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#941231 - 04/13/08 03:50 AM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
TheManofSteel
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under the Lone Star
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this is excerpted from a newspaper:
Michael Goodwin, a columnist for the New York Daily News, accused Mr Obama of "de-legitimising the way people choose to live in America" and argued that the furore would be even more damaging for Mr Obama than the previous row over inflammatory comments by his pastor Jeremiah Wright.
He said: "This is like Wright on steroids. It is a disaster for Obama. I happen to come from one of those small towns in Pennsylvania. I know what people there feel about religion and guns and immigrants.
"It's not about just hating other people. They don't embrace religion out of hate. They don't hunt or use their guns for target practice out of hate. You cannot denigrate religion in that way."
Democrat strategist Robert Zimmerman said: "This raises questions about whether he can truly unite the country, as he pledges to, and whether he really believes that we're one America."
A jubilant Grover Norquist, the conservative anti-tax campaigner said: "That sentence will lose him the election. He just announced to rural America: 'I don’t like you'. Now you can vote against that guy not because you don't like him. You can vote against him because he doesn't like you."
Mrs Clinton told voters in Pennsylvania that she does not consider them to be bitter. "I meet people who are resilient, who are optimistic, who are positive, who are rolling up their sleeves," she said.
"Pennsylvania doesn't need a president who looks down on them. They need a president who stands up for them."
Steve Schmidt, a senior aide to the Republican candidate, John McCain, said: "It shows an elitism and condescension toward hard-working Americans that is nothing short of breathtaking."
Mr Obama, campaigning in Indiana, refused to apologise.
_________________________
Societies that do not find work in and of itself "pleasing to God and requisite to Man," tend to be highly corrupt.
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#941257 - 04/13/08 05:57 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Pale Rider
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Diamond Poster
Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 2,390
USA
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very well stated Withdoctor, I could not agree with you more. Thank you.
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Ecclesiastes 10:2 (NIV)
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#941274 - 04/14/08 02:24 AM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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You go into these small towns in Pennsylvania and, like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them...And they fell through the Clinton administration, and the Bush administration, and each successive administration has said that somehow these communities are gonna regenerate and they have not.
And it's not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations. Hmm...anti-trade sentiment...where is it that I've been hearing anti-trade sentiment...oh yes!...seems like both of these Democrat candidates have been whipping that up, one of them even accusing the other of not being opposed to NAFTA enough. A candidate that says one thing when talking to rich folk in a coastal city [ edited to add - or when his representatives are talking to Canadian officials] and another thing when talking to regular folk in flyover country? I thought John Kerry plowed this ground already...
Last edited by Jokerman; 04/14/08 02:26 AM.
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#941284 - 04/14/08 03:59 AM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Jokerman
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Power Poster
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 6,172
Further South than I wanna be.
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In this political climate if a presidential candiate (any one of the three) said "the weather tomorrow will be cold and cloudy" they would be attacked from someone and it would blow up into a national debate. I am not defending what Obama said or Clinton's response to it. I am just saying politically we are in a high alert attack mode and no matter what is said it will be parced and blown apart by all concerned. BTW, it is going to be sunny tomorrow. Believe it or not, I wrote this before I read the other thread and Ron's comment.
Last edited by KCGeoQueen; 04/14/08 04:01 AM.
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Life is not the way it's supposed to be. It's the way it is. The way you cope with it is what makes the difference.
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#941305 - 04/14/08 01:21 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
CRAatBOK
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Way, way south.
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Lord, when you start quoting Springsteen as a great and wise Oracle, you seriously have some growing up to do.
Obama is an elitist. I have lots of relatives in small town PA, and none of them are bitter because of these reasons.
And, they were religious and shot guns their entire lives because they Love Jesus and the sport of shooting, not because of their political views.
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Giddy up.
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#941319 - 04/14/08 01:56 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
MB Guy
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"......it’s one thing for a German thinker to assert that “religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature.” It’s another thing for an American presidential candidate to claim that we “cling to ... religion” out of economic frustration.
And it’s a particularly odd claim for Barack Obama to make. After all, in his speech at the 2004 Democratic convention, he emphasized with pride that blue-state Americans, too, “worship an awesome God.”
What’s more, he’s written eloquently in his memoir, “Dreams From My Father,” of his own religious awakening upon hearing the Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s “Audacity of Hope” sermon, and of the complexity of his religious commitment. You’d think he’d do other believers the courtesy of assuming they’ve also thought about their religious beliefs.
But Obama in San Francisco does no courtesy to his fellow Americans. Look at the other claims he makes about those small-town voters.
Obama ascribes their anti-trade sentiment to economic frustration — as if there are no respectable arguments against more free-trade agreements. This is particularly cynical, since he himself has been making those arguments, exploiting and fanning this sentiment that he decries. Aren’t we then entitled to assume Obama’s opposition to Nafta and the Colombian trade pact is merely cynical pandering to frustrated Americans?
Then there’s what Obama calls “anti-immigrant sentiment.” Has Obama done anything to address it? It was John McCain, not Obama, who took political risks to try to resolve the issue of illegal immigration by putting his weight behind an attempt at immigration reform.
Furthermore, some concerns about unchecked and unmonitored illegal immigration are surely legitimate. Obama voted in 2006 (to take just one example) for the Secure Fence Act, which was intended to control the Mexican border through various means, including hundreds of miles of border fence. Was Obama then just accommodating bigotry?
As for small-town Americans’ alleged “antipathy to people who aren’t like them”: During what Obama considers the terrible Clinton-Bush years of economic frustration, by any measurement of public opinion polling or observed behavior, Americans have become far more tolerant and respectful of minorities who are not “like them.” Surely Obama knows this. Was he simply flattering his wealthy San Francisco donors by casting aspersions on the idiocy of small-town life?
That leaves us with guns. Gun ownership has been around for an awfully long time. And people may have good reasons to, and in any case have a constitutional right to, own guns — as Obama himself has been acknowledging on the campaign trail, when he presents himself as more sympathetic to gun owners than a typical Democrat.
What does this mean for Obama’s presidential prospects? He’s disdainful of small-town America — one might say, of bourgeois America. He’s usually good at disguising this. But in San Francisco the mask slipped. And it’s not so easy to get elected by a citizenry you patronize.
And what are the grounds for his supercilious disdain? If he were a war hero, if he had a career of remarkable civic achievement or public service — then he could perhaps be excused an unattractive but in a sense understandable hauteur. But what has Barack Obama accomplished that entitles him to look down on his fellow Americans? "
-----thoughts of Bill Kristol in National Review Online
_________________________
Societies that do not find work in and of itself "pleasing to God and requisite to Man," tend to be highly corrupt.
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#941358 - 04/14/08 02:34 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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Joined: Nov 2001
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FINALLY ABOVE the gnat line
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Mr. Obama's comments were more indicative of his own prejudice than that of others. He keeps reinforcing this view of him as a man incapable of uniting the country because he is so busy denigrating folks who aren't like him.
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"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free." - Frederick Douglass
My Opinion Only.
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#941383 - 04/14/08 02:53 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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Perhaps he really did just misspeak? He had very good clarifications over the weekend at events, at The Compassion Forum last night, and surely will be able to respond during the debate on Wed. night.
I don't believe he is denigrating anyone. well thanks for this unbiased condescension
_________________________
Societies that do not find work in and of itself "pleasing to God and requisite to Man," tend to be highly corrupt.
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#941398 - 04/14/08 03:05 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Pale Rider
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Joined: May 2004
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Way, way south.
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Man, if that's true, he misspeaks A LOT.
I wonder if he was President and was in crucial talks with other governmental leaders he would misspeak this much.
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Giddy up.
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#941432 - 04/14/08 03:24 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
MB Guy
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Fortress of Solitude
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The man simply echoes his true sentiments. No elitist thinks that they are actually being condescending to those they are in fact being condescending to. They are elitist sentiments.
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"Beneath an ever watchful eye...the angels of the temple fly"
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#941486 - 04/14/08 04:07 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Pale Rider
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Power Poster
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 7,624
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Perhaps he really did just misspeak? He had very good clarifications over the weekend at events, at The Compassion Forum last night, and surely will be able to respond during the debate on Wed. night.
I don't believe he is denigrating anyone. well thanks for this unbiased condescension Easy old man. I do not believe I was being condescending to anyone.
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#941501 - 04/14/08 04:19 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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In the Snow :)
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I don't think you're being condescending, Neo - but I have to agree with MB Guy. He is a very scripted candidate. When Obama speaks off the cuff, he seems to have a lot of problems. What happens when he's in a sensitive meeting with the President of a not too friendly country and there's a lot of pressure on him? We need someone who is cool under fire. This is where experience comes in - and if in Obama's case it's not just the lack of experience, then it is even MUCH worse!
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The woods are lovely dark & deep & I have promises to keep & miles to go before I sleep and miles to go before I sleep
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#941579 - 04/14/08 05:42 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Hated By Some
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Power Poster
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 3,275
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Ron, does it not concern you even just a little bit about Obama's judgment (let alone his beliefs) that:
He sees no problem serving on a board (and being friends with) an admitted - proud in fact - domestic terrorist who says his only regret is that he didn't do more (terrorism)?
He puts the incendiary pastor on some committee that is part of his campaign and publicly proclaims him as a trusted spiritual adviser?
He makes the unscripted remarks about working class PA people believing what they do (God, gun rights, etc.) because they're bitter and frustrated? Does that not seem even a little condescending to you?
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Nobody's perfect, not even a perfect stranger.
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#941587 - 04/14/08 05:50 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
rainman
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Power Poster
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 7,624
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Thomas Frank On Obama: Not That Controversial Thomas Frank, the author who redefined the perception of the red state/blue state divide in America, says he doesn't find Sen. Barack Obama's comments on the bitterness of small-town Midwesterners all that alarming.
"People are bitter in small towns," Frank told the Huffington Post. "People are bitter everywhere. I don't know if you have seen the stock market -- people are bitter about their situation. It doesn't strike me as a very controversial statement." Frank, who famously penned the book "What's The Matter With Kansas?" had been away this past weekend and missed the controversy surrounding Obama's remarks. Read the quotes over the phone, he said he was "disinclined to comment" further as he was hoping to devote his time to his upcoming book on Republican politicians in Washington D.C. rather than media requests.
However, his comments on the Obama flap reflect what was the underlying premise of his hit book: mainly, that people were voting against their economic interests because conservatives had galvanized them around political-identity issues.
"I chose to observe the phenomenon by going back to my home state of Kansas, a place that has been particularly ill-served by the conservative policies of privatization, deregulation, and de-unionization, and that has reacted to its worsening situation by becoming more conservative still," Frank wrote of the methodology behind his book in 2004. "Indeed, Kansas is today the site of a ferocious struggle within the Republican Party, a fight pitting affluent moderate Republicans against conservatives from the working-class districts and the downmarket churches. And it's hard not to feel some affection for the conservative faction, even as you deplore their political views. After all, these are the people that liberalism is supposed to speak to: the hard-luck farmers, the bitter factory workers, the outsiders, the disenfranchised, the disreputable." I placed my emphasis in bold. That, in my own opinion, is the whole point. People ARE bitter.
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#941597 - 04/14/08 05:56 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 34,318
under the Lone Star
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Perhaps he really did just misspeak? He had very good clarifications over the weekend at events, at The Compassion Forum last night, and surely will be able to respond during the debate on Wed. night.
I don't believe he is denigrating anyone. well thanks for this unbiased condescension Easy old man. I do not believe I was being condescending to anyone. now you insult me due to my advanced years!!!!! you elites just can't let it go!
_________________________
Societies that do not find work in and of itself "pleasing to God and requisite to Man," tend to be highly corrupt.
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#941598 - 04/14/08 05:56 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Imagine
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Joined: May 2004
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Way, way south.
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Yes, maybe people are bitter, but that has nothing to do with their religious beliefs nor their rights to own guns.
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Giddy up.
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#941606 - 04/14/08 06:04 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
MB Guy
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In the Snow :)
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It doesn't matter what he sounded like when he 'commented on his comments'. What matters is where the emphasis was when he originally made the comments.
And you all had better watch out because I actually do live in small town, Pennsylvania; with my guns; and my Church; and am bitter and frustrated (about all the Democrats crowding our airwaves for another week with this campaign cr*p!)
_________________________
The woods are lovely dark & deep & I have promises to keep & miles to go before I sleep and miles to go before I sleep
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#941610 - 04/14/08 06:08 PM
Re: Is What He Said Wrong? Honestly?
Pale Rider
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Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 34,318
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this is the greatest country in the history of the world Neo
we have done more to fight poverty, fight disease, oppression, and on and on - this was not done by bitterness, but by upbeat people of hope and faith and freedom!
know if you are bitter, we are sorry for you, people are not xenophobic by clinging to their church or guns.
O's statement was flat out an elitist viewpoint of a liberal who wants to win an election without the blue collar conservative, hayseed, illiterate democrats -
it was either Schrum or the snakehead that said as much yesterday with Russertt
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Societies that do not find work in and of itself "pleasing to God and requisite to Man," tend to be highly corrupt.
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