Blogroll

Choose skin :


Who's Online?

  • Guest Users: 22

powered by
b2evolution

Designed by iFrame

evoskin by Rob M. Worley

Credits: blog software | web hosting | ads

captainkona © 2006



BLOGS WE READ
Tennessee:
News Coma
KnoxViews
Whitescreek Journal
Sharon Cobb
Guerilla Gals
Shuck and Jive
Carole Borges



Roll it Up!

May 2 '08

Permalink 12:59:15 am, Categories: The Founding Father's Flying Circus  

Fate is fate. Though impossible to explain, shit happens and that’s all there is to it.

This brutal primary season will come to a close soon and Barack Obama will be the nominee. That’s the way it should be. The future of the democratic party, and the nation in general lies in the hands of America’s youth. That youth, backed up by some aging hippies and other visionaries ;), has made it’s case and staked it’s claim to it’s own future.
And Democrats, Super Delegates in particular, are ready to pass the torch to the next generation.

The time is now for the Democratic Party to evolve beyond the Republican Lite existence it’s maintained for so long and lead this nation, it’s people, and the world around us out of the darkness and into the light. It’s time for the Democratic Party to become a real opposition party.

New blood is what we need, and that’s what we’re going to have….

Change? And then some.

From Politico:

Obama backer predicts victory in Hill war

By AMIE PARNES & JOSEPHINE HEARN | 4/30/08 4:31 AM EST

Capitol Hill insiders say the battle for congressional superdelegates is over, and one Senate supporter of Barack Obama is hinting strongly that he has prevailed over Hillary Rodham Clinton.

While more than 80 Democrats in the House and Senate have yet to state their preferences in the race for the Democratic nomination, sources said Tuesday that most of them have already made up their minds and have told the campaigns where they stand.

“The majority of superdelegates I’ve talked to are committed, but it is a matter of timing,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.). “They’re just preferring to make their decision public after the primaries are over. … They would like someone else to act for them before they talk about it in the cold light of day.”

Obama currently holds an 18-13 lead among committed superdelegates in the Senate, while Clinton holds a 77-74 lead in the House. Asked which way the committed-but-unannounced superdelegates are leaning, McCaskill — who has endorsed Obama — said: “James Brown would say, ‘I Feel Good.’”

Not so fast, said Clinton spokesman Phil Singer.
“Considering the rough patch Sen. Obama is going through, it’s understandable that Sen. McCaskill would want to change the subject, but her observations don’t jibe with what automatic delegates are actually saying,” he said. “Most are concerned about Sen. Obama’s electability and are impressed by the fact that Sen. Clinton is winning the states that Democrats must carry if we are to be successful in November.”

Still, supporters of both Clinton and Obama say that the lobbying for congressional superdelegates seems to have decreased in recent weeks.

McCaskill said that the campaigns have all but given up on lobbying her Senate colleagues because they know their minds are made up.

Clinton backer Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) acknowledged that the lobbying is no longer as aggressive as it once was. “I think there’s a different touch now,” he said. “We’re staying engaged. Right now, it’s about making sure everyone still feels loved and wanted.”

Montana Sen. Jon Tester — one of the Democrats who has yet to commit publicly — said the campaigns “haven’t applied much pressure” of late. “I haven’t heard much, and it’s been a few weeks,” he said.

“All the low-hanging fruit has already been picked,” said one Democratic Senate aide. “The rest are waiting to see who the winner is or are doing what’s in their best interests. Most of the people that are remaining just don’t want to pick the wrong side.”

Probably just waiting on one of the usual jelly-spined Centrists in the house to find the guts to speak first.

This primary is over. John McCockroach is next.

Let the games begin! :>

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: EdB [Visitor] · http://wonderwinds.com
I think you're right. I think Obama got it done. In fact I'd say he would have it locked down except Hillary is very powerful magic to be up against. Anyone other than Obama and she would have it down yah?

McSame ain't got a ghost of a chance. If he didn't sell his soul in the middle of Bush's reign he might have had a chance at not being totally crushed, and if he got to run against Hillary he might even have a chance at winning, but no: his fate is to be destroyed by the future.

Dr Hoffman died :(
PermalinkPermalink 05/02/08 @ 03:51
Comment from: captainkona [Member] Email · http://tn420.org
McCain will be easy for Obama to tear down. For us too. ;)

For one, McBush isn't smart enough to be president and all the best Repig advisers are exposed and disgraced.

Iraq is getting worse and the country is tired of it. Southern Cal ship yards were shut down a day or two ago because of the anti war protest strike by the longshoreman's union. No estimate yet on financial loss.
Brilliant strike for a good cause and a fine display of power.

These same hard-ass longshoremen were all for the war in the beginning.

The war is McCain's only pillar. He just doesn't know jack shit about anything else. Nothing.
Being a war candidate is thankfully a thing of the past in America.

And yeah, Hillary has some powerful mojo over her worshipers (worshiper is not the same as supporter btw).
I fully believe that even with the Bosnia Betty lie and the other undignified actions, Hillary would be way out in front had she not positioned herself as a hawk and had fessed up about the war vote.
She has never shown remorse for her hand in the matter and I'm certain that's what ultimately cooked her goose with the base.

The sooner she's gone the better.
PermalinkPermalink 05/02/08 @ 13:23

Leave a comment:

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.

Allowed XHTML tags: <p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small>
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email and url)
(Allow users to contact you through a message form (your email will NOT be displayed.))

Previous post: Poll: Obama Leads Clinton in NCNext post: The REAL Hillary Clinton