Forum: Miscellaneous
Topic: Primaries
started by: Santorini

Posted by Santorini on Sep. 15 2010,7:16 am
Hat's off to the Tea Party movement :beer:  :thumbsup:  :clap:  :peaceout:
Posted by Santorini on Sep. 16 2010,10:17 am
There is "Real Change" stirring in the air...

The kind of "Change" that was promised during the Presidential campaign...remember

Only THIS TIME you will see it come to fruition.

Never underestimate the power of the people OR the "kooks" and "zealots" as some of you like to call them!

But a thank you to Olderman and Madcow and Ed for keeping the "Tea Party" alive :beer:  Ya can't buy the constant coverage that channel provides :angel:

Posted by Liberal on Sep. 16 2010,12:44 pm
The primary races were between Republitards and the Teabaggers, even Rove is smart enough to see that some of these people are unelectable in the general election.
Posted by hymiebravo on Sep. 16 2010,8:59 pm
QUOTE
There is "Real Change" stirring in the air...


It just seems to be following a natural typical cycle to me.

QUOTE
The kind of "Change" that was promised during the Presidential campaign...remember


I "remember" you being a total poor sport the night of the election when you lost. That's what I remember the most.

QUOTE
Never underestimate the power of the people OR the "kooks" and "zealots" as some of you like to call them!


Yes those teabaggers seem to have found a whole new vein of untapped resources in that regard.

Although you can't really trust what you see on your boob tube. They can make a few hundred people look like thousands. MTV did that for years with some of their beach party events. lol

Posted by nphilbro on Sep. 16 2010,9:21 pm
The party of "NO" will be the party of nothing. They don't even have a platform. People are pis$ed about the economy... the teabags are just in line. There is no unified platform or voice. Just a bunch of goofballs who want to erase all taxes, abolish the courts, and turn us into Afghanistan.
Posted by Liberal on Sep. 17 2010,9:50 pm
GOtP circular firing squad cotinues...

QUOTE


(AP)  Sen. Lisa Murkowski says she'll mount a write-in candidacy after last month's GOP primary loss.

Murkowski, who lost Alaska's Republican primary last month in a stunning upset to a tea-party backed rival, announced Friday that she'll mount a write-in candidacy in a bid to hold onto her job.

The decision to launch a write-in bid follows Murkowski's surprise defeat last month by political novice Joe Miller, who was supported by former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin and the ant-establishment, anti-tax tea party movement.

Interactive Map: CBS News Election 2010 Race Ratings
CBSNews.com Special Report: Election 2010

Palin urged Murkowski on Friday afternoon to recognize that the state's primary voters demonstrated their support for Joe Miller in last month's election.

"Listen to the people, respect their will," Palin said on Twitter. "Voters chose Joe instead."

The convention center where the rally is being held featured signs reading "Let's Make History," and had a table where people could sign up to help Murkowski's campaign. Prominently displayed, too, was a photo of the late Sen. Ted Stevens with his arm around Murkowski.

Stevens is beloved in this state for bringing billions of dollars in federal aid and project to Alaska, and he was one of her biggest cheerleaders before his death last month.

Murkowski has said she has considered her options since conceding the race to Miller and following an outpouring of encouragement from Alaskans stunned by her loss.

Earlier this month, she told The Associated Press she wasn't a quitter and "still in this game." On Thursday, she told reporters that while there's a lot of risk involved in a run, success was possible.

"And I think this is the hope that Alaskans have been sharing with me," she said, "that if it is possible, Lisa, will you give it a try? Will you give us a choice?"

In running, Murkowski would face long odds. Historians and election officials can think of no Alaska candidate who has successfully run as a write-in.

She also has lost support from within the Republican establishment with some leaders urging her either to wait to challenge Alaska's Democratic Sen. Mark Begich in 2014 or to join them in supporting Miller, the self-described "constitutional conservative." Murkowski also would have just has over six weeks to gear up a campaign and turn out the vote.

But she also enjoys widespread name recognition, and her campaign estimates she has about $1 million left in the bank. Plus, the race features a "kind of perfect storm of the things you need for a write-in to be successful," pollster Ivan Moore said. Among those, he said: a vast middle of Alaskans - "tens of thousands" - looking between Miller and Democrat Scott McAdams and questioning their choices.

The largest bloc of registered voters in Alaska are nonpartisan and undeclared.

Heather Handyside, a spokeswoman for McAdams, said McAdams welcomed Murkowski to the race. She said the campaign didn't see how it was "statistically possible" for Murkowski to win and that her entry doesn't change McAdams' strategy at all.

Political observers say that, to win, Murkowski would have to be far more aggressive than she was in the primary, when she touted the benefits of her seniority for Alaska and ran largely on her record. Miller cast her as part of the problem in an out-of-control Washington, and the California-based Tea Party Express, which reported spending more than $550,000 in support of Miller, called her a Republican in name only and repeated stated in seemingly ubiquitous ads claims that she opposed repeal of the federal health care overhaul - claims she called false but didn't challenge until late.

Murkowski recently called the Tea Party Express an "extremist" group and said it has "hijacked" the state Republicans. The group responded that it would work twice as hard as it did in the primary to defeat her if she ran as a write-in.

To successfully run, Moore said, she "has to attack ... forcibly in both directions," pushing Miller "relentlessly to the far right" and painting McAdams, a small-town mayor as "not ready for this."

Carl Shepro, a political science professor at the University of Alaska Anchorage, said Murkowski would have a good shot at victory, despite what history shows.

"No question it's going to be a tough thing, it's not going to be easy at all," he said. "But, hey, at some point, somebody has to be able to do it even though the arguments are pretty much in the opposite direction."





< http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/09/17/politics/main6877896.shtml >

Posted by Liberal on Sep. 19 2010,8:12 pm
Witchcraft? :rofl: :rofl:

QUOTE

In the video, O'Donnell says: "I dabbled into witchcraft. I never joined a coven … I hung around people who were doing these things. I'm not making this stuff up.

"One of my first dates with a witch was on a satanic altar, and I didn't know it. I mean, there's a little blood there and stuff like that … We went to a movie and then had a little midnight picnic on a satanic altar."

O'Donnell declined to appear on Fox News, which is regarded as more than sympathetic to the Tea Party, after the video of her appearing on the Politically Incorrect show in 1999 was released by its host, Bill Maher, who now has a semi-satirical chat show on HBO.

< http://www.guardian.co.uk/world...chcraft >

Posted by hairhertz on Sep. 19 2010,9:00 pm
:dunce: teabaggers  :frusty:
Posted by Grinning_Dragon on Sep. 19 2010,9:47 pm
Murkowski is a progressive POS, and just a plain RINO.  She is being a sore loser and wouldn't have won anyways.

As for the gal with the witchcraft, whoopee do, who cares as it was something done back in High School.  As if any of you didn't do anything in HS that you have regretted.

And on another note, what is so wrong with our Govt abiding by the Enumerations of the Constitution?  I just don't get all of the animosity towards those who prefer the Govt to stop over stepping its authority.  I for one cannot stand the amount of money that is stolen from me each week, all in the name of taxes.

Posted by Liberal on Sep. 20 2010,12:08 am
QUOTE

As for the gal with the witchcraft, whoopee do, who cares as it was something done back in High School.  As if any of you didn't do anything in HS that you have regretted.

Yeah, but most people regret things like wearing a furry tiger stripe shirt in the Tiger's Roar :blush:, not things like a midnight picnic on a bloody satanic altar.

Posted by hymiebravo on Sep. 20 2010,1:29 am
QUOTE
Yeah, but most people regret things like wearing a furry tiger stripe shirt in the Tiger's Roar :blush:, not things like a midnight picnic on a bloody satanic altar.


A lot of times they say it's the things that you didn't do that you regret "more".

Although bloody satanic altar stuff just might be an exception. lol

Posted by Grinning_Dragon on Sep. 20 2010,7:19 am
QUOTE
things like a midnight picnic on a bloody satanic altar.

Well it all makes sense now, isn't that how that dumb caeta pelosi got here on earth, someone summoned her from a bloody satanic altar? :rofl:

Posted by hairhertz on Sep. 20 2010,9:49 pm
I really am enjoying how the right is glossing over this satanic stuff.  More from the party of values.
Posted by Liberal on Sep. 20 2010,11:13 pm
Well, it's not like she joined a coven...   :rofl:


Posted by gijoeman on Sep. 21 2010,12:33 am
I'd teabag Christine and her bushy Irish box.
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