Mon Aug 25, 2008 5:58 pm
benji wrote:rules out America,
He doesn't "rule America" we haven't had real dictators in almost seventy years.Diddy wrote:i want to c an intellegent guy rules out America, not another dump ass like bush!
But, you said you want Obama. So...which is it?
Gundy wrote:benji, it's best to ignore Diddy posts
Mon Aug 25, 2008 6:11 pm
Mon Aug 25, 2008 6:23 pm
i mean i don't want McCain to become president!
benji, it's best to ignore Diddy posts
Wed Aug 27, 2008 7:49 am
Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:29 am
Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:38 am
Lamrock wrote:lmao Dump ass.
I had a post replying to all of benji's anti-Obama posts, before realizing that I didn't know what I was talking about. I still would rather have Obama (after the past 8 years, anything would be better than essentially another Bush in my humble opinion), but I can't tell if he is any less of a dump ass than McCain.
Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:43 am
Wed Aug 27, 2008 10:31 am
Lamrock wrote:I had a post replying to all of benji's anti-Obama posts, before realizing that I didn't know what I was talking about.
I still would rather have Obama (after the past 8 years, anything would be better than essentially another Bush in my humble opinion)
but I can't tell if he is any less of a dump ass than McCain.
I'm sorry if it's already been answered but do the indie parties offer any better, and is there any remote chance for them to have a shot at winning?
do the indie parties offer any better, and is there any remote chance for them to have a shot at winning?
Wed Aug 27, 2008 11:19 am
Wed Aug 27, 2008 11:29 am
Thu Aug 28, 2008 12:17 am
Because Obama is another Bush, only without any good major ideas
Bush Tax Cuts which shifted more of the tax burden onto the richest, spurned an economic boom
Social Security reform
foreign policy (Obama's foreign policy is the irrational incoherent poll driven one of the Clinton administration which led to more individual military deployments in eight years than all other Presidents combined
not even if there is genocide, if it's not popular to help in the U.S.
Thu Aug 28, 2008 4:52 am
el badman wrote:![]()
I know you always find a way to dig up some stats proving your points, but I really doubt you could find anything that successfully proves every major economic institutes/experts wrong...
The economy has been going down the drain
foreclosures are up
mortgage and automobile giants need to be saved by the Congress to avoid complete mayhem,...
I'm glad this shitstorm isn't affecting you in any way, but pretending that everything's going smoothly for everyone is actually quite rude.
Yup, that was in the agenda. Nothing was done of course.
Except none of these deployments were anywhere as costly, in lives
or managed to lead to the highly unstable foreign relations climate that we have now, so this is very much irrelevant.
Yes, thank Jeebus that Bush and co have been hard at work with what's going on in Darfur and the zillion countries plagued by civil war...
Thu Aug 28, 2008 7:05 am
I don't see what's absurd about the comparison. They're both religiously driven guys who want to use the state to "correct" life. Obama can't speak without a teleprompter, Bush manages this but people still mock when he flubs.
Except economic experts do look at statistics and would never deny the post-2003 "Bush Boom" during which economic performance was comparable to the late 90s.
Sorry, going down the drain is when growth goes negative
Again, the result of an economic boom. People had more money, so they with Congress' backing, bought loans they couldn't actually pay long term for. When things slowed, everyone realized that was a bad idea and now the lenders needed to be blamed.
Again, bad management does not control the status of the entire economy.
And Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac don't even count.
He decides that because I actually bother to look at economic data and read economists instead of just listening to sob story anecdotes
Except this is a empirical fallacy. You cannot apply characteristics of individuals to the whole.
I flinched at Thug's semi-elitist notion that $400 is less than a month's paycheck and thus consoles are cheap as well as the people who constantly buy phones or have three, I don't spend anywhere near outside my means and I do save some though so I am "doing fine"
Because Bush didn't overtly intervene everywhere in the world, it makes it okay let genocide happen in Iraq, where the US already is involved?
Thu Aug 28, 2008 11:39 am
el badman wrote:but it seems obvious that the vast majority is hurting these days
mainly because of the atrocious choices from this administration when it comes to properly allocating funds.
It's legitimate for people to really start wondering what the hell is going on when such huge entities are in danger.
Not at all, but instead of misleading the world, including his own people, and going on false pretenses on an uber costly crusade that made the world more dangerous than ever for any non-Muslim individual
(how many new generations of terrorists do you think this has created?)
In this regard, I do believe that Obama would never ever be as reckless and manipulative as the current dickhead in the Office
Thu Aug 28, 2008 3:28 pm
The Bush Administration's failure was not in making the correct decision to end the war and remove Saddam from a position of power, but in the execution of the post-invasion period.
And how many were drawn to Iraq to die in a losing effort? And how many of the networks were severly damaged, especially financially? And how many generations will hopefully have a country like Iraq is becoming to look up to?
Thu Aug 28, 2008 3:52 pm
the gap between the rich and poor is always still wide
When has the US ever successfully installed a democracy with a good human rights record?
US backed governments are always corrupt.
Thu Aug 28, 2008 11:55 pm
benji wrote:Some of us care about non-Americans.
Well, some of us don't have a problem with everyone not being poor.
When have the Pacers ever won a NBA title?
There are governments that aren't corrupt? I didn't know this was possible.
Fri Aug 29, 2008 12:11 am
instead of using them to buy votes. Except Obama promises more of the latter
He's already said he wants to invade Pakistan just to capture one man. He spent all of the primary season railing against NAFTA and borderline vowing to dismantle it, while telling Canada in private he won't touch it.
I take it you haven't been paying too much attention to Obama in this campaign.
Bush may have been a problem. But I think it's delusional, as so many cultists seem to believe, to think someone like Obama is the divine answer.
Fri Aug 29, 2008 1:52 am
I am one of those. This is exactly why I want America as far from them as possible.
Helping to create an elite while leaving the majority behind to watch their situation worsen. That is the American way. Ohhh saaaay can you seeee
Ah, but at least it is the Pacers intention to win a title every year.
(Please, if you don't already know, ask me for examples. There are hundreds. We could go administration by administration if you wish.)
For you, he only seems to be an attention-seeking noob who just wants to step all over your pecious constitution in order to reach his personal goals.
I did listen to what Obama has to say. I almost went to see his rally when he came in my area. And I really think that your apparent contempt for what the guy stands for clouds your judgement and makes you interprete his words in a totally extreme and subjective way.
Instead of bombarding everything and asking questions later
As one of the rare politicians who was against the invasion in Irak in the first place
and seeing how incredibly unpopular and costly this occupation has become
I'm fairly sure he's never said he would invade anyone.
Reuters wrote:Obama said if elected in November 2008 he would be willing to attack inside Pakistan with or without approval from the Pakistani government, a move that would likely cause anxiety in the already troubled region.
"If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and President Musharraf won't act, we will," Obama said.
he's a better fit than McCain in order to bring his country's economy on the right
while improving the relations with the rest of the world
(the so called "war on terror" just can't be fought and won as as sole party, disregarding what the rest of the world has to say like what's been done in the last few years
Fri Aug 29, 2008 2:19 am
And I love it. "Your precious Constitution." It's the fucking highest law of the land and it's been blatantly ignored and violated for 116 straight years (Yes, I'm giving Lincoln a pass for simplicity's sake) by the political entities. Anyone with actual respect for the American republic would not dismiss the most important document in its history as something to be ignored.
Well, I've only read 90% of his speeches, explored his history, and re-read his Issues section every month as it changes. But hey, you almost went to a rally to support him.
So because he was right then, he must always be right now?
Which doesn't really discredit the invasion.
How is the government taking more of employers and citizens money and using it to purchase votes
Good thing it hasn't been, huh?
Fri Aug 29, 2008 4:31 am
el badman wrote:The fact is a whole lot of what's in the Constitution CANNOT possibly apply to our modern society
el_badman wrote:Well, that and the fact that it was initiated on false pretenses
Fri Aug 29, 2008 4:55 am
Almost every political argument I've ever had ends with the opposing party admitting that they don't really care for the Constitution.
as benji said, it's the highest law in the land.
False pretenses that pretty much everyone accepted, rather than "fabrications of the Bush administration."
Fri Aug 29, 2008 5:36 am
BigKaboom2 wrote:el badman wrote:The fact is a whole lot of what's in the Constitution CANNOT possibly apply to our modern society
Name something.
Fri Aug 29, 2008 5:54 am
Fri Aug 29, 2008 6:12 am
Well, that and the fact that it was initiated on false pretenses
Hmm yeah, since every single country that participated to this masquerade had its majority of citizens against the war, I think it's fair to say that the US went all lonesome cowboy and fascist bully on that one...
Again, this appears to be a completely twisted, subjective opinion of what was said or implied.
Which doesn't mean it shouldn't be altered to reflect today's world.
I don't think it's just because I'm a foreigner
The fact is a whole lot of what's in the Constitution CANNOT possibly apply to our modern society
Would you gladly oblige if it had somehow stated that it's okay to beat up your wife and kids on every first monday of the month?