Next US President!

Mike M., you have rewritten history as the truth, I LOVE IT!

Man i totally agree really i have no problem with his skin color but he’s really just a giant a hole who keeps playing the race card and whats really upsetting is that some people acctually want to compare him to Martin luther King

P.S Not to be racist but i found this hilarious

there have been black men who would have made better presidents, i know they never got their chance, and that is criminal, but obama is a joke

ask Osama how many states there are in union. how many states???

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrsBKGpwi58

I wish I could take credit for that but its not mine…Its been around a while and tells the story to a T. :slight_smile:

He’s the president, WTF would it be his job to know about automobiles?

Secondly, you have no idea what you’re talking about. Tune-ups haven’t worked since 1984? Really? Have you ever driven a car with shit plugs and wires? Have you ever owned an automobile?

Okay, so you’ll be voting for the guy that no longer takes questions from the audience at his “townhall meetings” because he’s showing his age and is easily befuddled?

And don’t you get a hard on for Reagan, Bush, and countless dottering jackasses? And "all over this? " Bush so routinely flubbs speeches and McCain is increasingly handled, that no one even bothers anymore…

He was talking about the number of primary contests, not fucking states. :rolleyes:

Military abroad favoring Obama, money-wise
Posted by Foon Rhee, deputy national political editor August 14, 2008 06:38 PM

It’s not a ton of money or large number of donors, but it is interesting to note that more US military members deployed abroad are backing Democrat Barack Obama than Republican John McCain.

The Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks campaign money, reported today that Obama has received nearly six times as much money from troops deployed overseas at the time of their contributions than McCain. Ron Paul, who like Obama opposes the Iraq war, has received four times McCain’s amount though he suspended his campaign for the Republican nomination.

Through June 30, Obama had received 134 donations totaling about $61,000 to 99 totaling about $45,500 for Paul, and 26 contributions totaling less than $11,000 for McCain, who graduated from the US Naval Academy, was a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War, and highlights his military experience.

Among all members of the military, whether deployed abroad or not, the gap between Obama and McCain is smaller, though Obama is still getting 57 percent of the cash.

The trend is a shift from both 2004 and 2000, when Republican George W. Bush substantially outraised John F. Kerry and Al Gore, respectively, among the US military. And if the shift in money translated to votes, it could be more significant.

“That’s shocking. The academic debate is between some who say that junior enlisted ranks lean slightly Republican and some who say it’s about equal, but no one would point to six-to-one” in Democrats’ favor, Aaron Belkin, a professor of political science at the University of California who studies the military, said in the center’s report… “That represents a tremendous shift from 2000, when the military vote almost certainly was decisive in Florida and elsewhere, and leaned heavily towards the Republicans.”

The Boston Globe

This should be the reason to vote Obama, because he can rick roll you lol.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65I0HNvTDH4&feature=related

The Criminals want Democrats in office…WTF DOES THAT TELL YOU??? But don’t let the truth get in the way… continue in the herd.

http://dwb.thenewstribune.com/news/local/story/4850294p-4452879c.html

Felons vote Democratic, national study says

KENNETH P. VOGEL; The News Tribune
Published: May 10th, 2005 12:01 AM

If disenfranchised felons had been allowed to vote, they would have swung the 2000 presidential race to Al Gore, according to a national study Republicans are touting in their fight to overturn Christine Gregoire’s victory in last fall’s governor’s race.
The study posits that since racial minorities and the poor – groups that tend to vote for Democrats– make up a disproportionate number of felons, a hypothetical felon voting bloc would be so overwhelmingly Democratic it could swing national and statewide elections.

On average, 74 percent of felons would have voted Democratic in presidential and U.S. Senate elections dating back to 1972, according to the study’s analysis of demographic and voting data.

Of Democratic presidential candidates, the study predicts that Bill Clinton’s successful 1996 re-election campaign would have gotten the highest percentage of felon votes, at 85.4 percent. Jimmy Carter’s failed 1980 re-election would have gotten the lowest, at 66.5 percent.

A state GOP-funded study by Jonathan Katz, a political science professor at the California Institute of Technology, estimates that Gregoire received 66.3 percent of the illegal felon votes.

And a study by Tony Gill, an associate political science professor at the University of Washington, estimates that Gregoire received 60.1 percent of felon votes in King County, Gregoire’s base and home to by far the largest number of illegal felon votes the GOP says were cast.

Compared with the national study, published in 2002 in the American Sociological Review, Gill writes that his study’s estimate “is too conservative, giving Ms. Gregoire the benefit of the doubt. In other words, the rate at which felons vote for a Democratic candidate is likely to be higher than the estimates provided by the precinct-level of analysis here.”

Katz did not return a phone call.

But Nick Handy, elections chief for the secretary of state’s office, the primary defendant in the case, said the national study shouldn’t be admissible.

“It strikes me that generalized testimony about how felons probably would have voted is getting pretty remote,” he said.

Todd Donovan, a political science professor at Western Washington University who’s not involved in the case, said the national study is based too narrowly on race and is not applicable in Washington, where racial minorities make up a lower percentage of the felon population than in other states.

The study’s “hypothetical felon doesn’t really exist in most places in Washington. We just don’t fit that. We’re not in Georgia,” Donovan said.

Kenneth P. Vogel: 360-754-6093
ken.vogel@thenewstribune.com

OR THIS

Democrats Rush to Dump Felon Voting Bans

http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=79e4134212f3cfdd52a9ed26d3dbdb56

OR THIS

Dems Go After Convicted Felon Vote

Democrats have found a rich new vein for mining votes: convicted felons.

http://rightwingnews.com/mt331/2008/08/dems_go_after_convicted_felon.php

[i]Thanks for the three year old article. :lol:

I guess felons vote for Democrats, but run as Republicans:[/i]

Bushies Behaving Badly
A guide to GOP scandals.

By Holly Allen, Christopher Beam, and Torie Bosch
Posted Friday, May 11, 2007, at 12:11 PM ET

Paul Wolfowitz in the World Bank With Nepotism
The World Bank president and “Iraq war architect” allegedly helped his girlfriend get a generous salary package and promotion when she transferred to the State Department. Wolfowitz said an ethics panel approved the deal, but the panel denies it. An investigative committee found that the deal was a conflict of interest. (He apparently helped her career in the past, too.) Wolfowitz critics also allege that he used his position at the bank to promote a conservative agenda on family planning and global warming.

Federal Employees in the Department of Education With Corporate Ties
Leading colleges have long received kickbacks for guiding their students to certain loan companies, but a new investigation into the practice has implicated the Department of Education. One department official was suspended for owning stock in a student-loan company called Student Loan Xpress. Loan companies also temporarily lost access to a federal student-information database because they were using it to find borrowers, not just to determine the eligibility of applicants. The House education committee is investigating—and Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is on the defensive. Six years ago, the Department of Education wanted to tighten restrictions on college/loan-company relations, but the Bush administration nixed it.

Bushies in the Election Assistance Commission With Fraud
The Bush administration and Karl Rove pushed for U.S. attorneys and others to look into voter fraud more thoroughly, alleging that illegal immigrants (and dead people) are casting ballots. A couple of the recently fired U.S. attorneys said that they were pressured by Republican lawmakers to bring voter-fraud cases they didn’t think warranted attention, and the president himself allegedly spoke to Alberto Gonzales about U.S. attorneys not pushing hard enough to find-voter fraud cases. Last year, the Election Assistance Commission, a federal panel, allegedly altered findings to make it seem like experts thought voter fraud was more pervasive than it really was.

Partisan Hacks in the Press With Bought Agendas
Commentator Armstrong Williams was paid $240,000 by the Department of Education to promote No Child Left Behind, while columnists Michael McManus and Maggie Gallagher got $10,000 and $21,500 respectively from the Department of Health and Human Services to push Bush’s Community Healthy Marriage Initiative. After lobbing softballs to President Bush at a press conference, conservative “journalist” (and occasional gay escort) Jeff Gannon was accused of being a plant. Meanwhile, White House “video news releases” made it onto television news broadcasts. The segments, produced by the Department of Health and Human Services, used fake journalists to promote the Medicare expansion bill and were shown on local TV news shows, without any disclosure that they were basically government commercials.

Bernard Kerik in the Department of Homeland Security With the Nanny … and the Publisher … and the Mob …
In 2004, Bush tapped former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik to head the Department of Homeland Security. The nomination fell through when it emerged that Kerik’s nanny was an illegal immigrant. He also had an extramarital affair with publishing dynamo Judith Regan in an apartment donated as a rest stop for 9/11 workers, and he did business with the allegedly mob-linked Interstate Industrial Corp.

Karl Rove in the White House With the Delete Key
White House officials allegedly used Republican National Committee e-mail accounts to conduct government business. As many as 5 million messages relating to official business may be lost because users were deleting them, in violation of White House rules requiring that e-mails be saved. Karl Rove says he thought the e-mails were being saved, but some allege that the deletions were a deliberate attempt to keep things off the official record. The missing communiqués interfered with the congressional investigation into White House involvement with the U.S. attorney scandal. The Senate judiciary committee has subpoenaed the Department of Justice e-mails to track them down.

Lester Crawford in the Food and Drug Administration With Tainted Stocks
Former FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford recently pleaded guilty to conflict of interest and false reporting for owning stock in companies he oversaw as part of his FDA duties. He was fined $90,000 and sentenced to three years of probation. While heading the FDA, he owned stock in Pepsico Inc., Sysco Corp., and Embrex Inc., a drug company. His brief tenure was marked by debates about emergency contraception—he allegedly tried to keep Plan B from receiving over-the-counter status, contradicting the advice of an FDA expert panel.

Bushies in NASA With the Weird Science
NASA scientist James E. Hansen accused Bush appointees of censoring global-warming info and limiting press access to top climate experts. George C. Deutsch, a 24-year-old writer and editor for NASA who had worked for Bush’s 2004 campaign, resigned for lying on his résumé. Deutsch also made NASA Web masters add the word theory to every mention of the big bang.

The GOP Leadership in Congress With Dirty Money
In 2003, Rep. Nick Smith said another congressman offered to donate $100,000 to his son’s campaign fund if he voted in favor of a Medicare bill. Smith later recanted, saying there was no bribe—he was just pressured into the vote so his son would get an endorsement. In 2004, the House ethics committee admonished Tom DeLay for violating House rules by offering a quid pro quo and Rep. Candice Miller for appearing to make “threats of retaliation” by saying that Smith’s son would never get elected if Smith didn’t vote for the Medicare bill.

Bored Soldiers in Iraq With the Cameras
Soldiers at Abu Ghraib took pictures of prisoners being mistreated. Several of those involved were court-martialed, and some were sent to prison, but they claimed they were acting on orders to soften up the prisoners for interrogation. The highest-ranking person to be held accountable was Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, who headed the Army Reserve unit running the prison. She was demoted to the rank of colonel but claims she was merely a “scapegoat.” Some critics wondered whether then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld knew about the scandal; Rumsfeld offered his resignation to Bush twice, but the president didn’t accept it.

Eavesdroppers at the National Security Agency With the Wiretaps
After 9/11, the National Security Agency started eavesdropping without warrants on phone calls between the United States and overseas parties. Alberto Gonzales defended the wiretaps, but a federal judge ruled that the practice violated both the Constitution and the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. After objections from Democrats and lawsuits filed by the ACLU and the Center for Constitutional Rights, Gonzales announced that, although the program “fully complies with the law,” President Bush would not reauthorize it. The administration continues to push for expanded surveillance laws.

Bureaucrats at Walter Reed With Cockroaches
After the Washington Post ran a series detailing the moldy, roach-infested conditions and incompetent bureaucracy of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Sen. Charles Schumer called the scandal the “Katrina of 2007.” Army Secretary Francis Harvey removed the hospital’s commander, only to be fired himself the next day. Ten days later, the Army surgeon general was gone, too. Investigations are ongoing.

Jack Abramoff on K Street With the Wallet
In January 2006, Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff pleaded guilty to conspiracy, fraud, and tax evasion. Between entertaining congressmen with golf junkets to Scotland, trading votes for dinners at his D.C. restaurant, and fleecing Indian tribes, there aren’t many white-collar crimes Abramoff hasn’t committed. He was sentenced to five years and 10 months in federal prison for wire fraud, but might get out sooner. (Abramoff’s misdeeds spawned a massive corruption investigation that is still ongoing.)

Steven Griles in the Department of the Interior With the “Special Relationship”
The former deputy interior secretary pleaded guilty to lying about his relationship with Jack Abramoff. Griles initially told the Senate Indian affairs committee that “there was no special relationship for Mr. Abramoff in my office.” In reality, he had intervened in the department on behalf of Abramoff. (For example, he helped block progress on a new Indian casino that would have competed with one of Abramoff’s clients.) Griles will be sentenced in June.

Con’td

Scooter Libby in the White House With the Faulty Memory
After retired diplomat Joe Wilson disputed President Bush’s State of the Union claim that Iraq had sought uranium from Niger, an administration official (later revealed to be Richard Armitage) leaked the classified CIA status of Wilson’s wife, Valerie Plame. The leak led to a federal grand jury investigation examining the roles of, among others, Karl Rove and I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, then-chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney. Libby was indicted and convicted, but not for the leak. Rather, his crimes were perjury, obstruction of justice, and lying to the FBI. His sentencing is set for June 5.

Alberto Gonzales in the Justice Department With the Pink Slips
In March 2007, eight fired U.S. attorneys claimed that they were let go for political rather than performance-related reasons. A subsequent congressional investigation led to the resignations of Kyle Sampson, chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and Monica Goodling, the AG’s senior counsel. Gonzales initially denied his involvement in the firings, but documents released to reporters indicated he had attended meetings on the subject. In his testimony to the Senate, he admitted to misspeaking in his initial statements about the firings and said the removal of the attorneys was “flawed,” but insisted he should keep his job.

John Doolittle in Congress With the Campaign Donations
The FBI raided the home of California Rep. John Doolittle in April 2007 as part of the Jack Abramoff probe. Doolittle reportedly accepted $14,000 in campaign donations from Abramoff—and a lot more than that from Abramoff’s clients. Doolittle’s wife, Julie, also runs a consulting business with ties to Abramoff.

Mark Foley in Congress With the Instant Messages
Florida Rep. Mark Foley resigned amid revelations that he exchanged sexually explicit e-mails and instant messages with former congressional pages. Foley claimed he never actually had sex with any of the minors, and it’s still unclear whether he broke any laws. The flap also raised questions about why Republicans, particularly House Speaker Dennis Hastert, didn’t act on earlier reports of Foley’s inappropriate behavior.

Halliburton in Iraq With the Defense Contracts
Halliburton Co., the multinational energy company helmed by Dick Cheney between 1995 and 2000, scored lucrative contracts to provide logistical support for U.S. troops in Iraq and elsewhere, netting the firm $20 billion over the past five years. Spokespersons for the company have said that Cheney played no role in helping secure the contracts. In 2004, the Justice Department began investigating whether a subsidiary of Halliburton offered a $180 million bribe to secure a contract to build a natural-gas plant in Nigeria back when Cheney was CEO.

Tom DeLay in Congress With the Corporate Funds
Rep. Tom DeLay, the former House majority leader known as “the Hammer,” resigned in June 2006 after a Texas grand jury indicted him for financing Republican candidates in state elections with corporate money—a violation of Texas campaign-finance law. DeLay has not been charged in connection with the Jack Abramoff case, but two of his aides pleaded guilty to crimes uncovered by the Abramoff probe. DeLay also took multiple foreign trips on lobbyists’ dimes. (Use this handy scorecard to keep track of the DeLay scandals.)

Randall Tobias in the Massage Parlor With Scented Oils
Tobias, head of the Bush administration’s foreign-aid programs, resigned from his post after his name appeared on an escort service’s client list. The service’s proprietor, the so-called “D.C. Madam,” is under investigation for running a prostitution ring. Tobias has denied receiving any illicit services—he just phoned “to have gals come over to the condo to give me a massage.”

Rick Renzi in Congress With the Land Deal
Federal prosecutors are investigating a land deal that may have benefited a former business partner of Arizona Rep. Rick Renzi. When his chief of staff phoned the Arizona prosecutor to discuss the investigation, Renzi got swept up in the U.S. attorneys scandal, too. Most recently, the FBI raided his wife’s insurance business, prompting Renzi to step down from two House committees.

Duke Cunningham in Congress With the Candlestick
California Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham resigned his congressional seat in late 2005 after pleading guilty to accepting $2.4 million in bribes from defense contractors. Among the gifts he received were Persian rugs, a secondhand Rolls-Royce, access to a contractor’s boat, and silver candlesticks worth $5,600. He is currently serving an eight-and-a-half-year prison sentence.

Dusty Foggo in the CIA With the Bribes
The same probe that sent Duke Cunningham to jail led to the indictment of Kyle “Dusty” Foggo. The former CIA executive director allegedly accepted bribes from Brent Wilkes, a high-school friend who also happened to be a defense contractor and a major Republican donor. Foggo, who was appointed in 2004 by then-CIA Director Porter Goss, stands accused of granting Wilkes contracts in return for lavish gifts, including a one-week stay at a Scottish castle. Revelations of Foggo’s sexual proclivities have done little to burnish his reputation, either.

Holly Allen is a Slate Web designer.
Christopher Beam is a Slate political reporter.
Torie Bosch is a Slate copy editor.

Slate.com

But let’s not leave out the latest scumbag political crook, Alaskan Sen. Stevens (R):

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/31/AR2008073101817.html

Or Senator Craig:

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington/2007/08/breaking-news-s.html

Your right most, not all but most politicians are scum, your guys and mine. I can post a list like you did with Democrats names on it but that wont mean shit cause its guys like us who keep voting the party line because we don’t want the other dick heads getting in . I wish we could kick em all out and start over but that’s not gonna happen…but what does it say when the Criminals want the Democrats in office?

That they should learn to read, which might be a bit more likely under Democrat educational policies, so they could learn about real politics. Then they’d learn that the GOP has people in it who could teach your average burglar and mugger a thing or two about crime, and how to make it pay. For example,

http://www.sacbee.com/111/story/1001404.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/03/AR2006010300474.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/charlie-cray/halliburton-flees-the-sce_b_43247.html

Obama chooses Biden as running mate
Foreign Relations Committee chairman has globe-trotting credentials

MSNBC staff and news service reports
updated 6:39 a.m. ET, Sat., Aug. 23, 2008

WASHINGTON - Barack Obama named Delaware Sen. Joe Biden as his vice presidential running mate early Saturday, balancing his ticket with a seasoned congressional veteran well-versed in foreign policy and defense issues

Biden, who has served in the Senate since being elected at the age of 29, is the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.

Obama’s decision leaked to the media several hours before his aides planned to send a text message announcing the running mate, negating a promise that people who turned over their phone numbers would be the first to know who Obama had chosen. The campaign scrambled to send the text message after the leak, sending phones buzzing at the inconvenient time of just after 3 a.m. on the East coast.

A statement on Obama’s Web site said Biden “brings extensive foreign policy experience, an impressive record of collaborating across party lines, and a direct approach to getting the job done.”

In selecting Biden, Obama passed over several other potential running mates, none more prominent than former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, his tenacious rival in dozens of primaries and caucuses.

The decision is intended to give the Democratic ticket depth in areas Obama was labeled as weak by his Republican opponents — foreign policy and global security.

In recent years, Biden has traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan two times and to Iraq eight times. He returned Monday from a fact-finding trip to Georgia.

The McCain camp was quick to react. “There has been no harsher critic of Barack Obama’s lack of experience than Joe Biden. Biden has denounced Barack Obama’s poor foreign policy judgment and has strongly argued in his own words what Americans are quickly realizing — that Barack Obama is not ready to be president,” McCain spokesman Ben Porritt said.

Early Saturday, McCain’s campaign released a new television ad entitled “Biden.” The spot highlights statements made by Biden before he was selected to run on Obama’s ticket in which Biden said he would be “honored” to run with McCain.

Tragedy
At age 65, the Delaware senator is nearly 20 years older than Obama.

He has endured tragedy and near death: Five weeks after he won his Senate seat in 1972, his wife and infant daughter were killed in a car accident.

And in 1988, he suffered a brain aneurysm and nearly died.

Biden’s voting record is in line with many Senate Democrats: He voted in 2003 to authorize President Bush to use military force in Iraq, and he also voted against the Bush tax cuts and against Republican Supreme Court nominees William Rehnquist, Robert Bork, Clarence Thomas, John Roberts and Samuel Alito.

Borrowed speech
He has run twice for the Democratic presidential nomination, once in 1988 and again this year.

He was forced to exit the 1988 race after he was caught having borrowed portions of a speech by British Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock — without giving him credit.

In 1987, as the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Biden managed the Senate’s rejection of Bork, a conservative Supreme Court nominee by Ronald Reagan.

But some Democrats still blame Biden for allowing Thomas to win confirmation to the high court in 1991.

Biden has a reputation for verbosity. He often prefaces his questions to witnesses before his committee with remarks such as, “All kidding aside…” or “I don’t mean to be cute, but…”

He got less than glowing reviews in 2006 for his questioning of Alito during his confirmation hearings.

At one point Biden rambled on about Alito’s alma mater, Princeton.

“I really didn’t like Princeton,” Biden told Alito. “I was an Irish Catholic kid who thought it had not changed. … I admit, one of my real dilemmas is I have two kids who went to Ivy League schools. I’m not sure my Grandfather Finnegan will ever forgive me for allowing that to happen. But all kidding aside, I wasn’t a big Princeton fan.”

The Delaware Democrat’s long-windedness occasionally leads him to make remarks that prove to be embarrassing.

In 2007, he seemed to be talking down to Obama by calling him “clean” and “articulate.”

In 2006 he said, “In Delaware, the largest growth in population is Indian-Americans moving from India. You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I’m not joking.”

Intensely personal campaigner
Biden is an effusive, wisecracking, and often intensely personal campaigner. No Democratic politician is more literally “in your face” with voters.

At a campaign breakfast in Iowa in 2007, he claimed credit for getting money appropriated to build a new type of armored vehicle that reduced casualties from roadside explosives in Iraq by 70 percent.

Walking into the audience, Biden got six inches away from one woman’s face.

Biting off his words, Biden vehemently told her, “I will not cut one single solitary cent of the money that we need to build those vehicles to protect these kids — and they cost billions of dollars.”

During his bid for the nomination last year, Biden criticized Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton.

“Both Hillary and Barack didn’t get it right,” Biden said, when they had their “little spat” on whether a president could order a unilateral attack on terrorists in Pakistan or Afghanistan.

Biden said Obama “didn’t know it was already U.S. policy” but “was attempting understandably to show more strength” on military matters.

And he criticized Obama and former Sen. John Edwards for “playing the populism card, the idea that rich are bad, poor are good, the nobility of America lies in the poor. I think that’s a losing general election argument; I think it’s a losing argument, period.”

He argued, “The rich are as patriotic as the poor, if you ask of them.”

Biden also parted company from Obama in a May 2007 vote on cutting off funds for operations in Iraq.

“I knew what the political vote was — it was to vote ‘no,’” Biden explained a few months later. “I had bets with my staff that every one of the senators who were running (for president) would vote against it, even though they knew better. I went ahead and voted for the funding.”

Presidential contenders Obama, Clinton and Sen. Chris Dodd were among the 14 senators who voted no on funding.

Biden has not always taken the predictable liberal Democratic line: He surprised some of his fellow Democrats in 1975 when he advocated a measure to ban the use of busing to school integration. He argued that busing was counter-productive.

Biden has begun a political dynasty in Delaware: his son Beau was elected state attorney general in 2006.

Biden commutes to the nation’s capitol everyday from Wilmington on Amtrak.

NBC News’ Kelly O’Donnell and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26010055/?GT1=43001

I’m never one for long winded posts, so Ill cut to the chase here.

Personally, I think that nearly all politicians, regardless of party are mostly in it, to be in it. So I dont see much difference between them all.

SO my big question here is, will it really make a difference to the US both nationally and internationally who is the next President?

and McCain wasted little time letting Biden and the world know what he said about Obama

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDVUPqoowf8

/

Yeah but, what were Bush and Rove saying about McCain in 2000?

which was ??? and who cares??? its a new ball game. Obama went after Biden’s foreign policy experience. Obama has none. Biden has a big mouth and always sticks his foot in it. so who going to train him to be an Obama man??? the media will eat his alive.
in a crisis will Obama answer that phone at 3 am or call Biden???
McCain will pick his next week…