how about a barack gaffe?

Chadman

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Two generations back, Obama's family: Great-uncle liberated Jews from concentration camp

Two generations back, W's family: Grandpa Prescott helped Hitler build the Nazi War Machine. Assets seized by the US gov't for helping the enemy.

I think this may be the most appropriate comparison you've ever made, Sponge. I think it's important to mention every time anyone left of center is labeled Hiter-ish...

What's more important - a slight mis-speak, or someone who received a name years before we knew anything about anyone named Osama, or a father/grandfather who was a Nazi worshipper? :shrug:
 

smurphy

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DTB doesn't care in the least that Bush's grandfather helped the Nazis or that Dick Cheney weaseled out of military service during Vietnam 5 times. It does bother him greatly, however, that Obama's visit to the Middle East in 2006 did not follow his Travelocity itinerary to the minute, Obama's great uncle was part of the forces that liberated Buchenwald instead of his uncle being at Aushwitz, and Obama has possibly not been part of very many family reunions.
 

kosar

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:shrug:

MadeasFamilyReunionTheM11705_f.jpg

Good point.
 

kosar

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eau contraire! Around here, the big families have them every year, African Americans that is.

'Around here?'

It's neither here or there, but are there more than 2 blackies within 50 miles of you?

Whatever the case, it's good to know that the dark faces (that aren't in jail) have reunions like the rest of us normal people.
 

SixFive

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'Around here?'

It's neither here or there, but are there more than 2 blackies within 50 miles of you?

Whatever the case, it's good to know that the dark faces (that aren't in jail) have reunions like the rest of us normal people.

we have a regular melting pot here in Bowling Green.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Obama King of Gaffes and just getting started

Note all the press McMcain got on his one on shia/sunni in main media--how many of these have you ever seen --they can keep pretty good secret when they want to --imagine if you would had GW made these comments :)

http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB121210923476431299.html

The Obama Gaffe Machine
By JOHN FUND
May 30, 2008

For months, Barack Obama has had the image of an incandescent, golden-tongued Wundercandidate. That image may be fraying now.

As smart and credentialed as he is, Sen. Obama is often an indifferent speaker without a teleprompter. He has large gaps in his knowledge base, and is just as likely to dig in and embrace a policy misstatement as abandon it. ABC reporter Jake Tapper calls him "a one-man gaffe machine."

Take the Auschwitz flub, where Mr. Obama erroneously claimed last weekend in New Mexico that his uncle helped liberate the Nazi concentration camp. Reporters noted Mr. Obama's revised claim, that it was his great uncle who helped liberate Buchenwald. They largely downplayed the error. Yet in another, earlier gaffe back in 2002, Mr. Obama claimed his grandfather knew U.S. troops who liberated Auschwitz and Treblinka ? even though only Russian troops entered those concentration camps.

That hardly disqualifies Mr. Obama from being president. But you can bet that if Hillary Clinton had done the same thing it would have been the focus of much more attention, especially after her Bosnia sniper-fire fib. That's because gaffes are often blown up or downplayed based on whether or not they further a story line the media has attached to a politician.

When John McCain claimed, while on a trip to Iraq in March, that Sunni (as opposed to Shiite) militants in Iraq are being supported by Iran, coverage of the alleged blunder tracked Democratic attacks on his age and stamina. (In fact, Iran may well be supplying both Sunni and Shiite militants.) Dan Quayle, tagged with a reputation as a dumb blond male, never lived down his misspelling of "potatoe."

Mr. Obama, a former editor of the Harvard Law Review, has largely been given a pass for his gaffes. Many are trivial, such as his suggestion this month that America has 57 states, and his bizarre statement in a Memorial Day speech in New Mexico that America's "fallen heroes" were present and listening to him in the audience.

Some gaffes involve mangling his family history. Last year in Selma, Ala., for example, he said that his birth was inspired by events there which took place four years after he was born. While this gaffe can be chalked up to fatigue or cloudy memory, others are more substantive ? such as his denial last April that it was his handwriting on a questionnaire in which, as a state senate candidate, he favored a ban on handguns. His campaign now contends that, even if it was his handwriting, this doesn't prove he read the full questionnaire.

Mr. Obama told a Portland, Ore., crowd this month that Iran doesn't "pose a serious threat to us," saying that "tiny countries" with small defense budgets aren't much to worry about. But Iran has almost one-fourth the population of the U.S. and is well on its way to developing nuclear weapons. The next day Mr. Obama had to reverse himself and declare he had "made it clear for years that the threat from Iran is grave."

Last week in Orlando, Fla., he said he would meet with Venezuelan dictator Hugo Ch?vez to discuss, among other issues, Ch?vez's support of the Marxist FARC guerrillas in Colombia. The next day, in Miami, he insisted any country supporting the FARC should suffer "regional isolation." Obama advisers were left explaining how this circle could be squared.

In a debate last July, Mr. Obama pledged to meet, without precondition, the leaders of Iran, North Korea, Syria and Cuba. He called President Bush's refusal to meet with them "ridiculous" and a "disgrace."

Heavily criticized, Mr. Obama dug in rather than backtrack. He's claimed, in defense of his position, that John F. Kennedy's 1961 summit with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in Vienna was a crucial meeting that led to the end of the Cold War.

Not quite. Kennedy himself admitted he was unprepared for Khrushchev's bullying. "He beat the hell out of me," Kennedy confided to advisers. The Soviet leader reported to his Politburo that the American president was weak. Two months later, the Berlin Wall was erected and stood for 28 years.

Reporters may now give Mr. Obama's many gaffes more notice. But don't count on them correcting an implicit bias in writing about such faux pas.

Over the years, reporters have tagged a long list of conservative public figures, from Barry Goldwater to Ronald Reagan to George W. Bush, as dim and uninformed. The reputation of some of these men has improved over time. But can anyone name a leading liberal figure who has developed a similar media reputation, even though the likes of Al Gore, Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi have committed substantial gaffes at times? No reporter I've talked to has come up with a solid example.

It's clear some gaffes are considered more newsworthy than others. But it would behoove the media to check their premises when deciding just how much attention to pay to them. The best guideline might be: Show some restraint and judgment, but report them all.

Mr. Fund is a columnist for WSJ.com1.
 
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