/dev/null Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 More change we can need to believe in http://apnews.myway.com/article/20090612/D98OTD380.html
KD in CA Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Obama's a good match for The Most Ethical Congress EverTM.
Magox Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 More change we can need to believe in http://apnews.myway.com/article/20090612/D98OTD380.html yes indeed.
GG Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Love the pecking order. $500K - Belgium & Switzerland. $4k, ah, oh, uhm... - Romania (Bulgaria must have been already taken) Do admit $100k for the Belize gig was a bargain of the election.
drnykterstein Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Obama's a good match for The Most Ethical Congress EverTM. Ya that corrupt dickwad should have employed McCains biggest donors!
pBills Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 I guess it's good that they didn't say they were going for change: McClatchy Newspapers WASHINGTON -- Among the 17 senators who voted against allowing the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco are some of the top recipients of campaign contributions from the tobacco industry, which has donated millions of dollars to lawmakers in the past several campaign cycles. Over the course of his nearly quarter-century Senate career, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who hails from the tobacco-rich state of Kentucky, has received $419,025 from the tobacco industry, more than any other member of Congress, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that analyzes the influence of money on politics and policy. North Carolina Republican Sen. Richard Burr, who led the opposition to the bill, is the second-highest recipient and netted $359,100 from tobacco-related political action committees and individual contributions. His state is the nation's largest tobacco grower and is home to R.J. Reynolds, the nation's second-largest tobacco manufacturing company, which contributed $196,850 to Burr's campaigns. Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss, the ranking Republican on the Senate Agriculture Committee, is the third-highest recipient with $228,700. Kentucky Sen. Jim Bunning, who's up for re-election next year and is considered the most vulnerable Senate Republican, ranks eighth with $194,166.
Max Fischer Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 More change we can need to believe in http://apnews.myway.com/article/20090612/D98OTD380.html So? It's funny how much fake outrage you all can stir up.
Magox Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 hmm I wonder who it was that said? : "The stakes are too high and the challenges too great to play the same old Washington games with the same old Washington players" or this gem : "Politics has become so bitter and partisan, so gummed up by money and influence, that we can't tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that's what we have to change first." or how could we ever forget this one? : "new kind of politics."
pBills Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 hmm I wonder who it was that said? : "The stakes are too high and the challenges too great to play the same old Washington games with the same old Washington players" or this gem : "Politics has become so bitter and partisan, so gummed up by money and influence, that we can't tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that's what we have to change first." or how could we ever forget this one? : "new kind of politics." So it's ok for republicans to be corrupt as long as they don't say they want change?
drnykterstein Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 So? It's funny how much fake outrage you all can stir up. Thank you! The only way this is outrageous is if you can show me something that everything single president in the last 100 years hasn't done exactly this or likely even worse. You might as well make a thread complaining that Obama breaths oxygen. It would be just as pertinent as this one.
X. Benedict Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 hmm I wonder who it was that said? : "The stakes are too high and the challenges too great to play the same old Washington games with the same old Washington players" or this gem : "Politics has become so bitter and partisan, so gummed up by money and influence, that we can't tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that's what we have to change first." or how could we ever forget this one? : "new kind of politics." Hmmm. This curiously sounds like any politician, anywhere. But I'm sure you have a particular one in mind.
Magox Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Hmmm. This curiously sounds like any politician, anywhere. But I'm sure you have a particular one in mind. Bingo!! That's my point
IDBillzFan Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 So it's ok for republicans to be corrupt as long as they don't say they want change? Preston is great simply because he's not Fowler. Great justification there.
Magox Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Sweet. What do I win? you win an auto decal that says "change we can believe in" Signed by rahm emanuel's secretary
IDBillzFan Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 you win an auto decal that says "change we can believe in" signed by rahm emanuel's secretary Signed by Obama? Awesome!
pBills Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 Preston is great simply because he's not Fowler. Great justification there. Simply saying it's funny how some people can be so upset about what Obama does something questionable but their not upset about the actions of others. I call them hypocrites.
X. Benedict Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 you win an auto decal that says "change we can believe in" Signed by rahm emanuel's secretary I can eBay that, right?
Magox Posted June 12, 2009 Posted June 12, 2009 I can eBay that, right? or you can dowload it on http://www.barackobama.com/
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