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  • :sigh: election crap...

    :Sigh:



    Una vez mas, el puerco de mccain saca su verdadero caracter.

    RNC to seek audit of all contributions to Obama campaign

    Ojala que la gente pendeja empieze a ver quienes son sus candidatos realmente, detras de ellos hay un partido desesperado y pataleando por no hundirse, lo unico que les queda es tratar de embarrar a Barack Obama. En el momento en que cambiaron los polls a favor de Obama supimos que iban a sacar sus estrategias de siempre... embarrar de bullshit.



    Que si las contribuciones (maybe ya se les acabo el dinero que recibieron ellos del gobierno ($84 million, poco comparado con los $450 million que ha recaudado Obama) y del cual Barack Obama opto por no aceptar, o quesque tiene lazos y amistades con terroristas.

    Times are tough, they're gonna try everything, and I knew it... doesn't mean it doesn't piss me off. I wrote my comment to mccain through his website today, lots of bad words ... just a vent. Peace out.
    Si ya sabes cómo soy, pa’que me dejas sola?!

  • #2
    *Taking a deep breath*

    BUUUUUUUUUUTTHUUUUUUUUUUUUUURRRTTT!!!!



    Chale, les es imposible aceptar que Obama reciba tantas, TANTAS veces m?s contribuciones ?? Are they THAT butthurt and desperate for leverage and footing ??


    Parece que sí. Primero Palin abierta y descaradamente diciendo que Obama tiene ligas con terroristas, y ahora les Reps se mueven como masa a acusar de "foul game". Siente pasitos el anciano y enfermizo elefante republicano.



    Tú nom?s dame chance y me meto al site de Mequein...Hechos recientes en este foro me han demostrado la enorme cantidad de pendejadas y spam que se puede lograr publicar en tan s?lo un par de horas .
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    • #3
      Y aquí tenemos una excelente y detallada (pero f?cil de entender) explicaci?n de las dolencias econ?micas de McCain, raz?n detr?s de la m?s reciente ola de ataques desesperados de su campa?a contra la de O:

      WARNING
      ARTICULO EXCESIVAMENTE LARGO (tl;dr)



      Under Financial Restraints, McCain Drops Michigan



      Low Expectations in Typically Blue State May Signal Shakeups in Other Swing States

      The electoral map shrank for John McCain Thursday as he abandoned his campaign in Michigan, raising the stakes in other battleground states such as Ohio.

      Ceding 17 electoral votes to Barack Obama and conceding to the economic realities of the financial crisis and his own coffers, McCain, R-Ariz., said he would end his campaign in Michigan in order to better concentrate his attention and campaign funds on other battleground states. Given the constraints imposed on him by federal fundraising regulations and economic problems throughout the battleground states, some supporters in key swing states, such as Pennsylvania and Ohio, wonder if McCain will be able to effectively close the gap where it matters most.

      Even his own advisers admit that the current economic crisis, along with an incumbent Republican administration, has hurt McCain in the working-class swing states of the Midwest.

      "The overall environment right now that we face is one of the worst environments for any Republican in probably 35 years,'' said Mike DuHaime, McCain's political director, in a conference call with reporters last week.
      McCain's advisers discussed several ways the electoral map could be divided come November to give the Republicans the 270 votes the Arizona senator needs to win.

      However, the McCain campaign's initial plan to win Michigan, Pennsylvania and New Hampshire -- swing states that all went for Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in 2004 -- has been shelved. Now extra reinforcements have been sent to shore up traditional Republican strongholds, such as Virginia, Colorado and New Mexico, against newly registered and energized Democrats.

      "The more terrain you're playing on the better your odds of winning via various channels," said Sara Taylor, the deputy strategist for George W. Bush's 2004 campaign.

      "Losing Michigan shrinks McCain's options," she said. "This decision is going to raise the stakes even more in battleground states. It means fewer opportunities and fewer choices for McCain."

      Despite the state's history of voting Democratic four times in a row, Michigan was one swing state McCain hoped he could turn from blue to red.

      Since effectively winning the Republican nomination in March, McCain has spent 11 days in the state. He has held 18 events, including four town-hall meetings and four fundraisers, and has spent nearly $8 million on ads, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group, a company that monitors political advertising.

      Looking at the polling data alone, McCain's chances in Michigan seemed no worse than in the battlegrounds of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
      According to a recent CNN/Time poll, Obama leads in Michigan 51 percent to 46 percent. In Pennsylvania, Obama leads 54 to 39; in Ohio 51 to 43; and in Florida 50 to 42, according to a Quinnipiac poll that came out last week and focused on the battleground states.

      But observers say financial problems, both on the ground in Michigan and inside the McCain camp, likely led to his decision to walk.

      "From this distance it looks like the decision was made from economic data as much or more as from political data. The campaign has come to a reasonable conclusion that voters, worried about their economic prospects, are much more likely to vote for Democrats," said Dan Schnur, a former McCain adviser and now political science professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

      The economy is a key issue in Michigan, where a suffering auto industry has led to an 8.9 percent unemployment rate, the highest in the country. Over the past year, Michigan lost 40,000 jobs, according to federal statistics.

      Given Michigan's financial woes, senior McCain adviser Greg Strimple called the state the "worst state of all the states that are in play'' for the campaign. "It's an obvious one from my perspective to come off the list,'' he said during last week's conference call.

      While the economic downturn is perhaps more pronounced in Michigan than in any other state, the financial worries felt there are echoed along the rustbelt in swing states like Pennsylvania and Ohio.

      Nowhere is the pressure to win being felt by McCain staffers and surrogates quite the way it is in Ohio.

      No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio, and the state is key to virtually any chance McCain has for victory.

      "Whoever wins Ohio is president of the United States," said Marty Judd, a Fairfield, Ohio, city councilman and regional vice-chair of the Butler County Republican Party.

      "I think it was a very good strategic move," said Judd of McCain's decision to leave Michigan. "Michigan is generally a blue state. The McCain campaign has to concentrate on the big three: Ohio, Virginia and Florida. If we win those three states, then John McCain and Sarah Palin will be sworn in."

      McCain's chances of victory in Michigan aside, some observers believe the McCain campaign's finances may also have played a role in the Republican's decision to abandon the race there.

      The Republican presidential nominee, unlike Obama, is restricted in his fundraising options because he took federal funds. While Obama can raise funds by simply e-mailing his supporters and asking for donations, McCain must conduct traditional fundraisers, which waste time and resources that could be better spent in battleground states.

      "We're seeing the impact of Obama's decision not to take public funding," said former McCain adviser Dan Schnur. "McCain has a finite number of resources and has to make triage-level decisions that most campaigns have had to make in the past. Deciding to bow out of a state -- like Michigan and perhaps he'll have to abandon Pennsylvania -- is standard for a campaign under those restraints. Obama is fortunate enough to not have to worry about it. It gives him much more leeway."

      Opinion polls have Obama leading every battleground state -- Colorado, Florida, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin. He is also leading in two states carried by George Bush in 2004, Iowa and New Mexico. If he wins all of those states on Election Day, he is just six electoral votes away from the 270 he needs to win.

      But in races so close, there are 19 plausible scenarios in which a tie occurs and each candidate wins 269 votes. As a result, the candidates are duking it out in the tiniest of battlegrounds, single congressional districts in states such as Maine and Nebraska, where electoral votes are awarded by congressional district rather than winner-take-all.


      - - -

      Resumen:
      I SMELL FAAAAAA~AAAAIIIILLL!!
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      • #4
        Y aquí el contra-ataque de la campa?a Azul, represalia por las acusaciones de Palin:


        Gloves come off on the campaign trail



        (CNN) -- Sen. Barack Obama's campaign is trying to draw a parallel with Sen. John McCain's involvement in the "Keating Five" scandal and the current economic crisis.

        The Obama campaign announced plans to release a 13-minute documentary called "Keating Economics: John McCain and the Making of a Financial Crisis."

        Charles Keating was a businessman who went to prison for fraud.
        McCain was investigated as being one of five senators, dubbed the "Keating Five," who met with regulators on behalf of Keating, the owner of an Arizona savings and loan.

        The Senate Ethics Committee cleared McCain in 1991, but said that he showed poor judgment in his efforts for Keating, who had been a major contributor to McCain's campaign. McCain later turned over $112,000 in campaign contributions from Keating to the U.S. Treasury.

        A preview of the documentary shows clips of McCain's hearings before the Senate Ethics Committee, as the narrator says "the Keating Five involved all the things that have brought the modern crisis."

        The clip says McCain "has not learned the lessons and has continued to follow policies that are going to produce a disaster."

        The documentary will be released online at noon.

        The documentary debuts two days after Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin accused Obama of "palling around with terrorists who target their own country" for his ties to Bill Ayers, a founding member of the radical Weather Underground.





        Quiero llegar a mi casa a ver el documentaaaaalll!!
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        • #5
          orale..



          que interesante






          resumen:


          ya perdio el negro?
          Yo era capaz de subir al cielo, para bajarle un monton de estrellas....



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          • #6
            de hecho da risa como ponen los republicanos a la palin a criticar y no al mccain, para quemarla a ellay que ella despues haga cara de mujer inocente. Casi creo que si les piden disculpas la ponen a decir que estaba en sus dias y todo fue un desahogo homonal. No lo dudaria, nada mas para no quedar "tan mal"
            hffehkhhjfsd sigpic Vive tu vida de tal manera que cuando tus pies toquen el suelo en la mañana, el diablo se estremezca y diga.... "En la madre!.... ya se levantó!!"

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            • #7
              Y, para terminar con mi sobredosis de info sobre las elecciones (por el momento, anyway), aquí dejo dos pares de fotografías OH SO EXPLOITABLE que me encontr? de ambos. Las expresiones y el hecho de que pudiesen considerarse estar en secuencia...aaaahhh, tantas posibilidades!








              Las últimas dos, jajaja..!! :]] :]] :]]


              OBAMA IS NOT AMUSED, CRACKER.
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              • #8
                Originally posted by Blackheart View Post
                orale..



                que interesante






                resumen:


                ya perdio el negro?



                ...











                ¿C?mo le fue a tus Tigeresss en esta última jornada que acaba de concluir?
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                • #9
                  bahhh


                  yo tambien puedo poner copys-paste grandotes
                  Yo era capaz de subir al cielo, para bajarle un monton de estrellas....



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                  • #10
                    Hazlo .
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                    • #11
                      Empecemos por el Iphone SPAM



                      Obama, el candidato a la presidencia de los Estados Unidos se ha hecho con un nuevo aliado: el iPhone. Una aplicaci?n dise?ada para tratar de influir positivamente en la campa?a electoral a trav?s de una “reorganizaci?n estrat?gica” de los contactos.
                      Esa característica es la m?s destacable de esta peque?a y singular aplicaci?n que adem?s dispone en la parte inferior de un enlace claro para “Donaciones” y un mensaje que informa de los días que quedan para las elecciones presidenciales.

                      La idea es la de tratar de usar nuestra lista de contactos para saber d?nde puede ser m?s clave su ayuda. Hay ciertos estados de EE.UU. donde si tenemos amigos y contactos estos podrían hacer su peque?a parte en las elecciones, así que el iPhone se convierte en un elemento m?s para tratar de apoyar la campa?a electoral.
                      Yo era capaz de subir al cielo, para bajarle un monton de estrellas....



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                      • #12
                        Estrategias innovadoras para alcanzar demogr?ficas diferentes. Me agrada.
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                        • #13
                          hahaha...



                          si le cambiamos Obama por Mcain?..



                          ahh pos a los tigeres les fue muy bien, empataron con chivitas y por nada y sacan la gloria del jalisco..
                          Yo era capaz de subir al cielo, para bajarle un monton de estrellas....



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                          • #14
                            en resumen, quien va en la delantera?
                            Soy como tu, pero mejor, Y a pesar de ser perfecto, me mantengo humilde.

                            De 100 problemas que tienes 10 son por pendejo y 90 por metiche

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                            • #15
                              Obama, por donde le veas .
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