Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Clinton Wins But Is a Loser ?

Well the tv radio and other pundits were quick of the mark in blasting Hillary for continuing in the race.She is hurting the party because McCain will campaign while the Dems fight it out. They ar calling still for Hillary to quit. She can't win is all I hear and read. Now all of a sudden the superdelegates don't count it should be Obama now!!
They can't quit cutting her, yesterday it was if Hillary loses tonight it's over for her. This morning after winning three contests its still over for her.Well hope she stays till the last night of the convention. Threre was talk on ABC that there will be riots ( they didn't say who but we know don't we) if Obama is not given the nomination.
They say she could win all the remaining contests and still lose because Obama has the most delegates and Hillary can't catch up without the supers.That is what the super delegates are there for to ensure that the most qualiified person who can beat the Republican gets the nomination. We all know that is Hillary and the media is trying to shove Obama up our Ass. Well I am pretty f--king angry and if she doesn't get it after winning the remainder of the states then we whites ought to riot.
This entire damn problem was brought on by the media and their affirmative activity towards Obama. Let us not forget the political affiliation of the ownership of the media.Thier reading of the Texas win was too small a margin to mean anything.
Hey big deal a black wins the black states but loses in the rest of the big ones, California, New YOrk,Mass,Ohio, Texas, Florida,etc.
We can't let the media determine this election as they did in 2000 and 2004 with Bush. Cut up the person they don't like and lay off the one they want.

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Taylor Marsh Blog


The wind at Barack's back, the press at his feet, but he couldn't close it out.
Now John McCain looms large. War hero. Tortured veteran. Experienced national security hawk.
In his shadows stands Barack Obama, a gifted man, but one who didn't care to call a single hearing of his foreign relations sub-committee. Who couldn't keep his top economist on a leash. Who answered a national security ad with an ad that talked about one speech, which was answered a second time with irrefutable facts on his non-action on Afghanistan, which left his campaign mute on the one subject which Republicans always win.
Lunch bucket Democrats got it and didn't buy into it.
Now it's no longer about just delegates, but about resumes. Hero versus rhetoric and change without proof; hero versus action, backed up with experience and passion for policy. No longer about a primary season, but about who can win the general election.
Eleven wins at Barack's back and he couldn't close it out; couldn't seal the deal.
In the opening stands Hillary Clinton. The first woman who ever had a chance to change the country and the world in one swoop. A woman with the U.S. military Armed Forces standing by her side and backing her up. Strength beyond wisdom, which comes through alliances gotten through years of hard work. A woman with a lifetime of experience applying for The Job.
A fighter, but not just to win. To lead. To change the world. A woman at the helm. It can happen. Believe.
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In Spite of Clintons Big Wins in TWO BIG STATES
it was near impossible to find any positive news stories about it.
Above is one here is another.
The Comeback Kid: Hillary Clinton Does a McCain

Everyone is trying to scramble to explain Hillary Clinton's turnaround tonight. Negative campaigning. Aggressivness. Elbow grease. NAFTA. Rezko. Saturday Night Live. Lots of stuff.
But the bottom line is that Barack Obama's campaign had some air let out of the balloon this week by a media that began to feel guilty for imbalanced coverage of the two. And Obama's folks lost control of the agenda-setting function that a frontrunner usually has.
After the Wisconsin debate, I thought that Clinton had begun to acquiesce to Obama's surge. Many on her campaign -- at high levels -- thought this was the case as well. And what I thought was taking place after was a "negotiation" for what the role of the Clinton franchise would be.
That is now a dead narrative. Clinton is back and wants to win. Obama still has a magic aura, but it is a bit more tarnished this week than last.
And the bottom line tonight -- despite the fact that Obama won Vermont and that Texas is so close and the caucus process so mismanaged that it's hard not to believe that a recount won't be demanded -- is that Hillary Clinton "did a McCain" tonight -- and she's back in the race. . .big time.
-- Steve Clemons publishes the popular political blog, The Washington Note

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