Quit picking on Obama……

L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
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#2971
Yeah, wifey and I even know how to flip photos, and we aren't particularly adept with photo-editing. lol
 
ironsides
No Party Affiliation
+1
#2972
Oh Obama


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Walter
#2973
Good on Tim.
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Spade
Free Thinker
#2974
No Tim bits from Boston?
 
Walter
+1
#2975
The Bamster is a --.
 
L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
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#2976
Quote: Originally Posted by ironsidesView Post

Oh Obama


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lol That's pretty good.

Quote: Originally Posted by WalterView Post

The Bamster is a --.

lol You expected different? It's his money, not OPM. Of course he'll be stingy with it. lol
 
Walter
#2977
Quote: Originally Posted by WalterView Post

The Bamster is a --.

His veep is an even cheaper bas tard, as was Gore it turns out.
 
ironsides
No Party Affiliation
#2978
--
 
Icarus27k
Democrat
#2979
Quote: Originally Posted by ironsidesView Post

--


From the "About Us" page:

"Founded in 1991 by Joseph Farah (the brains behind WND.com news website) and James H. Smith (former publisher of the Sacramento Union)"





Despite the release of Obama's -- birth certificate abstract,-- Farah demanded that Obama release his "long-form" birth certificate, which was subsequently posted on the -- web site on April 27, 2011.------ Farah had previously pledged $15,000 to the hospital where Obama was born upon the release of said document.---- When Obama finally released the long-form birth certificate, he called it "fraudulent."--

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Farah. WND.com. Ewww....
 
Walter
#2980
Quote: Originally Posted by WalterView Post

I never miss his (Marl Levin) show. Best mind on the radio.[/FONT]

Mark Levin's new book is number 1 on the NYT best sellers list.
 
Tonington
Avatar
#2981
A man writing about freedom and tyranny who supports wiretaps of Americans without warrants? Who supports denying citizen rights to anyone born in America? Clearly the conservative intellectuals of America have no desire to be consistent or genuine. Number one on the NY times? That's not really surprising.
 
gopher
No Party Affiliation
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#2982
Obama's Arizona friend and separated at birth:

 
Walter
Avatar
#2983
Oh, no. The Bamster is in trouble.
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Tonington
Avatar
#2984
Quote: Originally Posted by WalterView Post

Oh, no. The Bamster is in trouble.
--

In President GW Bush's re-election, he carried states where he didn't have a net positive approval rating. He didn't even have a 50% approval rating nationwide.

Oh no. But he polled better against John Kerry. That's what matters.
 
Walter
Avatar
#2985
Ask not what you can do for your country; ask what your country can do for you. JFK must be weeping in his grave.
Dependent Nation: Dependency Index Surges 23% Under President Obama; 67 Million Get Aid - Investors.com
 
Walter
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#2986
This is not a good record to have if you want to be re-elected.
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Locutus
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+1
#2987
Obama Likens Himself To Gandhi And Nelson Mandela





"The civil rights movement was hard. Winning the vote for women was hard. Making sure that workers had some basic protections was hard," President Obama said at a fundraiser while talking about how difficult it is to bring about "change" in politics.

"Around the world, Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, what they did was hard. It takes time. It takes more than a single term. It takes more than a single president. It takes more than a single individual," Obama said.

"What it takes is ordinary citizens who keep believe, who are committed to fighting and pushing and inching this country closer and closer to our highest ideals. And I said in 2008, 'that I am not a perfect man and I will not be a perfect president.' But I promised you, but I promised you, I promised you back then that I would always tell you what I believe. I would always tell you where I stood," he also said at a fundraiser in NYC.




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gopher
No Party Affiliation
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#2988
Obama leads current Republican field:

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Walter is gonna have a severe s..t fit if he wins again ...
 
L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
#2989
I wonder if anyone's told DUHbama there's only 50 states yet.
 
B00Mer
No Party Affiliation
+1
#2990
 
L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
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#2991
lol What? You think DUHbama will be able to keep track of 10 provinces and 3 territories?
 
B00Mer
No Party Affiliation
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#2992
Quote: Originally Posted by L GilbertView Post

lol What? You think DUHbama will be able to keep track of 10 provinces and 3 territories?

9 provinces, 3 territories and 1 country, within our country.. you see, you missed it. LOL

 
L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
#2993
lol.
 
DaSleeper
#2994
Quote: Originally Posted by B00MerView Post

9 provinces, 3 territories and 1 country, within our country.. you see, you missed it. LOL

You also forgot the "First Nations"
 
Locutus
Avatar
#2995
Harvey Weinstein passes on movie pitch from Obama



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Barry, Barry, Barry...




 
EagleSmack
+1
#2996
Apparently he is a bit idle.
 
Locutus
Avatar
#2997
Obama knocks Rutherford B. Hayes



-- took aim Thursday at one of his Republican predecessors: Rutherford B. Hayes. Speaking about the need to develop new sources of American energy in Largo, Md., Obama used our 19th president to illustrate a failure of forward-thinking leadership.

"One of my predecessors, President Rutherford B. Hayes, reportedly said about the telephone: 'It’s a great invention but who would ever want to use one?'" Obama said. "That's why he's not on Mt. Rushmore."

"He's looking backwards, he's not looking forward. He's explaining why we can't do something instead of why we can do something," Obama said. "The point is there will always be cynics and naysayers."


Obama was speaking about the need to be forward-thinking in developing new sources of American energy — and how "unnamed" Republicans -- had positioned themselves against alternative energy.


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The problem with this asshole is that, of course, he is wrong again. What a maroon.

New York Magazine's Daily Intel does the legwork and finds that, contrary to Obama's assertion that our 19th president dismissed the telephone as useless, Rutherford B. Hayes was quite --.
The curator of the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center responds to Obama's quip:
She then read aloud a newspaper article from June 29, 1877, which describes Hayes's delight upon first experiencing the magic of the telephone. The Providence Journal story reported that as Hayes listened on the phone, "a gradually increasing smile wreathe[d] his lips and wonder shone in his eyes more and more.” Hayes took the phone from his ear, "looked at it a moment in surprise and remarked, 'That is wonderful.'"
In fact, Card noted, Hayes was not only the first president to have a telephone in the White House, but he was also the first to use the typewriter, and he had Thomas Edison come to the White House to demonstrate the phonograph. "So I think he was pretty much cutting edge," Card insisted, "maybe just the opposite of what President Obama had to say there."
"One of my predecessors, President Rutherford B. Hayes, reportedly said about the telephone: 'It’s a great invention but who would ever want to use one?'" Obama said in remarks --."He's looking backwards, he's not looking forward. He's explaining why we can't do something instead of why we can do something."
And TPM's Benjy Sarlin reports that Obama -- the flat earth thing right either...


But wait, there's more...


Obama Mangles U.S., World History In Energy Speech


President Obama got a laugh out of a Maryland audience on Thursday when he mocked the Republican Party in a speech, comparing their skepticism of alternative energy to the “Flat Earth Society” in Christopher Columbus’ day and President Rutherford B. Hayes’ apparent dismissal of the telephone. But while Obama thinks the GOP is in need of a science lesson, he may need to bone up on history himself.
In mocking the GOP, Obama cited an anecdote about Hayes in which, upon using the telephone for the first time, he said, “It’s a great invention, but who would ever want to use one?”
“That’s why he’s not on Mount Rushmore,” Obama said. “He’s explaining why we can’t do something instead of why we can do something.”
But Nan Card, curator of manuscripts at the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center in Ohio, told TPM that the nation’s 19th president was being unfairly tagged as a Luddite.

“He really was the opposite,” she said. “He had the first telephone in the White House. He also had the first typewriter in the White House. Thomas Edison came to the White House as well and displayed the phonograph. Photographing people who came to the White House and visited at dinners and receptions was also very important to him.”
While often cited, Card said Obama’s cited quote had never been confirmed by contemporary sources and is likely apocryphal. A contemporary newspaper account of his first experience with telephone in 1877 from the Providence Journal records a smiling Hayes repeatedly responding to the voice on the other line with the phrase, “That is wonderful.” You can read the full story --.
“He was pretty technology-oriented for the time,” Card said. “Between the telephone, the telegraph, the phonograph and photography, I think he was pretty much on the cutting edge.”
As for why he’s not on Mt. Rushmore, Card noted that popular history tends to favor wartime presidents in the long run. To be fair, modern historians aren’t-- either in their rankings.
Obama’s invocation of the “flat earth” theory in the context of Christopher Columbus’ journey across the ocean also contained some dubious (if incredibly widespread) history.
“If some of these folks were around when Columbus set sail, they must have been founding members of the Flat Earth Society,” Obama said. “They would not have believed that the world was round.”
In fact, historians have long contended that the notion Europeans widely believed the Earth was flat, let alone 15th century Spanish scholars, is a myth developed centuries later. From the late Harvard paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould’s 1995 book “Dinosaur In a Haystack”:
There never was a period of “flat earth darkness” among scholars (regardless of how many uneducated people may have conceptualized our planet both then and now). Greek knowledge of sphericity never faded, and all major medieval scholars accepted the earth’s roundness as an established fact of cosmology. Ferdinand and Isabella did refer Columbus’s plans to a royal commission headed by Hernando de Talavera, Isabella’s confessor and, following defeat of the Moors, Archbishop of Granada. This commission, composed of both clerical and lay advisers, did meet, at Salamanca among other places. They did pose some sharp intellectual objections to Columbus, but all assumed the earth’s roundness. As a major critique, they argued that Columbus could not reach the Indies in his own allotted time, because the earth’s circumference was too great. Moreover, his critics were entirely right. Columbus had “cooked” his figures to favor a much smaller earth, and an attainable Indies. Needless to say, he did not and could not reach Asia, and Native Americans are still called Indians as a legacy of his error.
As far as muddled historic references go, Obama’s hardly the first presidential candidate to screw things up on the trail. But for an address specifically going after his opponents for their ignorance, it’s probably not great to have a “citation needed” banner on top of his speech.



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skookumchuck
Free Thinker
#2998
I'm no fan of the "stealth president" but speech writers have much to do with what is said. Teleprompter contributes. More power to the politicians of old who had to wing it, Obama would probably sound good to his followers.
 
L Gilbert
No Party Affiliation
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+1
#2999
Before teleprompters there were little CCTV screens. Before that were cheatsheets.

I get a kick out of these idiots that denigrate DUHbama for using teleprompters, yet seem to think G Dumbya Bush memorized all his speeches.
 
gopher
No Party Affiliation
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#3000
Actually, there was an old saying about Hayes and the telephone. In fact I remember hearing about it as a child many moons ago. Supposedly Hayes found the invention intriguing but he didn't think it would be popular and supposedly did not buy stock in it. Same thing with Mark Twain who wasted his money on other things. By contrast, those who invested in telephone stock made a huge fortune back then. It's no big deal but, as usual, the right wingers will use it in order to make political hay while ignoring the bungling that's going on in the Republican debates.
 

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