To: Kurt Evans
From intellectual force to buffoon in one swell foop.
He's now for certain a dis-appointment to McCain.
5 posted on
04/13/2008 8:31:09 PM PDT by
Carry_Okie
(Islam offers us three choices: surrender, kill them, or die.)
To: Carry_Okie
At least he has a place in history as a political trivia question:
Who ran for U.S. Senate against Barack Obama and received only 27% of the vote?
To: Carry_Okie; trooprally; The Mayor; Jim Robinson
The GOP must be sure that we don’t let the RNC presume to speak for us—if it doesn’t, and it doesn’t.
That doesn’t mean we should leave the GOP, it means we need to throw over the RNC and take the reins back.
Looking for ideas.
Before September.
37 posted on
04/13/2008 10:10:57 PM PDT by
The Spirit Of Allegiance
(Public Employees: Honor Your Oaths! Defend the Constitution from Enemies--Foreign and Domestic!)
To: Carry_Okie
He's now for certain a dis-appointment to McCain. Just as McCain is to conservatives.
70 posted on
04/14/2008 10:08:01 AM PDT by
Ron H.
(Keeping my powder dry for the next coming civil war....)
To: Carry_Okie; All
I hope your comment was a spoof! The day Alan Keyes would run with McCain is the day he has a severe brain injury. The 2 are so far from each other on the spectrum. Do you not understand? McCain could care less about the party or the platform! The Party doesn't even care about the platform! so...who is the buffoon?
Keyes knows more about running a country than McCain, and Keyes has a stronger backbone. If this country ends up in a crisis, Keyes is the one who would bring us through it, not McCain, who flips his position as easily as a pancake can be flipped.
110 posted on
04/14/2008 11:18:58 PM PDT by
MountainFlower
(There but by the grace of God go I.)
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