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saxitoxin wrote:Serbia is a RUDE DUDE
may not be a PRUDE, but he's gotta 'TUDE
might not be LEWD, but he's gonna get BOOED
RUDE
... But, Luns, Mormons are filthy and fascist animals. If you are not Mormon, they believe, you deserve no freedom... and no soft drinks.luns101 wrote: I think the point DangerBoy was trying to make was that it would be a shame if people didn't vote for Mitt Romney simply for his Mormon beliefs. If he has made bad policy decisions, then that's another matter.
while i think your post holds some validity, let me run this by you. in a previous post you said the GOP seems to be going overboard to hand this election to the dems. i agree. therefore, don't you think it would be an atrocious political strategy to run the most hated woman in the USA as your candidate in this situation? running hilary will have almost the same effect as if the dems ran barney frank; shitloads of red state citizens will come out to vote against her.spurgistan wrote:Thanks, Neph. The thing I like about Hillary (again, I'd prefer if a more liberal Dem got the nomination, but seeing as how it's her and Obama, and then Edwards too, I guess I won't be disappointed if/when she gets it) is this: she's already been through the right-wing smear machine, and frankly, she's somebody pretty much everybody has an opinion on. In other words, there isn't much of anybody where the Reps can run ads saying "Hilary is a ..." and your families not already going to have a well-formed opinion of her.
She had eight years as First Lady and a well-known senator for 6 1/2; she's not like Kerry (or really, the other candidates this year) where if somebody runs an ad saying "Obama's a Black Panther", people will be shocked and change their vote.
Again, I'm not really in the Clinton camp (still holding out for the Richardson comeback), but she's charismatic, intelligent, and the voters opinion of her won't be changed much by the election season, the effects of which almost invariably benefit Republicans: they're just better politicians than us.
well, i'm pretty sure i can't answer this with much objectivity. but here's what i think.luns101 wrote:Nephilim,
While this is a big generalization, would you say that both major political parties are looking to point the finger at the other and play the blame game rather than set their own political agenda?
It just seems to me that the Democrats try to bring down the Republicans with political scandal accusations 24/7. Some of those scandals are justified. But nobody can stand negative accusations forever...people get sick of it.
The Republicans seem to be playing the game that, "hey, at least we're not liberals. Do you really trust the liberals?" That can only work for so long.
Neither party seems to be advancing what they stand for, but rather why the other party is terrible.
maybe you're rite, but i'm just thinking the group in bold above will come out in droves to vote against her. a lot of those folks might normally stay home, but hilary will bring them to the polls. very bad idea to run her, methinks.....spurgistan wrote:Thanks, Neph, that's what I've been getting at, re the whole Hilary running thing.
A lot of people (jay, for example) have what I would term a somewhat irrational hatred of her. However, there are also a lot of people who like her a lot. There are not a lot of people who have any sort of indecision regarding whether to vote for Hilary or not. So when the inevitable Swift Boating happens, it won't sway the election as much as it will with a more unknown entity; the people who hate her will hate her, and the people who love her will still love her. Yeah, she's polarizing, but she polarizes some people to her too. (Also, she's a fund-raising dynamo. With the best fund-raiser ever as her prospective First Dude)
JESUS SAVES!!!PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
I think this may be referring to me. I said I couldn't believe that people think of Hillary as being conservative. I know there are more liberal dems, look at Gravel and Kucinich. I'd say both are more liberal. The only thing I was saying was that Hillary imo isn't 'conservative' by any stretch of the imagination.Nephilim wrote:[we had someone earlier in this thread who could not fathom the idea that there are politicians more "liberal" than hilary. she is a hated democrat, therefore she must be the most "liberal" person out there.
saxitoxin wrote:Serbia is a RUDE DUDE
may not be a PRUDE, but he's gotta 'TUDE
might not be LEWD, but he's gonna get BOOED
RUDE
rite, didn't mean to misrepresent you. it's just that "conservative" and "liberal" are relative terms. so it doesn't take much of a stretch to call hilary "conservative" in relation to, say, obama. you might actually hear someone say, "hilary is more conservative than obama." this is more likely than "less liberal."Serbia wrote:I think this may be referring to me. I said I couldn't believe that people think of Hillary as being conservative. I know there are more liberal dems, look at Gravel and Kucinich. I'd say both are more liberal. The only thing I was saying was that Hillary imo isn't 'conservative' by any stretch of the imagination.Nephilim wrote:[we had someone earlier in this thread who could not fathom the idea that there are politicians more "liberal" than hilary. she is a hated democrat, therefore she must be the most "liberal" person out there.
She does approve the banning of violent video game, pretty conservative to me.Serbia wrote:I think this may be referring to me. I said I couldn't believe that people think of Hillary as being conservative. I know there are more liberal dems, look at Gravel and Kucinich. I'd say both are more liberal. The only thing I was saying was that Hillary imo isn't 'conservative' by any stretch of the imagination.Nephilim wrote:[we had someone earlier in this thread who could not fathom the idea that there are politicians more "liberal" than hilary. she is a hated democrat, therefore she must be the most "liberal" person out there.

Stopper wrote:I am not an American citizen. What is the best way for me to donate £50 ($100) to the Democratic Party presidential campaign?
I wouldn't want to donate to any of the individual Democratic candidates in the primaries. It'd be for the presidential campaign proper.
I dont believe it is legal for a foreign national to donate to an American political party. If it is legal, it shouldnt be. Keep your money!lalaland wrote:Stopper wrote:I am not an American citizen. What is the best way for me to donate £50 ($100) to the Democratic Party presidential campaign?
I wouldn't want to donate to any of the individual Democratic candidates in the primaries. It'd be for the presidential campaign proper.
try http://www.democrats.org
you should find some kind of link there.
I'm not sure it's legal, either, but if you want, Stopper, I will be your go-between.ksslemp wrote:I dont believe it is legal for a foreign national to donate to an American political party. If it is legal, it shouldnt be. Keep your money!lalaland wrote:Stopper wrote:I am not an American citizen. What is the best way for me to donate £50 ($100) to the Democratic Party presidential campaign?
I wouldn't want to donate to any of the individual Democratic candidates in the primaries. It'd be for the presidential campaign proper.
try http://www.democrats.org
you should find some kind of link there.
I'm not that impressed with any of the current candidates, this race started much to early. Given that, at the end of this year when the field of candidates narrows i believe newt Gingrich will declare his candidacy and i would vote for that guy. He is the only one i trust to do put his country ahead of politics.
btownmeggy wrote:I'm not sure it's legal, either, but if you want, Stopper, I will be your go-between.ksslemp wrote:I dont believe it is legal for a foreign national to donate to an American political party. If it is legal, it shouldnt be. Keep your money!lalaland wrote:Stopper wrote:I am not an American citizen. What is the best way for me to donate £50 ($100) to the Democratic Party presidential campaign?
I wouldn't want to donate to any of the individual Democratic candidates in the primaries. It'd be for the presidential campaign proper.
try http://www.democrats.org
you should find some kind of link there.
I'm not that impressed with any of the current candidates, this race started much to early. Given that, at the end of this year when the field of candidates narrows i believe newt Gingrich will declare his candidacy and i would vote for that guy. He is the only one i trust to do put his country ahead of politics.
No, it's illegal, and I think possibly it was ruled unconstitutional as well, but don't quote me on the latter. That's why I was asking for the best way to finance the Democrats in a round-about way. I donated to the NAACP last election, (I was drunk), but it seems a terribly inefficient way to do it. Plus I've been getting invitations to join the Black Socialist Society and I think it was because of that. It's a bit embarrassing.To paraphrase in a Cockney accent, ksslemp and btownmeggy wrote:Wot? That can't be legal, that can't.
Why? What's wrong, in principle, with foreigners donating to political parties? The US government doesn't seem to think there's anything wrong with it.ksslemp wrote:I dont believe it is legal for a foreign national to donate to an American political party. If it is legal, it shouldnt be. Keep your money!
That's a lovely offer. Can you take a cheque denominated in sterling?btownmeggy wrote:if you want, Stopper, I will be your go-between.
Sure. Or Paypal.Stopper wrote:That's a lovely offer. Can you take a cheque denominated in sterling?btownmeggy wrote:if you want, Stopper, I will be your go-between.