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


To: bentway who wrote (567684)5/23/2010 11:49:34 AM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1576990
 
electricity is bad, it causes global warming, the libs and Obama are trying to end our dependence on electricity. We should be so lucky as the Mexicans who can live without it, on day we will be there, with the help of the"ONE"



To: bentway who wrote (567684)5/23/2010 11:50:24 AM
From: d[-_-]b  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576990
 
But, they sacrifice things like electricity and running water in much of the countryside.

Yawn - send Obama if he wants to be president of mexico. Everything you babble on about is worse farther south and mexico just kicks'em out of the mexican paradise - we should do the same.



To: bentway who wrote (567684)5/23/2010 12:43:08 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576990
 
let the impeachment begin.

White House mum on whether Sestak offered a job
May 23 12:31 PM US/Eastern
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WASHINGTON (AP) - What job did the White House offer Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak if he skipped the Pennsylvania Senate primary and who made the offer?

Sestak isn't saying—and the White House only says "nothing inappropriate" took place.

Sestak won his party's Senate nomination last week. His opponent was longtime Sen. Arlen Specter, who ditched the GOP last year and became a Democrat.

Sestak says the White House offered him a job—he's not saying what it was—if he would leave Specter alone.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs isn't saying if Sestak was offered a job, but he does say White House lawyers and others have looked into the matter.

Gibbs was on CBS' "Face the Nation" while Sestak was on CBS and on NBC's "Meet the Press." White House mum on whether Sestak offered a job
May 23 12:31 PM US/Eastern
Comments (2) Email to a friend Share on Facebook Tweet this Bookmark and Share
WASHINGTON (AP) - What job did the White House offer Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak if he skipped the Pennsylvania Senate primary and who made the offer?

Sestak isn't saying—and the White House only says "nothing inappropriate" took place.

Sestak won his party's Senate nomination last week. His opponent was longtime Sen. Arlen Specter, who ditched the GOP last year and became a Democrat.

Sestak says the White House offered him a job—he's not saying what it was—if he would leave Specter alone.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs isn't saying if Sestak was offered a job, but he does say White House lawyers and others have looked into the matter.

Gibbs was on CBS' "Face the Nation" while Sestak was on CBS and on NBC's "Meet the Press."