OMG. Palin has no brain.
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OMG. Palin has no brain.
| Wed, 10-01-2008 - 8:09pm |
Never - ever - have I heard more a vacuous, vapid response to a question from a major candidate for public office:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/10/01/eveningnews/main4493062.shtml
Please, people. Please. You cannot put this bimbo in the White House.

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< "No, but it would probaby give you a perspective of how small our world is and how important it is that we work with our allies to keep good relations with all of these countries, especially Mexico."
>>> hahaha Are you serious? it would probably just make me hungry....
Hopefully our VP has something more serious on her mind than tacos. LOL! But to answer your question...yes, I'm serious. For many people, the realization that they can stand in one country and throw a stone onto another gives a "small world" perspective as compared to people who are hundreds or thousands of miles away from that country. It's a common occurrence for people who live on the US border and have to deal with the problems from Mexico. These same people quite probably also see the benefit of keeping up good relations with these countries that are only a "stone's throw" away. Frankly, I'm surprised that you would find such obvious revelations "funny." But then I guess some people lead sheltered lives.
>>> You proved your case? How, exactly?
Um...by...er...providing supporting evidence from credible sources. Duh. LOL!
>>> Originally, you responded to this point by sild: "the failure to capture bin Laden has seriously hindered the reaching of that objective," by saying "not really. The deaths of so many Al Qaeda leaders and the dismantling of their organization have dealt them a significant, if not debilitating, blow.
>>> No mention in there of "debilitating blow only to the Iraq component of Al Qaeda," where everyone agrees the main headquarters of - and threat from - Al Qaeda ISN'T located.
Actually, there was. The articles didn't confine themselves to "Al Qaeda in Iraq." LOL! Sorry, but you'll actually have to read the links I gave you instead of your year old articles. That'll help you keep "up to date" and save you from more of those red-faced embarrassing moments like the ones you just experienced.
>>> Hooey.
Hey, that's almost as insightful as your "horse dootie." Keep working at it. ; )
>>> And I demonstrated to you (and everyone else) that your statement was hooey...whereupon you replied with your "but I meant AQI" nonsense, which is not only lame but also wasn't what you said to begin with.
Like I said before...read...learn...and not from year old news. LOL!
Try again.
Actually, he is not part of the machine. Daley was afraid of him, and saw him as a threat.
Rose
"Actually, he is not part of the machine. Daley was afraid of him, and saw him as a threat.
I'm sorry, I can't agree.
My DH worked for the county. He told me Hyde Park has never been part of the Daley machine. That is because of the U of C being located there, and their ultra liberal professors.
I don't see Obama's relationship with Rev Wright,
Rose
How do you know when they last spoke?
Rose
Twenty-six years later, at a lunchtime meeting about school reform in a Chicago skyscraper, Barack Obama met Mr. Ayers, by then an education professor. Their paths have crossed sporadically since then, at a coffee Mr. Ayers hosted for Mr. Obama’s first run for office, on the schools project and a charitable board, and in casual encounters as Hyde Park neighbors.
Ok,so what's the problem? They live in the same neighborhood; I would expect their paths to cross. Honestly, there's nothing wrong there!
If he had been to a dinner, or a coffee with Ayers he would NOT have been cleared to work for the federal govt.
Sorry, but I don't believe that to be true. I need a link, not someone's word on it, before I will believe it. It doesn't make sense. I'm sure he's had coffee with dozens of people. He hasn't been considerd a threat since the late 60's. That's a long time ago. No, it isn't a big deal at all, in spite of conservatives trying to make it one. It just isn't.
Rose
It's a clear sign of desperation when Republicans start making a big deal out of Obama's tangential relationship with a guy who's been a University of Illinois professor for 18 years.
If you are going to compare Keating to Ayers then I would say that is absurd.
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