Something about Mccain Top Ten Blowups
The McCain campaign keeps trying to keep alive the myth of McCain the Maverick, but it is clearly on life support, and getting a bit crazy.
Senator John McCain said he can’t remember the last time he pumped gasoline or the cost of a gallon of a gas in an interview with the Orange County Register earlier this week.
Obama is beating McCain by 14 points in understanding people’s economic problems.
Obama Tells Hispanic Leaders McCain Abandoned Them.
The Washington Post/ABC poll shows Obama now leads the national horserace by 9 points, a turnaround of 11 points in two weeks.
As former GOP Senator Rick Santorum put it, “Everybody has a McCain story.”
Only that he doesn’t pump his own gas, an activity I doubt Obama does either.
His reputation is built on his opposition to torture, but McCain voted against a bill to ban waterboarding, and then applauded President Bush for vetoing that ban.
Over his tenure in Congress, McCain has had angry, expletive-laced exchanges with a number of his colleagues and peers,both Democrat and Republican alikemany of which have been covered extensively by local Arizona and nationwide news sources.
In a new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, 49 percent say Palin is unqualified to be president if needed.
Americans want and deserve an America-first president.
It’s almost as if “Raw Story” is purposely misleading its readers.
Obama may dislike the paranoid and self-serving vision of America embraced by the Bush Administration and the Republican Party, but its just disingenuous to suggest that he doesn’t love his country.
Kennedy was at the lectern delivering remarks, when McCain began walking toward him from across the Senate floor, mocking the Massachusetts legislator.
I think even he doesn’t realize just how much of an inbred product he is, fruit of the fruits who’ve never even liked much less admired the country called United States of America.
Meanwhile, Sarah Palin told Katie Couric on CBS if a bailout doesn’t pass, “We’re going to find ourselves in another Great Depression.”
The Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill of 2007 had caused an enormous rift among Republicans, and the two Senators found themselves on opposite sides.
The poll found 79 percent of the American people are very worried about the national economy, and 60 percent are worried about their own finances.
It’ll be like watching the GOP get tarred and feathered with the exact same brush they used to paint that crud on Kerry in 2004.








































