bitterlyclingin
Silver Member
- Aug 4, 2011
- 3,122
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(Here's the guy who's in the process of swiping one sixth of the American economy, who wanted to go to Japan and apologize to the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki for our use of the atomic bombs to mercifully end that war, who wants to give all Mexicans citizenship and the right to vote in our elections, who stole from the rest of the country to give to his 'goombahs' in the UAW, who wants to take the bank accounts and the assets of people who have worked all their lives to provide for themselves and give it to his friends in #OWS, who wants to annul the Constitution, who has visions of his being appointed president for life, who conspired to run 2,000 automatic weapons into Mexico for the purpose of removing America's right to bear arms and they want us to keep quiet and not pick on him? That's almost as if General Holland M Smith told the Third, Fourth, and Fifth Marines on the morning of February 19th, 1945 to go easy on Iwo Jima's Japanese defenders. If the defenders didn't agree to surrender when the Marines asked politely the Marines were to ask the Japanese if they could borrow their ceremonial swords and fall on it themselves. Obama received a pass from the entire media during all of 2008, and this time the opposition is to do it themselves again? Are they nuts?)
"Republicans on a private Republican National Committee conference call with allies warned Tuesday that party surrogates should refrain from personal attacks against President Barack Obama, because such a strategy is too hazardous for the GOP.
"We're hesitant to jump on board with heavy attacks" personally against President Obama, Nicholas Thompson, the vice president of polling firm the Tarrance Group, said on the call. "There's a lot of people who feel sorry for him."
Recent polling data indicates that while the president suffers from significantly low job approval ratings, voters still give "high approval" to Obama personally, Thompson said.
Voters "don't think he's an evil man who's out to change the United States" for the worse--even though many of the same survey respondents agree that his policies have harmed the country, Thompson said. The upshot, Thompson stressed, is that Republicans should "exercise some caution" when talking about the president personally."
On private call, Republicans say attacking Obama personally is too dangerous: Yahoo News exclusive | The Ticket - Yahoo! News
"Republicans on a private Republican National Committee conference call with allies warned Tuesday that party surrogates should refrain from personal attacks against President Barack Obama, because such a strategy is too hazardous for the GOP.
"We're hesitant to jump on board with heavy attacks" personally against President Obama, Nicholas Thompson, the vice president of polling firm the Tarrance Group, said on the call. "There's a lot of people who feel sorry for him."
Recent polling data indicates that while the president suffers from significantly low job approval ratings, voters still give "high approval" to Obama personally, Thompson said.
Voters "don't think he's an evil man who's out to change the United States" for the worse--even though many of the same survey respondents agree that his policies have harmed the country, Thompson said. The upshot, Thompson stressed, is that Republicans should "exercise some caution" when talking about the president personally."
On private call, Republicans say attacking Obama personally is too dangerous: Yahoo News exclusive | The Ticket - Yahoo! News
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