Tuesday, January 16, 2007

TOOTing the Obama horn


The most inexperienced candidate in the Dummycrat field has the audacity think he can occupy the White House.

This comes even after
insisting during the 2004 campaign and through his first year in the Senate that he had no intention of running for president.

Barack Obama said Tuesday he is taking the initial step in a presidential bid....

Obama announced on his Web site...that he was filing a presidential exploratory committee. He said he would announce more about his plans in his home state of Illinois on Feb. 10.

He's the biggest threat to Hillary Rodham Clinton and his rock star status shows Dummycrats are worried the country isn't ready to elect her.

"Obambi", according to National Journal, has a more liberal voting record than Hillary Clinton. Last year Mr. Obama had a perfect 100% voting record from both the Americans for Democratic Action and the AFL-CIO.

Last month he said, "This is an office you can't run for just on the basis of ambition. You have to feel deep in your gut that you have a vision for the country that is sufficiently important that it needs to be out there."

Apparently "Obambi" established the vision thing starting in HIGH school when, "I got high [to] push questions of who I was out of my mind."

"Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it...".

According to "Obambi" his drug use started in high school and ending in college.

Out of the closet as well is a cozy relationship with a crooked fund raiser/supporter/neighbor, Antoin "Tony" Rezko.

It hasn't stopped the boy wonder from being proclaimed, "...a new Jack or Bobby Kennedy."

History hasn't been kind to Kennedy.

Late last year, The Atlantic Monthly asked 10 eminent historians to rank the 100 most influential Americans of all time, and Kennedy did not make the cut. Worse, he was named on only two ballots.

...The panelists -- who included Pulitzer Prize winners Doris Kearns Goodwin , Walter McDougall , Gordon S. Wood , and David M. Kennedy -- clearly viewed JFK as more of a phenomenon than a truly influential figure.

...Now, historians seem ready to believe that Kennedy's fame was entirely a matter of style...

The same can be said now for Barack Hussein Obama.



0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home