Clinton is MORE of a COLORED then is OH!Bama

the COLOREDS are such LOSERS their HEROZ

are

WHITES


shame on the COLOREDS for letting this happen to them!


shame on the COLOREDS for saying such demeaning things about themselves!
 
"I want Barack Obama to be president," Young said, pausing for effect, "in 2016."

"It's not a matter of being inexperienced. It's a matter of being young," Young said. "There's a certain level of maturity ... you've got to learn to take a certain amount of (expletive)."

Young went on to say that Obama needs a protective network that he currently lacks - a quality that could hurt him if he were to be elected. He said Hillary Clinton already has that kind of network, including her husband to back her up.

"There are more black people that Bill and Hillary lean on," Young said. "You cannot be president alone. ... To put a brother in there by himself is to set him up for crucifixion. His time will come and the world will be ready for a visionary leadership."
 
Meanwhile the COLORED ClitBITCH is bashing

Oprah!

for her support of

OH!Bama

as long as the COLOREDS allow themselves and welcome being SHIT on

they will remain LOSERS!
 
print the whole thing.......member of a LOSER "culture"!


ATLANTA (AP) - Civil rights icon Andrew Young says Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is too young and lacks the support network to ascend to the White House.

In a media interview posted online, Young also quipped that Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton has her husband behind her, and that "Bill is every bit as black as Barack."

"He's probably gone with more black women than Barack," Young said of former President Clinton, drawing laughter from a live television audience. Young, 75, was quick to follow his comment on Bill Clinton with the disclaimer, "I'm clowning."

Young, a former United Nations ambassador and lieutenant of Martin Luther King, Jr., made the comments at an appearance at "Newsmakers Live," an urban media forum that interviews prominent Atlanta personalities and political figures.

Excerpts of the interview were posted on Newsmakers Journal, the Newsmakers' Web site, though the date of the appearance was not included with the video posting. Young was scheduled to appear on "Newsmakers Live" on Sept. 5, according to a press release.
 
"Young, 75, was quick to follow his comment on Bill Clinton with the disclaimer, "I'm clowning.""
:rolleyes:
 
Oh!

Yeah

He KNEW he shit up

and said so

imagine a WHITE guy saying so

Rememeber when Biden spoke the truth

and then

was corrected?


Shame on the COLOREDS

this isnt the first or the 21st time this shit is said
 
where are the LOSER COLOREDS of the board?

arent you EVEN MORE ashamed then you already are?
 
ClitBITCh who is COLORED bashes a real COLORED person






Oprah Lends Star Power to Obama in Iowa


Dec 9, 3:28 AM (ET)

By NEDRA PICKLER




DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Talk-show diva Oprah Winfrey said worry about the direction of her country and a personal belief in Barack Obama pushed her to make her first endorsement in a presidential campaign, invaluable support in a tight race for the Democratic nomination.

The weekend "Oprahpalooza" lends A-list star power to Obama's campaign, drawing huge crowds that Obama hopes will translate into votes. Tens of thousands were expected to turn out for Winfrey's Iowa stops and her Sunday visits to South Carolina and New Hampshire with Obama and his wife. In South Carolina, the campaign ran out of the 18,000 tickets originally available for the biggest event and moved it to the 80,000-seat University of South Carolina football stadium.

In Des Moines, spectators lined up hours early. Cameras flashed in the capacity crowd during Winfrey's speech, which opened and closed to loud applause and was frequently interrupted by cries of "We love Oprah."

Winfrey said she felt nervous and "out of my pew" as she addressed a gathering hall packed shoulder-to-shoulder in the largest gathering of Iowans in the campaign this year. But she did not hide her political convictions, making an argument for change from the Bush administration other than another Clinton in the White House.



Winfrey did not mention the current president or Obama rival Hillary Rodham Clinton by name, but was not subtle about her feelings for Clinton's argument that Obama doesn't have the experience to be president when she voted to authorize the war in Iraq.

"The amount of time you spend in Washington means nothing unless you are accountable for the judgment you made," Winfrey said. She said from the beginning Obama "stood with clarity and conviction against this war in Iraq."

"There are times that I even worry about what happens to our country," Winfrey said, standing on a small stage before a sea of people in the 100,000-square-foot hall. "That is why for the very first time in my life I feel compelled to stand up and speak out for the man who I believe has a new vision for America."

The campaign distributed 23,000 tickets for the Des Moines event and more than 10,000 for another later in Cedar Rapids. Thousands of people, many who don't normally participate in politics, came into his offices, volunteered and attended caucus trainings to score tickets.

Winfrey and the Obamas flew through snow to the Cedar Rapids event, though weather grounded Obama rival Joe Biden's campaign plane traveling the opposite route about the same time. Temperatures were in the low teens, and the Obama event was not all the way full. Winfrey delivered much the same speech that she did in Des Moines, again drawing cheers as she read prepared remarks. Winfrey drew laughter as she joked that she wasn't there to give out free cars and refrigerators as she has on her daytime talk show.


(AP) Oprah Winfrey, left, acknowledges a rally for Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama,...



The campaign said 18,500 people showed up in Des Moines. At least one person near the stage passed out, and paramedics came in to help.

Clinton countered Oprah-mania by debuting two other women on the campaign trail - her mother, Dorothy Rodham, and daughter, Chelsea. Neither had appeared publicly yet with the senator in her presidential bid.

The reluctant Chelsea Clinton's public emergence normally would have been big news, but it was a last-minute announcement that was overshadowed by hype surrounding Winfrey.

"Everybody wants to have his or her supporters speak out and try to persuade voters. At the end of the day, it's a choice between those of us who are running. I think most voters understand that," Hillary Rodham Clinton said after a campaign stop in Williamsburg, Iowa. "As we move toward the caucuses, voters are going to be weighing everything. I trust voters."

Clinton pledged "change across the generations" as she courted voters with her 88-year-old mother and 27-year-old daughter. "We're getting close to the caucuses," the senator said. "I always think it's better to go to the caucuses with a buddy. Today, I've got some buddies with me."



The Democratic race in Iowa is tight, with Obama, Clinton and 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards in a dead heat. Winfrey said she doesn't know if her influence on the presidential campaign will have the same impact as driving up the popularity of books and products featured on her show.

"I understand the difference between the Book Club and a free refrigerator," she said. "I understand the difference between that and this critical moment in our nation's history.

"Over the years, I have voted for as many Republicans as I have Democrats," Winfrey said - one line that didn't draw applause in the partisan crowd. "This isn't about partisanship for me. This is very, very personal. I'm here because of my personal conviction about Barack Obama and what I know he can do for America."

She said she is "tired of politics as usual," which is why she seldom invites politicians on her show to spread their rhetoric. Obama, she said, has an "ear for eloquence and a tongue dipped in the unvarnished truth."

Obama spoke after Winfrey, and acknowledged that he was under no illusions that the crowd was there to hear him. Indeed, some people left during his speech, although the majority stuck around to hear him.

"You want Oprah as vice president?" he asked the crowd that responded with enthusiastic cheers. "That would be a demotion, you understand that?"

The Obama campaign is particularly interested in winning over women, who have been leaning toward Clinton in the polls.

Terri Johnson of Urbandale, Iowa, lined up about two hours before the Des Moines event with three of her five children along. She said she had not been involved much in politics before, but was drawn to the rally by both Oprah and Obama.

"I would have voted for him without her, but it's nice to see Oprah," Johnson said, joking that she hoped Winfrey would have one of her famous giveaways. "I'd love to get a car."
 
OH!Prah sure brought out the crowds for OH!Bama

Expect the COLORED Clits to bash the COLORED OH!Prah and OH!Bama!
 
OH!Prah sure brought out the crowds for OH!Bama

Expect the COLORED Clits to bash the COLORED OH!Prah and OH!Bama!

I thought we were going to settle this by counting how many black women Bill and Obama had slept with, and save whoever nailed Oprah as a tie breaker.
 
"I want Barack Obama to be president," Young said, pausing for effect, "in 2016."

"It's not a matter of being inexperienced. It's a matter of being young," Young said. "There's a certain level of maturity ... you've got to learn to take a certain amount of (expletive)."

Young went on to say that Obama needs a protective network that he currently lacks - a quality that could hurt him if he were to be elected. He said Hillary Clinton already has that kind of network, including her husband to back her up.

"There are more black people that Bill and Hillary lean on," Young said. "You cannot be president alone. ... To put a brother in there by himself is to set him up for crucifixion. His time will come and the world will be ready for a visionary leadership."
"He's probably gone with more black women than Barack," Young said of former President Clinton, drawing laughter from a live television audience. Young, 75, was quick to follow his comment on Bill Clinton with the disclaimer, "I'm clowning."
 
I ink that the behaviorof the Clits in this episode should show the COLOREDS what they are thought of

of course, the COLOREDS never learn!
 
Im still trying to figure out what the Clinton administration did for black people that they love him so much.
 
"He's probably gone with more black women than Barack," Young said of former President Clinton, drawing laughter from a live television audience. Young, 75, was quick to follow his comment on Bill Clinton with the disclaimer, "I'm clowning."

speaks volumes about what Young thinks of his people

NOT MUCH
 
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