Monday, March 3, 2008

Barrack Obama was Able to Woo Over One of the Super Delegates - Quick Alert the Media



Amazingly enough, no one seems to be mentioning the fact that the media is trumping the Barrack Obama campaign in order to make up for any slow news days. Of course, any time a political campaign spends that kind of money on TV Advertising, the media is somewhat obliged to speak favorably of them. But, someone needs to ask the question; Is this about the media, or is this about the American People and the Future of this Great Nation?



After all, we have sure been through a lot together and we have come a long way. This election is looking more like a circus than any sort of much over due political dialogue about the forward progress of the great nation ever created in the history of mankind; that is what the United States of America is right? We are talking about a Nation at the tippy top of the food chain, with a 17 Trillion Dollar GDP and growing, with now over 303,000,000 million people.



This Presidential Election should not be a popularity contest or about a rising political "Hollywood Type" star. Our nation deserves proper discussion and dialogue on the realities and our future. We, the people, remember us, it is about US, not about them. We choose, not the media and not the political machines. We must choose the best candidate to lead this nation forward, we have too much at stake to make a mistake right now. The great Nation deserves the best possible person, will work tirelessly to make sure that we stay on top. This is a critical election, this is serious, we need to talk seriously about the issues now.




"Lance Winslow" - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance Winslow's Bio

Friday, February 29, 2008

Election 2008 - You Decide



Denounce or Reject?

Here I go again, shaking things up for the politically aware, provocative thinkers and social butterflies: those who perhaps need a topic to spark conversation at the next social mixer. Here goes...


In their final Democratic debate (February 26) at Cleveland State University, just one week before what appears to be critical primaries in Ohio and Texas, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama faced-off. As the showdown on who's the most suitable candidate for the White House began, fingers pointed to: who initially supported a useless war in Iraq; who supported the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that needs renegotiation; who failed to be strong enough to "denounce" or is it "reject" support from controversial leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan...and more.


Clinton believes that Obama's choice of the word "denounce" to express his refusal of Farrakhan's candidacy endorsement is just not emphatic enough. Obama described Farrakhan's numerous anti-Semitic remarks as "reprehensible," and said, "I obviously cannot censor him," and that he has been very clear in his denunciation. Clinton fired back, "There is a difference between denouncing and rejecting."



Is there really a difference? Okay, let's examination both words.



From Webster's II Dictionary:



Denounce:
1. To condemn openly.



2. To accuse formally.



3. To announce formally the ending of.



Reject:
1. To refuse to accept, recognize, or make use of.



2. To refuse to consider or grant.



3. To refuse affection or recognition to (a person).



Did Senator Clinton make a valid point, that Senator Obama's "denouncing" claim is not strong enough to prove that he has completely "rejected" any association with Farrakhan? As far as I'm concerned... semantics. Plus, perhaps Clinton needs to consider that one needs to pick their words very carefully when making public statements against a controversial leader like Farrakhan.


Nonetheless, regardless of what Clinton believes, what Obama claims or what the pundits predict as the outcome of the final debate between the two Democratic rivals, the question is: can somebody...anybody "denounce", "reject" or simply put an end to: the war in Iraq, the rising cost of oil and gas, the mortgage crisis and the economic recession?


Copyright 2008 Denrique Preudhomme