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


To: i-node who wrote (422903)10/6/2008 12:19:35 PM
From: Alighieri  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575984
 
He discusses it in his books. Go read them.

So what?

How did she find out about Ayers, by the way? The woman who couldn't tell Katie Couric which newspapers she likes to read finally found something that interested her in The New York Times, a paper that is supposed to be her sworn enemy. Fancy that.

Palin was barking about Obama at the same time it was being reported that McCain's campaign wants to "change the subject" from the economy to Obama's character, as if turning away from the economy could possibly happen in the financial crisis of 2008.


Al



To: i-node who wrote (422903)10/6/2008 12:30:06 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1575984
 
Obama's college Roommates?

What do you and NewsMax have against Pakistanis? Your president says Pakistanis are our friends?

Another dog that won't hunt.

If this is all so innocent why doesn't Obama just answer the question?

Why won't McCain release his medical records to the public?



To: i-node who wrote (422903)10/6/2008 12:34:41 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1575984
 
U.S. Sen. John Warner declines to endorse Jim Gilmore

By Warren Fiske
The Virginian-Pilot

© October 5, 2008
RICHMOND

Retiring U.S. Sen. John Warner on Saturday voiced disappointment in fellow Republican Jim Gilmore's efforts to succeed him this fall and declined to endorse him.

Instead, Warner suggested that he may wind up backing Democrat Mark Warner in the race. The two Warners are not related.


John Warner took exception to Gilmore's strong condemnation of a $700 billion Wall Street rescue package that was passed by the House of Representatives on Friday and signed by President Bush.

"I'm disappointed that he spoke against the rescue package that's vital to Virginia and vital to the nation," John Warner said during a telephone news conference.

John Warner, who chose not to seek a sixth Senate term this fall, voted for the bailout last week.

Gilmore, trailing badly in polls, repeatedly criticized the rescue in a Friday night debate with Mark Warner in Roanoke. "It's not right to take $700 billion of money from the taxpayers, men and women who work hard every day, and put it in the arms of the high rollers of Wall Street," he said.

Gilmore said the bailout will create pressure for higher taxes. He said the federal government, instead of buying bad debt from financial institutions, should have loaned them money at low interest to capitalize markets.

Mark Warner supported the rescue package, saying it will prevent deep financial turmoil and job losses. John Warner, during a news conference called to discuss his support for Republican John McCain for president, said he is following the Senate race closely. When asked if he is backing Gilmore, the senator criticized his fellow Republican's position on the bailout.

When asked if he would support Mark Warner, the senator said: "There have been occasions when I've supported Democratic candidates, but I'm not there yet."

John Warner has a history of exasperating the GOP by refusing to back Republican candidates he thought were dogmatic or untrustworthy. In 1993, he refused to back Michael Farris, a Christian conservative running for lieutenant governor. In 1994, he supported an independent candidate for the U.S. Senate instead of Republican Oliver North, the central figure in the Iran-Contra scandal.

Gilmore, in a written statement, voiced respect for John Warner but noted that a majority of Virginia's U.S. House delegation opposed the bailout. "If we allow innocent taxpayers who are already struggling to be saddled with the bailout, what comes next?" Gilmore asked.

Warren Fiske, (804) 697-1565, warren.fiske@pilotonline.com

hamptonroads.com



To: i-node who wrote (422903)10/6/2008 12:55:42 PM
From: combjelly  Respond to of 1575984
 
"He discusses it in his books. Go read them."

And you know they are Muslim, how?

"If this is all so innocent why doesn't Obama just answer the question?"

Umm, right. Just because it could be true makes it so.

Convenient.

Personally, I think he got the money by jacking Chicago area 7-11s.