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4 May 2008 - SUNDAY MORNING
Well shit far I missed this weeks NASCAR Race!
It was a night race last night in Richmond Va.
And I thought they were racing today. Oh well.

Today is the Ramp Festival but I didn't get to go
which sucks.

So no race today. No Ramp Festival today. Maybe
W will attack Iran today, at least I wouldn't be
bored. Maybe some scathing nasty shit will break
about Obama this afternoon, that would lift my
spirits.

Oh well I need coffee, but I will be back lol

Naked, crotch grinding, hand-full of ass Hugs, Richard

4 May 2008 - Obama appeal to working-class whites faltering
Polls: Obama appeal to working-class whites faltering
By Alan Fram, Associated Press

Barack Obama's problem winning votes from working-class whites is
showing no sign of going away, and their impression of him is getting
worse.

Those are ominous signals as he hopes for strong performances in the
coming week in Indiana and North Carolina primaries that would derail
the candidacy of Hillary Rodham Clinton, his rival for the Democratic presidential nomination. Those contests come as his candidacy has been
rocked by renewed attention to his volatile former pastor, the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright, and by his defeat in last month's Pennsylvania primary.

In an Associated Press-Yahoo News poll in April, 53% of whites who have
not completed college viewed Obama unfavorably, up a dozen percentage
points from November. During that period, the numbers viewing Clinton
and Republican candidate John McCain negatively have stayed about even.

The April poll — conducted before the Pennsylvania contest — also showed
an overwhelming preference for Clinton over Obama among working-class
whites. They favored her over him by 39 percentage points, compared to
a 10-point Obama lead among white college graduates. Obama also did
worse than Clinton among those less-educated voters when matched up
against Republican candidate John McCain.

"It's the stuff about his preacher ... and the thing he said about
Pennsylvania towns, how they turn to religion," Keith Wolfe, 41, a
supermarket food stocker from Parkville, Md., said in a follow-up
interview. "I don't think he'd be a really good leader."

Just before the Pennsylvania primary, Obama said many small-town
residents are bitter about their lives and turn for solace to religion
and guns.

Recent voting patterns underscore Obama's continued poor performance
with these voters, who are often pivotal in general election swing
states like Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

In Democratic primaries held on or before Super Tuesday, Feb. 5, whites
who have not finished college favored the New York senator by a cumulative
59% to 32%, according to exit polls of voters conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks.

In primaries since Feb. 5, that group has favored Clinton by 64% to 34%.
That includes Ohio and Pennsylvania, in which working-class whites have
favored Clinton by 44 and 41 percentage points respectively.

The AP-Yahoo poll shows less educated whites present a problem to Obama
in part because of who they are. Besides being poorer, they tend to be
older than white college graduates — and Clinton has done strongly with
older white voters.

Yet political professionals and analysts say more is at play. They blame Obama's problems with blue-collar whites on their greater reluctance to
embrace his bid to become the first black president, and his failure to
address their concerns about job losses and the battered economy
specifically enough.

Terry Madonna, a political science professor at Franklin & Marshall College
in Lancaster, Pa., said Obama lost among working-class whites in the state because his message of how this generation's time has come did not address their economic needs.


"While it's incredibly motivating and passionate and compelling, it lacks content," Madonna said. "Hillary would come in and relate to them, talk about the specifics of her policy."

Pennsylvania also illustrated the problems racial attitudes among less educated whites are causing Obama.

In exit polls, one in five of the state's white voters who haven't completed college said race was an important factor in choosing a candidate, about double the number of white college graduates who said so. Eight in 10 of them voted for Clinton over Obama, and only about half said they would vote for Obama over McCain in November.


"The scab is pealed back off," Democratic pollster John Anzalone, not working for either presidential candidate, said of the latest attention focused on Wright and Obama's denunciations of him. In video clips of past sermons, Wright has damned the United States for its history of racism and accused the government of spreading the HIV virus to harm blacks.
Obama pollster Cornell Belcher said that while working-class whites have favored Clinton, the fact that huge numbers of them and other voters have participated in Democratic contests boded well for the November election.
"I don't think there's going to be erosion in the fall of a core group of Democratic voters," Belcher said.
While less educated whites tend to vote less frequently than better educated voters, they are important because of their sheer number.
Exit polls show they have comprised three in 10 voters in Democratic contests so far, a group that cannot be ignored in a contest that has seen Obama maintain a slim lead. They made up 43% of all voters in the 2004 presidential contest, when they heavily favored President Bush over Democrat John Kerry.
Underlining his need to connect with these voters, Obama has geared some television ads in Indiana toward economic issues. In recent days he has turned to small events, rather than his trademark huge rallies, concentrating on the economy, including lunching with a blue-collar Indiana family while discussing their problems.

He has let cameras record him playing basketball in hopes of connecting with the passionate fans of the sport who populate Indiana and North Carolina.
The findings from the AP-Yahoo News poll are from interviews with 863 Democrats on a panel of adults questioned in November and April. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

The poll was conducted over the Internet by Knowledge Networks, which initially contacted people using traditional telephone polling methods and followed with online interviews. People chosen for the study who had no Internet access were given it free.

The exit poll is based on in-person interviews with more than 36,000 voters in 28 states that have held primaries this year in which both candidates actively competed. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 1 percentage point, larger for some subgroups.


4 May 2008 - Flight 93 Memorial for Using Islamic Symbols ?
Opponents Criticize Flight 93 Memorial for Using Islamic Symbols

Opponents of the proposed United Airlines Flight 93 memorial say they're outraged by a proposed design they say looks like Islamic symbols to commemorate victims in Shanksville, Pa. on September 11th.

They believe the design — a broken circle lined with trees outlining the crash —looks likes an Islamic crescent that points toward Mecca, the Muslim holy city.
Opponents presented a petition filled with 5,300 signatures to stop construction of the memorial in a joint meeting of the Flight 93 Memorial Task Force at the Somerset County Courthouse

The controversy over the memorial site began when the Flight 93 Advisory Commission announced a memorial design from Paul Murdoch Architects of Los Angles called "Crescent of Embrace," that included a crescent of maple trees around the crash site.

Some critics say its crescent-shaped design call to mind Islam or subtly include the hijackers alongside the passengers and crew.
The National Park Service, which is managing the construction of the memorial, denied those claims, but changed the design to more of a circle, and dropped the name.

4 May 2008 - THE DEMOCRATIC BOTTOM LINE
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Support for presidential rivals Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton among their fellow Democrats in the Congress is just about split and may become pivotal.

Overall, 97 Democrats in the House of Representatives and Senate have endorsed Sen. Obama of Illinois, while 98 have endorsed Sen. Clinton of New York. Eighty-six others have yet to back either in their party's battle for the presidential nomination and face mounting pressure to soon do so.

"Let me tell you the bottom line: They don't want to make this choice if they don't have to," said Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Dick Durbin, co-chair of the Obama campaign.

"They are trying to avoid the pain of what comes with making the choice because some of their constituents back home are going to be for the other person," he said.

"Many come up to me and say, 'Don't worry, I'm for Barack.' I say, 'When?' They say, 'Well, maybe she'll drop out.'" Maybe. Maybe not.

Clinton has vowed to fight all the way to the party's nominating convention in August, if needed, maintaining she has the best shot to beat the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain , in the November election.

All 283 U.S. Democratic lawmakers, including Clinton and Obama, are among the nearly 800 superdelegates -- members of Congress and party insiders -- who have a vote at the party's August nominating convention.
Obama leads among delegates awarded in nominating contests -- 1,492 to 1,338, according to MSNBC's figures. Yet neither he nor she can reach the 2,025 needed to capture the nomination without superdelegates.

Most of Clinton's superdelegates declared early in the campaign when she was the front-runner. Obama picked up the bulk of his superdelegates after he charged into the lead.

All uncommitted superdelegates have been urged to declare soon after the final state nominating contests on June 3 in hopes of wrapping up the race and avoiding a convention fight.
Many are torn.

"I think the world of Barack and Hillary," said Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware. "But I also want to make sure we win.

"After June 3, I'll take a look at the lay of the land, see what voters say and try to get a sense of who is the most electable."

Superdelegates are free to pick anyone they want. Some say they should reflect the will of their constituents. Others say they should consider who has the best chance to win.

DIVISIONS WITHIN THE PARTY
House Democratic Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina said superdelegates should decide for themselves.
"I don't think there should be some kind of an electronic, smoke-filled room," Clyburn said. "That's crazy.

"Just make the announcement as to who you're for and the DNC (Democratic National Committee) will tally that up."

The race between their two liberal Democratic presidential candidates has caused divisions within the party, at least temporarily, and may end up costing some House Democratic members their seats, particularly first-term lawmakers in conservative districts.

But overall, Clyburn said, echoing the sentiment of many congressional analysts, "I think we're going to pick up people no matter who is on the ticket."

Democratic Rep. Gene Taylor of Mississippi said he is in no rush to endorse Obama or Clinton and that "there's a chance" he will not make any endorsement. Taylor said he expected McCain to carry his district.

In March, some party fund-raisers wrote House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to complain about her position that superdelegates should reflect their constituents' wishes.

"Superdelegates must look to not one criterion but to the full panoply of factors that will help them assess who will be the party's strongest nominee," they wrote in reflecting the position of the Clinton campaign.
Brendan Daly, Pelosi's press secretary, replied that superedelegates' "choice will be based on many considerations."

But Daly added, "The speaker believes it would do great harm to the Democratic Party if superdelegates are perceived to overturn the will of the voters."
Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon said he intended to remain neutral, at least for the next few months, while he stays focused on trying to craft a bipartisan heath care plan.

"But if it comes down to a hot August night (at the Democratic convention) in Denver and I need to make a judgment, I'll make a judgment," he said.

Richard Mathis | Create Your Badge






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