Dixon Carter Lee
Headliner
- Joined
- Nov 22, 1999
- Posts
- 48,682
Or will Jesus refuse to step down?
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Or will Jesus refuse to step down?
Or will Jesus refuse to step down?
Can you image Palin in 2012? Will she finally be able to answer a Couric question without looking like a complete moron? Stay tuned.
Clear as day in my memory is the table of Boston Red Sox fans making a very public show of ordering champagne at the NYC sports bar in which my crew was watching Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. To their credit, the guys brought those bottles over to some other Mets fans' table, and we know what happened the next night.
I'm just saying, positive as signs are, Democrats might want to wait until they're Mookie Wilson is out to order champagne.
That's an easy one.
If Obama wins and the Democrats are filibuster-proof in 2009-10, there will be a lot more Republicans in Congress in January 2013.
Dude. Win or lose, the Republican Party, as it is, and as it was, is no more.
You're dead, son. Get yourself buried.
Can you image Palin in 2012? Will she finally be able to answer a Couric question without looking like a complete moron? Stay tuned.
OK, we've officially arrived at the point where making a down-the-middle statement is perceived as being partisan for the "other" side. I'm with Aliea: end the season already. (I'm an Obama voter, Dix.)Dude. Win or lose, the Republican Party, as it is, and as it was, is no more.
You're dead, son. Get yourself buried.
OK, we've officially arrived at the point where making a down-the-middle statement is perceived as being partisan for the "other" side. I'm with Aliea: end the season already. (I'm an Obama voter, Dix.)
This kind of "threat" of Gov. Palin taking over the Republicans seemed incredible at first blush to me, as well -- at worst, she's no more gifted than another Pat Buchanan with nicer legs and poorer speaking skills.
Two days after next week's election, top conservatives will gather at the Virginia weekend home of one of the movement's most prominent members to begin a conversation about their role in the GOP and how best to revive a party that may be out of power at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue next year.
"There's a sense that the Republican Party is broken, but the conservative movement is not," said this source, suggesting that it was the betrayal of some conservative principles by Bush and congressional leaders that led to the party's decline.
Either way, Sarah Palin will be a central part of discussion.
If the Arizona senator wins, the discussion will feature much talk of, "How do we work with this administration?" said the attendee, an acknowledgement that conservatives won't always have a reliable ally in the Oval Office.
Under this scenario, Palin would be seen as their conduit to power. “She would be the conservative in the White House,” is how the source put it.
Should McCain lose next Tuesday, the conversation will include who to groom as the next generation of conservative leaders – a list that will feature Palin at or near the top.
This kind of "threat" of Gov. Palin taking over the Republicans seemed incredible at first blush to me, as well -- at worst, she's no more gifted than another Pat Buchanan with nicer legs and poorer speaking skills.
However, after some thought, perhaps she's positioning herself to be the second coming of W?
Think about it -- hard right leanings, deeply polarizing, klutzy and tongue-tied... but no matter how much you may hate him, W did manage to get elected. Twice.
Maybe Gov. Palin thinks she can recycle that Rove magic. Maybe she's right.
Scary thought. Happy Halloween!
Woof!
Palin is a far better politician than W ever was. She is a natural. The old Republican stalwarts are only going to hoble her chances at getting elected. They will never except a woman as president. She needs to dump them as fast as possible after this election is over.
Fixed it for ya.
Like we've been trying to tell you. This is what happens when you're to the right of the "far left." It doesn't matter how far to the right you are.OK, we've officially arrived at the point where making a down-the-middle statement is perceived as being partisan for the "other" side. I'm with Aliea: end the season already. (I'm an Obama voter, Dix.)
Like we've been trying to tell you. This is what happens when you're to the right of the "far left." It doesn't matter how far to the right you are.![]()
I'm not sure who the "old Republican stalwarts" are that you refer to. But I think it's foolish to stereotype an entire group by saying they would never accept a woman president.
I'm probably as fiscally conservative as anyone on this board (socially conservative - not so much), and I regard Palin as the one candidate of the four I'd willingly cast a vote for simply because she is not part of the D.C. culture.
Thanks for your input.
In 1994 the GOP came back strong after only two years of the Clinton White House.
I would suggest if Obama and Congress are strongly Democrat and taxes and unemployment and the deficit are up, that illegals are streaming across the border again and getting "free" health care, that the tide will turn very quickly.
People will realize that this is not the "change" they had in mind.
But that's just my opinion and I could be wrong.
Can you image Palin in 2012? Will she finally be able to answer a Couric question without looking like a complete moron? Stay tuned.
Dude. Win or lose, the Republican Party, as it is, and as it was, is no more.