Obama's Grandmother Passed Away

Colpy

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 5, 2005
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At least she got to vote for him (at an advance poll) according to the CBC (Cheering Barrack Constantly).......

Too bad she won't get to see him win.

If he does.
 

Avro

Time Out
Feb 12, 2007
7,815
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Oshawa
Where'd you find this info?

Oh, that's just common knowledge.

Plus it dosen't hurt that Nixon was a dirty crook and Bush has a lower approval rating than Carter did.....ouch.

Sorry about your luck Walt.:lol:
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
27,780
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Why is this not the case in our country?

It seems to occur more in large culturally segregated areas, be it reservations, large black communities, etc. We just don't have as many large areas of segregated communities (aside from natives) as the US does. But I bet if you went to someone in Toronto and asked if we have problems with this sort of thing, or you talked to an elder on the reservations and asked if it's a problem, you might hear that it is in fact.
 

scratch

Senate Member
May 20, 2008
5,658
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It seems to occur more in large culturally segregated areas, be it reservations, large black communities, etc. We just don't have as many large areas of segregated communities (aside from natives) as the US does. But I bet if you went to someone in Toronto and asked if we have problems with this sort of thing, or you talked to an elder on the reservations and asked if it's a problem, you might hear that it is in fact.
Thank you karrie.
regards,
scratch
 

Risus

Genius
May 24, 2006
5,373
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Toronto
It seems to occur more in large culturally segregated areas, be it reservations, large black communities, etc. We just don't have as many large areas of segregated communities (aside from natives) as the US does. But I bet if you went to someone in Toronto and asked if we have problems with this sort of thing, or you talked to an elder on the reservations and asked if it's a problem, you might hear that it is in fact.

I would imagine you are correct on this. The problem is not limited to the states.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
It seems to occur more in large culturally segregated areas, be it reservations, large black communities, etc. We just don't have as many large areas of segregated communities (aside from natives) as the US does. But I bet if you went to someone in Toronto and asked if we have problems with this sort of thing, or you talked to an elder on the reservations and asked if it's a problem, you might hear that it is in fact.
Anywhere there is poverty there is abandonment.
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
27,780
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Anywhere there is poverty there is abandonment.

Discussing this over coffee with a friend, I realized that I failed to point out that white communities aren't immune, because yes beaver, it tends to run hand in hand with poverty.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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Smart woman; got out when the going was good; didn't want to see Barry screw up and become Jimmy Carter II.
Jimmy Carter's second coming

Lorne Gunter, National Post Published: Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Americans have not elected the next JFK. The next Jimmy Carter, maybe.
For months now, Barack Obama and his handlers have done all they can to cultivate comparisons between their man and John Kennedy, from spending US$700,000 staging Mr. Obama's "citizen of the world" speech in Berlin this summer in hopes it would be favourably likened to Mr. Kennedy's famous 1963 "Ich bin ein Berliner" address, to having the Illinois Senator give his acceptance speech in a football stadium at last summer's Democratic nominating convention. Even the fake columns brought in to frame Mr. Obama's backdrop were meant to evoke images of JFK's acceptance address at the Los Angeles Coliseum in 1960.
It's true both men share a rhetorical eloquence that makes idolatrous reporters go weak in the knees, and that Mr. Obama is the first incumbent U. S. Senator since Mr. Kennedy to be elected to the White House. But the similarities end there.
Jack Kennedy was a Cold Warrior, a staunch anti-Communist, even a "hawk" when it came to the military. Barack Obama on the other hand is a foreign policy naif who feels all that's needed for peace in most crises is talk and sincerity.
President Kennedy's Berlin speech was a warning to the Soviets and a pledge of undying support to West Berliners, trapped, as they were, behind enemy lines. When he said he was a Berliner, he meant he was someone who would not abandon the German capital to communist rule, no matter what, even if that meant war.
These sentiments were deep-rooted in Mr. Kennedy, who had risked his life fighting the enslaving ideology of Fascism and was not about to concede one square inch of free soil to another enslaving ideology, communism.
Barack Obama would seem to have no similarly entrenched faith
in the goodness of Western pluralistic democracy, or fear of the evils of totalitarianism in its many forms. It's hard to picture a President Obama being similarly willing to commit American resources and lives to the defence of a cause such as Berlin.
Mr. Kennedy was an American Exceptionalist. He believed America had much to teach the world; some things to learn, but much more to teach. Mr. Obama seems to feel shame for his own country, at least in international affairs. When he said in August he was a citizen of the world, he almost certainly meant he was a multilateralist, willing to subvert American foreign policy to the direction of America's international critics, particularly its European critics.
Admittedly, Mr. Kennedy's first big international foray -- the Bay of Pigs invasion -- did not go well. But he did not let that keep him from staring down the Soviets during the Cuban Missile Crisis, tightening the embargo of Cuba or expanding the Vietnam War.
He really, truly felt America was in a fight for survival with global communism (which it was) and he was prepared to do whatever it took to win.
Mr. Kennedy was the first president to sell arms to Israel and the first to warn of the "missile gap" between the U. S. S. R. and the States.
There is no way a president who has wined and dined with radical Islamists, befriended '60s hippy terrorists and said he believes negotiating with Iran will convince it to abandon its nuclear programs could ever be a foreign-policy Jack Kennedy.
It was president Carter whose undermining of the Shah of Iran lead to the Islamic Revolution, the Iranian hostage crisis, the Desert One debacle and, ultimately, to the nuclearized Iran we face today. It was Mr. Carter who sold out Taiwan and sold off the Panama Canal. He was also an appeaser of communist Cuba and North Korea and an apologist for Palestinian terrorists.
It might have been a good thing if Mr. Obama were the second coming of JFK. Instead, unfortunately, he seems to be the heir to the Man from Plains.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
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Are these writers for real? Jimmy Carter continues to be responsible for all of the worlds problems? lol
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
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Walter is adept at finding the most ridiculous rantings that support a narrow minded view of the world. Obama is not the meek Tra-la-la figure Gunter portray's him as. Obama is 'hawkish' on Afghanistan, you know Walter, where the communists failed. The failed state which housed the radical fools, the impetus for this global war on Terror. Obama plans to withdraw Americans from the self-inflicted quagmire in Iraq, and actually push the issue in the Pashtun regions where the yound men are fertile minds for the radical message.

Though, now it's likely Iraq will become a problem in future years just as Afghanistan now is. Through the country into chaos, and leave it for the wolves. So, Obama has a notion of stopping the cycle in the initial stages.

He hasn't even taken office yet and the partisan hacks are spilling their foul venom already...Op-eds, sweet phuck all!
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Walter is adept at finding the most ridiculous rantings that support a narrow minded view of the world. Obama is not the meek Tra-la-la figure Gunter portray's him as. Obama is 'hawkish' on Afghanistan, you know Walter, where the communists failed. The failed state which housed the radical fools, the impetus for this global war on Terror. Obama plans to withdraw Americans from the self-inflicted quagmire in Iraq, and actually push the issue in the Pashtun regions where the yound men are fertile minds for the radical message.

Though, now it's likely Iraq will become a problem in future years just as Afghanistan now is. Through the country into chaos, and leave it for the wolves. So, Obama has a notion of stopping the cycle in the initial stages.

He hasn't even taken office yet and the partisan hacks are spilling their foul venom already...Op-eds, sweet phuck all!

Obama has all the advice he needs to continue the corporate wars, he's a tool, a sharp one and an articulate one. The old team really hopes to rack up the profits with Wonder Man riding herd on the dumb consumer. He'll bring them to tears every time he farts and they'll do anything he suggests even die in the hundreds of thousands defending the rag from terrorists and commonists. They'll evict millions for him. He'll be perfect for the transition to the full police state. The great polarlizing hope artist. He's dung, same as the last one. They're drawn from a box Tonnington, and they're all individually wrapped for insertion.:smile: