US Election Coverage 2008

US Election Coverage 2008

zile partial birth abortions, ambazo wa mama maisha yao hayapo hatarini ndio noma!!! ku-out law abortions kiujumla si sahihi, haki lazima iwepo ili itumike pale inapobidi!!!. je, abuses zitakuwepo?? of course, kama ktk sheria nyingine yeyote. lakini isiwe kigezo cha ku-abolish abortions.

hivi unajua walipogundua IVF(in vitro fertilization) ile inaitwa 'test tube babies,' pia ilileta ubishi ile mbaya!! enzi hizo liberals ndio walikuwa wana lead charge(late 60's-early 70's) kwamba its wrong and blah blah, kila fallacy unayoijua ilitupwa hapo ili ku-win debate, lakini wapi.....good course ikashinda!! now zaidi ya miaka 30, hakuna lolote baya lilotokea na watu wanaochagua IVF ni wale tu ambao hawana jinsi......na huu ndio ulikuwa mwanzo wa scientists ktk anga hizo kuingia mitini toka MIT na Genzyme pale Cambridge, MA kwenda zao left coast hasa California. Maana huko walikuwa na bado wapo friendly na ma-research controvesial kama ya stem cell etc.

Morality ya hizi laws, ni kulinda wale waso na nguvu......na si ku impose matakwa ya wachache(southern evangelicals christians conservatives) kwa walio wengi. kwanza hamna mtu anayetumia tax $$$ kwa ajili hii......kinawauma nini??
 
NN kuna situations nyingine nadhani inabidi tuu, I.e kubakwa, au kuhatarisha afya na maisha ya mama. Lakini sio tuu kuwa umefanya mapenzi umepata mimba unatoa.

Kaka hivi unafikiri ktk mimba zote zinazotolewa hapa duniani ni ngapi zinazotolewa kwa mazingira husika na ni ngapi mtu anaamua kutoa kwa sababu ya convenience tu? I guarantee you the latter is way more than the former.

Kama mimba zingekuwa zinatolewa ktk mazingira husika kasi (rate) ya utoaji mimba ingekuwa iko chini sana. Pasipo na sababu yoyote ile ya msingi na ya kitabibu ningekuwa na uwezo ningepiga marufuku utoaji mimba wa kiholela.
 
Hii article ya AP inatoa analysis nzuri ya mambo yanavyokwenda.

Can Clinton overcome Obamania?
By NANCY BENAC, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 49 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - A year ago, Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-Inevitable, was joshing about whether she could appoint her husband secretary of state when she became president, and Barack Obama was urging a throng to be realistic about his own chances. "Let's face it," he said. "The novelty's going to wear off."

But a funny thing happened on the way to the Clinton coronation.

The Democratic presidential race took so many twists that close observers might have needed a chiropractor to follow it. And now Clinton, once the instant favorite in a crowded field of candidates, is struggling to overcome a daunting wave of Obamania.

"There's a problem with inevitability," said Dick Harpootlian, a former South Carolina party chairman who supports Obama. "It rarely proves to be true."

When Clinton joined the race in January 2007 with a cozy Webcast from her living room couch, the notion of a former first lady-turned-senator running to be the first female president was so new, so different, she quickly eclipsed rival candidates such as Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, Bill Richardson, all seasoned politicians with solid credentials.

"I'm in to win," Clinton proclaimed. And she had the money to back up her bravado.

"I don't think anyone can stop her," John Catsimatidis, a New York businessman and member of Clinton's finance team, trumpeted in February 2007. "She's unstoppable; she's got such a machine."

Clinton, intent on keeping 2000 nominee Al Gore out of the race, seemed to regard all other rivals as "Lilliputians," says Democratic pollster Peter Hart

Her Democratic opponents didn't buy it, though, and neither did the public.

"I lived through the inevitability of Howard Dean," scoffed John Edwards, recalling the early darling of the 2004 presidential race who quickly faded from the Democratic field.

But it was Obama, not Edwards, who emerged as the anti-Clinton.

Bidding to become the nation's first black president, Obama offered a fresh new face, and a message of hope and change that captured the public's imagination.

His first visit to New Hampshire, back in December 2006, before he'd entered the race, sparked such a frenzy of interest that even Obama dismissed it as hype, as his 15 minutes of fame.

"I think to some degree I've become a shorthand or a symbol or a stand-in for now," he said. "It's a spirit that says we are looking for different. We want something new."

Obama joined the race in January 2007, a week before Clinton, and soon proved that his appeal with voters was no passing fancy, that he was more than a cardboard stand-in.

He turned his short resume — just two years of national experience as a senator — into an asset by stressing that it was time for a new generation to step forward.

Obama's surprising ability to raise money — by the boatload — instantly served notice to Clinton that he was not to be discounted.

He matched Clinton almost dollar for dollar in the first three months of 2007, and breezed right past her in the next quarter — raising $33 million to her $27 million. By year's end, both had raised more than $100 million and blown through at least $80 million, muscular figures that no other Democrat could touch.

"That really changed the whole tenor of the race to becoming more of a two-person contest than a coronation," said Anthony Corrado, a campaign finance expert at Colby College in Maine.

Clinton did her best to maintain the illusion of inevitability nonetheless.

In July, she dismissed Obama as "irresponsible and frankly naive" on foreign policy.

In September, she ran the gantlet of five Sunday talk shows in one day, working in the phrase "When I'm president" at least seven times.

As recently as November, she calmly told an interviewer that despite Obama's surprisingly strong challenge, "it will be me."

Late into the fall, there were plenty of believers in a Clinton juggernaut.

"If this were a wedding, we'd be at the 'speak now or forever hold your peace' part," Steve McMahon, a former Dean adviser, said of Clinton's strength in October.

But soon there were signs of trouble for her.

An internal campaign memo had surfaced the previous May in which aides urged Clinton to bypass the leadoff caucuses in Iowa because it was her "consistently weakest state." Clinton disavowed the idea and worked hard all fall for an Iowa win, but the memo rang true. She was walloped with a third-place showing in Iowa, surpassed by both Obama and Edwards.

"Years from now," Obama promised his Iowa supporters, "you'll look back and you'll say that this was the moment. This was the place where America remembered what it means to hope."

His Iowa victory propelled him like a slingshot into New Hampshire, where the only question seemed to be how big his victory would be.

Clinton didn't buy it, and neither did the public.

With her candidacy on the ropes, tough-as-nails Clinton let loose her emotions. Choking back tears the day before the primary, Clinton spoke from the heart about the meaning of the presidential race. In the process, she softened her remote image and zinged Obama along the way.

"You know, this is very personal for me," she told voters in a coffee shop. "Some of us are right, and some of us are not. Some of us are ready, and some of us are not."

It was a powerful moment, played over and over on TV.

When the New Hampshire results came in, Clinton was the newest comeback kid, Obama the underdog once again.

"I found my own voice," Clinton declared.

Then she overplayed her hand, or rather, her husband.

Heading into a difficult South Carolina contest, Bill Clinton ramped up the anti-Obama rhetoric he'd first unleashed in New Hampshire.

The ex-president's rancorous words — criticizing Obama's positions on the Iraq war as a "fairy tale" and complaining that the Obama campaign had put out a "hit job" on him — were a distasteful counterpoint to Obama's lofty message.

Obama, for his part, took the criticism as a source of pride. "It means I might win this thing," he said.

Win he did in South Carolina. And the money came pouring in.

Obama collected a stunning $36 million in January, compared with $14 million for Clinton.

That gave him the firepower to challenge Clinton everywhere in the mega-round of primaries on Super Tuesday, the day that Clinton had once predicted would be the "finish line."

Instead they traded states, victory for victory, on Feb. 5, and neither came close to touching the tape.

And from there, it was all Obama, all the time, rolling up 11 straight primary and caucus victories in the past three weeks.

Clinton responded by moving the finish line — and raising her own boatload of cash. She collected $35 million in February but was surpassed yet again by Obama's fundraising.

Now Clinton is pinning her hopes on victories Tuesday in Ohio and Texas, where she once led in polls by a wide margin.

But the race has tightened in both states, and Clinton for the first time has lost the lead that she has held in national polls since Day One.

The news just gets worse for her. Two weeks ago, she was up by 16 points in Pennsylvania, which votes April 22. A poll this week showed the race at Clinton 49, Obama 43.

With every victory, more voters have given Obama a closer look.

"The person who wins homecoming queen always looks a lot better the following week walking around campus," said Hart, the pollster.

"My cautionary note," he added, "is that it ain't over. You always think the surprise you've seen is the last surprise."

"If she wins Texas and Ohio, we'll be talking very differently on Wednesday."

YAHOO NEWS
 
Kaka hivi unafikiri ktk mimba zote zinazotolewa hapa duniani ni ngapi zinazotolewa kwa mazingira husika na ni ngapi mtu anaamua kutoa kwa sababu ya convenience tu? I guarantee you the latter is way more than the former.

Kama mimba zingekuwa zinatolewa ktk mazingira husika kasi (rate) ya utoaji mimba ingekuwa iko chini sana. Pasipo na sababu yoyote ile ya msingi na ya kitabibu ningekuwa na uwezo ningepiga marufuku utoaji mimba wa kiholela.

msee,
hakuna kitu kinachoitwa 'utoaji mimba holela'......data zilizopo ni kwamba, nchi ambazo abortion is legal, the rate is very low, the practice is safe compared to those countries ambazo the act is illegal!!.
wanawake wengi wanaenda thru terrible emotions agony and immensely psychological trauma kabla, wakati na baada ya kutoa mimba......hivyo basi kama wapo wanaotoa kwasababu tu wanaweza, basi ni wachache na wasitumike kama sababu ya kunyima walio wengi haki yao ya kikatiba!!.

kakalende,
Nimependa sana hiyo "Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-Inevitable." Kimsingi hilo dongo, lina summarize kampeni yake nzima!!

wkend njema wakuu woooooote.
 
msee,
hakuna kitu kinachoitwa 'utoaji mimba holela'......data zilizopo ni kwamba, nchi ambazo abortion is legal, the rate is very low, the practice is safe compared to those countries ambazo the act is illegal!!.
wanawake wengi wanaenda thru terrible emotions agony and immensely psychological trauma kabla, wakati na baada ya kutoa mimba......hivyo basi kama wapo wanaotoa kwasababu tu wanaweza, basi ni wachache na wasitumike kama sababu ya kunyima walio wengi haki yao ya kikatiba!!.

kakalende,
Nimependa sana hiyo "Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-Inevitable." Kimsingi hilo dongo, lina summarize kampeni yake nzima!!

wkend njema wakuu woooooote.

Haya bwana...wewe naona unaishi sayari nyingine kabisa au umeshaanza kunywa Irish Lager na mjomba wako Kennedy...
 
Day of Reckoning

A visitor to Clinton HQ sees signs of serious trouble.


The day of reckoning for Hillary Clinton is almost here. The voters in Ohio will either deal a final blow to her campaign or provide a much needed victory that at best will give her a reprieve in the long march to the nomination. A visitor from another country recently paid a call on the Clinton campaign headquarters in Ballston, Va., a place just over the bridge from Washington but light years away. He imagined he would be present at a moment of great triumph. Instead he found a campaign on the verge of imploding. Phone bank tables were unmanned. Bins full of mail sent over from the Senate sat unattended. A lot of young women, fanatical Hillary fans all, rushed about, seemingly unclear about what they were supposed to be doing. Other aides sat in front of computer screens, gloomily reading coverage of the campaign. Howard Wolfson and Phil Singer, the campaign's communications team, weren't speaking with anybody else, just doing their own thing, whatever that might have been. In short, it was not a happy family....endelea

Bailing Out Barack
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Supporters of Sen. Barack Obama concede that Sen. Hillary Clinton's aggressiveness rescued him from a serious blunder in last Tuesday's presidential debate at Cleveland, when he hesitated at rejecting a lavish endorsement of him by black Muslim leader Louis Farrakhan......Endelea
 
Haya bwana...wewe naona unaishi sayari nyingine kabisa au umeshaanza kunywa Irish Lager na mjomba wako Kennedy...

naona kwisha legea weye!!! achana na kina Rush L, fikiria vitu hivi ktk lnterllectual angle na sio angle ya religious overzeal/emotions ndio zinakuwa ruler of the day!!

kuna issue nyingine ambayo pia ni very hot, bado inafanyiwakazi, nakuwa test politically hasa hapa USA. so far left and right kwa pamoja wanaonyesha upinzani, mambo ya fear of the unknown.............lakini maandalizi kwa general public yanaendelea polepole!!

Issue yenyewe ni kuruhusu commercialization of human body parts, eg Kidneys, liver, heart etc.
Huu ni mjadala mrefu mno!! lakini mie nasema yes!! ruhusu watu kufanya biashara hiyo, kwani oversight ni nyeti mno kuliko hali halisi ilivyo sasa.
kutokuruhusu hii kitu, matokeo yake ndio mambo ya kina Dr. Amit Kumar(google: Dr. Amit Kumar....kwa story zaidi)................

we nae, unaniona mimi "Pampula" flani hivi eeeenh!!?? saa zote unafikiri nimeshikilia bottle?? bado mapema......kuna bia moja local hapa inaitwa Samuel Adams(ilianzishwa na yule yule wa kwenye historia) ipo safi sana!!.
 
Unaona sasa...wewe nawe umeshakuwa alcoholic kama mjomba wako...
Yaani siku hizi ktk kila bandiko lako lazima utaje pombe....mweeee...haya bana.

Sasa hii commercialization ya human body parts ndio tunaita pumba. Yaani wewe kwa akili yako timamu unasema hii biashara rukhsa...? Kwa hili sitabishana sana na wewe hadi nishawishike na utimamu wa akili yako maana naona athari za pombe zinaanza kujitokeza kidogo kidogo...
 
Has Tiger Woods helped clear the way for Barack Obama?


feb26_tigoba_299x268.jpg


Michael BambergerSenior Writer said:

Sports IllustratedPublished: February 26, 2008
There's something happening here. When Tiger Woods won his first Masters, in 1997, most every story noted that he was the first African-American to win at Augusta. Back then, the exotic ancestral history of Woods — his black father, his Thai mother — was an engaging subject. But now, with Tiger in our living rooms one weekend after another, it hardly ever comes up. Familiarity breeds comfort. We've moved on.

And now, at warp speed and on a scale that dwarfs anything to do with sport, something similar is happening with Barack Obama. We know about his black father from Kenya and his white mother from Kansas. But when you watch Obama in a televised debate, or see him on the evening news, are you thinking about his race? The man won Iowa! Zach Johnson, the Masters champion, is from Iowa.
So the question here in the toy department is this: Has Tiger Woods — simply by conducting his business the way he does — helped make the country more tolerant? And if you believe he has, do you think Woods, in a way no CNN pie chart could ever capture, has helped pave the way for Barack Obama? Discuss.
Don't expect Tiger to post a comment on your blog.

He talks politics on his plane, not in the press tent. But he's following the presidential campaigns closely. John McCain is a decorated Vietnam veteran, as was Tiger's father, Earl. Hillary Clinton's husband, the former First Golfer, stood on a California stage with Woods at the opening of the Tiger Woods Learning Center in 2006. Obama, like Woods, knows that the continental drift is now in reverse. (Look how each got here.) The campaigns have approached Tiger's people, but none of the candidates has directly asked for his endorsement. They must know his M.O.

The act of endorsing is presumptuous, and Tiger is not. He's modest. Even with friends he doesn't say, "Look what happens to the TV ratings when I play. " The Nielsen numbers speak for themselves, just as his golf scores do. He likes precision. He'll tell you how many kids are enrolled at his learning center, but he would never try to analyze his impact on race relations. For that, to use a fancy Mitt Romney word, there's no metric.

As a rookie, Tiger appeared in a Nike spot in which he said, "There are still courses in the United States that I am not allowed to play because of the color of my skin. " He wouldn't recite that line today, chiefly because every last course would welcome him now — but also because Tiger has no use for grand and sweeping oratory. He's a golfer, not a pol.
Tiger in grand terms, that was his father's specialty. In '96, when Tiger was SI's Sportsman of the Year for the first time, Earl said, "Tiger will do more than any other man in history to change the course of humanity. " The father went on to say, "He'll have the power to impact nations. Not people. Nations. The world is just getting a taste of his power. "At the time, it sounded like crazy talk. Actually, it still does. But less so all the time.

Thats Tiger power!
 
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By ADAM NAGOURNEY

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Taking advantage of his financial edge, Senator Barack Obama is buying large amounts of advertising and building extensive get-out-the-vote operations in an effort to end Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s candidacy with twin defeats Tuesday in Ohio and Texas.

The intensity of Mr. Obama’s drive is especially apparent on television, where he has outspent Mrs. Clinton by nearly two to one in the two states. That is helping him eat deeply into double-digit leads she held in polls just weeks ago.

But after a month in which she raised $32 million — a remarkable amount, but still less than the $50 million or more brought in by Mr. Obama — Mrs. Clinton is fighting back.

The expenditures of the two Democratic presidential candidates, combined with a travel schedule that sent them and their surrogates from border to border in Texas and Ohio, reflect the expectation that the voting this week may be climactic. Mrs. Clinton’s advisers have suggested that she will bow out of the race if she falters in either state, after 11 straight losses.

Their face-offs are not just on television. Mr. Obama, of Illinois, has a town-hall-style meeting Sunday afternoon in Westerville, Ohio. Mrs. Clinton, of New York, just announced one there, too. Mr. Obama will be at Westerville Central High School, Mrs. Clinton at Westerville North High School.

Polls show that the race is deadlocked in Texas. Mrs. Clinton’s lead in Ohio has been whittled away, though she does still lead.

“Senator Obama is spending a lot of money on TV; if this can be purchased, he can win it,” Gov. Ted Strickland of Ohio, a Democrat who has campaigned across the state with Mrs. Clinton, said in an interview. “I think we’ve survived the initial blast of the Obama phenomenon, and we’re now holding steady.”

In a sign of Mr. Obama’s confidence and his strategy of amassing delegates wherever he can, he spent part of Saturday in Rhode Island, which with Vermont also votes on Tuesday.

Aides to Mrs. Clinton said she remained confident of winning the Ohio and Texas contests and would press on with her campaign, as signaled by her increasingly tough attacks on Mr. Obama.

But Clinton advisers have recently pointed to Mr. Obama’s financial advantage, in what appears to be an attempt to lay the groundwork to stay in the race should she lose by a small margin or squeak to victory in either or both states. “They are dumping a lot of money there,” said Mrs. Clinton’s chief strategist, Mark Penn, referring to the Obama campaign.

That said, Mrs. Clinton once enjoyed double-digit leads in both states, and her campaign had told supporters concerned about her string of losses that her effort to win the Democratic nomination would get back on track after solid wins in Ohio and Texas. Democrats said narrow victories there might not be enough to stanch a flow of uncommitted superdelegates — elected officials and party leaders — to Mr. Obama, who have until now deferred to the request by Mrs. Clinton’s advisers to wait for the vote in the two states.

Mr. Obama, campaign officials said, has spent about $10 million on television advertising in Texas since early February; Mrs. Clinton has spent just less than $5 million. Mr. Obama has spent about $5.3 million for television advertising in Ohio, compared with just under $3 million for Mrs. Clinton, the officials said.

Those figures do not take into account substantial advertising being presented for Mr. Obama by the Service Employees International Union. It also does not include money that Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton spent in Texas on Spanish-language television and radio stations in a competition for Latino voters, whom Mrs. Clinton had once considered an unassailable part of her base.

“I have many friends in Texas; I know your tradition and culture,” Mrs. Clinton said in one commercial broadcasting in Houston this weekend, speaking into the camera as subtitles translate her remarks into Spanish.

Mr. Obama’s financial advantage is helping him beyond the airwaves. His campaign flew 200 paid organizers from across the country to 10 campaign offices in Texas right after the Feb. 5 primaries, aides said, when some of Mrs. Clinton’s staff members were volunteering to work without pay. Another 150 were sent to build get-out-the-vote networks in Ohio, working for Paul Tewes, who was the Obama campaign’s director in Iowa. Mr. Obama’s eight-point victory in that state’s caucuses gave his campaign a huge boost.

Mrs. Clinton’s on-the-ground effort is no less aggressive and extensive; in particular, she has tapped into the network of support provided to her by Mr. Strickland. But in both states, her corps of workers are made up largely of volunteers. Many are from the two states, but others came here and to Texas on their own dime — typically from Washington and New York, some responding to an e-mail plea from Chelsea Clinton.

“We need as many people on the ground in Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont as we can get,” Ms. Clinton wrote.

Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama were relying on surrogates to help carry their message ahead of the contests this week. Their identities offered a hint at the kind of voters both candidates were going after.

For Mrs. Clinton, it was Richard A. Gephardt, the former House Democratic leader from Missouri. Mr. Gephardt, a longtime opponent of trade deals like the North American Free Trade Agreement, was campaigning in the blue-collar Mahoning Valley in Ohio.

Mr. Obama has Arcade Fire, the popular indie-rock group who announced that the leading members would perform for him on Sunday at Stuart’s Opera House in Nelsonville. The city is not far from Ohio University and many of the younger voters that Mr. Obama seeks. (Aides to Mrs. Clinton, distressed that a band with many fans at the Clinton headquarters would join the line of supporters heading into the Obama camp, pointed out that the band was Canadian; in fact, while its members live there now, they grew up in Texas.)

If the Clinton and Obama campaigns succeed at their goals, every Democrat in the state will get a knock on the door from a supporter of one candidate or the other. Thousands of Mr. Obama’s supporters gathered Saturday morning at 75 staging stations.

In Texas, Mr. Obama’s campaign began the final part of its Caucus Education Program to make certain its supporters understood the state’s complicated voting procedure: a primary, in which two-thirds of the delegates are chosen, is followed by a caucus, which determines the remaining delegates. Volunteers went door-to-door leaving pamphlets that explained what the campaign had come to call the Texas Two Step, to remind Obama supporters that they had to vote twice.

Mr. Obama has repeatedly defeated Mrs. Clinton in caucuses. Because of that, his aides said, he could win more Texas delegates even if he lost the popular vote. Aides to Mrs. Clinton said Saturday that in part because of defeats she had suffered to Mr. Obama in caucuses, they had made an all-out effort to identify voters who would get out for both the primary during the day and the caucuses at night.

Mr. Obama has been particularly aggressive in these contests in using Internet tools to identify and turn out supporters. For example, anyone using the search engine Google to look for Texas caucus locations will see an advertisement from the Obama campaign listing the sites and, after a click, inviting people to sign in with their names and e-mail addresses.

Visitors to the Web sites of The Houston Chronicle and The Cincinnati Enquirer were confronted with a moving advertisement that took up nearly half the screen showing a video of Mr. Obama and urging voters to sign up and pledge their support to his campaign.

“We are trying to grow the electorate,” said Mr. Obama’s campaign manager, David Plouffe, referring to the Internet effort. “We have had almost 20,000 people come through our ads looking for their early vote location.”

Here in Ohio, both candidates have focused on urban and suburban areas. Mrs. Clinton is also campaigning in rural areas and southeast Ohio, which she views as one of her strongest parts of the state. (Mr. Strickland did particularly well there in his election as governor.)

In Texas, both candidates staged last-minute efforts in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio, where both Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama had rallies Friday evening. Mrs. Clinton’s campaign brought in Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa of Los Angeles as part of an extensive roster of Latino surrogates sent across South Texas, reflecting the intensity of the struggle for those voters.

Mr. Obama focused on parts of the state with large concentrations of African-American residents, from Beaumont in East Texas to Houston, both with significant populations of evacuees from Hurricane Katrina.

Heading into the final days before the nominating contests this week, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama used heavy television advertising to reinforce what had been the central closing themes of their campaigns.

Across Texas, Mrs. Clinton presented an advertisement that starkly suggested Mr. Obama was not ready to lead the world in dangerous times, echoing a similar charge she made against him Saturday in speeches in the state.

The Obama campaign began running a series of new advertisements in Texas over the weekend. Among them was a pointed response to Mrs. Clinton’s attack on his national security credentials, in which he criticized her judgment in voting for the resolution authorizing President Bush to proceed with the Iraq war. He also broadcast advertisements that appeal to veteran voters, who make up over 20 percent of the Democratic electorate, and that press for change in Washington, a central part of his case against Mrs. Clinton.

Advertisements in Ohio reflected the prominent role that trade has taken here. Mr. Obama filled the airwaves with a spot saying he opposed Nafta, a pact put in place while Bill Clinton was president. Meanwhile, advertising in the state from Mrs. Clinton appealed to blue-collar workers by attacking trade and tax policies that she said unfairly protected corporations.

The extent of Mr. Obama’s financial advantage was increasingly clear this weekend and stirred concern among Mrs. Clinton’s supporters.

Mr. Obama has already begun spending money on staffing and television advertisements in some states coming up after Tuesday. Mrs. Clinton’s expenditures there have been minimal.

Clinton advisers said the television advertisement about Mr. Obama’s readiness for the White House — it features children sleeping while a narrator asks who would be better able to deal as president with a middle-of-the-night telephone call or a crisis — would be shown only in Texas. Part of that strategy was based on the calculation that the security message would resonate better in Texas than Ohio, where the economy is the overwhelming issue. But another aspect, an aide said, was that the advertisements would gain free coverage in the Ohio news media, saving money.

Financial concerns have also played into a decision by Mrs. Clinton’s campaign to buy time on the Fox sports channel to broadcast across Texas a town-hall-style forum that she will hold Monday near Austin.

Her aides said the venue was chosen in part to reach white male voters who had moved steadily to Mr. Obama. But the bigger factor, they said, was that the channel was a relatively inexpensive outlet.

Jeff Zeleny contributed reporting from San Antonio.
 
Clinton under pressure to quit White House race

by Stephen Collinson2 hours, 5 minutes ago

Democrat Hillary Clinton faced pressure Sunday to abandon her White House bid heading into pivotal contests in Ohio and Texas that are unlikely to dent Barack Obama's surging momentum.

Democratic grandees who are supporting Obama said that for the sake of party unity, Clinton should consider her options after Tuesday's primary battles as the Republicans rally behind their heir apparent, John McCain.

The pressure on the former first lady intensified as new polls suggested she was deadlocked with Obama in Texas and Ohio, far from the kind of blowout wins that she needs to overhaul his lead among Democratic delegates.

However, the former first lady has come out firing against her rival, issuing an ominous television spot that suggests Obama would be ill-prepared to protect US children in the event of a foreign-policy crisis.

"This is a wartime election," she told a rally Sunday in the Ohio town of Westerville.

"For some people, this election is about how you feel. It is about speeches. That is not what it is about for me," she said. "It is about solutions."

One party elder not yet endorsing either candidate, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, said "the bickering between these two very fine senators is going on too long" as they fought running battles over national security.

"D Day is Tuesday. We have to have a positive campaign after Tuesday," Richardson, who abandoned his own White House bid in January, said on CBS News.

"Whoever has the most delegates after Tuesday, a clear lead, should be in my judgment the nominee."
 
Nyani,

Umemsoma mchumba wako Maureen Dowd leo? Je uliangalia Kipara Carville alivyopeteza matumaini alipokuwa kwa Mimacho Tim Russert kwenye Meet the Press?
 
Icadon,

Jalua anasema "dhingisha kwa KANU"! ODM na binamu wake Raila wanampa uanachama wa kudumu!
 
Jaluo, mambo yote sasa ilichobaki Makeni, inabidi Jaluo sasa aanza kuongea facts, ya atakayofanya na ambayo hatafanya in details, maana sasa kuna kina Rush, Cavuto, Savage nation, Bob Grant, na Cuningham noma kweli hao ma-conservative radios!

Otherwise, Jaluo mbele sisi tuko nyuma, mpaka kieleweke!
 
Ni kusubiri mpaka jumanne na kuona ni nani hasa atapita kwenye primaries zinazofuata. Inanoekana Ohio anabeba Hilary, lakini sijui kwa kiasi gani, Texas ,50-50, na nyingine zinaonekana kuwa na mwelekeo kama huo. Obama akishinda moja tu kati ya Ohio na Texas, au hata akiweza kufikisha kama asilimia 48 basi it will be allover for Hilarry. Sasa ni kusubiri tu jumanne tusikie mtu anacheka au analia
McCain atachekelea sana Hilarry akipata nomination!
 
Hillary's Decalogue - 11 Good Reasons to vote for her

(1) Knowledge: She voted for the Iraq War - But if she had known at that time what she knows today, she wouldn't have voted – Conclusion: she had no clue on what she was voting for..

(2) Clarity - She voted for the Law that made it more difficult for the Americans to declare bankruptcy (in favor of the Credit Card businesses) – Although she voted for, "she was happy that the Law finally did not pass". Do you understand? Clear as water.

(3) Forgiveness - She forgave her husband for the Monica affair in exchange for his support to her New York Senate bid – love is always love.(4) Transparency - She will show us her tax-returns when the primaries are over and "only if she is elected the nominee"

(5) Compassionate - She worked on the Wall Mart Board of directors, trying to avoid the workers to form a union, but she is concerned about the working classes….

(6) Consistent - Not satisfied for having supported the Iraq war, she gave George Bush a semi free-ride to attack Iran.

(7) Bright - She forgot already about the Whitewater scandal (a small youth affair)

(8) Human - She knows when to cry (after the defeat in Iowa) to seem more human and attract sympathy- shall she use the same tactics with Kim Il Sung?

(9) Combative - If the law doesn't favor her, let's overrun it. That's how she tried to overturn the Nevada court decision allowing the Food and Casino workers to vote on their working place. After all, if they work, why do they need to vote?

(10) Grateful - She convinced her husband, Bill, to pardon Marc Rich for tax evasion on his last day in office (20 January 2001)- after all his wife, Denise Rich, had given her 1 million for her New York Senate campaign. –that's called gratitude

(11) Honest – When she left the White House in 2001, she inadvertently took some "extra" furniture when she moved to her Chappaqua Residence in New York, but she gave it back when the scandal broke out
 
Nyani,

Umemsoma mchumba wako Maureen Dowd leo? Je uliangalia Kipara Carville alivyopeteza matumaini alipokuwa kwa Mimacho Tim Russert kwenye Meet the Press?

Aaah mimi nshahama kambi siku nyingi mbona...
Niko GOP sasa hivi na nina uhakika jumba jeupe tutabaki nalo
 
Aaah mimi nshahama kambi siku nyingi mbona...
Niko GOP sasa hivi na nina uhakika jumba jeupe tutabaki nalo

Nyani, mi nilishasema wiki kadhaa zilizopita, wewe deep down unapenda Obama ashinde lakini you hate to be on the loosing side, lakini naomba uachane na GOP ni watu wabaya sana - after 8 years of Bush hakuna haja ya kukupa facts kwani ni dhahiri. Karibu Obama camp, nina uhakika atakuwa inaugurated.
 
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