Saturday, 10 May 2008

Facts, facts and... facts



Fact: It is mathematically impossible for Hillary Clinton to reach Barack Obama on the delegate race for the Democratic nomination.

Fact: Hillary is likely to win the next contests in West Virginia, Kentuky and Puerto Rico.

Fact: Obama is already playing the "Clinton who?" general election strategy. Don't mind if he makes any gafe such as calling the Republican senator "John McClinton".

Fact: She promised not to drop out before June 3rd after the last primary.

Fact: Even the New York Times, that supports her, suggests that the big issue is not if she should stay or not in the race. But how will she behave until the end, with the less negativity it’s possible.

Fact: By staying in the race she makes a very good pose to people who voted for her - which happend to be in a number very close to Obama's supporters.




Last fact: people can say John McCain is too old for the job, but he is making na interesting statement about his genes, with mama’s help.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

The longer Clinton stays on the race the more damage she makes on herself. Those who have been to her side start questioning the way she behaives. No way to catch Obama. No way to have a dream ticket with him due to apparent reason.

Anonymous said...

The time is now for Democrats to transition and place their focus on McCain. (I'm an Independent, and I'm choosing to do the same.) All of us, those who supported Obama and those of us who supported Clinton, have a vested interest in making sure that our way of life: our economy, our livelihoods, our principals and our Constitution are restored to what it once was. We can put aside the pettiness of the primary season to become a positive force to be reckoned with. We can undo the damage that the previous administrations have caused. We can preserve this country's standing in the eyes of the global community. And we can do it together, but only together.

Anonymous said...

Nice to know Obama is a gracious winner. Obama should be careful. He still has ways to go to make it to the White House. He acts like it's a sure thing.

Anonymous said...

In all fairness, if this situation were reversed, I think Obama would have been forced out some time ago. I also think, given the numbers, that Hillary would have been looking toward the General Election, too.

"Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies..." Groucho Marx

Anonymous said...

why should she drop out? as long as obama knows an angry black person and has a foreign sounding last name, she's got a strong case that the least enlightened and least educated members of the democratic party will have trouble voting for him. hillary's argument: leaders shouldn't be expected to lead the masses; they should follow. like iraq, for example. plenty of those same uneducated lower class whites supported the war, so hillary supported it. then, when they decided they didn't like the war anymore, hillary decided she didn't like it either. that's real leadership. i just hope if hillary's elected, the public perception of the iraq war doesn't become more favorable. then she won't know how to think and feel.

Anonymous said...

The longer Clinton stays on the race the more damage she makes on herself. Those who have been to her side start questioning the way she behaives. No way to catch Obama. No way to have a dream ticket with him due to apparent reason.

Anonymous said...

The time is now for Democrats to transition and place their focus on McCain. (I'm an Independent, and I'm choosing to do the same.) All of us, those who supported Obama and those of us who supported Clinton, have a vested interest in making sure that our way of life: our economy, our livelihoods, our principals and our Constitution are restored to what it once was. We can put aside the pettiness of the primary season to become a positive force to be reckoned with. We can undo the damage that the previous administrations have caused. We can preserve this country's standing in the eyes of the global community. And we can do it together, but only together.

Anonymous said...

Obama is the most leftist kook the democrat party has ever nominated. He'll have problems winning the general election. The only good thing is that he ended the clinton era. So much for the much vaunted third term and the love of the 90's that so many were talking about for so long. Obama is even a bigger fantasy than the clinton third term.