Obama Vs McCain - KOD

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
Cafferty: Why does Obama get more news coverage than McCain?
Posted: 01:52 PM ET

From CNN's Jack Cafferty


When Barack Obama travels overseas to Europe and the Middle East, he won't be alone.

Obama's trip is becoming a media extravaganza. All three network anchors will join him ? broadcasting their nightly newscasts from stops along his route. Also along to record Obama's every move, top political reporters from major newspapers and magazines. 200 journalists have asked to join Obama on the trip, although the campaign will only be able to accommodate about 20% of them.

Meanwhile, Republican John McCain has taken 3 foreign trips in the last 4 months, and not a single network anchor has gone on any of them. It's causing some concern among Republicans that the news media aren't giving balanced coverage.
.......................................................


The media don't follow losers. :142smilie
 

DOGS THAT BARK

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
19,485
161
63
Bowling Green Ky
Cafferty: Why does Obama get more news coverage than McCain?
Posted: 01:52 PM ET

From CNN's Jack Cafferty


When Barack Obama travels overseas to Europe and the Middle East, he won't be alone.

Obama's trip is becoming a media extravaganza. All three network anchors will join him ? broadcasting their nightly newscasts from stops along his route. Also along to record Obama's every move, top political reporters from major newspapers and magazines. 200 journalists have asked to join Obama on the trip, although the campaign will only be able to accommodate about 20% of them.

Meanwhile, Republican John McCain has taken 3 foreign trips in the last 4 months, and not a single network anchor has gone on any of them. It's causing some concern among Republicans that the news media aren't giving balanced coverage.
.......................................................


The media don't follow losers. :142smilie

I would say the media has an agenda would be more correct--now add the liberal media bias to the fact of economy and others things that we mentioned before that should point to a romp and ask yourself why he doesn't have at least a 20point lead but has been losing ground instead.
A good read by staunch Dem on issue--
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/07/it_should_be_a_democratic_year.html

P.S. fox and cnn agree on your issue--

Going Gaga

On his upcoming overseas trip, Barack Obama will be met along the way by the anchors of the three network evening newscasts. About 200 other journalists have also asked to join Obama during his trip.

But Howard Kurtz of The Washington Post reports that John McCain has taken three foreign trips in the past four months ? all unaccompanied by a single network anchor and with little fanfare.
The Tyndall Report, which monitors news coverage, says that since June the nightly newscasts on the three networks spent a combined 114 minutes covering Obama while devoting just 48 minutes to McCain.
 
Last edited:

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
McCain adviser Gramm leaves campaign
Former lawmaker from Texas resigns after 'nation of whiners' comment


NEW YORK - Phil Gramm,
a top adviser to presidential candidate John McCain, said Friday he is resigning from the role as campaign co-chairman after his comments that the United States had become a "nation of whiners" who constantly complain about the state of the economy.

The former U.S. senator from Texas and past presidential candidate made the remarks earlier this month. McCain immediately distanced himself from the comments, but they have been criticized constantly as McCain tries to show he can help steer the country past its current financial troubles.

Gramm had also suggested that the country was facing a "mental recession" instead of real economic problems. Gramm said in a statement late Friday that he is stepping down as a co-chair of the campaign to "end this distraction."
..........................................................

Pitchers breaking up, he needs 7 up
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
art.conan.ap.jpg

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

McCain makes fresh late-night swing
Posted: 10:22 AM ET


McCain pretends to have a ?senior moment.

NEW YORK (AP) ? Republican John McCain has had another turn on the late-night TV comedy circuit, as a guest on NBC'S "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" last night.

Host O'Brien acknowledged that jokes about the 71-year-old McCain's age are themselves getting old. And as McCain pretended to nod off, O'Brien asked for some new material. Instead of "seniority," O'Brien wondered if maybe McCain has a kooky uncle or bad breath or webbed toes. To which McCain replied, "All of the above."

McCain also noted that at one point in his career he was able to "intercept a surface-to-air missile" with his plane. But O'Brien pointed out, "People don't really laugh at that."

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

When is McCain going to get some new material.

I have seen him flop sleeping now about five times. Its not funny. It shows him as a unpresidential boob.

Then he says he was able to intercept a missle with his plane. How about the other crashs hot dogging where he cost the goverment millions.

Its surreal to think this guy could be President..
 
Last edited:

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
Blogs have been buzzing recently over McCain's admission that when it comes to the Internet, "I'm an illiterate who has to rely on his wife for any assistance he can get." And the 71-year-old presumptive Republican nominee, asked about his Web use last week by the New York Times, said that aides "go on for me. I will have that down fairly soon, getting on myself.":SIB

How unusual is it for a 71-year-old American to be unplugged?

That depends how you look at the statistics. Only 35 percent of Americans over age 65 are online, according to data from April and May compiled by the Pew Internet Project at the Pew Research Center.

But when you account for factors like race, wealth and education, the picture changes dramatically. "About three-quarters of white, college-educated men age over 65 use the Internet," says Susannah Fox, director of the project.

"John McCain is an outlier when you compare him to his peers," Fox says. "On one hand, a U.S. senator has access to information sources and staff assistance that most people do not. On the other, the Internet has become such a go-to resource that it's a curiosity to hear that someone doesn't rely on it the way most Americans do."

McCain spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan presented a somewhat updated picture when contacted by The Associated Press on Friday: "He's fully capable of browsing the Internet and checking Web sites," Buchanan said. "He has a Mac and uses it several times a week. He's working on becoming more familiar with the Internet."

That's a good thing, says Tobey Dichter, CEO of Generations on Line, a group that helps bring seniors ? including the 106-year-old Robinson ? into the digital age.

"He needs the self-empowerment" of going online himself, says Dichter. "There are too many people surrounding John McCain who are willing to print an e-mail for him" ?or do a search on his behalf, like the aides who, he says, show him the Drudge Report.

"But that cheats him of an opportunity to let his own mind take him to the next link," says Dichter. "If he doesn't know what links are available, he will only get exactly what he's asking for, and nothing more."

Why do most of us ? 73 percent of Americans ? use the Internet? The top three reasons are, in order, e-mail, informational searches, and finding a map or driving directions.

But there are dozens of other conveniences: Online banking, shopping, travel or restaurant reservations, job searches, real estate listings, and of course, the news (McCain, like many people over 30 or so, prefers his newspapers the old-fashioned way.) "The Internet is the ultimate convenience appliance," says Fox.

McCain may be in "digital denial," as Dichter calls it, but his family sure isn't: His wife, Cindy, has been seen scrolling away on her Blackberry, and daughter Meghan, one of his seven children, blogs from the campaign trail on McCain Blogette.

As for McCain's Democratic rival, Barack Obama is 46, and thus in an age group where fully 85 percent of Americans are plugged in. A CNN clip available on YouTube shows him so engrossed with his Blackberry while crossing a street that he bumps into the curb.

McCain's frank admissions of his offline state have led to discussion of whether being wired is a qualification for leading the free world. One aide, Mark Soohoo, defended the senator's lack of wiredness at the Personal Democracy Forum in New York in June by assuring the panel: "John McCain is aware of the Internet."

One blogger opined last week that all the fuss is silly. McCain, wrote Newsweek's Andrew Romano, hasn't become computer literate because he hasn't needed to. "When aides are responding to your messages and briefing you on every imaginable subject, the incentive to get online sort of disappears," he wrote.

McCain is hardly the only prominent, wealthy, powerful man in the country to lack an affinity with computers. To take one, Sumner Redstone, the 85-year-old chairman of Viacom, "is not an avid user," says a spokesman, Carl Falto. "He's capable of going on but doesn't do it frequently."

On the other hand, famed Broadway director Arthur Laurents, 91, whose "Gypsy" is now a hit on Broadway, is known to respond faster to e-mails than to phone calls.

Among fellow senators, aides to Sen. Robert Byrd, 90, say he has a computer but prefers to speak directly to his staff and doesn't carry a Blackberry.

What keeps some American seniors unwired? Some lack immediate access to a computer, Dichter says. But intimidation, she says, is the greatest problem.

"One has to be compassionate with a person who hasn't gotten onto the information highway early, because the cumulative vocabulary is so intimidating," she says. Also, many older people "feel they have a perfectly happy life without it. They feel that the world is overrun with electronic devices already."

But, Dichter says, such people often change their minds when they realize they can get family pictures via e-mail ? not to mention health information, support groups, and local community news. And Fox, of Pew, notes that seniors outpace other age groups in tracing their family's genealogy online (a third of them say they do so, compared to a quarter of all Internet users.)

Robinson credits her computer with helping her withstand the effects of a stroke she suffered in 2003. "In my case I had a stroke and as a result could not talk," she says in her e-mail. "The computer has been a lifesaver for me."
......................................................

Lets see McCain graduates 894 out of 899 in his class.

McCain Dont like internet .

McCain don't understand even basic economics

McCain - what a dumb ass :142smilie
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
All questions about the process of selecting a running mate are quickly shot down.

"It's the one subject we've been forbidden to talk about," said senior adviser Mark Salter. He promised to come to the press area of McCain's plane, "but I won't tell you anything." That is, unless it's "what's wrong with Barack Obama's judgment," Salter joked. Actually, he wasn't joking.

When reporters caught a glimpse of McCain and rushed forward on the plane, he grinned and waved them away. "What do you want, you little jerks?" he asked.

There are a lot of potential running mates that McCain could visit as he jets around the country ? Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist or Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, for instance, three governors mentioned frequently as possible running mates.
........................................................

So McCain jokingly calls the press " you little Jerks"
and he wonders why they hate him.

I am hoping that McCain chooses his VP in the next few days to try and offset Obama coverage.

Blundering move after blundering move.

McCain = :shrug:
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
Addressing the Republican presidential candidate during his town-hall forum in New Hampshire Tuesday, a woman identified herself as a volunteer for his campaign, and said she had come to believe it was time McCain hires a new staff in the state.

"You've got to make some changes," the woman told McCain. "I've had problems with a lot of your paid staff."

Watch: a volunteer tells McCain to make some staff changes

The volunteers had put up all the signs ahead of the town hall event, she complained. "You've got two people sitting right here next to me?They have done more work for you volunteering than a lot of your paid staff have. All your signs that are up outside today, they were put up by us, not by your staff people.?

McCain, whose campaign has battled charges of incompetence ? even from some within his own party ? joked, "A lot of our paid staff, a lot of them are on work release programs as you know."

McCain later said the staff problems would be fixed.

"................................................................

work release program :142smilie

The lady is telling him he is going down the tubes, and he wants to joke about his people in prison ?

The guy is off the wall. :SIB
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
July 23, 2008
Jindal: I will not be VP
Posted: 04:00 PM ET

From CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

Jindal said Wednesday he will not be McCain's VP.
(CNN) ? Has Bobby Jindal ruled out being John McCain's running mate?

One day after it was revealed the presumptive Republican presidential candidate was slated to hold a closed-door meeting with the 37-year old governor, Jindal told Fox News there is no way he will fill the bottom half of the GOP presidential ticket.



"I'm not going to be the vice presidential nominee or vice president," Jindal said. "I'm going to help Senator McCain get elected, as governor of Louisiana."

"Let me be clear: I have said in every private and public conversation, I've got the job that I want," Jindal also said.

It's not uncommon for those being considered for a slot on the presidential ticket to deny interest in the position, but Jindal's blanket statement is notable, especially in light of the fact he is widely considered to be on McCain's shortlist. It also came the day the two men were scheduled to sit down at a private meeting the McCain campaign refused to discuss. On Wednesday afternoon, the meeting was postponed due to weather.

GOP sources also tell CNN Jindal is being considered for the keynote address slot at the Republican Convention.

Earlier: VP buzz rises around Jindal

Widely considered a rising star in his party, VP speculation first swirled around Jindal earlier this summer when he was one of a handful of politicians McCain invited to his Sedona, Arizona ranch. The long weekend was described as purely social, though former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Florida Gov. Charlie Crist ? two other Republicans considered to be top vice presidential possibilities ? were also in attendance.

Jindal has been lauded by several conservatives wary of John McCain, including talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh. But the decision would undercut one of the Arizona senator's chief arguments against Obama: his relative lack of experience. The Louisiana governor is nearly 10 years younger than the Democratic presidential candidate.
.........................................................

Jindal is not going to get involved in a losing campaign.

McCains hopes of upstaging Obama in Europe go down the drain.

Now what McCain. Jindal would have been a good choice from what I have seen.

Back to the drawing board. Again, and again , and again.................
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
art.obama.ap.jpg


BERLIN, Germany (CNN) -- Standing before a massive crowd in a city that once symbolized division, Sen. Barack Obama on Thursday warned about the dangers of allowing new walls to come between the United States and its allies.

Sen. Barack Obama addresses a large crowd Thursday at the Victory Column in Berlin, Germany.

"People of the world -- look at Berlin, where a wall came down, a continent came together, and history proved that there is no challenge too great for a world that stands as one," Obama said at Berlin's Victory Column in the Tiergarten park.

"The fall of the Berlin Wall brought new hope. But that very closeness has given rise to new dangers -- dangers that cannot be contained within the borders of a country or by the distance of an ocean," he said.

Obama said people of all nations must stand together to face challenges of the 21st century -- from terrorism to global warming to genocide.

"We cannot afford to be divided. No one nation, no matter how large or powerful, can defeat such challenges alone. None of us can deny these threats or escape responsibility in meeting them," he said.

The greatest danger, Obama said, "is to allow new walls to divide us from one another." Read a transcript of the speech

Obama called on Europeans and Americans to join together to "defeat terror and dry up the well of extremism that supports it."

"If we could win a battle of ideas against the communists, we can stand with the vast majority of Muslims who reject the extremism that leads to hate instead of hope," he said.

Obama started his speech by introducing himself as a "proud citizen of the United States and a fellow citizen of the world."

Police estimated that more than 200,000 people came to watch the speech, according to The Associated Press.

Shortly before the address began, Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, chided Obama and said he'd rather give a speech in Germany as president than as a presidential candidate.

"So we're going to be campaigning across the heartland of America and talking about the issues that are challenging America today," McCain said outside a German restaurant in Columbus, Ohio.

The Democrat said earlier his address was not a "political rally."

Crowds gathered at the Victory Column to listen to musical acts in the hours leading up to Obama's arrival.

Obama originally had hoped to speak in front of the iconic Brandenburg Gate, where President Kennedy was photographed during a 1963 visit after the rise of the Berlin Wall. Expressing solidarity with the people of the divided city during the same trip, Kennedy declared, "Ich bin ein Berliner."

That phrase -- which means "I am a Berliner" -- expressed the unity of the West in the Cold War era.

The gate also was the site of a speech by President Reagan in 1987 in which he memorably urged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to "tear down" the wall.

But use of the landmark apparently was vetoed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who a spokesman Wednesday said disapproved of plans to co-opt it as a "campaign backdrop."

Asked whether he looked to Reagan's and Kennedy's Berlin speeches for inspiration, Obama said, "They were presidents. I am a citizen."

"But obviously Berlin is representative of the extraordinary success of post-World War II effort to bring a continent together, to bring the West together -- East and West together," he said.

Nonetheless, as a youthful Democratic presidential hopeful who has promised change if elected and invoked comparisons with Kennedy, Obama's strategists hope a warm welcome from Germans will play well with voters.

Obama is in Germany for the latest leg of an international trip intended to bolster his foreign policy credentials at home and set out his vision for a new era of transatlantic cooperation.

So far, his trip has taken him to Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Israel and the Palestinian territories. Obama is expected to stop in France and Great Britain before returning to the United States.

Obama has said he is making the trip as a senator and not a presidential candidate.


Robin Oakley, CNN's European political editor, said Obama enjoyed widespread popularity in Europe.

"He is one of those politicians who reaches parts other politicians don't reach," Oakley said. "After the unpopularity of George W. Bush, the world is waiting to love America again, and many see in Obama, with his youth and his optimism, somebody who can bring that about."
..............................................................

Obama said people of all nations must stand together to face challenges of the 21st century -- from terrorism to global warming to genocide.

What a novel idea. The world against terrorism instead of America by its lonesome spending trillions :00hour

"After the unpopularity of George W. Bush, the world is waiting to love America again, and many see in Obama, with his youth and his optimism, somebody who can bring that about."
:00hour :00hour
 
Last edited:

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
Poll: 'Sharp reversal' for Obama with Latino votersStory Highlights
Pew Hispanic Center poll taken from June 9-July 13 of Latino voters

Poll shows an overwhelming majority support Barack Obama over John McCain
:00hour

Obama "appears to be even more popular" with Latinos than Sen. Clinton, poll finds

Issues like education, health care and jobs rank high amongst this voting bloc

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A new poll released Thursday shows overwhelming support from Latinos for Sen. Barack Obama over Sen. John McCain.

A new poll out Thursday shows strong support for Sen. Barack Obama among Latinos.

Obama's approval rating with registered Latino voters, the nationwide Pew Hispanic Center poll found, is at 66 percent versus 23 percent favoring McCain.

Obama's "strong showing in this survey represents a sharp reversal in his fortunes from the primaries, when Obama lost the Latino vote to Hillary Clinton by a margin of nearly 2-to-1," according to Pew Hispanic Center associate director Mark Hugo Lopez.

Obama's favorability among Latinos is slightly up from a Gallup Poll summary of surveys taken in May, which showed Obama with 62 percent of Latino voters nationwide, compared with 29 percent for McCain.

"He now appears to be even more popular than Hillary Clinton among Latinos," Lopez said.

Pew Hispanic Center's deputy director, Susan Minushkin, added that Obama is "enjoying broad-based support among Hispanics who don't see great differences by age, by gender, by education, by income." Watch more of Minushkin's analysis ?

In comparison, a CNN "poll of polls" from July 16, shows Obama holding a 6-point lead over McCain among general registered voters.

It shows Obama at 47 percent and McCain at 41 percent; about 12 percent said they are undecided.

The survey also shows more than three quarters of Latinos who said they voted for Clinton in the primaries, now indicate they are likely to vote for Obama in the general election.

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

VIVA MEXICO !
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
sell your country out:sadwave:
.........................................................

RAYMOND - I actually have hope that in the coming months you will see McCain for what he is and cast your vote for Obama.

You seem reasonable.

well not really :SIB
 

RAYMOND

Registered
Forum Member
Jul 31, 2000
45,601
912
113
usa
.........................................................

RAYMOND - I actually have hope that in the coming months you will see McCain for what he is and cast your vote for Obama.

You seem reasonable.

well not really :SIB

do you have mexician working for you:shrug:
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
John McCain is the ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, so our friend works directly with McCain?s staff on a regular basis. ?his experience has been that McCain staffers are habitually heavy handed and abusive, using threats and intimidations to get what they want with complete and utter disregard and disrespect for people to the extent that it would make it very difficult to feel good about a McCain presidency. Maybe that?s how people get things done on Capital Hill, but that?s not the kind of leadership that I want to support.
......................................................

Does any of this sound familiar ?

Bush and Cheney ?

McCain and Cheney and Rove ?

disrespect and heavy handed.
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
041105_Ch4BushMccain_hd.hmedium.jpg

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

Old man - Georgie things are not looking good. I cant get a VP

Georgie - Hell Dick will stay on with you or we could get Rice or Rove . They would do it.

Old Man - Yeh but everyone hates them.

Georgie - then I will do it

Old man - Uh Georgie they really hate you

Georgie - Bastids. I will just start another war and see how they like that .

Old man - I am worried about the debates.

Georgie - Dont worry about it, your smarter than I am , and I am pretty dumb.

Old man - yeh
 

THE KOD

Registered
Forum Member
Nov 16, 2001
42,497
260
83
Victory Lane
enough say:SIB
...........................................................

DEAR RAYMOND -

I need some business advise.

Today we are working at a construction site, nobody around but me and four guys that work for me.

Two Americans , two Mexicans. All hard working good guys. All citizens been with me years.

American guy says something to the effect of you got your green card on Buford Highway for five bucks, older mexican tells him to shut up or get his ass kicked. They are always joking around so I told them to knock it off and get back to work. Next thing I know , these two are swinging shovels at each other. :shrug:
 

RAYMOND

Registered
Forum Member
Jul 31, 2000
45,601
912
113
usa
i have no problem with amercian citizens working
but i have a problem with contractors useing illegal
immigrants for profit, i pay my finishers very good money total package $55.51 a hour. or $300 bucks a day under the table, my labors make $25 bucks a hour ! $200 bucks a day if done in 4-5 hours still pay them for the day 8 hours:SIB i will never sell my countryman out for $12 bucks a hour!

my men will work hard or there gone!
bottom line we all make money:00hour


work hard . play hard . live hard and earn your keep and go home
 
Last edited:
Bet on MyBookie
Top