busybody..
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2002
- Posts
- 149,503
Obama "Town Hall" Retardery: All 3 Supposedly Random Audience Members He Called on Had Close Ties With His Administration...
White House Calls it a "Coincidence"....
Your fucking brain dead supporters may not be able to spot an obvious lie (a "coincidence," are they serious?), but we can...because we have this magical ability to think for ourselves....
President Obama offered a wonkish defense of his embattled health-care reform effort during an hour-long town hall meeting in Northern Virginia yesterday that featured seven questions, including one sent via Twitter and several from a handpicked audience of supporters.
In the stage-managed event, questions for Obama came from a live audience selected by the White House and the college, and from Internet questions chosen by the administration's new-media team. Of the seven questions the president answered, four were selected by his staff from videos submitted to the White House Web site or from those responding to a request for "tweets."
The president called randomly on three audience members. All turned out to be members of groups with close ties to his administration: the Service Employees International Union, Health Care for America Now, and Organizing for America, which is a part of the Democratic National Committee.
White House officials said that was a coincidence
White House Calls it a "Coincidence"....
Your fucking brain dead supporters may not be able to spot an obvious lie (a "coincidence," are they serious?), but we can...because we have this magical ability to think for ourselves....
President Obama offered a wonkish defense of his embattled health-care reform effort during an hour-long town hall meeting in Northern Virginia yesterday that featured seven questions, including one sent via Twitter and several from a handpicked audience of supporters.
In the stage-managed event, questions for Obama came from a live audience selected by the White House and the college, and from Internet questions chosen by the administration's new-media team. Of the seven questions the president answered, four were selected by his staff from videos submitted to the White House Web site or from those responding to a request for "tweets."
The president called randomly on three audience members. All turned out to be members of groups with close ties to his administration: the Service Employees International Union, Health Care for America Now, and Organizing for America, which is a part of the Democratic National Committee.
White House officials said that was a coincidence