Hillary Supporters unite part 2; no bashing please

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Based upon recent events with this man.. me thinks something really weird is going on with this election.

Not good for Hillary, but would I ever love to be a fly on a lot of walls to see what's really going on.

http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/

(CNN) — Warren Buffett, a longtime friend of both Hillary and Bill Clinton, told CNN Monday Barack Obama would be his choice for the next President of the United States.

Speaking with CNN's Becky Anderson, the billionaire investor said he would gladly vote for either candidate, but said it is clear the senator from Illinois will be the party's nominee.

"So it would be Barack Obama, — [he] would be my preference," Buffett said.

Buffett had refused to take sides in the prolonged Democratic presidential race. The Nebraska Democrat hosted million dollar fundraisers for both last summer, and had previously held back on endorsing one over the other. Though he reportedly said at the Clinton fundraiser that the New York senator is "the person to run the country."

Buffett also has offered Clinton informal advice on the economy, and the two led a question-and-answer session about the economy with voters at a San Francisco campaign event in December.

Buffett, the world's richest man according to Forbes Magazine, runs Omaha-based Berkshire Hathaway Inc. The company's assets total more than $260 billion.
 
I wanted to share my post from the Obama thread about the Byrd endorsement. Maybe it will help explain why I didn't comment on the hateful comments posted here earlier:

---------

I don't know the senator. People can change. It sounds like he changed. My comments were not meant to be hateful.

However, his endorsement will not sway me towards Obama.
 
That doesn't say anything. How rude!

It doesn't?

Hillary saying: "It's clear this election (Michigan) they're having isn't going to count for anything" means nothing to you?

Oops. :lmao:
 
It doesn't?

Hillary saying: "It's clear this election (Michigan) they're having isn't going to count for anything" means nothing to you?

Oops. :lmao:

Seems to me it isn't counting for anything.
 

Exactly what Hillary said.

Hmmm the more I am on here the more I smell Obama trolls...sniff sniff....I say dont feed the trolls and they will go away:rotfl2: .......only nice OS need apply. And that's how I roll :woohoo: GO HILLARY!!!
 
Ummmmm.....I dont even know what to say to this....funny how this comes out with Obama running ...read on theres more this is just part copied. Like the U.N has no starving people to take care of or helping the people in Burma and so on...so they have to come here and do a investigation on Racism....give me a break.

http://www.reuters.com/article/poli...Type=RSS&feedName=politicsNews&rpc=22&sp=true

U.N. racism investigator to visit U.S. from Monday
Fri May 16, 2008


U.S. welcomes U.N. investigator’s racism probe
4:16pm EST



GENEVA (Reuters) - A special U.N. human rights investigator will visit the United States this month to probe racism, an issue that has forced its way into the race to secure the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.

The United Nations said Doudou Diene would meet federal and local officials, as well as lawmakers and judicial authorities during the May 19-June 6 visit.

"The special rapporteur will...gather first-hand information on issues related to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance," a U.N. statement said on Friday.

His three-week visit, at U.S. government invitation, will cover eight cities -- Washington D.C., New York, Chicago, Omaha, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Miami and San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Race has become a central issue in the U.S. election cycle because Sen. Barack Obama, the frontrunner in the battle for the Democratic nomination battle, stands to become the country's first African American president.

His campaign has increased turnout among black voters but has also turned off some white voters in a country with a history of slavery and racial segregation.

Diene, a Senegalese lawyer who has served in the independent post since 2002, will report his findings to the U.N. Human Rights Council next year.
 
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We're voting here in Kentucky tomorrow. Supposed to be a big day for Hillary.
 
We're voting here in Kentucky tomorrow. Supposed to be a big day for Hillary.

Have fun voting...glad you had the chance to do so :thumbsup2 that is a chance we should all be heard on. No one should ever get the nom until all in the USA has had a chance to vote...that would be democracy at it's finest.
 
Hi folks - Mom is still in the hospital ICU - fighting for her life, on a ventilator (they can't solve why she can't breathe - pneumonia has been treated with antibiotics - but still no lung relief.....). Thank you so much for your positive thoughts and prayers.

While looking at the news tonight - I came across this opinion piece by Arianna Huffington. Too little, too late - but its still a nice read........

I still don't get why Hillary is summarily dismissed as a VP candidate. I still believe that if Hillary were "Bill" - a joint ticket would be a no-brainer.....

Hillary Clinton's Defeat: A Historic Triumph

Posted May 19, 2008 | 11:24 AM (EST)

A front page story in today's New York Times wonders whether Hillary Clinton's flagging run for the presidency is "a historic if incomplete triumph or a depressing reminder of why few [women] pursue high office in the first place."

Let me quickly weigh in with an unequivocal vote for "historic if incomplete triumph." And the only thing I find depressing is that the answer is even in doubt.

I have regularly criticized Clinton over the course of her campaign (and long before it, starting with her vote to authorize the war), but there is no question that she has forever altered the way women running for president will be viewed from here on out. In the words of the Times, Clinton has established "a new marker for what a woman can accomplish in a campaign -- raising over $170 million, frequently winning more favorable reviews on debate performances than her male rivals, rallying older women, and persuading white male voters who were never expected to support her."

She has also forever demolished the question mark hovering over the issue many (wrongly, in my opinion) have felt would be a woman candidate's biggest weakness: the ability to be seen as a plausible commander-in-chief.

It is to her great credit that very shortly into the '08 race, when you saw Clinton on television, you didn't think, "Oh, there's the woman running for president." That is no small feat for a woman trying to break into a male-dominated arena. So the next time a woman -- or two or three -- runs for president, it won't be seen as a novelty act. Because Hillary certainly wasn't.

But the greatest triumph of Clinton's campaign -- a complete triumph -- is the example she has set for the next generation. And not just for young women; her dedication, perseverance, and indefatigable drive make her a role model for young men as well.

Much has been made of the generational divide in the Clinton-Obama battle, with older women rallying to Clinton and younger women drawn to Obama. But the impact of her candidacy transcends this division. I've seen this very clearly in the reaction of my oldest daughter.

She voted for the first time in this year's California primary, casting her ballot for Obama. Yet hardly a day passes without her speaking with admiration, almost awe, about Hillary Clinton -- how she manages to get up every morning, no matter how hard things get for her, and keep following her dream.

I've written a lot about fear and fearlessness, and how fearlessness is not the absence of fear -- it's the mastery of fear. It's all about getting up one more time than we fall down. Has any public figure embodied this more powerfully and compellingly than Hillary Clinton?

Last week I was in a hotel room in Las Vegas preparing to give a speech. Checking in for a political update, I turned on CNN and saw Wolf Blitzer interviewing Hillary. But instead of a debate on who is more electable in Appalachia, or a Talmudic discussion about Michigan and Florida, there was this incredibly human moment.

Blitzer asked Clinton about what it's been like having Chelsea on the trail campaigning with her. Clinton, choking up, replied: "Well, it's one of the most incredibly gratifying experiences of my life, as a person and as a mother. I get very emotional. She is an exceptional person, and she's worked so hard, and she's done such a good job that I'm just filled with pride every time I look at her."

And just as Hillary started tearing up, I realized I was too. This has been an election where, even more than usual, the personal and the political have been constantly overlapping. And my feelings as I watched that interview were no exception.

It was clear that the 17-month campaign had taken a toll on Clinton, but at the same time has been incredibly transformative. She famously announced after winning New Hampshire that she'd found her own voice. But, in fact, she has kept finding it and refinding it -- until now, finally, she seems to be more in touch with her own message, instead of the message Mark Penn's poll numbers told her to adopt.

And in doing so, she has redefined and taken over the Clinton brand. Forget welfare reform, free-trade uber alles, and third-way DLC-economics. Since hitting her stride in Ohio, Hillary has transformed the Clinton brand into one that represents working-class Americans. Because of this, she is the Clinton who will now be most relevant to the country's future.

I see Hillary returning to the Senate with a newfound sense of purpose -- and power. With the presidency no longer in her sights -- at least for now -- she could become a commanding progressive force in the Senate.

Campaigning in Pennsylvania in early April, Clinton compared herself to Philadelphia icon Rocky Balboa. "Let me tell you something," she said. "When it comes to finishing the fight, Rocky and I have a lot in common. I never quit. I never give up."

The comparison was meant to reinforce her image as a tireless warrior -- but it was more accurate and prescient than she intended. Because Rocky actually lost his initial fight with Apollo Creed. After 15 punishing and bloody rounds, he was satisfied just to have gone the distance.

"Ain't gonna be no rematch," says Creed amidst the post-fight pandemonium. To which Rocky replies: "Don't want one."

Even though Rocky didn't win, he was ultimately seen as a triumphant figure. And that's how Hillary will be seen too. Once the disappointment fades and the cuts and bruises heal, the lasting impression will be one of glory, accomplishment, and profound impact.

Hers will have been a game-changing defeat.
 
Hi folks - Mom is still in the hospital ICU - fighting for her life, on a ventilator (they can't solve why she can't breathe - pneumonia has been treated with antibiotics - but still no lung relief.....). Thank you so much for your positive thoughts and prayers.

While looking at the news tonight - I came across this opinion piece by Arianna Huffington. Too little, too late - but its still a nice read........

I still don't get why Hillary is summarily dismissed as a VP candidate. I still believe that if Hillary were "Bill" - a joint ticket would be a no-brainer.....

WOW sorry to hear about your Mom...that is so scarry:flower3: :grouphug: :flower3: :grouphug: hope they find the problem soon and I will add her into my nightly prayers...and thats a promise...stay strong.
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/hillary-clintons-defeat-a_b_102418.html


Hillary Clinton's Defeat: A Historic Triumph
Posted May 19, 2008 | 11:24 AM (EST)



A front page story in today's New York Times wonders whether Hillary Clinton's flagging run for the presidency is "a historic if incomplete triumph or a depressing reminder of why few [women] pursue high office in the first place."

Let me quickly weigh in with an unequivocal vote for "historic if incomplete triumph." And the only thing I find depressing is that the answer is even in doubt.

I have regularly criticized Clinton over the course of her campaign (and long before it, starting with her vote to authorize the war), but there is no question that she has forever altered the way women running for president will be viewed from here on out. In the words of the Times, Clinton has established "a new marker for what a woman can accomplish in a campaign -- raising over $170 million, frequently winning more favorable reviews on debate performances than her male rivals, rallying older women, and persuading white male voters who were never expected to support her."

She has also forever demolished the question mark hovering over the issue many (wrongly, in my opinion) have felt would be a woman candidate's biggest weakness: the ability to be seen as a plausible commander-in-chief.

It is to her great credit that very shortly into the '08 race, when you saw Clinton on television, you didn't think, "Oh, there's the woman running for president." That is no small feat for a woman trying to break into a male-dominated arena. So the next time a woman -- or two or three -- runs for president, it won't be seen as a novelty act. Because Hillary certainly wasn't.

But the greatest triumph of Clinton's campaign -- a complete triumph -- is the example she has set for the next generation. And not just for young women; her dedication, perseverance, and indefatigable drive make her a role model for young men as well.

Much has been made of the generational divide in the Clinton-Obama battle, with older women rallying to Clinton and younger women drawn to Obama. But the impact of her candidacy transcends this division. I've seen this very clearly in the reaction of my oldest daughter.

She voted for the first time in this year's California primary, casting her ballot for Obama. Yet hardly a day passes without her speaking with admiration, almost awe, about Hillary Clinton -- how she manages to get up every morning, no matter how hard things get for her, and keep following her dream.

I've written a lot about fear and fearlessness, and how fearlessness is not the absence of fear -- it's the mastery of fear. It's all about getting up one more time than we fall down. Has any public figure embodied this more powerfully and compellingly than Hillary Clinton?

Last week I was in a hotel room in Las Vegas preparing to give a speech. Checking in for a political update, I turned on CNN and saw Wolf Blitzer interviewing Hillary. But instead of a debate on who is more electable in Appalachia, or a Talmudic discussion about Michigan and Florida, there was this incredibly human moment.

Blitzer asked Clinton about what it's been like having Chelsea on the trail campaigning with her. Clinton, choking up, replied: "Well, it's one of the most incredibly gratifying experiences of my life, as a person and as a mother. I get very emotional. She is an exceptional person, and she's worked so hard, and she's done such a good job that I'm just filled with pride every time I look at her."

And just as Hillary started tearing up, I realized I was too. This has been an election where, even more than usual, the personal and the political have been constantly overlapping. And my feelings as I watched that interview were no exception.

It was clear that the 17-month campaign had taken a toll on Clinton, but at the same time has been incredibly transformative. She famously announced after winning New Hampshire that she'd found her own voice. But, in fact, she has kept finding it and refinding it -- until now, finally, she seems to be more in touch with her own message, instead of the message Mark Penn's poll numbers told her to adopt.

And in doing so, she has redefined and taken over the Clinton brand. Forget welfare reform, free-trade uber alles, and third-way DLC-economics. Since hitting her stride in Ohio, Hillary has transformed the Clinton brand into one that represents working-class Americans. Because of this, she is the Clinton who will now be most relevant to the country's future.

I see Hillary returning to the Senate with a newfound sense of purpose -- and power. With the presidency no longer in her sights -- at least for now -- she could become a commanding progressive force in the Senate.

Campaigning in Pennsylvania in early April, Clinton compared herself to Philadelphia icon Rocky Balboa. "Let me tell you something," she said. "When it comes to finishing the fight, Rocky and I have a lot in common. I never quit. I never give up."

The comparison was meant to reinforce her image as a tireless warrior -- but it was more accurate and prescient than she intended. Because Rocky actually lost his initial fight with Apollo Creed. After 15 punishing and bloody rounds, he was satisfied just to have gone the distance.

"Ain't gonna be no rematch," says Creed amidst the post-fight pandemonium. To which Rocky replies: "Don't want one."

Even though Rocky didn't win, he was ultimately seen as a triumphant figure. And that's how Hillary will be seen too. Once the disappointment fades and the cuts and bruises heal, the lasting impression will be one of glory, accomplishment, and profound impact.

Hers will have been a game-changing defeat.
 
I just want to say that I am a proud Hillary koolaid drinker :thumbsup2 and if she has had me in a trance it is a trance that I am happy to be under....just thought I would say that...:cool1: :woohoo: GO HILLARY :woohoo: :cheer2:
 
[QUOTE="Got Disney";25209150]Hmmm the more I am on here the more I smell Obama trolls...sniff sniff....I say dont feed the trolls and they will go away:rotfl2: .......only nice OS need apply. And that's how I roll :woohoo: GO HILLARY!!![/QUOTE]

The truth really hurts you. :lmao:
 
Like I keep saying if certain individuals bother you, consider using ignore and that applies to everyone. Personally I love it (for now) but of course YMMV.
 
The truth really hurts you. :lmao:
I doubt that anyone you are speaking to is paying much attention to this truth. I watch both sides saying the same things over and over again and it doesn't appear to be changing.

Just an observation from my observer's perspective.
 
You don't know what you're talking about:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/4/6/12656/59124/210/490995

As the gentleman said ......... "Oops".

Oh pleeeeeeeease!

First off thats NOT what I am talking about.
None of the candidates SIGNED ANYTHING SAYING the votes dont/shouldnt count! They ONLY signed to NOT campaign in those states (again which Obama broke that "rule")

Secondly, ..lets talk about "out of context".... what was the question asked of her????????????????????????????

Thirdly, if Dudly Do Right Obama is so 'above the fray" why did his name appear on the Florida Ballots???????????

Names just dont appear on Ballots...It takes a long time, lots of work and many lawyers & Officials to place them there....and thats way befor they even get printed out for the Voting booths & the mail in ballots!
geez!

How any American can justify not counting votes is just ludachris to me, and not even a debatable topic.

In AMERICA, in any DEMOCRACY, WE COUNT THE VOTES.
If not, then it is no longer a Democracy.:mad:


We're voting here in Kentucky tomorrow. Supposed to be a big day for Hillary.

HURRY before Obama snatches your votes away from you guys too!:yay:

The Obama who Stole the Primary​

You're a mean one, Mr. Obama
You really are a heel,
You're as cuddly as a cactus, you're as charming as an eel, Mr. Obama,
You're a bad banana with a greasy black peel!


You're a monster, Mr. Obama,
Your heart's an empty hole,
Your brain is full of spiders, you have garlic in your soul, Mr. Obama,
I wouldn't touch you with a thirty-nine-and-a-half foot pole!


You're a foul one, Mr. Obama,
You have termites in your smile,
You have all the tender sweetness of a seasick crocodile, Mr. Obama,
Given a choice between the two of you I'd take the seasick crocodile!


You're a rotter, Mr. Obama,
You're the king of sinful sots,
Your heart's a dead tomato splotched with moldy purple spots, Mr. Obama,
You're a three decker sauerkraut and toadstool sandwich with arsenic sauce!


You nauseate me, Mr. Obama,
With a nauseous super "naus"!,
You're a crooked dirty jockey and you drive a crooked hoss, Mr. Obama,
Your soul is an appalling dump heap overflowing with the most disgraceful
assortment of rubbish imaginable mangled up in tangled up knots!


You're a foul one, Mr. Obama,
You're a nasty wasty skunk,
Your heart is full of unwashed socks, your soul is full of gunk, Mr. Obama,
The three words that best describe you are as follows, and I quote,
"Stink, stank, stunk"!​


pirate:
 
Hi folks - Mom is still in the hospital ICU - fighting for her life, on a ventilator (they can't solve why she can't breathe - pneumonia has been treated with antibiotics - but still no lung relief.....). Thank you so much for your positive thoughts and prayers..

:grouphug: Thoughts and prayers for your Mom, and you and your family!
 
Here is my call for todays Primaries

Kentucky
Clinton 62%
Obama 36%

Oregon
Clinton 44%
Obama 50% * I hope i am wrong about this!:confused3
 
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