain very skeptical of him, if you believe the polls (and his people do). At the public unveiling of the ticket Saturday at Springfield, Ill., Obama called Biden a “scrappy kid from Scranton.”

5. He doesn't hold a grudge — or at least he doesn't let it get in the way. Biden, who pulled out of the Democratic race after finishing fifth in Iowa, raised serious questions about Obama’s readiness to handle national security in the primaries. Biden said things like this a year ago: “If the Democrats think we're going to be able to nominate someone who can win without that person being able to [bring to the] table unimpeachable credentials on national security and foreign policy, I think we're making a tragic mistake.” That criticism hurt then because it echoed the precise case made by Clinton in the nomination contest. It’s hurting now because Republicans are using Biden’s words against Obama in a new ad. Now Obama has to show he can get over the Clinton grudge.
 
If Obama Loses
Racism is the only reason McCain might beat him.

What with the Bush legacy of reckless war and economic mismanagement, 2008 is a year that favors the generic Democratic candidate over the generic Republican one. Yet Barack Obama, with every natural and structural advantage in the presidential race, is running only neck-and-neck against John McCain, a sub-par Republican nominee with a list of liabilities longer than a Joe Biden monologue. Obama has built a crack political operation, raised record sums, and inspired millions with his eloquence and vision. McCain has struggled with a fractious campaign team, lacks clarity and discipline, and remains a stranger to charisma. Yet at the moment, the two of them appear to be tied. What gives?

If it makes you feel better, you can rationalize Obama's missing 10-point lead on the basis of Clintonite sulkiness, his slowness in responding to attacks, or the concern that Obama may be too handsome, brilliant, and cool to be elected. But let's be honest: If you break the numbers down, the reason Obama isn't ahead right now is that he trails badly among one group, older white voters. He does so for a simple reason: the color of his skin.

Much evidence points to racial prejudice as a factor that could be large enough to cost Obama the election. That warning is written all over last month's CBS/New York Times poll, which is worth examining in detail if you want a quick grasp of white America's curious sense of racial grievance. In the poll, 26 percent of whites say they have been victims of discrimination. Twenty-seven percent say too much has been made of the problems facing black people. Twenty-four percent say the country isn't ready to elect a black president. Five percent of white voters acknowledge that they, personally, would not vote for a black candidate.

Five percent surely understates the reality. In the Pennsylvania primary, one in six white voters told exit pollsters race was a factor in his or her decision. Seventy-five percent of those people voted for Clinton. You can do the math: 12 percent of the Pennsylvania primary electorate acknowledged that it didn't vote for Barack Obama in part because he is African-American. And that's what Democrats in a Northeastern(ish) state admit openly. The responses in Ohio and even New Jersey were dispiritingly similar.

Such prejudice usually comes coded in distortions about Obama and his background. To the willfully ignorant, he is a secret Muslim married to a black-power radical. Or—thank you, Geraldine Ferraro—he only got where he is because of the special treatment accorded those lucky enough to be born with African blood. Some Jews assume Obama is insufficiently supportive of Israel in the way they assume other black politicians to be. To some white voters (14 percent in the CBS/New York Times poll), Obama is someone who, as president, would favor blacks over whites. Or he is an "elitist" who cannot understand ordinary (read: white) people because he isn't one of them. Or he is charged with playing the race card, or of accusing his opponents of racism, when he has strenuously avoided doing anything of the sort. We're just not comfortable with, you know, a Hawaiian.

Then there's the overt stuff. In May, Pat Buchanan, who writes books about the European-Americans losing control of their country, ranted on MSNBC in defense of white West Virginians voting on the basis of racial solidarity. The No. 1 best-seller in America, Obama Nation by Jerome R. Corsi, Ph.D., leeringly notes that Obama's white mother always preferred that her "mate" be "a man of color." John McCain has yet to get around to denouncing this vile book.

Many have discoursed on what an Obama victory could mean for America. We would finally be able to see our legacy of slavery, segregation, and racism in the rearview mirror. Our kids would grow up thinking of prejudice as a nonfactor in their lives. The rest of the world would embrace a less fearful and more open post-post-9/11 America. But does it not follow that an Obama defeat would signify the opposite? If Obama loses, our children will grow up thinking of equal opportunity as a myth. His defeat would say that when handed a perfect opportunity to put the worst part of our history behind us, we chose not to. In this event, the world's judgment will be severe and inescapable: The United States had its day but, in the end, couldn't put its own self-interest ahead of its crazy irrationality over race.

Choosing John McCain, in particular, would herald the construction of a bridge to the 20th century—and not necessarily the last part of it, either. McCain represents a Cold War style of nationalism that doesn't get the shift from geopolitics to geoeconomics, the centrality of soft power in a multipolar world, or the transformative nature of digital technology. This is a matter of attitude as much as age. A lot of 71-year-olds are still learning and evolving. But in 2008, being flummoxed by that newfangled doodad, the personal computer, seems like a deal-breaker. At this hinge moment in human history, McCain's approach to our gravest problems is hawkish denial. I like and respect the man, but the maverick has become an ostrich: He wants to deal with the global energy crisis by drilling and our debt crisis by cutting taxes, and he responds to security challenges from Georgia to Iran with Bush-like belligerence and pique.

You may or may not agree with Obama's policy prescriptions, but they are, by and large, serious attempts to deal with the biggest issues we face: a failing health care system, oil dependency, income stagnation, and climate change. To the rest of the world, a rejection of the promise he represents wouldn't just be an odd choice by the United States. It would be taken for what it would be: sign and symptom of a nation's historical decline.
Jacob Weisberg is editor-in-chief of the Slate Group and author of The Bush Tragedy.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2198397/

Nonsense! What's Husein's plan to solve failing health care, oil dependency, income stagnation? Income redistribution? Raise taxes? America is already broke financially. How is Obama going to pay for all the programs he has promised during his campaign?
 
Interesting photos. They show Biden taking the leader position and Obama the lead/follower/listener position. So maybe things won't be so bad if Obama wins because from these pictures it looks like Biden will be the one making the decisions. Obama is just a figure head that will only be reading speeches from the telepromter.


..maneno kama haya ndio yameondoa moto wa kufuatilia kampeni hizi kwasasa. simply, hayana substance yeyote.

..ni sawa na maneno anayotoa spokesman wa mccain baada ya biden kuchaguliwa. maneno ya kitoto tupu. hata ile ad ya mccain ni ya kitoto pia.

..ukiondoa mambo mengine, inaonyesha ni jinsi gani wamarekani ni wajinga na watoto, kwa mtazamo wa mtanzania wa kawaida au mtu asiye mmarekani.
 
The countdown has begun....12hrs into being named running mate Bin Biden has already made his firt gaffe of the campaign.....did I hear Biden say Barack America...? bwahahahahaaaaaaa


..so what's wrong with that?, au ndio hoja zimewaishia?

..hicho ni kitu cha kawaida, kama kupaliwa wakati unapata msosi.
 
..maneno kama haya ndio yameondoa moto wa kufuatilia kampeni hizi kwasasa. simply, hayana substance yeyote.

..ni sawa na maneno anayotoa spokesman wa mccain baada ya biden kuchaguliwa. maneno ya kitoto tupu. hata ile ad ya mccain ni ya kitoto pia.

..ukiondoa mambo mengine, inaonyesha ni jinsi gani wamarekani ni wajinga na watoto, kwa mtazamo wa mtanzania wa kawaida au mtu asiye mmarekani.

Dar si LAMU: mkuu, mi nadhani kwamba wamarekani si wajinga au watoto kuliko wabongo, ila baadhi ya wanasiasa wao hususan Rethuglicans wanapenda kuwatreat hivyo - ditto for watanzania. Huyo Truth si tumeshaamua kum-ignore, ana personal problems.
Lakini tukirudi kwenye matangazo ya McCain ni kweli ni za kitoto sana. Na kibaya zaidi chama chake na washabiki wanadhani ile slip in the polls of Obama ni kutokana na tangazo lakini ukweli ni kwamba imetokana na Obama kuwa on holiday na hakusikika na kuonekana for more than 1 week. Na ndio wakati ule walipo-release ads zile. Sasa McCain camp wamejitetea mapema eti McCain ataachwa sana na Obama katika polls kutokana na Democratic convention, lakini ukwei ni kwamba the race is on and Obama is winning! Biden is a great choice na ataongeza watu na ku-strengthen the base. Hata Hillary na group lake kama Wolfson wamemfurahia sana Biden. So the party is together and this presidential team is not going to take ujinga na utoto wa Republicans. Cheki wanavyommaliza babu yake Nyani Ngabu na senitlity yake ya kusahau ana nyumba ngapi! Not this time!!! Republicans wajue Democratic party has learnt about its dirty tricks and now it's crunchtime.
 
Dar si LAMU: mkuu, mi nadhani kwamba wamarekani si wajinga au watoto kuliko wabongo, ila baadhi ya wanasiasa wao hususan Rethuglicans wanapenda kuwatreat hivyo - ditto for watanzania. Huyo Truth si tumeshaamua kum-ignore, ana personal problems.
Lakini tukirudi kwenye matangazo ya McCain ni kweli ni za kitoto sana. Na kibaya zaidi chama chake na washabiki wanadhani ile slip in the polls of Obama ni kutokana na tangazo lakini ukweli ni kwamba imetokana na Obama kuwa on holiday na hakusikika na kuonekana for more than 1 week. Na ndio wakati ule walipo-release ads zile. Sasa McCain camp wamejitetea mapema eti McCain ataachwa sana na Obama katika polls kutokana na Democratic convention, lakini ukwei ni kwamba the race is on and Obama is winning! Biden is a great choice na ataongeza watu na ku-strengthen the base. Hata Hillary na group lake kama Wolfson wamemfurahia sana Biden. So the party is together and this presidential team is not going to take ujinga na utoto wa Republicans. Cheki wanavyommaliza babu yake Nyani Ngabu na senitlity yake ya kusahau ana nyumba ngapi! Not this time!!! Republicans wajue Democratic party has learnt about its dirty tricks and now it's crunchtime.

..susuviri,

..naelewa wamarekani si wajinga kiivyo, ndio maana nikasema ukiondoa mambo mengine. ila katika hili la kampeni hawashindwi kunishangaza kila wakati!

..wanashikilia mambo ya kijinga na kitoto, especially hao mashabiki wa GOP na camp mccain.
 
Hii ya kumchagua Biden ni uppercut, kata funua na Republicans wameachwa wameshangaa.

Hiyo add ya McCain kuwa Biden alisema Obama bado kuwa Raisi tayari imeanza ku-motonyuma, (backfire).

Du!! Rev Chukua tano, hii nilikuwa sijawahi kuipata!!!
 
Nonsense! What's Husein's plan to solve failing health care, oil dependency, income stagnation? Income redistribution? Raise taxes? America is already broke financially. How is Obama going to pay for all the programs he has promised during his campaign?



bwahahahahaha nani kaifanya America iwe broke? programs gani hizo anazo ahidi Obama...tuwekee basi na jibu swali la kwanza!! nilijua tu kuwa wewe ni kituko!! LOL
 
OK, so why didn't you ask that first instead you chimp out and hurl racial epiphets? I don't have the poor woman's medical records and neither do you. So my source that says Husein's mother died from Cervical Cancer are just as reliable (or unreliable) as your source that says she died from Ovarian Cancer.

bwahahahaha unazidi kuchekesha tu!! nani alianzisha mambo ya medical records??sasa utaongeaje kitu na authoirty hivyo wakati huna data!! who told my sources are unreliable? unacheza wewe, na nshakwambia tumia tools zako kuresearch kabla ya ku-post hahahahaha naanza kupata wasiwasi na jambo ambalo sitasema...anyway soma hapo chini ni maneno ya Obama mwenyewe bwahahaha usinambia kwamba wewe unamjua mama yake sana kushindwa yeye mwenywe!!! hooooovyo

"I remember my mother. She was 53 years old when she died of ovarian cancer, and you know what she was thinking about in the last months of her life? She wasn't thinking about getting well. She wasn't thinking about coming to terms with her own mortality. She had been diagnosed just as she was transitioning between jobs. And she wasn't sure whether insurance was going to cover the medical expenses because they might consider this a preexisting condition. I remember just being heartbroken, seeing her struggle through the paperwork and the medical bills and the insurance forms. So, I have seen what it's like when somebody you love is suffering because of a broken health care system. And it's wrong. It's not who we are as a people."

ok......happy now?

source..swamppolitics.
 
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