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Political Discussion / Politics / General Political Discussion / Tea Pary Convention next month, Obama at 50% and Dropping

Posted:  09 Jan 2010 07:45   Last Edited By: GOParty
I'm happy to report that Bastard Obama's approval rating is going down faster than the ball in Times Square! In fact, he now has the second-lowest end-of-first-year rating in 50 years! Shockingly, the lowest ever was Ronald Reagan's, but by the end of 1982 he'd slain the dragon of inflation.

I wish I could go to the first Tea Party Convention in Nashville next month, even if only to hear our Future First Female President speak in person again. But I'll be following it! Hope you'll all be watching as well. On FOX, of course. All the other networks, who still have their lips glued to Obama's butt, might even have the nerve to report "Nothing's happening today".
I'll try to keep you posted.

GOParty

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Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain. And most fools do! - Benjamin Franklin
Posted:  09 Jan 2010 16:49
Well Obama isn't going to be much help in the economy because he's so stuck on healthcare. Of course it maybe a good thing he's not trying too hard to fix it, he might make it even worse.
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Lucas McCain the Rifleman: A man doesn't run from a fight, Mark...but that doesn't mean you should go running *to* one, either.
Posted:  11 Jan 2010 20:54
I agree GOParty, Obama is another Ronald Regan and will no doubt be remebered as fondly by his party as Regan is by the Republicans.

It will be very interesting to see how the Tea Party Movement plays out.  It could give republicans the energized base they lacked in the last election, though it could also easily turn off the moderates that turned out in droves for Obama.

The Tea party movement is not without good ideas, but as with any third group there is alwasy a lot of crazy mixed in too.  The thing that determines the long term health of any movement is if the good ideas outnumber the crazy ones.

I think the Tea Party is at a disadvantage in that a number of prominant crazies have sought to tie their fortunes to this movement.  but this is the sort of thing that conventions usually sort out. 

At the end of the event there will likely be some sort of platform that will be produced.  It if strays too far from the mainstream in it's calls for action it will hurt the party, of course if it hones too close to the middle the party will likely fade into oblivion.

The crazies do get you noticed, you just need calmer heads to keep them inline.