BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   Cain Drops Out (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/144191-cain-drops-out.html)

X ` Man[_3_] December 3rd 11 08:06 PM

Cain Drops Out
 

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.

--
It warms my heart to see that the Republithugs are left with a true
Morton's Fork...Romney or, (ugh) the Newt.

Canuck57[_9_] December 3rd 11 09:33 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.

--
All successful people have one thing in common, if even for a moment
they think rationally.

bpuharic December 3rd 11 09:37 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sat, 03 Dec 2011 14:33:03 -0700, Canuck57
wrote:

On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.


hey this is the american right. no one is too insane for them. hell,
canuck, why not try running yourself? if they let you out of the
asylum


JustWait December 3rd 11 10:17 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/3/2011 4:33 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.


If Trump runs, it guarantees an Obama victory in November...

Canuck57[_9_] December 3rd 11 10:29 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 03/12/2011 3:17 PM, JustWait wrote:
On 12/3/2011 4:33 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.


If Trump runs, it guarantees an Obama victory in November...


I would bet not. People are really ****ed with the professional
politician **** ups in DC.

--
All successful people have one thing in common, if even for a moment
they think rationally.

X ` Man December 3rd 11 11:21 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/3/11 4:33 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.



Ron Paul and Michele Bachmann are nuts. Period. Trump is a moron. Not
one of the three is qualified in any way for high political office. You
sure hate the United States.

I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

bpuharic December 3rd 11 11:25 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sat, 03 Dec 2011 18:21:28 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:



Ron Paul and Michele Bachmann are nuts. Period. Trump is a moron. Not
one of the three is qualified in any way for high political office. You
sure hate the United States.

I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.


andrew sullivan made the comment that newt is a stupid person's view
of what a smart person looks like

X ` Man[_3_] December 3rd 11 11:28 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/3/11 6:25 PM, bpuharic wrote:
On Sat, 03 Dec 2011 18:21:28 -0500, X `
wrote:



Ron Paul and Michele Bachmann are nuts. Period. Trump is a moron. Not
one of the three is qualified in any way for high political office. You
sure hate the United States.

I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.


andrew sullivan made the comment that newt is a stupid person's view
of what a smart person looks like



Newtie also has a short fuse. Gotta admire the GOP...it hates the middle
class, latinos, women, gays, blacks...not the party with a future, eh?

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

BAR[_2_] December 3rd 11 11:54 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
In article ,
says...

On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA ? Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.


The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.


Ron Paul is an isolationist. You can't have a leader who ignores that
the world is a very small place.

X ` Man December 4th 11 01:38 AM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/3/11 5:29 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 3:17 PM, JustWait wrote:
On 12/3/2011 4:33 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate, denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.

The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.


If Trump runs, it guarantees an Obama victory in November...


I would bet not. People are really ****ed with the professional
politician **** ups in DC.


Hehheh. Trump is a political loser. Ron Paul is what, the second or
third candidate to announce he will not participate in a "debate" hosted
by the trumpster.

Drifter[_5_] December 4th 11 02:05 AM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/3/2011 8:38 PM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/3/11 5:29 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 3:17 PM, JustWait wrote:
On 12/3/2011 4:33 PM, Canuck57 wrote:
On 03/12/2011 1:06 PM, X ` Man wrote:

ATLANTA — Herman Cain, a little known businessman who became a
frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, suspended his
campaign
Saturday following allegations of an extramarital affair and claims of
sexual harassment.

For the past month, Cain has held on as an embattled candidate,
denying
accusations that he had sexually harassed several women when he headed
the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s. With his standing in
the polls already slipping, an Atlanta woman this week came forward
and
alleged that she and Cain had carried on a 13-year affair.

The affair did him in. And not doing the polygraph says it all. System
is working.

But Gingrich? OMG, you really have the top three as garbage choices.
Only Ron Paul and Bachman are any good. Lets hope Trump runs as an
independent. Sad to say though, even Newt would be better than 0bama.

If Trump won as a independent it would restore my current lack of faith
in US democracy. As in fact the party political game is a rigged race,
money buys the smear, the fear and he brainwashing.


If Trump runs, it guarantees an Obama victory in November...


I would bet not. People are really ****ed with the professional
politician **** ups in DC.


Hehheh. Trump is a political loser. Ron Paul is what, the second or
third candidate to announce he will not participate in a "debate" hosted
by the trumpster.


You'd love it if bozo ran unopposed, wouldn't you?

1-20-13 The end of an error

Eisboch[_8_] December 4th 11 10:12 AM

Cain Drops Out
 


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the
GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given
any thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant
the same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved,
giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch



X ` Man December 4th 11 12:20 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved, giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


Drifter[_5_] December 4th 11 01:00 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/4/2011 7:20 AM, X ` Man wrote:
On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved, giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


You are a poster boy for the single minded assholes that Eisboch is
talking about. And you don't get compensated for it. That makes you a
*moron*.
--
1-20-13 The end of an error

iBoaterer[_2_] December 4th 11 01:25 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
In article ,
says...

"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the
GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given
any thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant
the same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved,
giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch


I agree with everything you've just said.

iBoaterer[_2_] December 4th 11 01:25 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
In article ,
says...

On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved, giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


And the current Dems are so far left that they won't work with the
right, either.

Wayne.B December 4th 11 02:05 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sun, 4 Dec 2011 05:12:06 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote:

As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given
any thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.


===
Nicely said.
===

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant
the same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved,
giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.


===

Absolutely right. Let's figure out how to get term limits enacted.


Wayne.B December 4th 11 02:06 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 07:20:08 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


===

Term limits would be a good start.


Eisboch[_8_] December 4th 11 02:20 PM

Cain Drops Out
 


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...

On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and
in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the
GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to
a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given
any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash
DC that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant
the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of
them are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved,
giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric
goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility
for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

-----------------------------------------------------

Even more reasons for a strong, two party (minimum) political system.
The current extreme far right position of the GOP is largely a result
of the influences
of the "TeaParty" group. The Democratic politicians could just as
easily go overboard as a whole, influenced by the "Occupy Everything"
group. Neither is good overall for this country.

Conservatives should embrace only the thoughtfully considered
components of
the Teabagger's positions that are justified and beneficial ... not
the whole package.
The Dems should do the same with those justified issues represented by
the Occupy crowd.

Instead, we currently have all joining each representative causes, in
whole.
When you listen to a Republican or a Democrat giving a speech or being
interviewed
you could very easily just record and play the same audio for everyone
featured.
It's all the same. You can read it here in this newsgroup for
cripe's sake.
Each side repeating the same arguments in the same manner, using the
same
words.

Whatever happened to being an individual with unique and different
ideas and prospectives?




iBoaterer[_2_] December 4th 11 02:31 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
In article ,
says...

"X ` Man" wrote in message ...

On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and
in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the
GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to
a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given
any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash
DC that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant
the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of
them are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved,
giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric
goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility
for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

-----------------------------------------------------

Even more reasons for a strong, two party (minimum) political system.
The current extreme far right position of the GOP is largely a result
of the influences
of the "TeaParty" group. The Democratic politicians could just as
easily go overboard as a whole, influenced by the "Occupy Everything"
group. Neither is good overall for this country.

Conservatives should embrace only the thoughtfully considered
components of
the Teabagger's positions that are justified and beneficial ... not
the whole package.
The Dems should do the same with those justified issues represented by
the Occupy crowd.

Instead, we currently have all joining each representative causes, in
whole.
When you listen to a Republican or a Democrat giving a speech or being
interviewed
you could very easily just record and play the same audio for everyone
featured.
It's all the same. You can read it here in this newsgroup for
cripe's sake.
Each side repeating the same arguments in the same manner, using the
same
words.

Whatever happened to being an individual with unique and different
ideas and prospectives?


Amen, brother!

X ` Man[_3_] December 4th 11 02:45 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/4/11 9:20 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...

On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved, giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

-----------------------------------------------------

Even more reasons for a strong, two party (minimum) political system.
The current extreme far right position of the GOP is largely a result of
the influences
of the "TeaParty" group. The Democratic politicians could just as
easily go overboard as a whole, influenced by the "Occupy Everything"
group. Neither is good overall for this country.

Conservatives should embrace only the thoughtfully considered components of
the Teabagger's positions that are justified and beneficial ... not the
whole package.
The Dems should do the same with those justified issues represented by
the Occupy crowd.

Instead, we currently have all joining each representative causes, in
whole.
When you listen to a Republican or a Democrat giving a speech or being
interviewed
you could very easily just record and play the same audio for everyone
featured.
It's all the same. You can read it here in this newsgroup for cripe's sake.
Each side repeating the same arguments in the same manner, using the same
words.

Whatever happened to being an individual with unique and different ideas
and prospectives?





I don't see or hear a majority of Democratic national officeholders
espousing many economic views that are different from traditional middle
class values, nor do I see or hear those officeholders espousing
radicial views aimed at corporations, banks, brokerage houses. I for one
would like to see some stringent regulations enacted against the looting
shenanigans of the latter, but I don't see it happening.

The GOP these days is far, far, far to the right of center. The Dems are
a little left of center.

I'm not sure what in the Teabagger package is "justified" or
"beneficial" to our society.

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

X ` Man[_3_] December 4th 11 03:01 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/4/11 9:06 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 07:20:08 -0500, X `
wrote:

The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


===

Term limits would be a good start.


What limits do you have in mind? Why do you think limits would stop the
flow of funds? What evidence do you have to offer?

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

iBoaterer[_2_] December 4th 11 03:08 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
In article , dump-on-
says...

On 12/4/11 9:20 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...

On 12/4/11 5:12 AM, Eisboch wrote:


"X ` Man" wrote in message ...


I hope the nominee is Newt. I'd love to see Obama win in a walk and in
the process just about skewer any future presidential hopes for the GOP.

-----------------------------------------------------

I could never vote for Newt, but the last part of your sentence
bothers me.
As an independent voter, it disturbs me to see people so married to a
particular party
that future, highly qualified and capable people will never be given any
thoughtful
consideration .... simply because of their party affiliation.

Right now we happen to have a bunch of politicians populating Wash DC
that
are behaving like school children wanting lollipops. They all chant the
same
representative BS of their party mantra, and the vast majority of them
are
political whores chasing $$ contributions. Even Obama is involved, giving
populist speeches full of anti big-business rhetoric while accepting
re-election
contributions from the same business groups he is castigating in the
speeches.

This country needs a strong, two party system as a check and balance
safety net.
Right now we just don't have enough honest, mature people in either.

Eisboch




The current GOP is so far to the right that it will take a string of
election results disastrous for it before what remains of the party
rebuilds on a center-right frame. If it can't return to the
center-right, it'll become and remain a fringe party full of nutcases
and nutcase candidates. As far as the anti-big-business rhetoric goes,
yeah, I agree...big business in collusion with big banks and big
brokerage houses and big politicians have created a situation in which
this country is being stripped clean of assets. The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

-----------------------------------------------------

Even more reasons for a strong, two party (minimum) political system.
The current extreme far right position of the GOP is largely a result of
the influences
of the "TeaParty" group. The Democratic politicians could just as
easily go overboard as a whole, influenced by the "Occupy Everything"
group. Neither is good overall for this country.

Conservatives should embrace only the thoughtfully considered components of
the Teabagger's positions that are justified and beneficial ... not the
whole package.
The Dems should do the same with those justified issues represented by
the Occupy crowd.

Instead, we currently have all joining each representative causes, in
whole.
When you listen to a Republican or a Democrat giving a speech or being
interviewed
you could very easily just record and play the same audio for everyone
featured.
It's all the same. You can read it here in this newsgroup for cripe's sake.
Each side repeating the same arguments in the same manner, using the same
words.

Whatever happened to being an individual with unique and different ideas
and prospectives?





I don't see or hear a majority of Democratic national officeholders
espousing many economic views that are different from traditional middle
class values, nor do I see or hear those officeholders espousing
radicial views aimed at corporations, banks, brokerage houses. I for one
would like to see some stringent regulations enacted against the looting
shenanigans of the latter, but I don't see it happening.

The GOP these days is far, far, far to the right of center. The Dems are
a little left of center.

I'm not sure what in the Teabagger package is "justified" or
"beneficial" to our society.


If you don't think the left has moved left as much as the right has
moved right, just look at our national debt.

Wayne.B December 4th 11 06:45 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 10:01:31 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?


===

Term limits would be a good start.


What limits do you have in mind? Why do you think limits would stop the
flow of funds? What evidence do you have to offer?


=====

Most, if not all, of the money in politics comes in the form of
re-election contributions. The reason is simple: Direct bribes are
illegal but re-election assistance is not only legal but necessary.
Media advertising costs a lot and that is not going to change.

With some reasonable term limit (something like 2 terms, same as the
presidency) there would presumably be less need for re-election
funding and less opportunity for establishing an entrenched power
base.

Too many of our current legislators look at it as a career
opportunity.


X ` Man[_3_] December 4th 11 06:51 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On 12/4/11 1:45 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 10:01:31 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

===

Term limits would be a good start.


What limits do you have in mind? Why do you think limits would stop the
flow of funds? What evidence do you have to offer?


=====

Most, if not all, of the money in politics comes in the form of
re-election contributions. The reason is simple: Direct bribes are
illegal but re-election assistance is not only legal but necessary.
Media advertising costs a lot and that is not going to change.

With some reasonable term limit (something like 2 terms, same as the
presidency) there would presumably be less need for re-election
funding and less opportunity for establishing an entrenched power
base.

Too many of our current legislators look at it as a career
opportunity.



Thanks to the Supreme Court, there's virtually no limit corporations can
spend to support the election of a *new* congressman/woman they can own.
Getting the money out of politics is the answer.

--
http://flickr.com/gp/hakr/8272ug

Wayne.B December 4th 11 08:12 PM

Cain Drops Out
 
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 13:51:19 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

Thanks to the Supreme Court, there's virtually no limit corporations can
spend to support the election of a *new* congressman/woman they can own.
Getting the money out of politics is the answer.


===

With term limits the "ownership" is also limited. It's important to
note that not all of the money comes from corporations. There are
many other powerful and well funded special interest groups.


Eisboch[_7_] December 4th 11 08:21 PM

Cain Drops Out
 

"X ` Man" wrote in message
m...
On 12/4/11 1:45 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 04 Dec 2011 10:01:31 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:

The only possibility for
change is to get the money out of politics...and how the hell is that
supposed to happen?

===

Term limits would be a good start.


What limits do you have in mind? Why do you think limits would stop the
flow of funds? What evidence do you have to offer?


=====

Most, if not all, of the money in politics comes in the form of
re-election contributions. The reason is simple: Direct bribes are
illegal but re-election assistance is not only legal but necessary.
Media advertising costs a lot and that is not going to change.

With some reasonable term limit (something like 2 terms, same as the
presidency) there would presumably be less need for re-election
funding and less opportunity for establishing an entrenched power
base.

Too many of our current legislators look at it as a career
opportunity.



Thanks to the Supreme Court, there's virtually no limit corporations can
spend to support the election of a *new* congressman/woman they can own.
Getting the money out of politics is the answer.


It's not just campaign financing though. It's influence peddling for
projects,
contracts, legisation and more. By limiting the terms of people serving in
Congress they have less time to develop cozy relationships with companies
and
other organizations with special interests.

12 years (two terms) for the Senate.
6 years for the House.

Eisboch

Eisboch



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:35 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com