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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: michael97123 who wrote (411206)8/28/2008 3:40:01 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576601
 
"You arent a christian at all"

So you would like Christians to go to anti-Christ Jews like yourself, Zionist Jews who believe in the perversions of the Talmud, to learn about "real" Christians?



To: michael97123 who wrote (411206)8/28/2008 3:41:03 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 1576601
 
Dems nervous over Invesco risks

Charles Mahtesian Wed Aug 27, 10:37 PM ET

DENVER - Senior Democratic officials are expressing serious concerns about the political risks posed by Barack Obama’s acceptance speech at Invesco Field at Mile High Stadium Thursday evening.
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From the elaborate stagecraft to the teeming crowd of 80,000 cheering partisans, the vagaries of the weather to the unpredictable audience reaction, the optics surrounding the stadium event have heightened worries that the Obama campaign is engaging in a high-risk endeavor in an uncontrollable environment.

A common concern: that the stadium appearance plays against Obama’s convention goal of lowering his star wattage and connecting with average Americans and that it gives Republicans a chance to drive home their message that the Democratic nominee is a narcissistic celebrity candidate.

“We already know he is a rock star, we already know he can bring 85,000 people together in a stadium. He has done it multiple times. He needs to talk to people who haven’t made up their minds yet,” said Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen.

“It’s likely that the campaign would do it differently if it had to do it again because the decision was made before the European trip,” said a senior Democratic elected officeholder who has worked closely with the Obama campaign. The GOP narrative of Obama as celebrity took root during that trip, where the Illinois senator played to large crowds of adoring Europeans.

Obama campaign officials acknowledged the apprehension Wednesday.

“I have heard some of the concerns and criticism that it’s such a big venue,” said a senior Obama campaign aide. “It’s no surprise that people could be a little nervous. We’re trying to do something new.”

Another senior Obama aide noted Tuesday there were only two options for what the campaign wanted to accomplish — either do it in the convention hall, in front of the delegates, or somewhere else. “A diner’s not an option,” the aide said.

The campaign noted that, aside from the speech itself, it's designed to be “a working event” that enables attendees to phone bank and reach out to potential voters through a variety of online tools. Holding the speech in a venue that holds 80,000 people also allows tens of thousands of Colorado residents to attend and participate — no small consideration since Colorado is a battleground state where Obama and McCain are neck and neck in the polls.

“Winning Colorado is a very important component,” said the Obama aide.

But the Invesco Field speech, with its massive crowd and the celebrity-style imagery it could evoke, is already being teed up by Republicans eager to hammer home the celebrity theme.

The McCain campaign Wednesday released a memo mockingly titled, “Proper Attire for the Temple of Obama (The Barackopolis),” a reference to the classical stage design in place for his speech. The campaign is already prepared to pull the trigger on ads spun out of the Invesco Field event, perhaps rolling out ads similar to the notorious spot featuring Paris Hilton and Britney Spears.

“We’ll put it in play against him,” said McCain spokesman Brian Rogers.

Some Democrats insist the GOP approach will backfire. Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts said the visuals of tens of thousands of people cheering for Obama can help his campaign by evoking comparisons to John F. Kennedy.

“I think he’s in that league,” Markey said.

Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio also sounded a confident note about the political impact of the forum, asserting it will prove Obama’s message has wide resonance.

“Would you want to play the Super Bowl in a Little League park?” he asked.

Bredesen also acknowledged that while he has concerns, Obama is a virtuoso performer who can’t be underestimated. “I don’t think that’s the right thing, but they are not asking me and they have got a great track record so far,” he said. “I would love to see him out showing a certain kind of humility, being in touch with people who go to breakfast at the Waffle House, sending a message.”

Martin Kady II, Daniel W. Reilly and Kenneth P. Vogel contributed to this story.



To: michael97123 who wrote (411206)8/28/2008 4:20:51 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 1576601
 
Kabala?



To: michael97123 who wrote (411206)8/29/2008 7:24:58 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1576601
 
Do you remember this about our klansman?

''I believe there's a climate in this country that has become anti-Euro-American,'' said Emile Vidrine, a campus minister at the University of Southwestern Louisiana who is spending his summer working as a volunteer for the (David) Duke campaign. ''I'm not putting anyone else down, but we have to put a stop to this idea that we can't stand up tall and say the European white man is one of the great races in the world.''

query.nytimes.com