Comments on: McCain Often Veers From Aggressive Message

Washington Post: Unpredictable Candidate Chafes At Delivering Campaign's Talking Points

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by liberalme July 31, 2008 8:36 PM EDT
Impeach, expel Barack Obama
http://obamaimpeachment.org

Posted by terrorislamv at 04:57 PM : Jul 31, 2008

Hahahaha what a riot!!! Bigotry is still popular among the ignorant.
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by ariel133 July 31, 2008 7:45 PM EDT
Obama is looking for a fight and because McCain would rather have a discussion than a fight what does that tell about these two men? One is too inexperianced to lead, the other is ready. Simple, really.
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by antoniof123 July 31, 2008 7:32 PM EDT
Hey I really get a charge out of wing nuts saying that McCain is a moderate. His voting record speaks for itself. He votes 95 percent plus along with George Bush. So some one try to explain how he is a moderate.

Next I though you wing nuts didn''t like flip flopers. But your boy here is now saying that Obama''s plan to get out of Iraq in 16 months is doable.

So tell us why should we keep the idiots who led us into this war of follie instead of having someone who knew it was wrong from the begining.

Morons...
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by newsjunky5 July 31, 2008 6:18 PM EDT
Sounds like his heart isn''t in it the way his handlers are. Not a true sociopath, rejected by many in his own party. But not a reason to make him President.
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by smurfcrusher July 31, 2008 5:54 PM EDT
"McCain Often Veers From Aggressive Message"


And what''s wrong with an occasional nap? They aren''t just for old men...
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by pr_boxer July 31, 2008 5:36 PM EDT
In recent years I thought no one could possibly be worse than Geo Bush, however McCain''s helter-skelter tactics of name calling one day, fear mongering the next, meanwhile telling us what a gentlemanly winner he is has pretty well convinced me he''s even worse than BushII
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by andor3 July 31, 2008 5:27 PM EDT
The last candidate to hide his true personality and let his handlers call the shots and invent a persona was Al Gore.
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by olderthnadam July 31, 2008 5:26 PM EDT
The Republican Party seems to heve become the party of the investor class and to Hades with anyone else. The Republicans bailing out bad investors and talking of lowering taxes on investments while the rest of the country struggles under the yoke of low wages and skyrocketing prices will come back and bite them in the glutes. Big Time. The corporate welfare system, giving billions of dollars a year to bad investors and bad businessmen to keep them making a profit in spite of bad behavior is not free enterprise but a rigged game that those who actually WORK for a living can never win. Trickle down economics has proven to be voodoo economics, just as George Bush Sr said before he turned coat to become vice-president. The hard-working class are expected to feed on the crumbs that fall from the table while those sitting at the table get fat and sassy. And should anyone lose his seat at the table the government gives them the people''s money to stay. Shame on us, the people, for ever believing this load of dung we''ve been force fed for the last 28 years. And shame on us for voting for the lackies of these corproate greedmongers who have hijacked our country.
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by olderthnadam July 31, 2008 5:24 PM EDT
As long as McCain continues to kiss the political behind of the Republican far right he is sunk. The best that those who actually want McCain to win could do is to turn him loose and let him be the maverick that he once was, although I fear it is too late for that now because he would be branded a flip-flopper if he changed course now. I suspect that we could see 15-20% of the electorate split between 3 or 4 third parties. Many of the independents and libertatian republicans will vote for the Libertarian or Constitution party candidates and many inedpendents will vote for Obama. The coalition of Wall Street Republicans and neocons will not be enough to elect McCain in the face of Millions of new voters who, in the primaries, went overwhelmingly to the Democrats. And I say this not as a Democrat, but as an Independent with Libertarian leanings who once believed in McCain, but after his winning the nomination and swinging to the right, has become dissolutioned with the Republican party all together.
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by antoniof123 July 31, 2008 5:13 PM EDT
The fact still remains that McCain knows nothing about the economy and his adviser don''t either.
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