'Hillary for president' rally draws 20 instead of hoped-for 200

AR182

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 9, 2000
18,654
87
0
Scottsdale,AZ
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
i don't know about anybody else but i find this very amusing....


THE TENNESSEAN

By BONNA de la CRUZ
Staff Writer

Published: Wednesday, 05/24/06
A Hillary Clinton rally drew critics of President Bush, nonpartisan voters looking for a strong leader, and people who want to elect a female president.

About 20 people attended the Tuesday event, the national kickoff for Hillarynow.com, a grass-roots group pushing to draft the New York senator and former first lady to run for president in 2008.

"I've been fired up about her for a long time," said Mary Sneed, 64, of Pegram. "I think she can get things done. I admire what she's done in upstate New York. If she can win over New Yorkers, she can win over anybody."

Organizers hoped to have 200 people at the event in Nashville, a city selected to show that Democrats can win in Southern states.

They were disappointed but said they are not focused on numbers.

"We can build something from this," said E. Gayle O'Hanlon, president of Enchanted Gingerbread, who cooked for and helped organize the fundraiser.

Clinton is not associated with the group. "Hillary is focused on working for the people of New York and winning re-election to the U.S. Senate," Ann Lewis, director of communications for Clinton's Senate campaign, said via e-mail.

Miami Beach-based activist Bob Kunst, the founder of Hillarynow.com, said Clinton needs the help of energized grass-roots supporters, not the Beltway consultants who tripped up the campaigns of John Kerry and Al Gore.

"Out of this can come the White House, starting here in Nashville," Kunst said. "We're not afraid of the controversy, and we have to make the controversy an ally."

Under large shade trees on a vacant lot in the Germantown neighborhood, the mostly female crowd picnicked. Two anti-Clinton protesters picketed on the sidewalk nearby.

"Nashville is well-known as the buckle of the Bible Belt, and Hillary's position is in direct opposition to the values of both Republicans and Democrats," said protest organizer Tom Kovach, 48, of Mt. Juliet, a candidate for Congress in the 5th District.

Attendees got custom-baked "Hillarynow.com ginger-girl" cookies that O'Hanlon baked and chocolate chip cookies from a Clinton recipe made by Goodlettsville chef Anna Lia Notardonato-Hicks.

"Even if she doesn't run, at least we started a dialogue about having a woman president," Notardonato-Hicks said. ?
 

hm23

Registered User
Forum Member
Mar 8, 2004
972
0
0
when I saw the webdress, I thought of the elocution phrase - how now, brown cow - and now I can't get it out of my head. :shrug:

I take it all 20 attendees were from the Isle of Lesbos. :scared
 

AR182

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 9, 2000
18,654
87
0
Scottsdale,AZ
stevie...

i don't know if you understand.... politicans cannot be elected running on a liberal platform since i heard about 20% of americans acknowledge that they are liberal......

hillary may be a flip flopper but she is not a neo-con....unless you classify everybody who doesn't agree with you to be a neo-con...
 
Last edited:

Chadman

Realist
Forum Member
Apr 2, 2000
7,501
42
48
SW Missouri
I can't decide which is funnier, the fact that the story seems to be pretty seriously written about a 20-person "rally", or the fact that there were two people that thought the "rally" was worthy of an organized protest.
 

StevieD

Registered User
Forum Member
Jun 18, 2002
9,509
44
48
72
Boston
AR, she is a Neocon. She is accepting money from Murdoch, he is the main Neocon fund Raiser. Mr. Clinton is in Old Man Bush's back pocket. Old man Bush is on the board of the Carlyle Group. That is enough not to trust her.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,485
161
63
Bowling Green Ky
Far from neocon--but is smart enough to know she can win pandering to liberal base--in fact she has also been heckled by the liberal element same as McCain and Rice at speaking engagements.
--which brings me to question--why are liberals in geneneral so disrespectful--when is last time you saw a conservative being hauled out of speaking forum--for being disruptive?? any Phsych majors out there that has input this type of behavior and link to liberals?

+++++++++++++++++++++++
Draft Gore Movement

Readers of the Internet's largest and most influential liberal Web blog overwhelmingly want Al Gore as the Democratic nominee for president in 2008. Sixty-eight percent of respondents in a DailyKos.com survey preferred Gore ? who has said he's not considering a run for the White House.

In a separate survey without the former vice president, liberal Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold handily defeated General Wesley Clark and former Virginia Governor Mark Warner with 44 percent of the vote. Presumptive Democratic favorite Hillary Clinton garnered less than 3 percent in both polls.

What's more, 25 percent of readers at Democratic blog, MyDD.com, named Clinton their least favorite potential candidate over Senator Joseph Biden and former Democratic Leader Tom Daschle.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Presidential Defense

New School President and former Democratic Senator Bob Kerrey is now defending the students who heckled and interrupted Arizona Republican Senator John McCain's commencement address at the school last week, including the student who took the stage to personally attack McCain.

On the Huffington Post, Kerrey called the students ? quote ? "rude, noisy, and disrespectful," but claimed their behavior was no worse than "the absence of civility and courtesy" shown by McCain during hard-fought Senate debates.

Kerrey also compared his students to pro-Democracy demonstrators in China's Tiananmen Square, adding that the protesters showed remarkable self-restraint by allowing McCain to complete his address at all.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
and on freedom of speach---

Free Speech for Some?

The American Civil Liberties Union is dedicated to defending free speech, but may soon ban board members from publicly speaking out against the organization.

The ACLU's committee on standards is proposing that individual directors, "should refrain from publicly highlighting" disagreements with the board, warning that "public airing of the disagreement will affect the ACLU adversely in terms of public support and fund-raising." Board members tell The New York Times it's too early to discuss the proposal, but former board member Nat Hentoff called it a "gag order," saying, "I can't think of anything more contrary to the reason the ACLU exists."
 
Last edited:

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
I don't think you will even see her run. This country is not ready for her or the Rice lady.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top