User Pass
Home Sign Up Contact Log In
Page:
 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
Originally posted by Rybread
Originally posted by cain141

Originally posted by mwoods07




Wow, you might want to read up a little on Richard Nixon...just because this is probably the only President you really know much about...and you watch a lot of news, doesn't mean he is the worst ever.

On that note, he certainly isn't anywhere near the top...probably close to the bottom. But anyway, you should actually know a little about History before making blind judgmental statements/opinions.


I'd say Carter, Buchanan and Grant are also in the running for this...

Other than Watergate, I sorta like Nixon...


LOL, Nixon was just doing what everybody else was too, he just got caught.


I have to ask...does that mean it's cool, since everyone else is doing it? Like it's only wrong if you get caught? Just curious...politics in general sucks, and thats one of the main things I like about Palin, she doesn't act lke a politician (yet).
 
Rybread
offline
Link
 
Originally posted by mwoods07
Originally posted by Rybread

Originally posted by cain141


Originally posted by mwoods07





Wow, you might want to read up a little on Richard Nixon...just because this is probably the only President you really know much about...and you watch a lot of news, doesn't mean he is the worst ever.

On that note, he certainly isn't anywhere near the top...probably close to the bottom. But anyway, you should actually know a little about History before making blind judgmental statements/opinions.


I'd say Carter, Buchanan and Grant are also in the running for this...

Other than Watergate, I sorta like Nixon...


LOL, Nixon was just doing what everybody else was too, he just got caught.


I have to ask...does that mean it's cool, since everyone else is doing it? Like it's only wrong if you get caught? Just curious...politics in general sucks, and thats one of the main things I like about Palin, she doesn't act lke a politician (yet).


It's completely wrong and yes, I like that Palin isn't a life long politician.
 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
Unfortunately, I see her changing in the near future. I truly hope not, but if she wants to sruvive in a mostly "man's" world, I think she would change. But hopefully she keeps that spunk and just says it like it is...but then the media likes to rip you apart when you speak from your head and not from a piece of paper you are regurgitating.
 
Barnsie
offline
Link
 
/boring
 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
sorry Barnsie...politics are getting old, and the race really hasen't even started!
 
BigCowboysFan
offline
Link
 
Originally posted by mwoods07
...politics are getting old...


Just like McCain...Every Day.

 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
Brittney's no 20 year ole' hottie anymore either...
 
BigCowboysFan
offline
Link
 
Originally posted by mwoods07
Brittney's no 20 year ole' hottie anymore either...


Hmm...she's 26, I'm 26...works for me!
 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
about the only real positive thing is she has a little more money than me So when she goes back to the nut house, I'd be sitting pretty...ha
 
mcivwah
offline
Link
 
...........
 
BigCowboysFan
offline
Link
 
Presidential Debate tonight...anyone other than me going to watch?
 
Rybread
offline
Link
 
I know all I need to.
 
mwoods07
offline
Link
 
I'll be there...maybe something will change tonight for me...
 
BigCowboysFan
offline
Link
 
...since nothing else gets you people talking...

Thought McCain was OK the first 30 minutes or so, but then something really pissed him off after that and it was all downhill. It was Obama's debate to lose and thought he performed well in the last hour of the debate which essentially won it for him.

He explained Ayers well and stuck to the issues. He did not get rattled while it was apparent McCain did.
 
BigCowboysFan
offline
Link
 
EMPSTEAD, New York (CNN) -- A majority of debate watchers think Sen. Barack Obama won the third and final presidential debate, according to a national poll conducted right afterward.
Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain debate face to face Wednesday night.

Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain debate face to face Wednesday night.

Fifty-eight percent of debate watchers questioned in a CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll said Democratic candidate Obama did the best job in the debate, with 31 percent saying Republican Sen. John McCain performed best.

The poll also suggests that debate watchers' favorable opinion of Obama rose slightly during the debate, from 63 percent at the start to 66 percent at the end. The poll indicates that McCain's favorables dropped slightly, from 51 percent to 49 percent.

The economy was the dominant issue of the debate, and 59 percent of debate watchers polled said Obama would do a better job handling the economy, 24 points ahead of McCain.

During the debate, McCain attacked Obama's stance on taxes, accusing Obama of seeking tax increases that would "spread the wealth around." But by 15 points, 56 percent to 41 percent, debate watchers polled said Obama would do a better job on taxes. By a 2-1 margin, 62 percent to 31 percent, debate watchers said Obama would do a better job on health care.

Sixty-six percent of debate watchers said Obama more clearly expressed his views, with 25 percent saying McCain was more clear about his views.

By 23 points, those polled said Obama was the stronger leader during the debate. By 48 points, they said Obama was more likeable. Watch entire debate: Video Part 1 » | Video Part 2 » | Video Part 3 »

McCain won in two categories. Eighty percent of debate watchers polled said McCain spent more time attacking his opponent, with seven percent saying Obama was more on the attack. Fifty-four percent said McCain seemed more like a typical politician during the debate, with 35 percent saying Obama acted more like a typical politician.

"Independents tend to prefer debates that are dominated by substance and light on discussion of personal characteristics," said Keating Holland, CNN polling director. "The perception that McCain attacked Obama gave red meat to GOP partisans, but it probably didn't help McCain with independents."
Don't Miss

* McCain, Obama face off in final debate
* iReport.com: Who won the debate?
* Election Center 2008
* Transcript of debate

"There was a notable gender gap as well," Holland said. "Women thought Obama won the debate by a 62 percent to 28 percent margin. Among men, Obama's lead was narrower, 54 percent to 35 percent in Obama's favor."

During the debate, McCain demanded to know the full extent of Obama's relationship with William Ayers, a 1960s radical. But the poll suggests that line of attack may not resonate with Americans. Fifty-one percent of debate watchers said Obama's connection to Ayers didn't matter at all to them, with 23 percent saying it mattered a great deal.

The audience for the debate poll appeared to be a bit more Democratic -- and a bit more Republican -- than the U.S. population as a whole. Forty percent of debate watchers in the survey were Democrats and 30 percent Republicans.

CNN's estimate of the number of Democrats in the voting age population as a whole indicates the sample is about 3 to 4 points more Democratic than the population as a whole, but also about 2 to 3 points more Republican than the population as a whole.

Eighty-eight percent of Democrats questioned in the poll said Obama did the best job, with 68 percent of Republicans saying McCain performed best. Among independents, 57 percent said Obama did the best job, with 31 percent backing McCain as the winner of the debate.

The candidates first debated in Oxford, Mississippi, on September 26. Fifty-one percent of debate watchers polled by CNN and the Opinion Research Corp. said Obama won that debate, with 38 percent saying McCain performed best. The second presidential debate was held in Nashville, Tennessee, on October 7 and 54 percent of debate watchers polled said Obama won, compared with 30 percent who said McCain did the best job.

The running mates, Democratic Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware and Republican Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska faced off in Saint Louis, Missouri, in the single vice presidential debate October 2. Fifty-one percent of debate watchers polled said Biden won, and 36 percent said Palin won.
advertisement

The post-debate polls do not reflect the views of all Americans. They only represent the views of people who watched the debates.

The CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll was conducted by telephone Wednesday night, with 620 adult Americans who watched the debate questioned. The survey's sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points.
E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend
Share this on:
Mixx Digg Facebook del.icio.us reddit StumbleUpon MySpace
| Mixx it | Share
 
Page:
 


You are not logged in. Please log in if you want to post a reply.