A Shot Across The Bow

  • Thread starter Thread starter Fenian_Bastard
  • Start date Start date
Sports Journalists Forum – Media, Newsroom & Reporting Talk

Help Support Sports Journalists Forum:

F

Fenian_Bastard

Guest
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53743

Uh, John, between this and the surge, you've kinda got a problem.
 
Wishful thinking. Dobson's one voice in a big crowd, and McCain has support from plenty of other Christian leaders. Plus, odds are the party establishment jumps on his bandwagon to stop Romney, whom they think is unelectable.

Dobson and some others may oppose McCain now, but when it comes down to McCain and the Democratic nominee -- even if it isn't Hillary -- the Christian Right won't have a hard time deciding which candidate to support.

But keep telling yourself 2008 will be your lucky year. The higher you get your hopes up, the funnier it'll be.

(By the way, the poster formerly known as dullatron still owes me a steak dinner from the '04 election. If you're reading this, be ashamed!)
 
The Christian Right really was a force in 2006, wasn't it? This is James Dobson's pathetic attempt at gumming the works for the presumed GOP front-runner, lest he becomes even more irrelevant than he is now.

As for 2008, it should be noted that Ohio, which no Republican has won the presidency without carrying, elected Democrats by landslides to the top three statewide elections (governor, secretary of state, Senator) on the ballot last November.

I suggest the GOP concentrate on defeating an incumbent Democratic congressman or governor before talking **** about winning the White House in '08.
 
The Republicans have FUBARed themselves in Ohio for a while with all the scandals. Some fairly OK Republicans, including one I voted for the first time he ran for the Senate, got turned out in the purge.
 
Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.0 FM.

Sorry off-topic ... but what is wrong with the second sentence?

And, back on-topic ... Don't sell Dobson's influence short. Some would argue he's passed Robertson and Falwell as the leading voice of the rapture right. His Colorado Springs minions will follow suit.

However, I agree that whoever the GOP nominates, Dobson will be back on board and will bring the lemmings along.
 
Just an early indication that McCain '08 is not the lead-pipe his acolytes believe he is.
If the surge goes bad. he's cooked, because he's its only public face, and the really wingnuttier parts of the base still don't like him.
 
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change.
Joe Rossi said:
The Christian Right really was a force in 2006, wasn't it? This is James Dobson's pathetic attempt at gumming the works for the presumed GOP front-runner, lest he becomes even more irrelevant than he is now.

As for 2008, it should be noted that Ohio, which no Republican has won the presidency without carrying, elected Democrats by landslides to the top three statewide elections (governor, secretary of state, Senator) on the ballot last November.

I suggest the GOP concentrate on defeating an incumbent Democratic congressman or governor before talking **** about winning the White House in '08.

Eh, the Dems went 0-for-America against Republican incumbents in 1994, and their presidental candidate seemed to do okay for himself two years later.
 
Football_Bat said:
Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.0 FM.

Sorry off-topic ... but what is wrong with the second sentence?

An FM radio station's frequency can't end in an even number.
 
Mystery Meat said:
Eh, the Dems went 0-for-America against Republican incumbents in 1994, and their presidental candidate seemed to do okay for himself two years later.

Yeah, and after that election, I didn't hear many Democrats claiming that the results didn't matter, 1996 was a slam dunk.

Even in '94, the Democrats picked up three open House seats previously held by the GOP. Not only did the Republicans fail to beat a Democratic incumbent in '06, not one previously Dem open seat flipped.

Yet, to hear some people talk, President McCain is a lock, even with no resolution in sight to a war that he is married to. Makes no sense.

I will say this, though: If McCain gets the Bush 2000 treatment from the ****-for-brains Washington press corps -- and early indications are he's going to get it, super-sized -- he's got a really good chance of winning.
 
Freelance Hack said:
Football_Bat said:
Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.0 FM.

Sorry off-topic ... but what is wrong with the second sentence?

An FM radio station's frequency can't end in an even number.

Really? Why not?
 
Angola! said:
Freelance Hack said:
Football_Bat said:
Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.0 FM.

Sorry off-topic ... but what is wrong with the second sentence?

An FM radio station's frequency can't end in an even number.

Really? Why not?

So there's separation between them. They start at 88.1 and end at 107.9. [/formerdj]
 
Dobson can't be liking his options in the GOP for 2008. His choices are (1) McCain, a man who is an uneasy truce with the Religious Right and whom Dobson can't count on to carry his water or (2) Guiliani, whose social policies aren't that far removed from Hillary or (3) Romney, a man who says all the right things, but is a recent convert to the cause (see the YouTube video of clips from his 1994 debate with Teddy) and who is a member of a religion that Dobson's audience believes is just as cultish and nutty as Scientology. And while those three men jockey for position, there is a massive drop from No. 3 to No. 4.

Even among the wannabes, only Huckabee and Brownback would be acceptable to Dobson. Brownback doesn't stand a chance -- he is a nice guy who excites no one. Huckabee has some potential to be the candidate from the right who would have some personal appeal (has some charisma, weight loss story is popular), but he isn't raising the money and creating the political infrastructure necessary. Even a guy like Howard Dean was making all the required trips four years ago and putting himself into a position to catch fire. Huckabee seems to believe in spontaneous combustion -- which does not happen in presidential politics.
 
Freelance Hack said:
Football_Bat said:
Several times he's talked to Republicans, the traditionally conservative political party, about the need to maintain the values of that large part of the U.S. population, or lose the support of those people.

His most recent comments came during an interview on the Jerry Johnson Live program on KCBI 90.0 FM.

Sorry off-topic ... but what is wrong with the second sentence?

An FM radio station's frequency can't end in an even number.

DING!

However, FM stations in Europe can be and often are assigned even-number frequencies because the frequencies there are only separated by 0.1 MHz.
 
Yep . . . I'm losing sleep about whether Jim Dobson is happy, or not.

Sawed-off busybody simpleton . . .
 
Speaking of losing the base ...

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/01/14/MNGB5NG95P1.DTL
 
. . . but easily-understandable, since current administration's top players are ALL handmaidens to
Big Oil (in Condi's case, quite literally) . . . glad to see conflicting interests causing further grief for
a chief exec who so richly deserves it, given his laziest of "minds" . . .
 

Latest posts

Back
Top