Obama refuses to acknowledge bulletin board material
Hillary Clinton is ready to take on Barack Obama “anytime, anywhere.” So says the senator speaking in North Carolina while fresh off a decisive Pennsylvania primary victory. I think she even threatened to take on Washington with a bold brand of rhetoric, but I wasn’t sure if she meant Gilbert Arenas or the nation’s capital. Apparently, Barack remains unfazed and is letting the Obama Nation do all the talking.
“Vote (Hillary) for the next vice president,” chanted a dreadlocked and seemingly intoxicated Obama fan outside of a Clinton appearance in Asheville, North Carolina. He claimed to be part of Cherokee Nation, but admittedly was only one-eighteenth part Cherokee. He wanted to discuss the Trail of Tears although I thought perhaps he was referring to his assumption of Hillary’s eventual defeat since Obama will practically have home-field advantage in Hoosierland — except for those pesky Southern Indiana voters who might shake up the whole state if they stick to their guns.
Earlier Thursday evening, two young gents on bicycles — looking barely old enough to shave, drive a car, or go to the polls — taunted the crowd of Hillary followers by barking “Vote for Obama” while holding campaign posters with the same message above their heads. Maybe they were counting on some bizarre and illegal scheme of voting by proxy or a vicarious political rush the equivalent of sniffing paint.
The prize of the night goes to McCain’s Army for talking trash before even knowing who he’ll match up against in the presidential finals. “Life’s a bitch, don’t vote for one,” a young lady’s sign read with “McCain rocks” boldly written on the other side.
“I do my rockin’ on the stage,
You can’t put this possum in a cage
My body’s old but it ain’t impaired
I don’t need your rockin’ chair”
-george jones
Tags: barack obama, george jones, Gilbert Arenas, hillary clinton, Indiana primary, John McCain, North Carolina Primary, trash talk, Washington Wizards
Share This Article
No Comments
No comments yet.
Comment On This Article
From The Gallery
Image Gallery Is Empty!
Website Poll
Poker sites for US players are somewhat hard to come by these days. Aside from the big ones, PokerStars and Full Tilt, mainly smaller, fairly unknown sites are available to Americans. It s a good idea to read a poker room review before you sign up with a site you don t know very much about.
