Truthseeker420
Gold Member
...in 2012?
have to wait and see who is going to be the GOP choice. Romney, Paul it will be close but if it is Perry, Gingrich Obama wins big.
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...in 2012?
...in 2012?
...in 2012?
have to wait and see who is going to be the GOP choice. Romney, Paul it will be close but if it is Perry, Gingrich Obama wins big.
Who's going to beat him?
Newt Gingrich?
I think Joe normal could beat him. I believe any person who has the least bit of common sense could beat President Dumbo.
Care to make a friendly wager?
If Mr. Obama wins, you change your sig line the night the election is decided to, "All hail President Obama, your President, my President, our President"
If anybody else wins the election, I change my sig line to, "All hail President _______, your President, my President, our President".
It would seem that if you think it is such an easy call, you would have nothing to risk.
I bet you are not as confident as you say you are.
Paul would get his ass kicked by BHO, as would Perry or Gingrich.
]I think Obama will win, not because people like him, but because the Republican candidates have failed to get people interested in them.
Paul would get his ass kicked by BHO, as would Perry or Gingrich.
If he can spin it that way, he might win. Personally, I don't think the folks are going to fall for it this time.....
...in 2012?
"A number of Republican candidates entered the field to challenge the incumbent Democratic President, Bill Clinton.
The fragmented field of candidates debated issues such as a flat tax and other tax cut proposals, and a return to supply-side economic policies popularized by Ronald Reagan. More attention was drawn to the race by the budget stalemate in 1995 between the Congress and the President, which caused temporary shutdowns and slowdowns in many areas of federal government service."
...in 2012?
He should have been impeached the minute after he signed that unconstitutional healthcare law into law. But nobody with any balls works in the DC beltway.
"A number of Republican candidates entered the field to challenge the incumbent Democratic President, Bill Clinton.
The fragmented field of candidates debated issues such as a flat tax and other tax cut proposals, and a return to supply-side economic policies popularized by Ronald Reagan. More attention was drawn to the race by the budget stalemate in 1995 between the Congress and the President, which caused temporary shutdowns and slowdowns in many areas of federal government service."
...in 2012?
Even though he executed an American, he will carry every liberal and progressive vote.
And about 2o percent of the middle.
Even though he executed an American, he will carry every liberal and progressive vote.
And about 2o percent of the middle.
No, he won't carry every liberal and progressive vote, but he will get a lot more than 20% of moderates. The Democrats won 55% of the self-labeled moderate vote in 2010, and that was a really bad year for them.
Nixon won re election by a large majority against the Socialist, McGovern. People knew what Communism was all about then.
"In September 1944, McGovern joined the 741st Squadron of the 455th Bombardment Group of the Fifteenth Air Force, stationed at San Giovanni Airfield nearby Cerignola in the Apulia region of Italy. There he and his crew found a starving, disease-ridden local population wracked by the ill fortunes of war and far worse off than anything they had seen back home during the Depression. (The sights would be part of his later motivation to fight hunger.) Starting on November 11, 1944, McGovern flew 35 missions over enemy territory from there, the first five as co-pilot for an experienced crew and the rest as pilot for his own plane, known as the Dakota Queen after his wife Eleanor. His targets were in Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, Poland, and northern, German-controlled Italy, and were often either oil refinery complexes or rail marshalling yards, all as part of the U.S. strategic bombing campaign in Europe. The eight- or nine-hour missions were grueling tests of endurance for pilots, and while German fighter aircraft were a diminished threat by then, his missions often faced heavy anti-aircraft artillery fire that filled the sky with flak bursts.
On McGovern's December 15 mission over Linz, his second as pilot, a piece of shrapnel from flak came through the windshield and missed killing him by only a few inches. The following day on a mission to Brüx he nearly collided with another bomber during close-formation flying in complete cloud cover. The day after that he was recommended for a medal after surviving a blown wheel on the always-dangerous B-24 take-off, completing a mission over Germany, and then landing without further damage to the plane. On a December 20 mission against the Škoda Works at Pilsen, McGovern's plane had one engine out and another in flames after being hit by flak. Unable to return to Italy, McGovern was able to land his plane on a British airfield on Vis, a small island off the Yugoslav coast controlled by Josip Broz Tito's Partisans. The short field, normally used by small fighter planes, killed many of the bomber crews who tried to make emergency landings there, but McGovern successfully landed, saving his crew and earning him the Distinguished Flying Cross."