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OT--New Gallup poll
Bush up 14 points.
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1 Attachment(s)
Whoops, my bad. 13 points. :-) :-) :-)
Bush clear leader in poll By Susan Page, USA TODAY WASHINGTON - President Bush has surged to a 13-point lead over Sen. John Kerry among likely voters, a new Gallup Poll shows. The 55%-42% match-up is the first statistically significant edge either candidate has held this year. http://www.usatoday.com/news/politic...lup-poll_x.htm "NOYB" wrote in message ... Bush up 14 points. |
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 00:04:01 -0400, "NOYB" wrote:
Bush up 14 points. As much as I dislike what Bush has done to this country, I have mixed feelings about who I want to win the election. Bush has made such a complete mess of virtually everything he's had the opportunity to have an effect on, who ever gets elected will have a impossible job to deal with. Whoever is in the next four years will go out wearing goat horns. I think the only way to swing the pendulum away from the fanatic right wing groups that now control the country is to go ahead and let the country go down the crapper. We'll see if blaming all the problems on the previous administration works with Bush's next four years. With the mess the US is currently in, it makes a lot of sense to vote for the party you like the least. bb |
bb wrote:
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 00:04:01 -0400, "NOYB" wrote: Bush up 14 points. As much as I dislike what Bush has done to this country, I have mixed feelings about who I want to win the election. Bush has made such a complete mess of virtually everything he's had the opportunity to have an effect on, who ever gets elected will have a impossible job to deal with. Whoever is in the next four years will go out wearing goat horns. I think the only way to swing the pendulum away from the fanatic right wing groups that now control the country is to go ahead and let the country go down the crapper. We'll see if blaming all the problems on the previous administration works with Bush's next four years. With the mess the US is currently in, it makes a lot of sense to vote for the party you like the least. bb Some of my more radical friends (well, I only have a couple of them), tell me they've been rooting for Bush for several years, because they figure that his path of destruction will cut such a wide swath, the people will rise up in revolt. I believe the first part of their conjecture will come to pass...but I think Americans are too much the pussy to seek the kind of redress a revolt brings. -- Not dead, in jail, or a slave? Thank a liberal! And don't forget to pay your taxes so the rich don't have to! |
"Harry Krause" wrote in message ... bb wrote: On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 00:04:01 -0400, "NOYB" wrote: Bush up 14 points. As much as I dislike what Bush has done to this country, I have mixed feelings about who I want to win the election. Bush has made such a complete mess of virtually everything he's had the opportunity to have an effect on, who ever gets elected will have a impossible job to deal with. Whoever is in the next four years will go out wearing goat horns. I think the only way to swing the pendulum away from the fanatic right wing groups that now control the country is to go ahead and let the country go down the crapper. We'll see if blaming all the problems on the previous administration works with Bush's next four years. With the mess the US is currently in, it makes a lot of sense to vote for the party you like the least. bb Some of my more radical friends (well, I only have a couple of them), You don't have quite as many since the Patriot Act was passed, eh? tell me they've been rooting for Bush for several years, because they figure that his path of destruction will cut such a wide swath, the people will rise up in revolt. They obviously used too much acid in the 60's. |
NOYB wrote:
"Harry Krause" wrote in message ... bb wrote: On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 00:04:01 -0400, "NOYB" wrote: Bush up 14 points. As much as I dislike what Bush has done to this country, I have mixed feelings about who I want to win the election. Bush has made such a complete mess of virtually everything he's had the opportunity to have an effect on, who ever gets elected will have a impossible job to deal with. Whoever is in the next four years will go out wearing goat horns. I think the only way to swing the pendulum away from the fanatic right wing groups that now control the country is to go ahead and let the country go down the crapper. We'll see if blaming all the problems on the previous administration works with Bush's next four years. With the mess the US is currently in, it makes a lot of sense to vote for the party you like the least. bb Some of my more radical friends (well, I only have a couple of them), You don't have quite as many since the Patriot Act was passed, eh? You mean, of course, the Fascista Takeover Act. tell me they've been rooting for Bush for several years, because they figure that his path of destruction will cut such a wide swath, the people will rise up in revolt. They obviously used too much acid in the 60's. Naw, but I agree. Once the fascists take over, as the Bush fascists have, ordinary citizens have no chance ot taking their country back. Our situation here is very close in many ways to what was taking place in Germany in the early 1930s. -- Not dead, in jail, or a slave? Thank a liberal! And don't forget to pay your taxes so the rich don't have to! |
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 14:31:36 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: Our situation here is very close in many ways to what was taking place in Germany in the early 1930s. I've been feeling that way for several years now. If the next four years of Bush don't create a severe backlash against the radical right wing, I think we're going the way of Germany '39. bb |
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 18:20:32 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:
I think that's an unfair assessment. Instead of asking yourself if you're better off now than you were 4 years ago, ask yourself if you're better off now than you were 3 years ago.. Nobby, I respect your apparent faith in where Bush is taking this country, and the amount of time you put into responding to my post. That much effort deserves at least a reply. I don't care if we start from year one, year two, year three, or year 3.5 of the Bush presidency, I dont' like where he taking my country, or how he's doing it. Right off the bat, I feel Bush attempted to steal the election with the help of his brother in Florida. I don't like people being denied their right to vote. Maybe it's happened in Chicago with Daley, maybe it happened on both sides in other places, but I don't condone it in any situation. If Bush did win the election, he certainly didn't win any kind of mandate to take this country to the extreme right. If Bush had any consideration for half the country that didn't vote for him, he would have made some effort to moderate the extremists in his administration, but he didn't. Bush by no means represents me, or my views about how a society should be run. I particularly resent a born again hypocite letting right wing christians attempting to tell the people of this country how to live their lives. I'd feel the same way if it were some Muslim sect attempting to tell others in our society how to live. Keep your F**KING reliegious beliefs out of my life, thank you. 1) Stock market is up nearly 20% (compared to earning 1% on a CD at your bank, a 6-7% return per year is pretty damn good) By the stock market, I'm assuming you're referring to the DJ average? Between 00 and 01 the market was between 10,000 and 11,000. Four years later it's bumping between 10,000 and 10,500. Four years ago the market was struggling with high interest rates. Today the markets are kept afloat by extremely low interest rates and high liquidity. The dollar is in the dumpster. 2) We've had a net gain of 272,000 jobs. 272,000 jobs? Doesn't it take 150,000 jobs a month to break even? After four years Bush has a net loss of jobs, and that's a good thing? And what are the quality of the jobs that are being created? However, remember that the jobs indicator lags the economic news by *at least* 6 months. I'm sorry NOYB, Bush has been on the job, with complete control of the government, for 3.5 years. I can't buy into the "in six more months things will be rosey" story. 3) Our unemployment rate is 5.4%...which is right about where it was for most of the 90's...and right where it was in the first couple of months of Clinton's second term. Well, to me, this sure comes off as spin. I do know, during the Clinton years, my business did exceptionally well. I also know that things haven't been that good for the last four years. I'd go back to the bad old Clinton days in a heart beat. To put this in perspective, the European Union has a rate in excess of 10%. Some countries (ex--Spain) have rates near 15%. People are starving in Ethopia so we should be happy with Bush because we're not starving here, is that the message? 4) GDP (in real dollars) has grown by more than 12% since the 3rd quarter of 2001. From 2002 to 2003, it grew by 4.9%. That's indicative of a pretty robust economy. Other that real estate values, inflated by cheap money, I don't see any sign of a robust economy. Check out the earnings reports coming out this quarter from a majority of companies. There's no sign of a robust economy. 1) The Taliban is no longer in power in Afghanistan. Afghanistan is by no means cleared of the Taliban. 2) Saddam is gone. I'm of the opinion we were better off with Saddam in power but hobbled by sanctions. 3) The Patriot Act was passed. For me, that is certainly not a selling point for Bush. To give Ridge and his crew any authority over my life makes me extremely uneasy. If Bush had any concern for those from my perspective, he would have picked someone a bit less extreme to run such a powerful organization. I would hope that you consider all of the aforementioned facts before voting on November 2nd. I will. I take my right to vote very seriously. Although, I'm so discusted with the direction of our county, and how hateful and polarized our political system has become, I'm not far from withdrawing from the whole system. bb |
And the poor showing by Kerry hopefully causes a backlash against the ultra
left of the Democrats. Bill "bb" wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 14:31:36 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: Our situation here is very close in many ways to what was taking place in Germany in the early 1930s. I've been feeling that way for several years now. If the next four years of Bush don't create a severe backlash against the radical right wing, I think we're going the way of Germany '39. bb |
On Sat, 18 Sep 2004 02:59:12 +0000, bb wrote:
If Bush did win the election, he certainly didn't win any kind of mandate to take this country to the extreme right. If Bush had any consideration for half the country that didn't vote for him, he would have made some effort to moderate the extremists in his administration, but he didn't. Bush by no means represents me, or my views about how a society should be run. Yeah, now imagine what he could be like as a lame duck, God forbid. |
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