Life long democrat and ............

ctownguy

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top hillary clinton fundraiser switches to McCain/Palin ticket and will also campaign for them.

It's nice to know that some on the left actually think for themselves and put the country first ahead of the angry left wing of their party.:00hour :00hour :toast:
 

BobbyBlueChip

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I thought you were better than that, you usually have thoughtful comments, but I guess you are falling prey to all the rest of the leftys on this site.

So be it:SIB

Just part of the angry left wondering what flip flops are appropriate. It just seems like Democrats are idiots until they turncoat.
 

marine

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what's the flip flop?

was a hillary supporter... hillary isn't on the ticket to vote for.
so they are voting mccain.

not really a flip flop is it?

oh wait.. or do you mean that because Barrack was nominated by the Democratic party, people should just fall in line and punch obama's name on the ballot because the DNC said so?

god forbid someone votes for who they want, right?
 

marine

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and you used flip flop.

its pretty obvious that they would have to switch.. like duh?
what are they supposed to do? keep on rooting for hilary?

so by your definition... everyone who voted and supported hillary in the primaries... and now votes for either mccain or obama is a flip flopper, right?

Just wanna make sure I am tracking with this...
 

dr. freeze

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I would really like to see Hilde hooked up to a lie detector and tell us she is hoping Barry wins:142smilie :142smilie :142smilie :nono: :nono: :nono:

Need to put her and Bill on that gameshow where the truth comes out for money. Would that ever be fun to watch. Give them a prize to win (Hilde could take Dingy Harry's job and we all know what prize Slick Willy would ask for) and they would readily go on that show.:142smilie :142smilie :142smilie
 

BobbyBlueChip

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and you used flip flop.

its pretty obvious that they would have to switch.. like duh?
what are they supposed to do? keep on rooting for hilary?

so by your definition... everyone who voted and supported hillary in the primaries... and now votes for either mccain or obama is a flip flopper, right?

Just wanna make sure I am tracking with this...

Anyone who changes their opinion is a flip flopper. And honestly, I think that's the answer, I don't "know" it's the answer - it's really a Republican term.

So, no, if you voted for Hillary and then McCain, not a flip flopper, but I doubt that ctownguy would start a post about "that". He used 9 smilies.
 

ctownguy

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I'll try and explain for you bobby, this thread was about voting ones conscience and not following the party line.

Then you come in with a smartass remark about flip flops because you have nothing else to add, proving once again you can only revert to trival crap when confronted with something that you can't explain or do not what to address seriously.

Your still the short sided pinhead we all have learned to know here at MJ's.

And it was only 3 smilies, proving you also can't count
:142smilie
 

dawgball

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It seems from this thread that others besides myself are also drinking bourbon tonight....
 

Jabberwocky

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In June the McCain campaign released a list of "prominent Democrats and Independents" supporting John McCain. Few of the names were prominent, and a review by the Huffington Post found that more than half of the list had "either obvious ties to the Republican Party or are regularly touted by GOP politicians as Democratic defectors."

The newly announced group of "Republicans for Obama" hope to have a more lasting impact. They certainly have a higher profile than McCain's Democratic defectors (other than top surrogate and possible veep Joe Lieberman). Organizers on a conference call this morning included former Iowa Congressman Jim Leach, former Rhode Island Senator Lincoln Chafee and Rita Hauser, a member of President Bush's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. The Republican Mayor of Fairbanks, Alaska also endorsed Barack Obama today. (There's an already existing Republicans for Obama website founded by John Martin, a Navy reservist who served in Afghanistan and lives in The Bronx.)

These so-called "Obamicans" -- throwbacks to the days of traditional Republicanism -- are disgusted by the Bush Administration's militant foreign policy, reckless spending and cronyism at home, and America's plummeting reputation in the world. In John McCain, they no longer see a maverick, but a continuation of the Bush-Cheney era.

"From my perspective, this is simply not a time for politics as usual," said Jim Leach, one of the smartest and most decent members of the House of Representatives, who represented eastern Iowa for three decades until 2006 and was one of only six House Republicans to presciently oppose the war in Iraq. "The case for inspiring, new political leadership and a social ethic has seldom been more self-evident."

Adds Leach: "Barack Obama's platform is a call for change. But the change that he is so gracefully articulating is more renewal than departure. While a break from the ideological policies of the moment, it is rooted in very old American values that are as much a part of the Republican as the Democratic tradition. There's an emphasis on individual rights, fairness and balance at home, and progressive internationalism."

Says Rita Hauser, "It is not traditional Republicanism to make war on everybody who disagree with you." The longtime foreign policy hand called McCain's response to the Russia-Georgia conflict "bellicose [and] threatening."

Like Leach, Lincoln Chafee is a reminder of the days when moderates could find a home in the Republican Party as advocates for fiscal responsibility, environmental protection and restraint in foreign policy. Chafee left the Republican Party in March to vote for Obama in Rhode Island's Democratic primary. He was the first Democrat Chafee had ever voted for.

Chafee served alongside McCain in the Senate; they were the only two Senate Republicans to oppose the Bush tax cuts in 2001. Chafee has since watched McCain adopt the very policies he once denounced. "Seeing the two different John McCain's is a fracture in his credibility," Chafee says.

How big of an impact this group will have remains to be seen. Obama performed well in traditionally Republican areas in the Democratic primary and attracted legions of "Obamicans" in swing areas like Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Yet partisanship has hardened since the primary has ended (usually the opposite occurs), with both Obama and McCain now drawing 90 percent support from self-identified members of their parties.

Both candidates have attempted to encroach on the other party's turf. McCain has made a bid for disaffected Clintonites, and elderly and blue-collar Democrats. Obama has courted moderate and suburban Republicans in swing states like Virginia and libertarians out West. It only takes a few points here or there to alter the election.

Hauser says the "Republicans for Obama" website will be online tomorrow and will include "a couple of hundred thousand names. We hope it will grow exponentially as we go through the campaign."

http://www.republicansforobama.org/
 

THE KOD

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top hillary clinton fundraiser switches to McCain/Palin ticket and will also campaign for them.

It's nice to know that some on the left actually think for themselves and put the country first ahead of the angry left wing of their party.:00hour :00hour :toast:
...............................................................

WASHINGTON (CNN) ? Lynn Forester de Rothschild, a prominent Hillary Clinton supporter and member of the Democratic National Committee?s Platform Committee, will endorse John McCain for president on Wednesday, her spokesman tells CNN.

The announcement will take place at a news conference on Capitol Hill, just blocks away from the DNC headquarters. Forester will ?campaign and help him through the election,? the spokesman said of her plans to help the Republican presidential nominee.

Forester was a major donor for Clinton earning her the title as a Hillraiser for helping to raise at least $100,000 for the New York Democratic senator?s failed presidential bid.

In an interview with CNN this summer, Forester did not hide her distaste for eventual Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama.

?This is a hard decision for me personally because frankly I don?t like him,? she said of Obama in an interview with CNN?s Joe Johns. ?I feel like he is an elitist. I feel like he has not given me reason to trust him.?

Forester is the CEO of EL Rothschild, a holding company with businesses around the world. She is married to international banker Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. Forester is a member of the DNC?s Democrats Abroad chapter and splits her time living in London and New York.

................................................................

Ctown - do you even know who this woman is ?

She is calling Obama a elitist. She is one of Hillarys best friends. The woman has like 200 billion banked.

She is one of McCains most fervent supporters now. :142smilie

damn neocons
 
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