jaguarr
Be Your Own Hero
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2003
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That's due to wounds received from being a POW, not nice!
or from being a Zombie....

jag
That's due to wounds received from being a POW, not nice!
or from being a Zombie....

You know I kept doing the same thing. After the michael incident, they should have just straight up killed his ass the next time he was in choking range.
Sidenote: when the hell did ben become a master ninja?
I don't know, but that statement makes me glad I gave up on "Lost" two years ago.
Well, at least his campaign team didn't pick "Raise Your Hands" by Bon Jovi as his entrance theme.
jag

McCain open to picking pro-choice VP
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/08/13/mccain-open-to-picking-pro-choice-veep/
It sounds like he's seriously considering Lieberman as his VP.
Nah, the base is going to vote for him no matter what. They DO NOT want Obama as president. There is no chance in hell they won't vote for McCain, won't matter who his VP is.
I think it definitely is for the Republicans, because Obama is one of the most liberal senators in the senate. There is NO WAY, no matter how much they hate McCain will they let someone that liberal just waltz into the executive office.
And, I totally disagree that the base is more shaky on McCain, than Obama.....there are many moderate democrats, or Regan democrats that are scared to death of Obama, so sorry but I totally disagree with that.
I don't see how the moderate democrats and Reagan democrats are the base of the Democratic Party, which is what I was referring to. The base of the Democratic Party (i.e. fairly liberal, straight along party line voters) are for the most part solidly behind Obama, whereas McCain's base is not. The group of people you are referring to are traditionally swing voters.
I don't see how the moderate democrats and Reagan democrats are the base of the Democratic Party, which is what I was referring to. The base of the Democratic Party (i.e. fairly liberal, straight along party line voters) are for the most part solidly behind Obama, whereas McCain's base is not. The group of people you are referring to are traditionally swing voters.
Conversely, Obama has made little progress in increasing his support among core Democrats since June - currently 83% favor him compared with 87% of Republicans who back McCain. The likely Democratic nominee is still getting relatively modest support from Hillary Clinton’s former supporters: 72% of them support Obama, compared with the 88% support level that McCain receives from backers of his formal GOP rivals. Obama’s strong points with voters are in being seen as the candidate with new ideas and as someone who connects well with ordinary people.
The Democrat Obama led McCain, the Republican, by 8 percentage points in June in the Pew Research Center poll, though by July his lead was 5 points, about the same as now. Since June, McCain has solidified his support among whites, men, Republicans, white evangelicals and whites who haven’t completed college. Obama has made few gains, but has retained his overwhelming advantage among blacks and leads by 13 points with women and 24 points among those under age 30. Seven in 10 who backed Hillary Rodham Clinton for the Democratic nomination now support Obama — little progress for Obama since June. Growing numbers pick McCain over Obama as the candidate who is personally qualified, could handle a crisis and is willing to take a stand. Obama retains his edge as the one with new ideas and connects with people.

A huge chunk of the Democratic Party's base are zealous Hillarites, though, and that changes the dynamic considerably for the Dem's.
jag
Just the simple fact that McCain has run one of the worst campaigns in history, and Obama seems to be able to do no wrong, YET.....................YET, he has ONLY A 5 point lead over McCain?..........sorry I still strongly disagree with you.
I don't see how the moderate democrats and Reagan democrats are the base of the Democratic Party, which is what I was referring to. The base of the Democratic Party (i.e. fairly liberal, straight along party line voters) are for the most part solidly behind Obama, whereas McCain's base is not. The group of people you are referring to are traditionally swing voters.
I'm sorry, you are wrong.
I'm wrong? So you are saying, straight faced, that hardcore social conservatives are strongly backing McCain? Can you provide some polls for me to prove this fact? I don't doubt that there aren't a large number of die-hard conservatives that will vote for McCain in November, but I'd wager the number is far lower than it was for Bush. And completely throwing their support and enthusiasm behind McCain is a completely different matter altogether.
*sighs*......yes, as I have proven.