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#21
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posted to rec.boats
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Id rather have him as a president over Bush or Kerry.
I'd rather have him for my congressman than, Durbin, or Obama thunder wrote: On Tue, 08 Aug 2006 11:32:19 -0400, Harry Krause wrote: Lieberman might have avoided the primary today had he merely been "hawkish" on the war and otherwise been non-supportive of Bush and Bush's conduct of same. Suggesting he might run as an independent, if he looses, has also cost him. It's telling the primary voters that their votes don't count, and that he somehow deserves to be their Senator. If he is going to run as an independent, he should have at least kept his mouth shut until after the primary. |
#22
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posted to rec.boats
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Eisboch wrote:
Rightwingnuts have absolutely no influence on my high regard for Joe Lieberman. Mine neither. ... And his support of the war and/or perceived support of Bush have absolutely no influence either. OK, if you say so. ... I just think he's an honest man with strong convections. IMHO he is as honest & conscientious a Senator as is likely to be found on either side. *But* let me ask a few leading questions... why does the Republican publicity machine suddenly want to dabble in a Democrat election? I can think of several reasons- by having a lot of blatant Bush-Cheney Cheerleaders supporting Lieberman, he is more likely to lose, thereby removing a senior Democratic Senator with a lot of influence over where the money goes; also putting in place a more vulnerable Democrat. Did it not seem odd to anybody else that the rightwingnuts are suddenly so hot about Lieberman, when just a few short years ago they were screaming about what a commie-liberal-fag-traitor he was (almost as bad as shudder Al Gore). DSK |
#23
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posted to rec.boats
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On 8 Aug 2006 15:02:25 -0700, "basskisser" wrote:
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: Because I prefer courteous and vigorous debate than mindless robotism currently in vogue in the left wing of the Democrat Party. That's a heck of a statement, given that the right wingers would blindly follow BushCo off of a cliff like lemmings! Proof? You are awful quick to condemn all. -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John |
#24
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posted to rec.boats
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Oh please - I made a freakin' typo.
Funny kind of typo, you made it two or three times in a row. Another funny coincidence is that a lot of the rightwingnuts are making exactly the same typo as a sort of highbrow insult to the Democrats. George Will explained it a few months ago. And I do have the moral high ground. That's because I'm a moral kind of guy. Then why are you meddling in a primary election that is not in your state and not in your party? Because the Rove-bots and rightwingnuts are suddenly paying it a lot of attention? It's not curteous to enter a debate under false pretenses. Vigorous, maybe, but you can't expect anybody but fools to stand up & salute when you enter flying false colors. Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: I'll pretend to understand that. Ok, no, I won't. It's simple. You claim to be a moderate... let's see some moderate opinons from you. You claim to support Lieberman, yet in the one instance in your life when you could have voted for him because, as you say, you "really could support a moderate Democrat" you did not vote for him because his running mate was also a moderate Democrat. In other words, you're not really a moderate. You know that, I know that, so quit pretending. You're not fooling anybody. DSK |
#25
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "JohnH" wrote in message ... On 8 Aug 2006 15:02:25 -0700, "basskisser" wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: Because I prefer courteous and vigorous debate than mindless robotism currently in vogue in the left wing of the Democrat Party. That's a heck of a statement, given that the right wingers would blindly follow BushCo off of a cliff like lemmings! Proof? You are awful quick to condemn all. Kevin is projecting again -- ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** John |
#26
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 08 Aug 2006 20:38:52 -0400, DSK wrote:
Then why are you meddling in a primary election that is not in your state Last time I looked Shortwave Tom was very much in Connecticut. |
#27
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posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 08 Aug 2006 20:03:09 -0400, DSK wrote:
IMHO he is as honest & conscientious a Senator as is likely to be found on either side. *But* let me ask a few leading questions... why does the Republican publicity machine suddenly want to dabble in a Democrat election? I can think of several reasons- by having a lot of blatant Bush-Cheney Cheerleaders supporting Lieberman, he is more likely to lose, thereby removing a senior Democratic Senator with a lot of influence over where the money goes; also putting in place a more vulnerable Democrat. Did it not seem odd to anybody else that the rightwingnuts are suddenly so hot about Lieberman, when just a few short years ago they were screaming about what a commie-liberal-fag-traitor he was (almost as bad as shudder Al Gore). I can think of another very good reason Republicans are interested, fear. The main issue that brought Lieberman's defeat, was his support for the war in Iraq. That makes a lot of Republicans, and Democrats, worried. It's too early to say, how a Democrats defeat, in a relatively liberal state, will translate to a national election in November, but I would say, many do have reason to worry. |
#28
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "thunder" wrote in message ... I can think of another very good reason Republicans are interested, fear. The main issue that brought Lieberman's defeat, was his support for the war in Iraq. That makes a lot of Republicans, and Democrats, worried. It's too early to say, how a Democrats defeat, in a relatively liberal state, will translate to a national election in November, but I would say, many do have reason to worry. There may be an unexpected backlash in the national elections that does not favor Democratic candidates. Democrats everywhere will be taking notice of what happened to Joe Lieberman and collectively will be moving their respective positions more to the left, further narrowing voter options. Republican candidates will then have room to move more to a center "moderate" position and may end up having more appeal nationwide. Betcha Hillary starts moving left soon. This is going to be interesting. Eisboch |
#29
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wed, 09 Aug 2006 06:41:50 -0400, Eisboch wrote:
"thunder" wrote in message ... I can think of another very good reason Republicans are interested, fear. The main issue that brought Lieberman's defeat, was his support for the war in Iraq. That makes a lot of Republicans, and Democrats, worried. It's too early to say, how a Democrats defeat, in a relatively liberal state, will translate to a national election in November, but I would say, many do have reason to worry. There may be an unexpected backlash in the national elections that does not favor Democratic candidates. Democrats everywhere will be taking notice of what happened to Joe Lieberman and collectively will be moving their respective positions more to the left, further narrowing voter options. Republican candidates will then have room to move more to a center "moderate" position and may end up having more appeal nationwide. Betcha Hillary starts moving left soon. This is going to be interesting. While my politics differed with Lieberman, he did have my respect. You knew where he stood. He was unlike the gutless wonders you describe above. Those willing to take any side of any issue to get elected, then sliding back once they are entrenched. It will be interesting, but I don't think much will change, regardless of which party wins. Unfortunately, to me, both parties are much the same. With 300 million people, I keep thinking we should be able to find better leadership. |
#30
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posted to rec.boats
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Harry Krause wrote:
Eisboch wrote: "thunder" wrote in message ... I can think of another very good reason Republicans are interested, fear. The main issue that brought Lieberman's defeat, was his support for the war in Iraq. That makes a lot of Republicans, and Democrats, worried. It's too early to say, how a Democrats defeat, in a relatively liberal state, will translate to a national election in November, but I would say, many do have reason to worry. There may be an unexpected backlash in the national elections that does not favor Democratic candidates. Democrats everywhere will be taking notice of what happened to Joe Lieberman and collectively will be moving their respective positions more to the left, further narrowing voter options. Republican candidates will then have room to move more to a center "moderate" position and may end up having more appeal nationwide. Betcha Hillary starts moving left soon. This is going to be interesting. Eisboch I dunno. What is it now - 65%-70% of Americans are none too pleased with the Bush Administration's conduct of its war against Iraq? While the Repubs will try to paint Lamont and other Dems who oppose their war as "weak on defense," I don't believe that dog is going to hunt. You'd think by now that most voters would be able to differentiate between a failed foreign policy that has drained our national security and a reasoned approach to getting out of Iraq that recognizes that country is heading down the toilet. The Democrats are weak on defense. The Bush-Republican-Neocon fiasco has done us serious and long-lasting damage around the world. We have "lost face" everywhere. Central and South America are turning left. Iran is thumbing its nose at us every way it can, and because we're bogged down in Iraq, it was able to get its Hezbollah client to start up serious trouble with Israel. We are in the initial stages of WWIII. You can choose to bury your head in the sand if you want but, this war hasn't even gotten started. The Bush Republicans have failed miserably. It's time to put some backbone in Congress and make sure our handicapped POTUS doesn't make any more really serious foreign policy mistakes for the remainder of his term. Backone yes, but it is the Democrats that need to stand up and do what is best for the country not just to regain political power. The biggest problem with the democrats is that they are power hungry and only power hungry. |
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