View Full Version : Obama will be your next President
Spider
02-12-2008, 05:58 PM
thats right , Iam not voting for him or Hillary , or McCain or Ron Paul , or Huckabee .....all you Bush supporters and Republicans should be lining up outside of voting places apologizing for the last 8 years and for trying to think on your own ......
Meck77
02-12-2008, 06:01 PM
thats right , Iam not voting for him or Hillary , or McCain or , or Huckabee ....
Me neither
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:03 PM
I am writting in the Name .......Stevie Wonder ...Ronnie Milsap as VP
TheDave
02-12-2008, 06:06 PM
I am writting in the Name .......Stevie Wonder ...Ronnie Milsap as VP
??? where's the love?
Rohirrim
02-12-2008, 06:09 PM
The way things are looking right now, Obama does look like the man. Of course, five months ago everybody was talking about Billary being a lock. Remember Gary Hart?
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:09 PM
??? where's the love?
LOL , I decided not to put you through the abuse of being swift boatd ;D
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:11 PM
The way things are looking right now, Obama does look like the man. Of course, five months ago everybody was talking about Billary being a lock. Remember Gary Hart?
Ha! how could I forget Gary Hart , one of the first things he asked his wife after he was caught in the sex scandal ........ "Hey Honey want ot go out for some Rice ? ";D
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:11 PM
P.S. .......very few will get my Rice joke
Maximus
02-12-2008, 06:13 PM
Bring out the charts and graphs... thats right... I want Perot!!!
Meck77
02-12-2008, 06:13 PM
I'm thinking Rodney Carringtion and Willie Nelson as VP.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uelk54jKuA8&feature=related Spider I'm sure you've seen this?
There was an uncut version on the other day but it was edited. Still funny as hell.
Hotrod
02-12-2008, 06:15 PM
You know looking at the current sad group of potential presidents dont it just make you want to shout out 4 more years 4 more years.
Ha! I kid I kid
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:15 PM
Bring out the charts and graphs... thats right... I want Perot!!!
CC Goldwater and Stephanie Miller ..... they get caught in a sex scandal I just hope it is with each other
Rohirrim
02-12-2008, 06:15 PM
P.S. .......very few will get my Rice joke
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/6/62/180px-Donna_Rice_and_Gary_Hart.jpg
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:16 PM
http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/6/62/180px-Donna_Rice_and_Gary_Hart.jpg
LOL should have known you would
Old Dude
02-12-2008, 06:21 PM
No excuses.
Rohirrim
02-12-2008, 06:21 PM
You know looking at the current sad group of potential presidents dont it just make you want to shout out 4 more years 4 more years.
Ha! I kid I kid
You could get excommunicated for that ****. :rofl:
Rohirrim
02-12-2008, 06:23 PM
Let him bring forth his holy hand grenade and explode all the evils of this world! We're saved!
http://anamericanfirst.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/saintobama.jpg
TheDave
02-12-2008, 06:24 PM
LOL , I decided not to put you through the abuse of being swift boatd ;D
Never thought of that... guess it would be a drag on the ticket if they started reading the Survivor I thread on Fox.
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:26 PM
Never thought of that... guess it would be a drag on the ticket if they started reading the Survivor I thread on Fox. LOL .....
Old Dude
02-12-2008, 06:26 PM
I wondered what became of her and found that since the mid-90s, Donna Rice has been working as an "anti-pornography activist."
Kaylore
02-12-2008, 06:27 PM
??? where's the love?
You're the VP. I'm seriously considering voting with Spider for Stevie Wonder. Come, Spider: Let's show that a republican and a Democrat can agree on something.
No inexperienced Senators. No NeoCons. Just A blind man that makes music. :afro:
Spider
02-12-2008, 06:29 PM
You're the VP. I'm seriously considering voting with Spider for Stevie Wonder. Come, Spider: Let's show that a republican and a Democrat can agree on something.
No inexperienced Senators. No NeoCons. Just A blind man that makes music. :afro:
I will do it , perhaps it will make the news ;D
TheDave
02-12-2008, 06:39 PM
Screw both of you... I'm voting for "The Impaler"
theAPAOps5
02-12-2008, 06:57 PM
Let him bring forth his holy hand grenade and explode all the evils of this world! We're saved!
http://anamericanfirst.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/saintobama.jpg
And the lord did grin and the people did feast upon lambs, sloths, and carp, and anchovies, and orangutans, and breakfast cereals, and fruit baths.
elsid13
02-12-2008, 07:41 PM
Screw both of you... I'm voting for "The Impaler"
Did someone call???
http://www.boingboing.net/images/th_satangovernor.jpg
He now has a web movie -http://www.impalerthemovie.com/
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-12-2008, 10:34 PM
Obama will be your next President
Well, I wouldn't count either Hillary or McCain out just yet.
The superdelegates could still put together some sort of sleazy backroom deal and Hillary could end up getting the nomination.
On the GOP side, don't assume that Karl Rove hasn't been doing his homework or that the right-wing propaganda machine and its corporate media infrastructure isn't going to be ready to work Obama.
Remember: The GOP and the corporate media have a track record of success when it comes to turning mediocrities, washed-up Hollywood actors, and failed oil men into presidents.
broncocalijohn
02-13-2008, 03:57 AM
thats right , Iam not voting for him or Hillary , or McCain or Ron Paul , or Huckabee .....all you Bush supporters and Republicans should be lining up outside of voting places apologizing for the last 8 years and for trying to think on your own ......
Like i stated I am going third party. Wont Go like Ann Coulter and go with Hillary. Hillary is more moderate than Socialist Barack but so many people hate her and I mean hate. If it comes down to McCain and Barack, I hope it is McCain but he wont get my support. He will make it worse than Bush. Then the Dems will learn to get a moderate on the ticket for 2012 and watch how they win in a landslide.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-13-2008, 04:34 AM
Broncocalijohn vs. reality:
...Socialist Barack...
http://www.orangemane.com/BB/attachment.php?attachmentid=20704&stc=1&d=1197348109
broncocalijohn
02-13-2008, 02:50 PM
You are correct. He hasnt said enough for me to know that he is more of a socialist than hillary or anyone that I know. Universal healthcare falls in what catagory? Raising the minimum wage every year is what catagory? Yes, he isnt Kucinich material but I would say he is more socialist than you think. Maybe it is because I am speaking as a conservative and think most democrats (and McCain :) ) are socialist. Ok, lets call him way too far to the left. Big deal. Socialist will come up with a word to describe them that doesnt sound so harsh ie. progressive.
Rohirrim
02-13-2008, 03:25 PM
Calling progressives "socialist" is no different than calling conservatives "fascist."
broncocalijohn
02-13-2008, 05:26 PM
Calling progressives "socialist" is no different than calling conservatives "fascist."
You are correct. I am stating my opinion only on Obama but i did state that being conservative would stretch my wording since I am on the complete opposite of obama. BTW: Where are those stats that you stated a few weeks ago about the rich being taxed to 90% in the 50s. I would wonder what bracket and how many people that fell into.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 12:37 AM
You are correct. He hasnt said enough for me to know that he is more of a socialist than hillary or anyone that I know. Universal healthcare falls in what catagory? Raising the minimum wage every year is what catagory? Yes, he isnt Kucinich material but I would say he is more socialist than you think. Maybe it is because I am speaking as a conservative and think most democrats (and McCain :) ) are socialist. Ok, lets call him way too far to the left. Big deal. Socialist will come up with a word to describe them that doesnt sound so harsh ie. progressive.
Take another look at that chart.
Obama is in the upper-right quadrant of the graph.
That means his positions on issues make him a fiscal conservative - not a socialist.
24champ
02-14-2008, 01:23 AM
I can't vote for McCain nor can I bring myself to vote for Obama. I realize he wants "Obamacans" but there is not much in his platform that I like.
What will probably end up happening is that I will vote whoever is the Constitution Party nominee.
Hogan11
02-14-2008, 02:29 AM
I am writting in the Name .......Stevie Wonder ...Ronnie Milsap as VP
Funny...writing in a canadate with no vision.
Hogan11
02-14-2008, 02:39 AM
It just doesn't make sense to vote for people who do not reflect your own views. The Libertarian Party reflects my views on the issues more than any other party out there.....so that's where my vote is going.
This whole Obama/McCain/Hillary thing is only a third rate side show to me.
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 02:59 AM
Well, I wouldn't count either Hillary or McCain out just yet.
The superdelegates could still put together some sort of sleazy backroom deal and Hillary could end up getting the nomination.
I dunno ... I saw on MSNBC that when you crunch the numbers, it's already pretty much over. Sure, we've heard that several times already with McCain and Hillary, but this time Chuck Todd really crunched the numbers hard: After you factor in Mississippi and the other states Obama will certainly win between now and March 2 (the Ohio-Texas Hillary "firewall" primary date), then she will have to win Ohio and Texas by 3-2 factors (60%-plus) just to pull back even, and the states after that are big Obama ones also. It's just not in the cards. Plus, it will have been about a month since she won her last primary, so expecting her to rout Obama like that in both states is highly unlikely.
l'm still voting for Ron Paul next week (Washington caucused last week, but have our primary next week ??? ... don't ask), but the reality looks like President Obama, and I couldn't be happier. The Obama-McCain race will be wonderful to watch ... the Agent of Hope and Change vs. The Warmonger who Never Met a War He Didn't Like.
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 03:06 AM
Very good article about the long-standing McCain-Obama feud
McCain, Obama take rivalry to new heights
Tension forged in the Senate spills onto the campaign trail
By Jeff Zeleny
http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/i/msnbc/Components/Sources/Art/nyt_logo_140x252.gif (http://www.nytimes.com/index.html?partner=msnbcpolitics)
Updated 2 hours, 50 minutes ago<SCRIPT language=javascript> function UpdateTimeStamp(pdt) { var n = document.getElementById("udtD"); if(pdt != '' && n && window.DateTime) { var dt = new DateTime(); pdt = dt.T2D(pdt); if(dt.GetTZ(pdt)) {n.innerHTML = dt.D2S(pdt,((''.toLowerCase()=='false')?false:true ));} } } UpdateTimeStamp('633385603109100000');</SCRIPT>
WAUKESHA, Wis. - Their tempest began well before their bids for a presidential nomination.
When Senator John McCain claimed victory for a round of primaries on Tuesday, it was little surprise that he skipped over criticism of Senator Barack Obama’s policies. There will be plenty of time for that. Instead, Mr. McCain zeroed in on another long-held annoyance, a perception that Mr. Obama wears a political halo.
“I don’t seek the presidency on the presumption that I am blessed with such personal greatness,” Mr. McCain said. “That history has anointed me to save my country in its hour of need.”
A contentious relationship between Mr. McCain, Republican of Arizona, and Mr. Obama, Democrat of Illinois, has been percolating on Capitol Hill for more than two years.
As momentum picks up, so do jabs
Now it is being thrust to the forefront as Mr. Obama spends as much time taking on Mr. McCain as he does Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, telling voters here on Wednesday that “somewhere along the line he traded principles for his party’s nomination.”
“If you want the same as we’ve had in the last seven years,” Mr. Obama said, “then I think John McCain’s going to be a great choice.”
The exchanges, hardly uncommon in the throes of a biting race, carry residue of a dust-up they had two years ago and provide a window into how they view, and may approach, each other should they battle in a general election.
In a debate in 2006 on ethics in the Senate, which Mr. McCain regarded as a signature issue, he dressed down Mr. Obama and accused the freshman senator of disingenuousness. Mr. Obama called Mr. McCain cranky.
In public, that dispute melted away when the two cocked their fists at each other and hugged for a mutually beneficial photo opportunity. Their rapport has not advanced, and the two have a distant relationship. The two men are very different. Mr. McCain, 71, is a veteran of political and military battles. Mr. Obama, 46, is community organizer turned Ivy League graduate. Mr. McCain has told friends and associates that he views Mr. Obama as something of an upstart whose charmed political life delivered him to the same place Mr. McCain’s decades of public and military service did.
McCain hoping to face Clinton?
And, associates said, Mr. McCain had always hoped to take on Mrs. Clinton.
Although Mrs. Clinton has been in the Senate just four more years than Mr. Obama, she has been on the Armed Services Committee and traveled around the world with Mr. McCain.
Examples of their mutual respect typically include a tale of holding a vodka-drinking contest in Estonia. Such a celebration may have been unlikely to happen with Mr. Obama, who on a trip to Russia in 2005 asked that his shot glass be filled with water.
The Democratic nomination is far from decided, and Mr. McCain could still have his wish to face Mrs. Clinton. But after winning 21 states, amassing more delegates and building a larger fund-raising network, Mr. Obama has increased his chances week by week, and his advisers are deliberating how to confront Mr. McCain, particularly because a selling point of both is their ability to court independents and moderates.
<SCRIPT></SCRIPT><TABLE class=boxH_brl cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD class=boxHC_brl noWrap width=*>
Click for related content
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=boxB_brl cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD class=boxBI_brl>Fineman: How would McCain vs. Obama play out? (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23151608/)
NYT: Michelle Obama takes to the trail (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23153959/)
NYT: McCain taps Bush’s donor base (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23136076/)
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Praise, pause, attack
Mr. Obama’s early strategy is clear: No matter what the message, praise Mr. McCain for his service to the country, particularly because Mr. Obama was not in the military. It is, strategists said, a similar approach to how Bill Clinton dealt with Bob Dole in 1996.
“By the way, John McCain is a great American hero, a war hero,” Mr. Obama told voters here. “We honor his service.”
He proceeded to criticize Mr. McCain for supporting the extension of the Bush administration’s tax cuts. Mr. McCain once opposed the idea.
“George Bush may not be on the ballot this fall, but his tax cuts and his economic policies are,” Mr. Obama said. “And if John McCain wants to debate the specifics of how well the economy has worked for ordinary families over the last seven years, that is a debate that I am happy to have, because the American people know that Bush’s policies have not worked for ordinary Americans.”
As Mr. Obama seeks to paint Mr. McCain as an extension of the current White House, Mr. McCain is seeking to raise questions about Mr. Obama’s readiness for the presidency. His critique carries a familiar frequency to questions that Mrs. Clinton raises.
He said Wednesday: “I’ve not observed every speech that he’s given, obviously. But they are singularly lacking in specifics.”
Battle hymns
Before an audience of Republicans on Tuesday, Mr. McCain was far more animated. “I have seen men’s hopes tested in hard and cruel ways that few will ever experience,” Mr. McCain said.
The exchanges recall the feuding on the ethics bill, which lingered for days and drew considerable notice, given Mr. McCain’s tone to a colleague.
“I understand how important the opportunity to lead your party’s effort to exploit this issue must seem to a freshman senator,” Mr. McCain wrote in a letter to Mr. Obama that he sent to every news outlet on Capitol Hill. “And I hold no hard feelings over your earlier disingenuousness.”
For his part, Mr. Obama has tended to highlight the generational differences, saying he represents the future and Mr. McCain represents the past. Mr. Obama’s advisers said although they have not determined how to deal with Mr. McCain, they intend to keep their criticism focused on differences over issues.
And no, they said, do not expect Mr. Obama to dust off the lyrics to a song he performed on March 11, 2006, when he appeared as a keynote speaker at the Gridiron Dinner in Washington. His words were written to the tune of “If I Only Had a Brain.”
“When a wide-eyed young idealist, confronts a seasoned realist, there’s bound to be some strain,” Mr. Obama sang perfectly on pitch. “With the game barely started, I’d be feeling less downhearted, if I only had McCain.”
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23153957/
Hogan11
02-14-2008, 03:12 AM
I dunno ... I saw on MSNBC that when you crunch the numbers, it's already pretty much over. Sure, we've heard that several times already with McCain and Hillary, but this time Chuck Todd really crunched the numbers hard: After you factor in Mississippi and the other states Obama will certainly win between now and March 2 (the Ohio-Texas Hillary "firewall" primary date), then she will have to win Ohio and Texas by 3-2 factors (60%-plus) just to pull back even, and the states after that are big Obama ones also. It's just not in the cards. Plus, it will have been about a month since she won her last primary, so expecting her to rout Obama like that in both states is highly unlikely.
You're forgetting the inevitable attempt by the Hillary campaign to have the Florida and Michigan results count if they come up short.....an attempt that just may work (Dean and the DNC will cave on the issue, bank on it).
Never count out the Clintons until the very last dirty trick has been pulled.
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 03:30 AM
I dunno Hogan, I'm with Bill Maher on this one: When people hate Hillary Clinton and demonize her as a dirty trickster, it says more about that person than it does about Hillary. You do realize that the budget-busting 8-year long Whitewater special counsel found N O T H I N G, don't you? They looked EVERYwhere, and found nothing more than one unusualy profitable commodities trade. That's it.
No, when it comes to dirty tricks, the GOP makes the Clintons look like amateurs. The phrase "Dirty Tricks" originated with Nixon's Plumbers, Colson, Liddy, Hunt, Segreti ... and Karl Rove learned his robo-calling, McCain-libelling dirty tricks at the foot of Donald Segreti in the 1970s. Rove was actually mentioned - however briefly - in the Watergate hearings.
No, the real dirty tricks in the past decade have been waged against Kerry, McCain (in 2000 primaries), and by SCOTUS on Gore and the voters of Florida. But .... if you have some beef, Hogan, and I mean some real B E E F, I'll listen. But I think I've heard most everything about Hillary and Bill, and "dirty tricksters" is not an accurate description of either one.
broncocalijohn
02-14-2008, 03:36 AM
You guys in Denver better have the police and yourselves protected because I see Hillary vs Obama pouring out into Lodo chucking campaing buttons and styrafoam hats at each other. Remember the riots after the Super Bowl wins? I am feeling that. Then add Code Pink nut jobs berating all the Dems for not ending the war and we have a party. 2nd story Sports Column will be a great seat. Seriously, this is going to make a great convention.
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 03:46 AM
I dunno Hogan, I'm with Bill Maher on this one: When people hate Hillary Clinton and demonize her as a dirty trickster, it says more about that person than it does about Hillary. You do realize that the budget-busting 8-year long Whitewater special counsel found N O T H I N G, don't you? They looked EVERYwhere, and found nothing more than one unusualy profitable commodities trade. That's it.
No, when it comes to dirty tricks, the GOP makes the Clintons look like amateurs. The phrase "Dirty Tricks" originated with Nixon's Plumbers, Colson, Liddy, Hunt, Segreti ... and Karl Rove learned his robo-calling, McCain-libelling dirty tricks at the foot of Donald Segreti in the 1970s. Rove was actually mentioned - however briefly - in the Watergate hearings.
No, the real dirty tricks in the past decade have been waged against Kerry, McCain (in 2000 primaries), and by SCOTUS on Gore and the voters of Florida. But .... if you have some beef, Hogan, and I mean some real B E E F, I'll listen. But I think I've heard most everything about Hillary and Bill, and "dirty tricksters" is not an accurate description of either one.
QFT! :thumbsup: ^5
Hogan11
02-14-2008, 03:52 AM
I dunno Hogan, I'm with Bill Maher on this one: When people hate Hillary Clinton and demonize her as a dirty trickster, it says more about that person than it does about Hillary. You do realize that the budget-busting 8-year long Whitewater special counsel found N O T H I N G, don't you? They looked EVERYwhere, and found nothing more than one unusualy profitable commodities trade. That's it.
No, when it comes to dirty tricks, the GOP makes the Clintons look like amateurs. The phrase "Dirty Tricks" originated with Nixon's Plumbers, Colson, Liddy, Hunt, Segreti ... and Karl Rove learned his robo-calling, McCain-libelling dirty tricks at the foot of Donald Segreti in the 1970s. Rove was actually mentioned - however briefly - in the Watergate hearings.
No, the real dirty tricks in the past decade have been waged against Kerry, McCain (in 2000 primaries), and by SCOTUS on Gore and the voters of Florida. But .... if you have some beef, Hogan, and I mean some real B E E F, I'll listen. But I think I've heard most everything about Hillary and Bill, and "dirty tricksters" is not an accurate description of either one.
Uh, I'm far from the usual run of the mill Hillary & Bill basher....as for his infidelity and Whitewater and the rest, I really could care less. The Clinton years were very good years for me all around, so I have no "beef" with them personally.
BUT even the most ardent Hillary supports over at CNN (Like Carvell) admit that they will push for Michigan & Florida to count if she remains behind or it stays close and that Dean will likely cave on this issue.
Not exactly fair or clean, is it? Given that they were disqualified for moving up thier primaries and no one else campaigned there as a result. (She has all the delegates of both states I believe)
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 04:07 AM
That is a pretty interesting wild card ... but it would not be fair to Obama, in that he wasn't even on the Michigan ballot because of the DNC sanctions. And I'm pretty sure he scored come "virtual" delegates in Florida - he did get a chunk of votes there.
And I know you're not a "serial" basher of the Clintons, I'm just bristling at the hostility she seems to draw like a magnet. Even in me - and I'm a Hillary supporter - I sense a machine-like, insincere-ish robo-candidate personality. Though by all accounts that persona disappears in person.
I just can't think of a single thing McCain can do to counter Obama-fever. Like some commentator said last night, he'll continue to try to blunt all the Obama "hope" message as just empty talk ... but that makes him the "anti-hope candidate," which is not a pretty position to run from, especially when you voted for Iraq from Day 1 and before.
All Obama has to do is say Iraq, Iraq, Iraq ... W, W, W ... those two issues alone should beat McCain.
Hogan11
02-14-2008, 04:20 AM
That is a pretty interesting wild card ... but it would not be fair to Obama, in that he wasn't even on the Michigan ballot because of the DNC sanctions. And I'm pretty sure he scored come "virtual" delegates in Florida - he did get a chunk of votes there.
And I know you're not a "serial" basher of the Clintons, I'm just bristling at the hostility she seems to draw like a magnet. Even in me - and I'm a Hillary supporter - I sense a machine-like, insincere-ish robo-candidate personality. Though by all accounts that persona disappears in person.
Well, it's that wild card that was the jist of my post. They were disqualified, period....and if she pushes the issue (and she will) and Dean and the DNC caves (and they will) that gives her a totally unfair edge in delegates and super delegates....she will have, in effect, stolen the nomination.
Now like I said, I generally have no problem with the Clintons, but that just sucks and would seem to me anyways like a potential party splitting move that opens things up considerably for McCain.
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 04:21 AM
Like some commentator said last night, he'll continue to try to blunt all the Obama "hope" message as just empty talk ... but that makes him the "anti-hope candidate," which is not a pretty position to run from.
/ The Anti-Hope Candidate
/ / / http://peacecorpsonline.org/messages/imagefolder/johnmccain.jpg
Abandon Hope, All Ye Who Enter Here....
Rohirrim
02-14-2008, 11:06 AM
Oh no! BroncoBuff has the Obamasig too. It's spreading. Even on the Mane!
Must stay awake.... must stay awake... must... stay......
24champ
02-14-2008, 12:42 PM
You guys in Denver better have the police and yourselves protected because I see Hillary vs Obama pouring out into Lodo chucking campaing buttons and styrafoam hats at each other. Remember the riots after the Super Bowl wins? I am feeling that. Then add Code Pink nut jobs berating all the Dems for not ending the war and we have a party. 2nd story Sports Column will be a great seat. Seriously, this is going to make a great convention.
Is code pink like some trans-gender group? Nutjob?
http://www.jkirkj.net/video/Code_Pink.jpg
Hilarious!
alkemical
02-14-2008, 01:31 PM
Is code pink like some trans-gender group? Nutjob?
http://www.jkirkj.net/video/Code_Pink.jpg
Hilarious!
She looks like ann coultiers dad!
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 06:02 PM
Is code pink like some trans-gender group? Nutjob?
http://www.jkirkj.net/video/Code_Pink.jpg
No, I think you're confusing them with someone else...
http://www.tenxaday.com/coulter2.jpg
theAPAOps5
02-14-2008, 06:50 PM
Her Adams Apple is bigger than her balls!
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 07:28 PM
Her Adams Apple is bigger than her balls!
:laugh:
BroncoBuff
02-14-2008, 07:38 PM
It's tempting to make fun of this psychopath along these lines ... but I just cannot join in. Whatever gender-identification issues she may or may not be having are personal to her, and I see no justification for making fun.
Gad ... I just defended Anne Coulter ::)
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 07:46 PM
Gad ... I just defended Anne Coulter ::)
:giggle:
We understand if you need to go take a shower now...
broncocalijohn
02-14-2008, 10:14 PM
It's tempting to make fun of this psychopath along these lines ... but I just cannot join in. Whatever gender-identification issues she may or may not be having are personal to her, and I see no justification for making fun.
Gad ... I just defended Anne Coulter ::)
You love her. As soon as she starts campaining for Hillary, Dems will run to Obama in seconds. Why do i feel like Obama supporters are becoming like Perot supporters?
L.A. BRONCOS FAN
02-14-2008, 11:25 PM
You love her. As soon as she starts campaining for Hillary, Dems will run to Obama in seconds. Why do i feel like Obama supporters are becoming like Perot supporters?
http://www.bartcop.com/mccain-not-cheers.jpg