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Keyword: streetwarfare

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  • Legal challenge is in line with plans to disrupt GOP convention

    06/25/2008 7:51:18 AM PDT · by ButThreeLeftsDo · 43 replies · 98+ views
    StarTribune ^ | 6/24/08 | Katherine Kersten
    Elaborate plans are underway to encircle and "shut down" the Republican National Convention at St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center in September. The strategies and tactics involved could come straight from a guerrilla warfare manual. Anarchist groups with ominous names -- the RNC Welcoming Committee, Unconventional Action -- have announced a "three-tier strategy" to cut off the Xcel Center. The steps include "blockading" streets and freeways, "immobilizing" delegates' transportation and "blocking" bridges to impede delegates' access to the center. The plan also features a "swarm, seize, stay" strategy. After dividing the city into "sectors," protesters propose to "seize space" through both...
  • Obama Campaign Masters Digital Media While McCain Efforts are "Old and Clunky"

    06/06/2008 9:43:28 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 31 replies · 128+ views
    JackMyers.com ^ | June 6th, 2008 | Shelly Palmer
    Back in 1960 the skills required to become President of the United States changed forever. That was the year that John F. Kennedy debated Richard M. Nixon on national network television for the first time. When reminiscing about Kennedy's win, pundits love to cite that he was tanned, good looking, had great hair and had his make-up professionally applied, while Mr. Nixon appeared pale, had a nervous demeanor and sweaty brow. They say that Nixon won on the radio but Kennedy won on TV. 1960 ushered in the era of the Network politician. For better or for worse, after the...
  • The Obama Aesthetic

    04/18/2008 1:02:13 PM PDT · by neverdem · 11 replies · 2,008+ views
    American Thinker.com ^ | April 18, 2008 | Thomas Lifson
    Barack Obama's campaign has been all about image. The well-dressed, impeccably groomed, and elegantly articulate speaker was able to speak of hope, change, and unity, and for awhile the public bought it. Capitalizing on the huge store of guilt, compassion, and hope for better racial relations among the vast majority of Americans of all races, Obama posed as the man who might heal the wounds of the past. The bonhomie lasted for months, as the press corps, no strangers to their own guilt and hope and leftist inclinations, averted its eyes from those elements of his politics and life story...