MESSAGE
DATE | 2008-11-03 |
FROM | From: "Michael L. Richardson"
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SUBJECT | Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Presidential Politics and the Press
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If you keep electing the same politicians you get the same results. Time to try someone new. Vote Obama
Ruben Safir wrote: > > Vote McCain: For real change > > NY Times: > http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Vote+McCain%3A+For+real+change&articleId=002164f0-2210-43c4-a1d6-9026e79f29af > > > 4 hours, 39 minutes ago > > Millions of Americans will "vote for change" tomorrow by choosing > Barack Obama for President. But millions of Americans also will vote > for change tomorrow by choosing John McCain. Obama has tried to frame > this election as one of change vs. stasis. It isn't. > > The truth is that the Bush administration has bungled nearly > everything it has touched. And Republican leaders in Congress were > just as bad. Seeking a "permanent majority," they sold out their > principles for power. And look where it got them. Voters booted them > two years ago and gave Democrats a chance to do better. > > Editorial logo > > > Click for Editorials & Op-Eds > > > > But in the past two years, the Democratic Party has not done better. > Congress is even less popular now than when voters cleaned house in > 2006. Its approval rating reached historic lows this year. And yet a > funny thing is happening. Voters are still venting their frustration > at Republicans. Such is the power of America's disappointment in the > eminently disappointing President Bush. > > We share that disappointment. And yet we are not prepared, as many > otherwise sober Granite Staters appear to be, to cast aside our core > convictions just to try to teach President Bush a lesson he probably > won't get anyway. > > For all his charm, Barack Obama proposes an agenda that is wholly > inconsistent with New Hampshire values. He envisions a country in > which even more wealth is collected and redistributed by an even more > powerful central government, where education decisions are made in > Washington, not the local school district, where federal bureaucrats > decide what kind of health care you have, where politicians decide who > is allowed to say what on the radio and where judges decide cases > based on their feelings, not the law (yes, he actually said that). > > Obama wants to take America back to the 1930s. John McCain wants to > move America into the future. > > McCain wants low taxes for everyone because he understands, as we in > New Hampshire do, that every dollar the government takes out of the > economy is a dollar that cannot go to create a job or a new product or > service. But he also understands, unlike Bush, that low taxes are the > result of low spending. He would -- finally -- get federal spending > under control. That is real change. > > McCain would -- finally -- run the executive branch in a truly > nonpartisan manner, unlike Presidents Bush and Clinton. That is real > change. > > McCain would -- finally -- guide our military affairs with skill, > knowledge and unrelenting determination to win with honor. That is > real change. > > McCain would -- finally -- regain the respect of both our friends and > our enemies around the world. That is real change. > > McCain would -- finally -- minimize Washington's influence in our > daily lives, not expand it. That is real change. > > McCain would -- finally -- reform runaway entitlement programs that > threaten to consume the nation's wealth like a plague of locusts. That > is real change. > > John McCain offers a true reform agenda. He is the only candidate with > credible plans to control spending, reform entitlement programs, fix > what actually ails our health care system and defeat al-Qaida > decisively. He would make Washington work again. That is what > Americans really want and what we really need. > > If you want to vote for a truly new direction for America, don't vote > for the failed policies of the early 20th century. Vote for John > McCain and a new direction for our country. > > > >
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