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Pres. Obama Is Still Winning the Battle-You Righties Will Never Admit It-Will Just Lash Out in a Nasty Manner-Hilarious
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Mar 19, 2015 20:03:03   #
BOHICA
 
KHH1 wrote:
** I guess that is what matters...WE voted him in and not YOU......


And we're all paying for that mistake. Enjoy your delusions while you can. You're in for a rude awakening.

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Mar 19, 2015 20:20:54   #
BOHICA
 
KHH1 wrote:
read the numbers amongst Democrats above........


Keep worshiping your black messiah. Like I said, you're in for a rude awakening.

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Mar 19, 2015 20:32:37   #
BOHICA
 
KHH1 wrote:
Okay...you worship Rush/Fox/Hannity...so turnabout is fair play.........


I worship God. No one else.

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Mar 19, 2015 22:46:55   #
Super Dave Loc: Realville, USA
 
KHH1 wrote:
President Obama Job Approval Among Democrats
Polling Data
Poll Date Sample Approve Disapprove Spread
RCP Average 4/11 - 10/20 -- 86.7 9.9 Approve +76.8
CBS News
10/17 - 10/20 A 83 10 Approve +73
Reuters/Ipsos
9/7 - 9/10 A 88 10 Approve +78
McClatchy/Marist
7/9 - 7/11 RV 83 13 Approve +70
CNN/Opinion Research
6/28 - 7/1 A 90 7 Approve +83
Resurgent Republic (R)
4/30 - 5/3 RV 87 11 Approve +76
Politico/GWU/Battleground
4/29 - 5/3 LV 90 8 Approve +82
Quinnipiac
4/11 - 4/17 RV 86 10 Approve +76
President Obama Job Approval Among Democrats br Po... (show quote)
Woopty...

Hitler is still popular with skinheads.

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Mar 20, 2015 00:57:44   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
KHH1 wrote:
Obama touts fiscal policies amid GOP fight

Republicans spar internally over the budget, and president seizes the spotlight.

BY MICHAEL A. MEMOLI AND LISA MASCARO

CLEVELAND — As congressional Republicans find themselves tangled over their newly introduced spending plans, President Obama tried Wednesday to seize the moment to talk about government spending on his terms, namely a focus on opportunities for the middle class.
Noting that Republican House Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio often asks, “Where are the jobs?,” Obama told a crowd in Cleveland he was there to “not only answer that question” but also to renew a central debate over the two major parties’ economic visions.
Obama said that his administration’s policies, such as investing in manufacturing and the landmark Affordable Care Act, have helped the nation emerge from a deep recession but that the Republican budget would “double down” on the theory that wealth trickles down from the rich to the rest.
“Reality has rendered its judgment,” Obama said in a speech to the City Club of Cleveland. “Trickle-down economics doesn’t work and middle-class economics does,” he said, using the White House’s umbrella term for its fiscal policies.
Meanwhile, Republicans who have the majority in both chambers of Congress are bogged down in trying to make their budgets workable as well as palatable to the party’s competing factions.
More than two months into the new Congress, they are grasping for legislative victories and looking to the House and Senate budgets unveiled this week as chances for a win in Washington. The chambers are expected to approve the budgets next week.
“Hopefully that will be an opportunity for us to show some success,” said GOP Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee.
Republicans are trying to present a unified front in their budget proposals, as internal debates have spilled out publicly between defense hawks, who want to bolster military coffers, and deficit-minded conservatives, who prefer to hold the line on new spending.
Although both of the party’s budgets largely boost military spending at the expense of domestic social programs, House and Senate Republicans are at odds over how to accomplish that goal while still adhering to strict budget caps agreed to in a 2011 deal with the White House.
Senate Republicans made clear Wednesday that they view the House approach as essentially a gimmick. It calls for hiking defense spending by increasing money for an account used for wars that was not subject to the so-called sequester limits established in the 2011 deal. Senate Republicans prefer establishing a separate, new defense account funded with unspecified savings elsewhere, but it also would not be held to the 2011caps.
Either way, those cause “real heartburn for conservatives” because they maneuver around the limits, Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.) said.
Those differences and others — including the House’s proposed Medicare overhaul that the Senate rejects — risk leaving the GOP unable to pass one budget.
Such a setback would derail not only the goal of increasing Pentagon spending, but also other priorities, including the effort to repeal Obama’s healthcare law.
“I’m absolutely confident we’ll do our duty,” said Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, head of the Republican Senate’s campaign committee. “It’s one of the most important votes we’ll have this year.”
The GOP’s scramble to make the numbers add up with concrete legislative proposals while Obama spoke in broad, aspirational terms further illustrated the contrast between the White House and Republicans who control Congress.
Obama no longer has to worry about being reelected, and since the November midterm election has made full use of the presidential bully pulpit to present his vision for the country without necessarily fretting over the short-term political consequences for him or his party.
On Wednesday, he said he wanted to “take a little credit” for the nation’s economic recovery.
Republicans have been loath to acknowledge any role Obama’s policies might have had in the nation’s improved economic picture, with deficits on the wane and rising confidence among voters.
“Republicans are proud to take credit for helping force some fiscal responsibility on the Obama administration,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Wednesday as his party’s Senate majority released its budget for the fiscal year that begins in October.
The White House countered that the House GOP is trying to balance the budget in part by further slashing investments that would benefit the middle class.
“House Republicans start their deficit reduction plan by promising large, expensive new tax cuts to high-income households,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. “In fact, the only specific tax proposals in the House Republican budget are tax proposals that benefit the wealthy.”
White House officials are eager to promote the notion that Obama has kept Republicans on their heels with a vigorous start to what he calls the “fourth quarter” of his term, a time when presidents often see their influence wane.
Democrats who shied away from the president before the midterm now praise Obama’s approach.
“The president feels liberated ,” said Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois. “He doesn’t have to measure his actions against the impact on a campaign.”


** One day, you righties will understand that scholarly guys (Obama, Clinton) always prevail.... :thumbup:
Obama touts fiscal policies amid GOP fight br br... (show quote)


Yep, the Clinton's have so much money they can't count that high, when, according to Hillary the Harridan, they were "Broke" when they left the White House. That must explain all the White House silverware in the local pawn shops.
Barry boy and Moochie, whose net worth was about 5 million in 2008, are now worth about 15 million. Of course, when someone else foots the bill for your vacations, and your daughters' spring breaks, I suppose it's a little easier to save money.

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Mar 20, 2015 06:26:35   #
Danielle Loc: Las Cruces, NM
 
KHH1 wrote:
Why do you ask such asinine questions?


I'll ask it again.

So-called "Big Chief" in the White House hates America. That is blatantly obvious. This man in the White House hates Israel and Netanyahu, too. In fact, this man in the White House is a one-man destruction crew of this country, backed up by the left. He's a narcissist (another obvious trait), a dictator, and a charismatic liar. He's far from the scholarly type, although he may abound with some degree of evil genius. And, just in case you haven't noticed, "Big Chief" says one thing one day and does and says exactly the opposite on the next day. A common Muslim trick of war. He cares about middle class America? Give me a break.

Big Chief cares about Big Chief. He cares about his pocketbook, his costly and frequent vacations, and the outpouring of American dollars into the upkeep of millions of illegals and illegal Muslims who he knows, thanks to their dependency on American dollars, will vote for the left.

He cares about fronting American monies to the terrorists and filling our United States with Muslim relocation camps. He has an Islamic agenda well in route for this country. (You might want to take that point up with Egypt, too. They have posted signs and banners that Obama supports terrorism.)

In fact, oh great believer in Big Chief in the White House, nobody, in truth, really knows who this man really is (???) or where he really came from. Nobody really knows where he was born, although he, himself, has admitted to being born in Kenya. Nobody really knows who his biological parents really are (or were); although we know he spent childhood years in Indonesia and he favors the Islamic faith. Few people in the government seem to care enough to confront these critical issues (or they're actually afraid to or they're siding with him -- lots of Islamics and Muslim Brotherhood in the administration), but the truth really is that "Big Chief" is a criminal and imposter who disdains our Constitution and tromps on the laws of America as if they don't exist. This man has his own agenda and it does not favor America or Israel in any productive way.

So, I'll ask that asinine question again. If you back Big Chief in the White House, why do you hate America? Or are you just completely brainwashed and blind?

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