At times I feel like it's just me against the world...

  • Carmelo Junior

    Republicans are making a big mistake and the left is enjoying it! let’s see:

    Republicans are obviously putting Bobby Jindal in the trap of comparing the Louisiana governor with Obama. That is exactly what the left want!!! In a one to one match Bobby WILL NEVER compare with Obama.
    The left is talking greatness about the “young and intelligent” governor. Just like they did with McCain!!

    The left was successful in having the GOP nominate McCain so they could mop the floor with him in the general elections!

    Republicans better not fall in the Obama trap this time….and I hope this pick of Bobby Jindal to respond to Obama is just a one night thing. Bobby will never defeat Obama and the left knows it!

    I would have loved seeing Sarah Palin being the responder but she is busy in Alaska cleaning her name and preparing for her reelection next year. After Sarah gets reelected, Bobby and the GOP better not fall in the trap that the left is trying to set up for them.

    After Sarah gets reelected and announces her run for president in 2011 the GOP better rally at 60% behind her. That would be the start of the nightmare for the Obamabots.

  • delvism

    It would’ve been much better to have that palin chick yammerin’ into the camera for 20 minutes; he’ll do though. Between palin, jindal and mike “yeah baby” steele 2012 will be very entertaining. Talk about loopy!!

  • delvism

    Hey little puma, you like quoting the main-stream media, check this out from the fox news panel covering the speech:

    BRIT HUME: “The speech read a lot better than it sounded. This was not Bobby Jindal’s greatest oratorical moment.”

    NINA EASTON: “The delivery was not exactly terrific.”

    CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER: “Jindal didn’t have a chance. He follows Obama, who in making speeches, is in a league of his own. He’s in a Reagan-esque league. … [Jindal] tried the best he could.”

    JUAN WILLIAMS: “It came off as amateurish, and even the tempo in which he spoke was sing-songy. He was telling stories that seemed very simplistic and almost childish.

    Between jindal, palin and the rnc homeboy you guys are all done. The best thing you can do is forget about 2012 altogether, hope that Americans will have a short memory, then go with Ron Paul in 2016.

  • Sparky

    Hey dildoboy, if it goes to 2012 there won’t be anything left between Barry and Pelosi running the country down to the ground. Take a look around you, ever since he was nominated everything is tanking.

    Tanking you loser – tanking.

  • Carmelo Junior

    delvism

    Don’t hold your breath. I agree that, as I have stated many times, Bobby Jindal can’t beat Obama neither in looks, oratory or message. Last night Bobby Jindal just took his name off for any national stage consideration(at least for the next 8 years). The GOP will commit political suicide if they nominate him against Obama in 2012. Bobby Jindal WILL NOT be the GOP nominee in 2012(but keep praying that he is Obamabots!)

    Obama had a good speech full of confidence BUT with no substance or any specifics. We still have 1370 days left. Don’t hold your breath! Bush had approval ratings in the 80s after his “Axis of Evil” speech.

  • Carmelo Junior

    FLASH! Iran AKA “Tiny Country” just tested a nuclear facility with you know who? RUSSIA!

    It is coming Obama, let’s see how the community organizer manages to keep the USA and the world safe from these crazies.

  • Sparky

    This just came out from the AP (yes I’m surprised too)!

    The title of this is called Fact Checking Obama…

    President Barack Obama knows Americans are unhappy that the government could rescue people who bought mansions beyond their means.

    But his assurance Tuesday night that only the deserving will get help rang hollow.

    Even officials in his administration, many supporters of the plan in Congress and the Federal Reserve chairman expect some of that money will go to people who used lousy judgment.

    The president skipped over several complex economic circumstances in his speech to Congress _ and may have started an international debate among trivia lovers and auto buffs over what country invented the car.

    A look at some of his assertions:

    OBAMA: “We have launched a housing plan that will help responsible families facing the threat of foreclosure lower their monthly payments and refinance their mortgages. It’s a plan that won’t help speculators or that neighbor down the street who bought a house he could never hope to afford, but it will help millions of Americans who are struggling with declining home values.”

    THE FACTS: If the administration has come up with a way to ensure money only goes to those who got in honest trouble, it hasn’t said so.

    Defending the program Tuesday at a Senate hearing, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said it’s important to save those who made bad calls, for the greater good. He likened it to calling the fire department to put out a blaze caused by someone smoking in bed.

    “I think the smart way to deal with a situation like that is to put out the fire, save him from his own consequences of his own action but then, going forward, enact penalties and set tougher rules about smoking in bed.”

    Similarly, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. suggested this month it’s not likely aid will be denied to all homeowners who overstated their income or assets to get a mortgage they couldn’t afford.

    “I think it’s just simply impractical to try to do a forensic analysis of each and every one of these delinquent loans,” Sheila Bair told National Public Radio.

    ___

    OBAMA: “And I believe the nation that invented the automobile cannot walk away from it.”

    THE FACTS: Depends what your definition of automobiles, is. According to the Library of Congress, the inventor of the first true automobile was probably Germany’s Karl Benz, who created the first auto powered by an internal combustion gasoline engine, in 1885 or 1886. In the U.S., Charles Duryea tested what library researchers called the first successful gas-powered car in 1893. Nobody disputes that Henry Ford created the first assembly line that made cars affordable.

    ___

    OBAMA: “We have known for decades that our survival depends on finding new sources of energy. Yet we import more oil today than ever before.”

    THE FACTS: Oil imports peaked in 2005 at just over 5 billion barrels, and have been declining slightly since. The figure in 2007 was 4.9 billion barrels, or about 58 percent of total consumption. The nation is on pace this year to import 4.7 billion barrels, and government projections are for imports to hold steady or decrease a bit over the next two decades.

    ___

    OBAMA: “We have already identified $2 trillion in savings over the next decade.”

    THE FACTS: Although 10-year projections are common in government, they don’t mean much. And at times, they are a way for a president to pass on the most painful steps to his successor, by putting off big tax increases or spending cuts until someone else is in the White House.

    Obama only has a real say on spending during the four years of his term. He may not be president after that and he certainly won’t be 10 years from now.

    ___

    OBAMA: “Regulations were gutted for the sake of a quick profit at the expense of a healthy market. People bought homes they knew they couldn’t afford from banks and lenders who pushed those bad loans anyway. And all the while, critical debates and difficult decisions were put off for some other time on some other day.”

    THE FACTS: This may be so, but it isn’t only Republicans who pushed for deregulation of the financial industries. The Clinton administration championed an easing of banking regulations, including legislation that ended the barrier between regular banks and Wall Street banks. That led to a deregulation that kept regular banks under tight federal regulation but extended lax regulation of Wall Street banks. Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, later an economic adviser to candidate Obama, was in the forefront in pushing for this deregulation.

    ___

    OBAMA: “In this budget, we will end education programs that don’t work and end direct payments to large agribusinesses that don’t need them. We’ll eliminate the no-bid contracts that have wasted billions in Iraq, and reform our defense budget so that we’re not paying for Cold War-era weapons systems we don’t use. We will root out the waste, fraud and abuse in our Medicare program that doesn’t make our seniors any healthier, and we will restore a sense of fairness and balance to our tax code by finally ending the tax breaks for corporations that ship our jobs overseas.”

    THE FACTS: First, his budget does not accomplish any of that. It only proposes those steps. That’s all a president can do, because control over spending rests with Congress. Obama’s proposals here are a wish list and some items, including corporate tax increases and cuts in agricultural aid, will be a tough sale in Congress.

    Second, waste, fraud and abuse are routinely targeted by presidents who later find that the savings realized seldom amount to significant sums. Programs that a president might consider wasteful have staunch defenders in Congress who have fought off similar efforts in the past.

    ___

    OBAMA: “Thanks to our recovery plan, we will double this nation’s supply of renewable energy in the next three years.”

    THE FACTS: While the president’s stimulus package includes billions in aid for renewable energy and conservation, his goal is unlikely to be achieved through the recovery plan alone.

    In 2007, the U.S. produced 8.4 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, including hydroelectric dams, solar panels and windmills. Under the status quo, the Energy Department says, it will take more than two decades to boost that figure to 12.5 percent.

    If Obama is to achieve his much more ambitious goal, Congress would need to mandate it. That is the thrust of an energy bill that is expected to be introduced in coming weeks.

    ___

    OBAMA: “Over the next two years, this plan will save or create 3.5 million jobs.”

    THE FACTS: This is a recurrent Obama formulation. But job creation projections are uncertain even in stable times, and some of the economists relied on by Obama in making his forecast acknowledge a great deal of uncertainty in their numbers.

    The president’s own economists, in a report prepared last month, stated, “It should be understood that all of the estimates presented in this memo are subject to significant margins of error.”

    Beyond that, it’s unlikely the nation will ever know how many jobs are saved as a result of the stimulus. While it’s clear when jobs are abolished, there’s no economic gauge that tracks job preservation. The estimates are based on economic assumptions of how many jobs would be lost without the stimulus.

  • http://www.debatepolitics.com/polls/44449-gov-jindal-hypocrite.html#post1057939312 Is Gov. Jindal a hypocrite? – Debate Politics Forums

    [...] in the history of our state. … You can read the entire text of the speech here if you want: Full Text of Governor Bobby Jindal’s Response To President Obama’s Speech to Congress&#8… But basically, its standard small government conservatism. He is advocating for a very limited [...]

  • http://www.debatepolitics.com/polls/44449-gov-jindal-hypocrite.html#post1057939315 Is Gov. Jindal a hypocrite? – Debate Politics Forums

    [...] in the history of our state. … You can read the entire text of the speech here if you want: Full Text of Governor Bobby Jindals Response To President Obamas Speech to Congress But basically, its standard small government conservatism. He is advocating for a very limited [...]

  • Carmelo Junior

    For those Sarah Palin lovers out there(to include PUMA pundit!) Bobby Jindal’s not so terrific performance as Obama’s speech GOP responder has just taken him off for 2012 consideration. That is a step closer for Sarah to become the first woman nominated for US president. Her closest opposition might be Mike Huckabee. One down three to go…! get ready for Madame President…!

  • http://www.debatepolitics.com/polls/44449-gov-jindal-hypocrite-6.html#post1057942327 Is Gov. Jindal a hypocrite? – Page 6 – Debate Politics Forums

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