Thread: Obama and the Supreme Court
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April 19th 2012, 11:49 PM #31
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Duh.
Even though the Tea Party was against Obama and taxes, it was initially libertarian, before it was co-opted by Palin and Beck. When Fox News and people like Hannity embraced it, that was the final nail in the coffin. OWS was much more spontaneous, IMO, and though it's been co-opted in some cases (or at least the media attempts to label it that way), it's still basically organic. I know because I live in downtown LA and see protests and marches here all the time, and the movement out here is still a mixed bag.I noticed that among those separating themselves from partisan politics, you omitted the Tea Party. For good reason, I suspect.
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April 20th 2012, 12:41 AM #32
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
your right it is a little unfair to include him into the things he didnt initiate, however he joined in on pointing fingers at the right for starting wars when he is also starting them. he claimed he would stop our troops from dying and while i havent seen the numbers as of late, the deaths of our troops isnt exactly satisfying.... he also stood up and said i;m the guy for the job. im your man. bush didnt ask for the twin towers to get hit but a good president will work with whats handed to him/thrown into his face.
if you and your right hand man are making mutually exclusive and opposing statements, then your administration is not organized well enough to run a small coffee shop much less the country.
as far as i know the republicans forced him to deny it or allow it to be built in a vague enough manor that he can still influence where and how and he turned it down even though they are still building it in pieces.
yea he shouldnt have insulted the isrealis so much....
Obama faces Jewish backlash over private insults about Israeli PM caught on open mic exchange with Sarkozy
Barack Obama’s top ten insults against Israel
and then there was the british
Barack Obama’s top 10 insults against Britain
and then he alienated his own police by saying they reacted stupidly and well.... if thats not enough i could provide more...
mmm. i'll concede your correct without further argument because i was not clear enough in my statement although i would like it noted that i did not mean vacations as defined by "An extended period of recreation spent away from home or in traveling."
newt makes me look like i have 170 IQ and yes general disrespect is something we should expect from our president especially when it has to do with the Supreme Court. you dont just respect those who agree with you. you respect everyone or at least try! that speech he gave made me feel like he was trying to intimidate the court into passing the law.
sure thing but i wont be able to keep digging until sunday. cya then!Last edited by odis; April 20th 2012 at 12:51 AM. Reason: clarity
All that is gold does not glitter,
not all those who wander are lost;
the old that is strong does not wither,
deep roots are not reached by the frost.
just because you can't see him, doesn't mean he isn't there!
even steel must be put to the flame, else it will remain weak and easily removed.
i find it amazing that a person who requests another to demonstrate that they are not terrorists by some small action like making the claim they are not terrorists, becomes terrorized himself, and not by the terrorists or even the proposed terrorists; but by those who seek tolerance and understanding. i believe that fits the definition of ironic doesn't it?
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April 20th 2012, 12:06 PM #33
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
But even a disappointing Obama is still more palatable to many voters than some of the alternatives put forth by the Right -- Perry? Santorum? Gingrich?

The Tea Party movement was more or less astroturfed from the start, and never the "voice of the people" they tried so hard to portray themselves as. I wouldn't call it "co-opted" as much as they showed their true colors too soon.Even though the Tea Party was against Obama and taxes, it was initially libertarian, before it was co-opted by Palin and Beck. When Fox News and people like Hannity embraced it, that was the final nail in the coffin. OWS was much more spontaneous, IMO, and though it's been co-opted in some cases (or at least the media attempts to label it that way), it's still basically organic. I know because I live in downtown LA and see protests and marches here all the time, and the movement out here is still a mixed bag.
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April 20th 2012, 12:12 PM #34
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Last edited by rogue06; April 20th 2012 at 12:14 PM.
Always strive to keep an open mind – but not so open that your brains fall out!Still afeared of & dodging The PINTM
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April 20th 2012, 12:33 PM #35
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Well, I know you're not referring to either Iraq or Afghanistan, so -- did you have another war in mind?
Well, without bringing Bush into this, (that's a road neither of us want to walk down for various reasons) I'll agree that while Obama was dealt a rotten hand by Nov. of '08, he does have to take responsibility for what he's done since then -- and it's been a mixed bag. I didn't much care for his early gripes about having inherited the problems of the last administration (no matter how much truth was to them), because in the words of another Democrat president, "the buck stops here."he claimed he would stop our troops from dying and while i havent seen the numbers as of late, the deaths of our troops isnt exactly satisfying.... he also stood up and said i;m the guy for the job. im your man. bush didnt ask for the twin towers to get hit but a good president will work with whats handed to him/thrown into his face.
Disappointing? perhaps. But hardly disastrous.
Again, the Buck stops with Obama, not Biden -- In the days before the Cheney administration (as I like to think of it), the Veep was sometimes little more than throne insurance -- look at some of the duds who were only a heart attack/assassin's bullet away from the oval office -- Agnew? Quayle? Palin?if you and your right hand man are making mutually exclusive and opposing statements, then your administration is not organized well enough to run a small coffee shop much less the country.
Biden's a dud, but hardly the first or the worst. It's what Obama says that matters in the end.
As far as I know, after Keystone was slapped with numerous lawsuits and criticisms from everyone from environmental groups to members of Congress, the State Department gave various federal agencies time to determine whether or not this pipeline was actually in the country's best interest. Obama gave those agencies an extension until 2013.as far as i know the republicans forced him to deny it or allow it to be built in a vague enough manor that he can still influence where and how and he turned it down even though they are still building it in pieces.
Obama often comes across as too cautious, but in this case, making sure that all the ducks are lined up and that we're sure this project isn't going to be a national embarrassment is worth another year -- measure twice, cut once.
First of all, from what I've heard, Netanyahu pretty much is a troglodyte -- but agreed, Obama should've watched out for those open mics.yea he shouldnt have insulted the isrealis so much....
Obama faces Jewish backlash over private insults about Israeli PM caught on open mic exchange with Sarkozy
Barack Obama’s top ten insults against Israel
and then there was the british
Barack Obama’s top 10 insults against Britain
and then he alienated his own police by saying they reacted stupidly and well.... if thats not enough i could provide more...
Britain? Really? Returning a bust of Winston Churchill counts as a major insult? You want to hear worse stories, check your history books.
As for the police, Obama has tended to side against them in controversial brutality/abuse cases -- but that's hardly an insult.
I'm sure you can come up with plenty more, but nothing here is particularly earthshaking. Just a lot of huffing, puffing, and manufactured outrage from the Right.
Which is never what it means in the case of any president -- it's not as if they're completely incommunicado or out of reach wherever they go.mmm. i'll concede your correct without further argument because i was not clear enough in my statement although i would like it noted that i did not mean vacations as defined by "An extended period of recreation spent away from home or in traveling."
Sounds to me like you got some bad info from an anti-Obama source -- no problem; you're not the first.
And sadly, that bozo is the GOP's second choice for the presidential nod -- and, in a fit of narcissism beyond anything the Right ever tried to pin on Obama, he actually thinks he's going to rally not only Santorum's former supporters, but the entire conservative base to his flag to beat out Romney for the nomination at the convention -- I've actually heard him speaking of his strategies for a contested convention.newt makes me look like i have 170 IQ and yes general disrespect is something we should expect from our president especially when it has to do with the Supreme Court.
Newt, really -- give it up.
Meanwhile, Newt went on record as saying that he would not only disrespect the court, but actually defy any decision he didn't agree with. In essence, he made a campaign promise to put himself above the law of the land.you dont just respect those who agree with you. you respect everyone or at least try! that speech he gave made me feel like he was trying to intimidate the court into passing the law.
And they call Obama a narcissist...
Cya.sure thing but i wont be able to keep digging until sunday. cya then!
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April 20th 2012, 01:07 PM #36
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
I wouldn't exactly call it more "palatable." Saying that Obama is a more palatable choice than the potential rightwing candidates being offered by the MSM would be like saying getting both my toes smashed by a hammer is more palatable than getting both my thumbs smashed.
Last edited by seanD; April 20th 2012 at 01:29 PM.
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April 20th 2012, 01:28 PM #37
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
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April 20th 2012, 03:35 PM #38
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Well, Gingrich didn't get the memo -- he's still thinking he has a prayer.
You and I both know that barring a thunderbolt, Romney's going to get the nod. And how much of an improvement is he from Obama? (ask Santorum)
The Republican Party had one job -- put forth a candidate that their base can rally around as an improvement over Obama. As horrible as they made him out to be, their failure to accomplish their only task becomes that much more egregious
Including the Koch brothers' blood money? Sure -- combat Obama's "socialism" using the profits from Stalin's socialism.Far more grass roots than the engineered Occupy farce.
Don't get me wrong -- I'm sure there were no shortage of hands pulling OWS' strings -- care to guess at whose?
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April 20th 2012, 03:37 PM #39
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
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April 20th 2012, 04:02 PM #40
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
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April 20th 2012, 04:48 PM #41
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Nah, you just came off as one of those whiny Conservatives who blames everyone else -- in this case, the MSM -- for their own failures.
Conservatives have been out of touch for so long, it's hard for them to see themselves as anything but victims.
Apologies if I misjudged you -- there might be hope for you yet.
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April 20th 2012, 04:53 PM #42
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
The Koch brothers were late to the party (no pun intended). The first time they were connected to the Tea Party was a couple months before the 2010 election whereas the first protests started in January of 2009.
If anyone or anything can be considered behind the Tea Party movement it would be folks from Ron Paul's failed 2008 campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. Paul is often refered to as the "intellectual godfather" of the movement.
In contrast the Occupy movement was dreamed up by AdBusters, the "anti-consumerist" organization which started the Occupy Wall Street movement and is in part financed by the Tides Foundation which is in turn financed by the infamous billionaire hedge-fund manager George Soros. Soros has also given millions to MoveOn which has joined the occupiers in several demonstrations and marches.
Soros is in effect the grandfather of the occupy movement. Interestingly though while announcing his sympathy and support for the movement he helped start he also lobbied for even greater handouts to bankers in 2009.
Soros, who has been convicted of insider trading in France, pocketed $1 billion betting against the British pound on “Black Wednesday” in 1992, when it lost 20% of its value in less than 24 hours earning him the reputation of “the man who broke the Bank of England.” Talk about your vulture capitalists.
But let's get back to the group that dreamt up the Occupy movement, AdBusters.
Under the photograph it states that "the demonstrations were inspired by a blog post by Kalle Lasn, founder of Adbusters magazine."
The last sentence of the story is "And as the continuing scene in lower Manhattan attests, Lasn certainly knows how to launch a campaign."
So now that we've established that Adbusters pretty much started the whole thing (the sources above aren't exactly Fox News) let's take a quick look at them. Seems that after Osama bin Laden's death Adbusters ran a feature that castigated the left for not lining up and supporting him.
So Adbusters, who even those on the left say was behind the Occupy Wall Street protests, bemoans that the left didn't embrace bin Laden as a comrade in the struggle.Last edited by rogue06; April 20th 2012 at 04:56 PM.
Always strive to keep an open mind – but not so open that your brains fall out!Still afeared of & dodging The PINTM
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April 21st 2012, 09:12 AM #43
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
Interesting -- I wondered who was behind OWS.
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April 21st 2012, 11:02 AM #44
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April 21st 2012, 01:00 PM #45
Re: Obama and the Supreme Court
You word choice of "engineered farce" was a poor one. Engineered farce implies it was synthetically created and then managed from beginning to the present. Obviously the spark had to come from somewhere, but it was basically just adding a spark to an already existing pile of kindling wood. And this is evident in how it ignited in different cities nationwide almost simultaneously. The same thing is true of the Arab Spring. Evidence shows that the west had a hand it that via certain social networks, but we don't believe they orchestrated the whole thing in all the different countries from start to finish. They just gave it a "push."
Last edited by seanD; April 21st 2012 at 01:02 PM.
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