Hey John, as the old saying goes, "suck my dick"...the campaign is not going to be peaceful, is not going to be a "respectful arguement amoung friends". We are NOT YOUR FRIENDS, have no desire to BE YOUR FRIEND, think you are a sleeze bag war whore that will follow the Bush Doctrine to the Gates of Hell as you ruin America, and keep our troops wrongfully tied down in the desert sands, all the while fucking the middleclass in the name of benefitting Corporate America and the rich and elite.
Let me GIVE YOU A CLUE...you can get any kind of agreement you want from Hillary Clinton, or Senator Obama, the three of you reaching and accord to play nice in the fall election, and it will not matter....YOU SEE, AMERICANS ARE PISSED, pissed about our troops in Iraq, pissed that you want to grant AMNESTY TO ILLEGAL ALIENS while we lose our houses and our jobs, pissed that you can't keep your dick in your pants, and we have the internet...we have Blogs, we have You Tube, we can put up full blown web sites in a matter of HOURS, and we are aiming our anger, and OUR MEDIA square at the Republican Party, and you as their Presidential Candidate. No longer can the two political parties and mainstream media CONTROL THE MESSAGE, decide what we will see and READ...WE MAKE OUR OWN MESSAGE.
So Mr out of touch with reality, old fart wind bag war whore, save your breath, stop thinking you can lay down the rules for this Presidential Election...IT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN, the Internet is about to come of age in the politcal arena as we sharpen our teeth in preparation of chewing your Presidential Run up and spitting it out. The White House will go to the Democrats because the vast middleclass has an ability to use the internet to counteract your false ads, and run our own campaign for NOTHING. You may not like it McCain, but for at least half of America, you and the Republicans ARE OUR ENEMY.
By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent Sat Apr 5, 4:48 PM ET
PRESCOTT, Ariz. - Sen. John McCain called Saturday for a presidential campaign that is more like a respectful argument among friends than a bitter clash of enemies, and said he is better able than either of his Democratic rivals to govern across party lines.
"We have nothing to fear from each other," the Arizona senator said as he wrapped up a weeklong trip designed to broaden his appeal beyond the voters who cast ballots in last winter's Republican primaries.
"We are arguing over the means to better secure our freedom, promote the general welfare and defend our ideals."
After a series of stops earlier in the week that emphasized his military service, McCain spoke on the steps of the Yavapai County Courthouse. The late Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the father of the modern conservative Republican party, launched his Senate campaigns as well as his 1964 bid for the White House from the same spot overlooking the town square of what was once the state's territorial capital.
McCain looked out at his largest crowd of the week as he recalled his early lessons in political bipartisanship. He described Goldwater and the late Arizona Rep. Mo Udall, a liberal Democrat, as close friends despite many political disagreements.
McCain recalled also that shortly after his own election to Congress in 1982, Udall took him under his wing. "I intend to wage this campaign and to govern this country in a way that they would be proud of me," he said of Goldwater and Udall.
And yet, he said, there are important differences to be settled in the fall on issues such as energy, the housing crisis, health care, the struggle with terrorists, and Medicare and other federal spending programs.
"It is more than appropriate, it is necessary that even in times of crisis, we fight among ourselves for the things we believe in," McCain said. "It is not just our right, but our civic and moral obligation."
"Let us exercise our responsibilities as free people. But let us remember we are not enemies," he added.
Let me GIVE YOU A CLUE...you can get any kind of agreement you want from Hillary Clinton, or Senator Obama, the three of you reaching and accord to play nice in the fall election, and it will not matter....YOU SEE, AMERICANS ARE PISSED, pissed about our troops in Iraq, pissed that you want to grant AMNESTY TO ILLEGAL ALIENS while we lose our houses and our jobs, pissed that you can't keep your dick in your pants, and we have the internet...we have Blogs, we have You Tube, we can put up full blown web sites in a matter of HOURS, and we are aiming our anger, and OUR MEDIA square at the Republican Party, and you as their Presidential Candidate. No longer can the two political parties and mainstream media CONTROL THE MESSAGE, decide what we will see and READ...WE MAKE OUR OWN MESSAGE.
So Mr out of touch with reality, old fart wind bag war whore, save your breath, stop thinking you can lay down the rules for this Presidential Election...IT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN, the Internet is about to come of age in the politcal arena as we sharpen our teeth in preparation of chewing your Presidential Run up and spitting it out. The White House will go to the Democrats because the vast middleclass has an ability to use the internet to counteract your false ads, and run our own campaign for NOTHING. You may not like it McCain, but for at least half of America, you and the Republicans ARE OUR ENEMY.
By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent Sat Apr 5, 4:48 PM ET
PRESCOTT, Ariz. - Sen. John McCain called Saturday for a presidential campaign that is more like a respectful argument among friends than a bitter clash of enemies, and said he is better able than either of his Democratic rivals to govern across party lines.
"We have nothing to fear from each other," the Arizona senator said as he wrapped up a weeklong trip designed to broaden his appeal beyond the voters who cast ballots in last winter's Republican primaries.
"We are arguing over the means to better secure our freedom, promote the general welfare and defend our ideals."
After a series of stops earlier in the week that emphasized his military service, McCain spoke on the steps of the Yavapai County Courthouse. The late Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the father of the modern conservative Republican party, launched his Senate campaigns as well as his 1964 bid for the White House from the same spot overlooking the town square of what was once the state's territorial capital.
McCain looked out at his largest crowd of the week as he recalled his early lessons in political bipartisanship. He described Goldwater and the late Arizona Rep. Mo Udall, a liberal Democrat, as close friends despite many political disagreements.
McCain recalled also that shortly after his own election to Congress in 1982, Udall took him under his wing. "I intend to wage this campaign and to govern this country in a way that they would be proud of me," he said of Goldwater and Udall.
And yet, he said, there are important differences to be settled in the fall on issues such as energy, the housing crisis, health care, the struggle with terrorists, and Medicare and other federal spending programs.
"It is more than appropriate, it is necessary that even in times of crisis, we fight among ourselves for the things we believe in," McCain said. "It is not just our right, but our civic and moral obligation."
"Let us exercise our responsibilities as free people. But let us remember we are not enemies," he added.
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