Results for ‘New Hampshire’:

29 TOTAL POSTS

July 23rd at 11:15AM

Barack Obama has Won Voter Support with His Strategy for Crushing Defeat, Says John McCain

POSTED BY: CubbyChaser

If you aren't a resident of Rochester, New Hampshire (pop. "almost 31,000"), you may have missed John McCain's recent town hall meeting there. No worries, he said a hilariously stupid thing in the midst of it, so you'll have plenty of chances to relive the experience via websites like this.

Take a look at the transcript of McCain's remarks in Rochester and the Q&A that followed. Can you spot the hilariously stupid thing he said?

Was it...

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LAST COMMENT:

well, actually, from one perspective, he has a point. there are ppl who believe that Obama's withdrawal from Iraq will effectively be a loss for us as well as disaster for the Iraqi ppl, and that McCain's committment to stay and make sure things are done well even if it isn't popular enough to win him an election is the right thing. I disagree, but to me it doesn't sound "hilariously stupid," just an expression of an alternative point of view that one can argue with.

by iowagradstudent July 23rd at 11:46AM
June 27th at 4:31PM

With Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and Unity For All

POSTED BY: CubbyChaser


This afternoon, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama had their historic Unity Summit in Unity, New Hampshire in which they advocated party unity while sipping on eunuch tea (a deliciously emasculating herbal beverage).

As part of the festivities, Clinton made a plea to all her supporters who hate Obama's guts...

"To anyone who voted for me and is now considering not voting or voting for Senator (John) McCain, I strongly urge you to reconsider," said Clinton, the loser in a marathon Democratic nomination fight, as she implored her supporters to join with Obama's "to create an unstoppable force for change we can all believe in."

I think that we should take Clinton on her word here. If she says she really supports Obama now, we have no reason to believe otherwise.

Sure, a loss for Obama in November would virtually guarantee her the nomination in 2012. If not the presidency. But, of course, she'd have to appear to unequivocally support Obama now, or she'd risk losing Democratic support in the future. And I'm not saying that's what she's doing now.

But if she were, this is exactly what it would look like.

Obama appeared to understand this...

Obama praised both Clinton and her husband, former President Clinton, as allies and pillars of the Democratic Party. "We need them. We need them badly," Obama said.

"Not just my campaign, but the American people need their service and their vision and their wisdom in the months and years to come because that's how we're going to bring about unity in the Democratic Party. And that's how we're going to bring about unity in America."

Come on, Obama. You can at least play a little hard to get.