Showing posts with label mccain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mccain. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2008

John McCain, you have offended ME. I am from Chicago. The CHICAGO MACHINE ad is untrue. Totally. Take it down. NOW.

click on logo. Slime from McCain. Bad, bad, bad.

I am a Chicago girl. Get this, you bonehead. Your slime ads are untrue. Chicago has patronage. And Mayor Daley Senior was BOSS. I worked for him when I was in high school. I was a messenger girl. But Barack Hussein Obama started out as an INDEPENDENT.
And he was never a friend of the Illinois Governor. The Trib says so:
http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/clout_st/2008/09/mccain-ad-takes.html

Stop your Karl Rove tactics now, please, sir.

I adore your choice of Sarah Palin, and love the leverage and her 15 minutes of fame, plus.

I love your values and your right to say it, as John Adams would. Fire Chris Cox. Bring in Andrew Cuomo. Okay.

But the more you slam Senator Obama (D-Ill.), the deeper you and your Republican cronies dig in.

Bad move, babe. Stop while you are AHEAD.

You almost had me.....
*

Kansas City Star
Hard-Hitting McCain Ad Links Obama to Chicago Political ‘Machine’ - 7 hours ago
The new spot, “Chicago Machine” also connects the Democratic presidential nominee to three prominent Illinois politicians– former US Commerce Secretary Bill ...
FOXNews -
28 related articles »
McCain's Boomerang Problem - Newsweek - 280 related articles »
McCain camp runs ad on Obama's Chicago - The Swamp - Tribune's Washington Bureau - 289 related articles »
RealClearPolitics - Video Log - McCain: "Chicago Machine"
Sep 22, 2008 ... This new McCain ad highlights Barack Obama's ties to people in Illinois politics. It includes Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich and Tony Rezko. ...www.realclearpolitics.com/video_log/2008/09/mccain_chicago_machine.html - 24k - 6 hours ago - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Ben Smith's Blog: Obama: 'Article'; McCain: 'Chicago Machine ...
Sep 22, 2008 ... Ben Smith's Politico.com blog on the 2008 presidential race, with a focus on the Democratic candidates. Includes political new coverage of ...www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0908/Obama_Article_McCain_Chicago_Machine.html - 181k - 7 hours ago - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

Thursday, July 31, 2008

MEMO to self: Send John McCain Campaign resume - work for next 90 days -



1. (stop playing Ludacris rap!)*

2. Write McCain and a Thanks to Wonk-ette!




.

John McCain Needs New Interns!

from Mr.. Wonk-ette: Hey college kids, are you looking for an exciting internship opportunity that’s guaranteed to launch you into the successful career of your choice? If you answered “No,” then we’ve got the perfect dead-end solution: John McCain is looking for interns! In Arlington, Virginia! It’s unpaid, but don’t worry about that: if you display a basic competency in Microsoft Word — you understand how to change fonts when required, for example — you could be managing the campaign all by yourself within a matter of weeks! The forwarded job description e-mail, after the jump.

Just think: you could work with Mister Cummins. Mmm!

From: John Cummins [mailto:Volunteer2@JohnMcCain.com]
Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2008 1:10 PM
To: ********************
Subject: McCain Campaign InternshipsJohn McCain 2008
John McCain needs YOU!

The John McCain 2008 Presidential Campaign is looking for interns for positions available immediately in our Arlington, Virginia headquarters.

In addition to giving you real-world work experience, this program provides an opportunity to participate in the most exciting presidential election in history! Campaign Internships are unpaid and participants are responsible for arranging their own transportation and housing.

Interns will work with staff on various projects essential to the campaign and play a significant role in Senator McCain’s campaign.

Interested candidates should send a resume and cover letter (with availability) to: Volunteer2@JohnMcCain.com

Thank-you!
John Cummins, Deputy Director of Volunteers
Volunteer2@JohnMcCain.com

Oh boy! You’d get to work with people so smart that they hyphenate “Thank-you.”

----------------------------------

WOW!!!!

(((((Wait! Maybe OBAMA-RAMA the most famous celebrity in the world will ask little me! OMIGOD!- omigod!)))))


# # #

* poor Obama - oh, dear - how will he evah go main-stream with Ludacris singing about pardons and ghetto-mayhem? just simply will not appeal to the Hillary-generation (my AARP-set)




"The Most Famous Celebrity in the World" --McCain on Obama


------and wouldn't you know it, Paris Hilton wants to sue for the use of her "likeness" (sic) !!

Well, la-de-dah to all that! She just wants to MILK THE p.r. , BABY!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHXYsw_ZDXg&eurl


and be sure to watch this:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBn7FEtn0E8&feature=related


will . i . am and black - eyed - peas say it best:

'yes we can'

and yes we will

because it can't get any more confusing.

MCain is too little too late.

Obama's chest is too extended.


# # #

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Obama is disapointed. Rush was disappointed in McCain, wasn't he? Now he compares Barack to - - Adlai Stevenson!

.
My e-mail from the famous Barack Obama is below

So many, many suburban women went (sic) "Madly for Adlai", including a famous Lauren Bacall. And although Stevenson ran twice, he was no match for old Ike.

And Adlai was as liberal as liberals get - the first true progressive democrat.


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Forwarded Message ----


From: Barack Obama info@barackobama.com


To: abbe hann highvizpr@yahoo.com


Sent: Tuesday, April 15, 2008 6:31:35 PM


Subject: Disappointed



Dear abbe,



In the last 24 hours we saw renewed attacks from Senator McCain and Senator Clinton.
The same John McCain who voted to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest few said I was "out of touch" when I spoke about the frustrations that working people in this country are feeling.



Maybe that's to be expected from John McCain. But I was disappointed to hear the exact same talking points from my Democratic colleague, Hillary Clinton. When a candidate who believes lobbyists represent "real people" says that I'm out of touch, that's when you know politics is being played.



But in the last 24 hours we've also heard from people like you.



We asked some of the 1.3 million people who have already donated to this movement for change to share their story and promise to match your first donation to the campaign.



Here are some of the people waiting to match your donation:



Rick from Florida matched a donation of $25, writing:



I am a typical American just like you. I've served in the military, I work hard for a living and I want what's best for my country, not just me. I've seen what's happened over the last years and


I am deeply saddened, worried and, yes, even bitter. But I see something in Barack Obama I have never seen in a presidential candidate in my own 45 years and the hope and inspiration I feel right now brings tears even as I write this to you. We don't get many chances like this. I don't have much to give but I give what I can because it's important and I ask that you please consider joining me with a few dollars that, added to the small contributions from millions of people like you and I, can be what it takes to really change things. Thanks in advance!



Eve from Oregon matched a donation of $50, writing:
I'm thrilled that Barack recognizes how frustrated so many of us are by the politics of fear and cynicism we've seen these past seven years! But what really sets him apart is that he's not afraid to speak the truth and say what's not supposed to be spoken - that yes, we can love our country but also be frustrated with it's direction and leadership.



Thank you for making a donation to this amazing...campaign! Yes, we can!



See for yourself what kind of movement this is. Make a matching donation now:
https://donate.barackobama.com/match



When we started this campaign, we said we were going to do something different.



We said we weren't going to take money from Washington lobbyists and PACs. And the cynics said we would never be able to compete against the status quo.



But what the cynics didn't anticipate was you.



They didn't understand that people like Rick, Eve, and you were tired of a politics that was about tearing each other down instead of lifting this country up.



And they didn't understand that you were going to finance this campaign with contributions of $5, $25 and $50 at a time.



There's nothing elitist about the largest grassroots campaign in the history of our country -- and you can prove that right now.



Make a matching donation of $25:



https://donate.barackobama.com/match



Thank you for all that you're doing to change our country.



Barack


Paid for by Obama for America
This email was sent to: highvizpr@yahoo.com

# # #

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Ann Coulter will campaign for Hillary Clinton - and I will EAT my desktop!

WHY do they ("the media") allow this shrike on national cable television? WHY WHY WHY????? She writes this book, plugs it shamelessly (nice dress, etc., ad nauseum), but jumps on the BASH McCain Bandwagon with Mark Levin, El Rush-BLOW, and the merry GOP henchman and voila! -- I [heart] Hillary, "I'm a Hillary girl now!"- Either this is a BAD Publicity stunt, and/or it further propels evil john mccain into the Oval Office - whooosh! He's got the Nom! Get over it!

And trust me, at one time I truly, deeply admired her, for her balls to the walls, f___ you mentality. It made her famous!

http://highvizpr.blogspot.com/2005/04/ann-coulter-on-cover-of-time-ultimate.html
and the Columba Journalism Review made sure that they let me know about it!

Come to think of it, the shrike is alright! There may be that method to her spinning madness....



Ann Coulter on McCain and Conservatives
Friday, February 01, 2008
This is a rush transcript from "Hannity & Colmes," January 31, 2008. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.
SEAN HANNITY, CO-HOST: And Senator John McCain is gaining momentum, but not all conservatives are jumping for joy. Senator McCain is a polarizing candidate for many. And critics point to his stance on immigration, his work with Russ Feingold. But with a potential Hillary Clinton candidacy on the Democratic side of the aisle, will true conservatives eventually fall in line and support the Arizona senator?

Joining us now, author of the "New York Times" best seller, "If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd be Republicans," our friend Ann Coulter. How are you?
ANN COULTER, AUTHOR, "IF DEMOCRATS HAD ANY BRAINS": Fine, thank you.
HANNITY: I'm standing on substance here.
COULTER: Yes.
HANNITY: It's immigration. It's limits on free speech. It's not supporting tax cuts.
COULTER: It's Anwar. It's torture at Guantanamo.
HANNITY: Class warfare rhetoric. It's interrogations. It's Guantanamo. It's Anwar. These are not small issues to conservatives.
COULTER: No, and if you're looking at substance rather than whether it's an R or D after his name, manifestly, if our's candidate than Hillary's going to be our girl, Sean, because she's more conservative than he is. I think she would be stronger on the war on terrorism. I absolutely believe that.
HANNITY: That's the one area I disagree with you.
COULTER: No, yes, we're going to sign up together. Let me explain that point on terrorism.
HANNITY: You'd vote for Hillary —
COULTER: I will campaign for her if it's McCain.
HANNITY: If Hillary is watching tonight, you just got an endorsement —
COLMES: I just heard the word no.
COULTER: I was touched when she cried. That part isn't true. But the rest of it is true. He has led the fight against — well, as you say, interrogations. I say torture at Guantanamo. She hasn't done that. She hasn't taken a position in front.
HANNITY: Without interrupting you, let me give you one distinction — that's what liberals do to you. Let me give you one distinction, he did support the war —
COULTER: So did Hillary.
HANNITY: But he stayed with it. He supported the surge. I didn't like his criticisms of Rumsfeld, but he was right —
COULTER: OK, let's get to him supporting the surge. He keeps going on and on about how he was the only Republican who supported the surge and other Republicans attacked him. It was so awful how he was attacked. It was worse than being held in a tiger cage.
I looked up the record. Republicans all supported the surge. He's not only not the only one who supported the surge, I promise you no Republican attacked him for this. And you know why he's saying that, Sean, because he keeps saying it at every debate, I'm the only one. I was attacked by Republicans. He's confusing Republicans with his liberal friends. They're the ones who attacked him for it, his real friends.
HANNITY: Hillary Clinton, if she gets her way, will nationalize health care. She's going to pull the troops out of Iraq.
COULTER: I don't think she will.
HANNITY: That's what she's saying she's going to do. She says in a hundred days she's immediately going to begin to pull out.
(CROSS TALK)
COULTER: She's running in a Democratic primary. He's running in the Republican primary, and their positions are about that far apart. When George Bush said at the State of the Union Address that the surge is working in Iraq, Obama sat on his hands, Kennedy sat on his hands, Hillary leapt up and applauded that we are winning in the surge and that the surge is working in Iraq.
She gave much better answers in those debates when Democrats like Obama and Biden were saying what do we do? What do we do if three cities are attacked. She said, I will find who did it and I will go after them.
HANNITY: You want to sit back.
(CROSS TALK)
ALAN COLMES, CO-HOST: Can I just say something — Ann -
(CROSS TALK)
COULTER: Hillary is absolutely more conservative.
COLMES: My work is done. My work is done.
COULTER: Moreover, she lies less than John McCain. I'm a Hillary girl now. She lies less than John McCain. She's smarter than John McCain, so that when she's caught shamelessly lying, at least the Clintons know they've been caught lying. McCain is so stupid, he doesn't even know he's been caught.
COLMES: Go. In fact, could you fill in for me next week? Let me get this straight, would you vote for Hillary Clinton?
COULTER: Yes.
COLMES: You would actually go in a voting booth —
COULTER: If it's close and the candidate is John McCain, because John McCain is not only bad for Republicanism, which he definitely is. He is bad for —
(CROSS TALK)
COLMES: Can I tell you the last thing that Hillary Clinton wants? Ann Coulter's endorsement.
COULTER: Even now he's running as a Republican, he won't give up on amnesty. At that debate the other not —
(CROSS TALK)
COULTER: I'm serious.
COLMES: I know, but let me get serious for a second, because so far I haven't. Look, are you telling me — look at all the people endorsing McCain. I'm not talking about Johnny come lately Republicans. Nancy Reagan is wrong? Rick Perry is wrong? Arnold is wrong? Charlie Crist is wrong?
COULTER: Other than Nancy Reagan —
(CROSS TALK)
COULTER: I will explain. It's not that they're wrong. Other than Nancy Reagan, and by the way we loved Nancy Reagan for loving Ron Reagan. We didn't love her for her political persuasion.
(CROSS TALK)
COLMES: All of these people are off the beat.
COULTER: I'm trying to answer the question. Stop talking. I'm moving Nancy Reagan to the side, and I'm saying all the rest of these political endorsements mean one thing; they think he's the front runner. They want a job in his administration. Nothing means less than an endorsement from someone who wants a position.
COLMES: They're all hoes just looking for a job?
COULTER: No, but they all do want jobs.
COLMES: I'm giving her the opportunity —
COULTER: They do all want jobs. It's good to be friends with the king. Some people —
HANNITY: Will you be careful.
COULTER: Some people don't care about being the king.

Copy: Content and Programming Copyright 2008 Fox News Network, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

AND
from Coulter's website:
QUOTATIONS FROM CHAIRMAN ((( Charwoman Mao )))ANN

February 1, 2008, 5:22 AM
Would that he would do it officially . . . - Democrats say McCain nearly abandoned GOP
February 1, 2008, 4:49 AM

January 31, 2008, 3:34 PM
John Edwards Drops Out, Endorses McCain - Scrappleface

GOP TO EDWARDS: HOW MUCH FOR THAT CONCESSION SPEECH? January 30, 2008 - The Democrats are trying to give away an election they should win in a walk by nominating someone with real problems -- like, for example, a first-term senator with a 100 percent rating from Americans for Democratic Action and whose middle name is "Hussein." But we won't let them. The bright side of the Florida debacle is that I no longer fear Hillary Clinton. (I mean in terms of her becoming president -- on a personal level, she's still a little creepy.) I'd rather deal with President Hillary than with President McCain. With Hillary, we'll get the same ruinous liberal policies with none of the responsibility. Also, McCain lies a lot, which is really more a specialty of the Democrats. Recently, McCain responded to Mitt Romney's statement that he understood the economy based on his many years in the private sector by claiming Romney had said a military career is not a "real job." McCain's neurotic boast that he is the only Republican who supported the surge is beginning to sound as insane as Bill Clinton's claim to being the "first black president" -- although less insulting to blacks. As with the Clintons, you find yourself looking up such tedious facts as this, which ran a week after Bush announced the surge: "On the morning of Bush's address, Romney endorsed a troop surge." -- The National Journal, Jan. 13, 2007 And yet for the 4 billionth time, at the Jan. 5, 2008, Republican debate, McCain bragged about his own raw courage in supporting the surge despite (apocryphal) Republican attacks, saying: "I said at the time that Gen. Petraeus and his strategy must be employed, and I was criticized by Republicans at that time. And that was a low point, but I stuck to it. I didn't change." A review of contemporaneous news stories about the surge clearly demonstrates that the only Republicans who were so much as "skeptical" of the surge consisted of a few oddball liberal Republicans such as Sens. Gordon Smith, Norm Coleman and Olympia Snowe. They certainly weren't attacking McCain, their standard-bearer in liberal Republicanism. But even if they were, it was a "low point" for McCain being "criticized" by the likes of Olympia Snowe? In point of fact, McCain didn't even stand up to the milquetoasts. In April 2007, when Democrats in the Senate passed a bill funding the troops but also requiring a rapid withdrawal, "moderate" Republicans Smith and Chuck Hagel voted with the Democrats. McCain and Lindsey Graham skipped the vote. But like the Democrats, McCain thinks if he simply says something over and over again, he can make people believe it's true. Thus again at the South Carolina debate on Jan. 10, McCain was proclaiming that he was "the only one on this stage" who supported the surge. Since he would deny it about two minutes later, here is exactly what Mr. Straight Talk said about the surge: "I supported that; I argued for it. I'm the only one on this stage that did. And I condemn the Rumsfeld strategy before that." The next question went to Giuliani and -- amid great flattery -- Giuliani noted that he also supported Bush's surge "the night of the president's speech." Mr. Straight Talk contradicted Giuliani, saying: "Not at the time." Again, Giuliani said: "The night of the president's speech, I was on television. I supported the surge. I've supported it throughout." To which McCain finally said he didn't mean that he was "the only one on this stage" who supported the surge. So by "the only one on this stage," McCain really meant, "one of several people on this stage." OK, great. Now tell us your definition of the word "is," Senator. I know Republicans have been trained not to go prostrate at Ivy League degrees, but do we have to admire stupidity? Mr. Straight Talk also announced at that same debate: "One of the reasons why I won in New Hampshire is because I went there and told them the truth." That and the fact that Democrats were allowed to vote in the Republican primary. Even in the Florida primary, allegedly limited to Republicans, McCain lost among Republicans. (Seventeen percent of the Republican primary voters in Florida called themselves "Independents.") That helps, but why would any Republican vote for McCain? At least under President Hillary, Republicans in Congress would know that they're supposed to fight back. When President McCain proposes the same ideas -- tax hikes, liberal judges and Social Security for illegals -- Republicans in Congress will support "our" president -- just as they supported, if only briefly, Bush's great ideas on amnesty and Harriet Miers. You need little flags like that for Republicans since, as we know from the recent unpleasantness in Florida, Republicans are unalterably stupid. Republicans who vote for McCain are trying to be cute, like the Democrats were four years ago by voting for the "pragmatic" candidate, Vietnam vet John Kerry. This will turn out to be precisely as clever a gambit as nominating Kerry was, the brilliance of which was revealed on Election Day 2004.
COPYRIGHT 2008 ANN COULTER DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE 4520 Main Street, Kansas City, MO 64111