Ninja
Senior Member
... And Team Obama doesn't like it one bit
[youtube]zEeHl0h3NBo[/youtube]
[youtube]zEeHl0h3NBo[/youtube]
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
... And Team Obama doesn't like it one bit
[youtube]zEeHl0h3NBo[/youtube]
Between Ayers, Wright, Pfleger, Rezko, and Farrakhan, his list of party guests isn't looking too promising for a White House Christmas party.
Has anyone linked MCain with a republican of substantive accomplishments: Cheney, W, Craig, Folley, Delay, Stevens, Libby, Hagee .... and the list goes on and on and on....
Debunk the ad or STFU, Jimmy.
The AD is BS. McBush will go down in November. Count on it.
The AD is BS. McBush will go down in November. Count on it.
Sen. Barack Obama has launched an all-out effort to block a Republican billionaires efforts to tie him to domestic (Bill Ayers) and foreign terrorists in a wave of negative television ads.
Obamas campaign has written the Department of Justice demanding a criminal investigation of the American Issues Project, the vehicle through which Dallas investor Harold Simmons is financing the advertisements. The Obama campaign and tens of thousands of supporters also is pressuring television networks and affiliates to reject the ads. The effort has met with some success: CNN and Fox News are not airing the attacks.
I want to echo what Yuval says, as well as Jennifer Rubin over at Contentions. Senator Obamas new ad, trying to explain his association with the unrepentant terrorist Bill Ayers, may rank as among the worst tactical mistakes of the campaign. It puts into play an issue that has been largely ignored by the MSM. It will drive at least some responsible members of the press to cover the truth about Obamas association with Ayers, which is certainly enough to seriously harm Obama. And it once again raises the problem of Obamas other troubling associations over the years, including (but not exclusive to) the Reverend Jeremiah Wright.
For weeks it has been clear that Obama is, for the first time in his national political career, on the defensive. He and his campaign look increasingly rattled. They seem unsure what strategy to pursue and what the new rationale for an Obama presidency ought to be. They seem to be shifting back and forth, from trying to recapture the old magic, now long gone, to using a two-by-four against Senator McCain. And now they have made what strikes me as a major misstep. Many people who never knew who Bill Ayers is, what he has done, and what Obamas relationship with him has been, are about to find out. And for a presidential candidate who is still a mystery to many people, and about whom they persistent and growing questions, it cannot be a good thing to be linked to Ayers.
The Obama campaign, which was running an almost flawless campaign for months, had begun to crack under the pressure of a presidential campaign. That pressure has now created a break. It is one I suspect they will come to regret.