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On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 08:33:17 -0500, GM wrote:
Cyli wrote: I do hope that Hillary will never run for president, nor even vice. First, I don't think a woman can be elected president any time in the next decade or two. Second, Hillary has so much baggage that it'd bog her right down. The buzz around Barack is happening too early and he realizes this, as evidenced in his own comments at last week's NH book signing, town-hall thing. Or his Bears' pregame "announcement"... His flame could burn bright and brief, at least for the 08 contest. I do like his message though: amongst other things, the audacious hope that a campaign can be fought with a respect for the opponent. I just wonder if he'll still walk on water when he realizes he has to go negative, either as a first strike, or in retaliation? If he joins up with McCain, they could both ignore whoever the opponents wind up being. If it does wind up being he and Hillary in a contest for Dem nominee, he won't need to "go negative" - the GOP and everyone else to the right of, oh, say, Michael Moore will do it for him. And speaking of idiots, Hillary and the Clintonistas seem to be right on schedule to **** up Hillary's chances by continuing to do what they do - attempting to rat**** _anyone_, including the voters, that they see as "in the way." If he's the Dem nominee, his objective negatives (no real experience, no real record at any level - no "yardstick"), combined with subjective negatives (he's a Dem, he's too black, he's not black enough, he's not "liberal"/"conservative" enough, he's too "liberal"/ "conservative," he's too young, etc.), will likely combine to get him defeated THIS TIME if the GOP puts up anyone short of maybe Pat Robertson. If it's McCain, Obama's done. They are both, as pols go, good men, but McCain has the name and the record, and if he goes (really) negative on McCain, he's _really_ done. IMO, though, if they are steering their own ships, neither would go unduly (and subjectively) negative on the other. If he's smart, whether he joins McCain or not, he will take a page from his playbook: don't go (subjectively) negative _against anyone_ and be thought of as one of the "good guys" by the entire center. And anyone wanna bet that Hillary (or her campaign) will bring up his skin color at least once? R |
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