US Election Coverage 2008

US Election Coverage 2008

Hello Nyani, just thought you should know. I went and looked for the results on fox news and to my surprise, hata FOX viewers wamesema BArack Obama alishinda debate???%%%$$

I am surprised at this one................

Obama 60%

McCain 40%

total of 219,875 cast their votes.

Just though you should know.........let me know how it goes

Bimkubwa, we are talking abot different polls here. Anyways, winning a debate doesn't win you the presidency of the United States. If you don't believe me go ask Al Gore or John 'wingnut' Kerry. McCain wins this easily....
 
Bimkubwa, we are talking abot different polls here. Anyways, winning a debate doesn't win you the presidency of the United States. If you don't believe me go ask Al Gore or John 'wingnut' Kerry. McCain wins this easily....

You should also remember that Kichaka and GOP stole 2000's election through SC as well as 2004's election.
 
So can you project the 2008 election based on the 2000 election trend? Are the issues the same (2000 vs. 2008)? What was the electoral map looked like 4 weeks before the election. What was the incumbent president approval rating 4 weeks before the general election (2000 vs. 2008?) Did the incumbent party win the election? Once you figure out the answers to these questions then we can have a discussion.

Don't just listen to pundits my friend...do a little homework first.

If the election trends mattered that much, Obantu would have been leading by 30-40 points now because the trends favor him. But his lead is similar to Al Gore's lead in 2000 despite the different trends in this election as you point out. Obantu is not going to win unless a miracle happens. Many Whites will quickly realize the implications of Obantu as president when they enter the voting booth and go with McCain. Latinos will do the same I predict since they don't like Bantus. So either way you look at it will be an uphill battle for Obantu.
 
If the election trends mattered that much, Obantu would have been leading by 30-40 points now because the trends favor him. But his lead is similar to Al Gore's lead in 2000 despite the different trends in this election as you point out. Obantu is not going to win unless a miracle happens. Many Whites will quickly realize the implications of Obantu as president when they enter the voting booth and go with McCain. Latinos will do the same I predict since they don't like Bantus. So either way you look at it will be an uphill battle for Obantu.

Hey Kerpal,

Obantu is going to end up like Jimmy Carter, a one term president! He is going to have Majority support from Congress and because he will face no stiff challenge, Democrats will start loosing control of the Congress during mid term elections of 2010 and by 2012, the Americans will have lost faith with the DFLers just like 1979-1980!
 
Oct_08_08_Obama_VS_McCain.jpg

LOL! McOld kajawa na hasira dhidi ya Obama hata kajisahau akasaula kila kitu na kubaki na birthday suit yake 🙂
 
Hey Kerpal,

Obantu is going to end up like Jimmy Carter, a one term president! He is going to have Majority support from Congress and because he will face no stiff challenge, Democrats will start loosing control of the Congress during mid term elections of 2010 and by 2012, the Americans will have lost faith with the DFLers just like 1979-1980!

Obantu is not going to win, period. So he won't end up like Jimmy Carter....he will end up like Dukakis....
 
If the election trends mattered that much, Obantu would have been leading by 30-40 points now because the trends favor him. But his lead is similar to Al Gore's lead in 2000 despite the different trends in this election as you point out. Obantu is not going to win unless a miracle happens. Many Whites will quickly realize the implications of Obantu as president when they enter the voting booth and go with McCain. Latinos will do the same I predict since they don't like Bantus. So either way you look at it will be an uphill battle for Obantu.

Huh!? 😕

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Tired of Campaigning for McOld, they can no longer pay attention...LOL!
What went wrong?
 
Published: October 7, 2008
New York Times

It is a sorry fact of American political life that campaigns get ugly, often in their final weeks. But Senator John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin have been running one of the most appalling campaigns we can remember.

They have gone far beyond the usual fare of quotes taken out of context and distortions of an opponent's record - into the dark territory of race-baiting and xenophobia. Senator Barack Obama has taken some cheap shots at Mr. McCain, but there is no comparison.

Despite the occasional slip (referring to Mr. Obama's "cronies" and calling him "that one"), Mr. McCain tried to take a higher road in Tuesday night's presidential debate. It was hard to keep track of the number of times he referred to his audience as "my friends." But apart from promising to buy up troubled mortgages as president, he offered no real answers for how he plans to solve the country's deep economic crisis. He is unable or unwilling to admit that the Republican assault on regulation was to blame.

Ninety minutes of forced cordiality did not erase the dismal ugliness of his campaign in recent weeks, nor did it leave us with much hope that he would not just return to the same dismal ugliness on Wednesday.

Ms. Palin, in particular, revels in the attack. Her campaign rallies have become spectacles of anger and insult. "This is not a man who sees America as you see it and how I see America," Ms. Palin has taken to saying.

That line follows passages in Ms. Palin's new stump speech in which she twists Mr. Obama's ill-advised but fleeting and long-past association with William Ayers, founder of the Weather Underground and confessed bomber. By the time she's done, she implies that Mr. Obama is right now a close friend of Mr. Ayers - and sympathetic to the violent overthrow of the government. The Democrat, she says, "sees America, it seems, as being so imperfect that he's palling around with terrorists who would target their own country."

Her demagoguery has elicited some frightening, intolerable responses. A recent Washington Post report said at a rally in Florida this week a man yelled "kill him!" as Ms. Palin delivered that line and others shouted epithets at an African-American member of a TV crew.

Mr. McCain's aides haven't even tried to hide their cynical tactics, saying they were "going negative" in hopes of shifting attention away from the financial crisis - and by implication Mr. McCain's stumbling response.

We certainly expected better from Mr. McCain, who once showed withering contempt for win-at-any-cost politics. He was driven out of the 2000 Republican primaries by this sort of smear, orchestrated by some of the same people who are now running his campaign.

And the tactic of guilt by association is perplexing, since Mr. McCain has his own list of political associates he would rather forget. We were disappointed to see the Obama campaign air an ad (held for just this occasion) reminding voters of Mr. McCain's involvement in the Keating Five savings-and-loan debacle, for which he was reprimanded by the Senate. That episode at least bears on Mr. McCain's claims to be the morally pure candidate and his argument that he alone is capable of doing away with greed, fraud and abuse.

In a way, we should not be surprised that Mr. McCain has stooped so low, since the debate showed once again that he has little else to talk about. He long ago abandoned his signature issues of immigration reform and global warming; his talk of "victory" in Iraq has little to offer a war-weary nation; and his Reagan-inspired ideology of starving government and shredding regulation lies in tatters on Wall Street.

But surely, Mr. McCain and his team can come up with a better answer to that problem than inciting more division, anger and hatred.
 
First it was Peggy Noonan sasa ni David Brooks...conservative journalists (real journalists sio Sean Hannity-- start to see the light)


David Brooks: Sarah Palin "Represents A Fatal Cancer To The Republican Party"


[Sarah Palin] represents a fatal cancer to the Republican party. When I first started in journalism, I worked at the National Review for Bill Buckley. And Buckley famously said he'd rather be ruled by the first 2,000 names in the Boston phone book than by the Harvard faculty. But he didn't think those were the only two options. He thought it was important to have people on the conservative side who celebrated ideas, who celebrated learning. And his whole life was based on that, and that was also true for a lot of the other conservatives in the Reagan era. Reagan had an immense faith in the power of ideas. But there has been a counter, more populist tradition, which is not only to scorn liberal ideas but to scorn ideas entirely. And I'm afraid that Sarah Palin has those prejudices. I think President Bush has those prejudices.

Brooks also spent time praising Obama's intellect and skills in social perception, telling two stories of his interactions with Obama that left him "dazzled":

Obama has the great intellect. I was interviewing Obama a couple years ago, and I'm getting nowhere with the interview, it's late in the night, he's on the phone, walking off the Senate floor, he's cranky. Out of the blue I say, 'Ever read a guy named Reinhold Niebuhr?' And he says, 'Yeah.' So i say, 'What did Niebuhr mean to you?' For the next 20 minutes, he gave me a perfect description of Reinhold Niebuhr's thought, which is a very subtle thought process based on the idea that you have to use power while it corrupts you. And I was dazzled, I felt the tingle up my knee as Chris Matthews would say.

Brooks predicted an Obama victory by nine points, and said that although he found Obama to be "a very mediocre senator," he was is surrounded by what Brooks called "by far the most impressive people in the Democratic party."

Source: The Atlantic's
 
If the election trends mattered that much, Obantu would have been leading by 30-40 points now because the trends favor him. But his lead is similar to Al Gore's lead in 2000 despite the different trends in this election as you point out. Obantu is not going to win unless a miracle happens. Many Whites will quickly realize the implications of Obantu as president when they enter the voting booth and go with McCain. Latinos will do the same I predict since they don't like Bantus. So either way you look at it will be an uphill battle for Obantu.
Dream on, brother, dream on.
The ship has left the shore. Njoo DC tucelebrate ushindi wa Obama Januari 20.
 
Listening to conservative radio shows this morning....Wengi wanaanza ku doubt kama Bill Ayers na Tony Rezko strategy is feective. So far the polls haven't shifted for McCain-Palin. They are suggesting he spends more time hammering about his records vs. those of Obama. Mpaka Newt Gingrich anagive props kwa Barack..saying he looked "cool" in the debate..anamponda anasema sometimes Barack looked way cool and he came out as arrogant...na McCain looked frustrated and cold.

I tell you people "that one"...That one is going to kick McPalin's butt baaaaad.
 
Listening to conservative radio shows this morning....Wengi wanaanza ku doubt kama Bill Ayers na Tony Rezko strategy is feective. So far the polls haven't shifted for McCain-Palin. They are suggesting he spends more time hammering about his records vs. those of Obama. Mpaka Newt Gingrich anagive props kwa Barack..saying he looked "cool" in the debate..anamponda anasema sometimes Barack looked way cool and he came out as arrogant...na McCain looked frustrated and cold.

I tell you people "that one"...That one is going to kick McPalin's butt baaaaad.

The polls won't show that it is working because if you are white and say yeah Obama is associated with Ayers and Wright you run the risk of being branded racist even if you are not one. Now, no one wants to be branded a racist. Mind you, this is a very different presidential campaign with a black man (or mullato, if you will) at the top of the ticket. But I guarantee you this, in the privacy of the voting booth, people will be able to comfortably express their opinions. Now, you can take all the joy you want to in the so called "polls" that you fondly like to point to but I hope you remember that none of these "polls" matter in the end. The only poll that matters is the one on Nov.4th and no one has any way of knowing how that will turn out.
 
The polls won't show that it is working because if you are white and say yeah Obama is associated with Ayers and Wright you run the risk of being branded racist even if you are not one. Now, no one wants to be branded a racist. Mind you, this is a very different presidential campaign with a black man (or mullato, if you will) at the top of the ticket. But I guarantee you this, in the privacy of the voting booth, people will be able to comfortably express their opinions. Now, you can take all the joy you want to in the so called "polls" that you fondly like to point to but I hope you remember that none of these "polls" matter in the end. The only poll that matters is the one on Nov.4th and no one has any way of knowing how that will turn out.


....I can't wait to see mcCabush and Repubstupid got creamed in November and become obsolete forever!
 
Kweli mfa maji haachi kutapa tapa....Mjomba Rush is loosing his mind today with the left wing media critics of John McCain calling Obama "that one" na "Obama cronies", and kwenye McCain/Palin rallies where those nuts were yelling, "kill him, "traitor", "he's not one of us", etc., nina uhakika wafanyakazi wake wamelowa kwa mate they way he talks. Leo topic ni ACORN na vote fraud.
 
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