| | |  | |
03-25-2008, 09:03 PM
|
#1 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Threads: 446
Posts: 2,389
| As a conservative... Barack Obama had initially impressed me to the point I put up a post favorable about him on this board. While he has little credible experience to be president I thought he could go a long way to bridge the racial gap in the United States which could have been a fair trade for his lack of depth.
After the recent conversation about his pastor's public statements it seems he is unfortunately not as advanced as I'd hoped. It is possible he has actually made perceptions about racial relations worse, when it seemed he could make them better.
Hillary's remarks on the issue today were correct.
therefore, McCain '08. |
| |
03-25-2008, 09:42 PM
|
#2 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: West
Threads: 104
Posts: 209
| As a conservative, I plan on writing in a candidate. Three liberals are running and I can't vote for a liberal. I like Obama the most, but I can't take that socialist agenda of his. |
| |
03-25-2008, 09:49 PM
|
#3 | | Member
Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Dad of 3 in college in California
Threads: 64
Posts: 817
| P2N: what do you think Obama should have said about his former pastor? And how do you think Obama has made race relations worse? And finally, in what significant way do you consider Obama's membership in his church different from McCain's overt courting of Rev. Hagee? |
| |
03-25-2008, 10:09 PM
|
#4 | | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Threads: 1
Posts: 22
| I always enjoy these kind of posts that populate this site and others about Obama. Honestly, like you were going to vote for the guy anyway..
What I see are alot of people are afraid of Obama simply because he has a real chance to win. If he wasn't a serious canidate, would ya bother?
The other thing to keep in mind is the pres is just one part of the three legged stool. As much as Obama,Hiliary and John want certain things to be, they have to convince 51% of the folks in the other two branches. Going into what will be hard times in America it is doubtful the ambitious parts of anybody's plans will stick and more than possible the tax brackets will change again to raise revenues. |
| |
03-25-2008, 10:26 PM
|
#5 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Threads: 89
Posts: 3,311
| I don't agree with all his policies, but I like Obama because I think he has the potential to lead the country in such way that we won't have to be embarrassed to be Americans any more. He's the total anti-Bush. He's smart, articulate, thoughtful, and inspiring. He appears to be able to examine an issue from all sides and then formulate a solution.
Bush has only two solutions for every problem the country faces: Tax cuts for the rich or military intervention. One or the other. That's it. Obama has many more ideas at his disposal.
McCain is a good guy, but he's offering only more of the same. Hillary has some good ideas but is too wounded and unpopular to win. Of the three only Obama holds any real hope of turning things around. |
| |
03-25-2008, 10:35 PM
|
#6 | | Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Bay Area, CA Gender: Male
Threads: 17
Posts: 1,369
| Any of the three candidates will do better than Bush's government by hunch. |
| |
03-25-2008, 10:39 PM
|
#7 | | Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Threads: 33
Posts: 384
| ^^^
This is one thing I can agree on.
But I don't get what Hillary is trying to do. Won't her bringing up the pastor comments seem like shes beating a dead horse, and alienate herself from the black and young demographics when it comes to election time? But I guess now is better than later because by the time June rolls around people will be REALLY tired of hearing about his pastor, and shes takin ammunition away from the Republicans. |
| |
03-25-2008, 10:46 PM
|
#8 | | Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Threads: 18
Posts: 329
| razorsharp - A write-in vote doesn't help get the "least liberal" candidate elected. Like it or not, those are the candidates we have - one of them WILL get elected. Better vote for the one you can most easily live with, or you might get the other one!
BTW, Just what is it about "Smaller Government, Lower Taxes, Controlled Spending, Pro-Life, Strong Military, Constructionist Justices" McCain that isn't Conservative enough for you? |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:03 PM
|
#9 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Threads: 96
Posts: 1,377
| Quote: |
what do you think Obama should have said about his former pastor?
| There's nothing he COULD have said, he SHOULD have gotten the hell out of the church once he found out what this guy was saying. |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:03 PM
|
#10 | | Member
Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Princeton, NJ '11 Gender: Male
Threads: 18
Posts: 890
| bz2010: When did McCain become pro-controlled spending? Last I checked he wanted to continue the war (one of America's largest expenses) indefinitely. Explain, please? |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:17 PM
|
#11 | | Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Threads: 14
Posts: 216
| What does being conservative mean to you? |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:17 PM
|
#12 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Threads: 96
Posts: 1,377
| Quote: |
When did McCain become pro-controlled spending? Last I checked he wanted to continue the war (one of America's largest expenses) indefinitely. Explain, please?
| When you compare him to Obama, who wants national health care, revived infrastructure, reduced tuition for all, an end to aids in africa (by way of the US) it seems pretty damn controlled.
Also, you're buying into a pretty big lie if you think Obama is going to pull troops out when he gets in the white house. He said he'd take them out in 16 month....when somebody inquired how he'd do this w/o the situation collapsing he said once he talked to the leading military leaders he could change that timetable based on what they say. But hey, keep drinking the koolaid  |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:23 PM
|
#13 | | Member
Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Princeton, NJ '11 Gender: Male
Threads: 18
Posts: 890
| LaxAttack09: Oh, I don't think Obama's a fiscal conservative either. Don't make the mistake of thinking that because I like Obama's war ideas better than McCain's that I support him. I'm very much not committed to a candidate at the moment. I just think it is being totally intellectually dishonest for various Republicans to call themselves fiscal conservatives while supporting an extremely expensive war. I would level the same criticism at the Democrats if they called themselves fiscal conservatives - but they don't, so no need. |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:28 PM
|
#14 | | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Threads: 1
Posts: 22
| I think all this situation shows is hillary doesn't play well from behind.  It's only going to get worse.
"There's nothing he COULD have said, he SHOULD have gotten the hell out of the church once he found out what this guy was saying."
Why? You're an adult what part of that guys words do you HAVE to accept? There's alot of deeply religous people I know whom I may agree 75% of the time with, the rest is how they say bat s.... crazy? If you disowned everybody that didn't share your opinion 100% of the time, you'd be alone..
As for the pastor, before I would condem, I want to know why he feels that way? Maybe your opinion of America would change if you were black, indian, asian or hispanic? Might just depend on how often you were stopped and searched while driving home..no? Maybe he feels the way he does because he sees the poor and the helpless and sees no help or hope for them. Maybe he's ate a nitestick for doing nothing... maybe the guy has his reasons. Maybe your vision of America isn't his... |
| |
03-25-2008, 11:28 PM
|
#15 | | Senior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Threads: 96
Posts: 1,377
| Do you find it intellectually dishonest that Obama says he'll pull the troops out in 16 months when he's made it known, in one on one interviews, that that "plan" could change if leading military officials don't think it's the right thing to do....and that's exactly what everybody is saying now? |
| | All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:20 AM. |