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The candidate who couldn't stop
Message
From
02/06/2008 13:08:50
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01320967
Message ID:
01321051
Views:
12
First, I find it interesting that your candidate agreed to the FL and MI decision, but you do not. It is in his favor, afterall, it awarded him delegates for votes he did NOT receive. I find the decision regarding MI to be against the principals of a democratic electoral process and find it as bad or worse as what happened to Al Gore in 2000.

Second, she is not lying (although she was certainly stretching the truth previously) when she claims to have received more of the popular vote than Obama today. Given the numbers allowed in from FL and MI (and NOT all were allowed in), she has indeed received the popular vote according to CNN. Although I don't see the numbers even given the strange FL and MI decision. Perhaps she is 'forecasting?' She did say in her Puerto Rico speech 'after Tuesday elections.' I guess you would consider that a lie? Wow, it is amazing the amount of slack you give Obama and absolute none to her. You even appear to find fault where they doesn't seem to be any. I'm really getting disenchanted with your party.

That is what you get Mike for being a Democrat. You have to live with their un-democratic decisions.

Anyway, it's all moot. Obama will win the party ticket. Anything else would be called 'racist' whether right or wrong.




>>>Superdelegates can still change their minds, Hillary says. Time for reflection is needed, Hillary says. I'm ahead in the popular vote, Hillary continues to lie says. Is someone going to have to drive a stake through her heart before she concedes she has lost?
>>>
>>>http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/06/02/democrats.race/index.html
>>
>>Not that I like her either, but she has a valid point. She also has a valid point re: FL and MI delegates. Votes should not be changed by committee as the DNC did on Saturday. She bothered to run, and she got the votes.
>
>Those two primaries were invalidated before they were held and Hillary agreed to that along with everyone else. If the committee had chosen to adhere to that, neither candidate would be receiving any delegates from the two states. The DNC's decision was a compromise. Hillary stirred up Florida and Michigan voters so much after the fact that they genuinely believe themselves disenfranchised. This is being presented as thought the primaries were held in the normal manner and then the votes were taken away. They weren't.
>
>I don't know if you caught it but Harold Ickes, Hillary's chief kneecapper (and DNC member!), said Michigan votes should be counted exactly as cast. IOW Hillary gets every vote cast for her and Obama, who took his name off the ballot, gets zero. About 40% of the ballots were marked "Uncommitted." The Clinton camp says none of those votes were for Obama, since none of them say Obama. "He made the decision to take himself off the ballot," Hillary now says airily. Truly unbelievable. Well, no, not unbelievable given the Clintons' loose history with the truth, but still appalling.
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.·`TCH
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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
Vita contingit, Vive cum eo. (Life Happens, Live With it.)
"Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away." -- author unknown
"De omnibus dubitandum"
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