View Full Version : McCain pimp slaps Obama...
Devastatin Dave
02-07-2006, 04:52
http://mccain.senate.gov/index.cfm?fuseaction=NewsCenter.ViewPressRelease&Content_id=1654
Never have been a big McCain fan until I read this letter he sent to "Osama" Obama. There is so much beauty to the total pimp slap that McCain delivered to this "senator" I've found simply hillarious. God, I wish I could insult someone this well. I guess I have to drop all my teabag assaults to assend to the level that Senator McCain has risen to. Love it!!!:2thumbsup:
ajaxfetish
02-07-2006, 04:58
I've been pretty disappointed with the options in the last few presidential elections, but Senator McCain is one person I'd happily vote into the White House.
Ajax
Crazed Rabbit
02-07-2006, 07:31
I'd love it if he got the Executive Budget Reviewer position, but his campaign finance bill that outlawed certain types of speech disgusts me.
And yeah, that was a great letter.
Crazed Rabbit
Watchman
02-07-2006, 09:31
Whoever wrote it obviously had a commendable grasp of smooth and easily flowing rhetoric. It actually possesses a certain kind of aesthetical appeal, and a trace of the dry, snide humor more commonly seen in good upper-class British text.
Major Robert Dump
02-07-2006, 10:34
It's funny, i seem to recall a lot of conservatives a few years ago calling McCain a "democrat" compared to GWB. Hope that worked out for them
Samurai Waki
02-07-2006, 10:39
McCain is definantly one man I'd vote for hands down. I just saddens me he doesn't really have Presidential support, because he would probably Pimp Slap Hillary Clinton in the poles.
Divinus Arma
02-08-2006, 03:28
McCain is who McCain is. I think that is a good thing. Towing the party line against your will, while monetarily rewarding, is not good for honest debate within a party. I don't say that I am for him or against him. I do think that he is a stand up guy. As is Lieberman, Orin Hatch, and poor old Powell.
And perhaps, IMHO, that is what we need right now more than ever. Not that my GOP is doing so bad, its just that these guys could bring a lot to the table.
What would happen if we saw a McCain-Lieberman ticket? I'm not saying it would be good or bad. I'm just saying it would be utterly fascinating.:balloon2:
solypsist
02-08-2006, 03:38
McCain's big gripe is that Obama is playing politics.To suggest that lobbyists are equally into the Democrats and Republicans is raving crazy talk. Republicans have been financed by Enron, motivated by Halliburton's profit margins, they've held secret energy meetings, they just elected a guy that was passing out tobacco industry checks on the floor of Congress, and have had control of the House for over a decade, and they expect us to lump all the Democrats in with them when it comes time to get pissed off about lobbyist corruption?
Forget you John "Tow-the-party-line" McCain. What respect I had for you has been further diminished.
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