Question:

McCain Chooses Great Great Grand Daughter for VP Job?

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McCain is not an idiot like Obama, he is going to prove tha women are worth their weight in diamonds. Obama do not believe in women. McCain will prove Obama that his great great grand daugther can do the job.

Just give me serious answers please.

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11 ANSWERS


  1. Is it supriing that McCain picked a woman for his VP?

    I'll admit as a conservative that I do have a small problem with the idea of a woman being a VP.  However, when I look and see what the Governor say verse what Obama say and compare both to the Bible, Obama might as well go back to Kenya.

    McCain/Palin '08


  2. McCain will prove what?? hahah have you even checked out his past and how he votes on woman's issues?? I didn't think so.. WOW!  Try for starters looking up his stance on Roe V Wade..

    And his VP choice??? Do you know how the Conservative party stands on Women issues???   Tell me that that is not a huge contradiction!

  3. Your question do not make sense.

  4. McCain made the right choice, I have 5 daughters that are going crazy over Sarah Palin so I guess she can't be all bad if she can get my daughters to pay attention to politics...even my 6 year old granddaughter loves her, lol.

  5. You want serious answers?

    Then are you serious?

    He picks a woman old enough to be his granddaughter and have the sense of a Hockey Mom?

    Who is Sarah Palin? Here's some basic background:

        * She was elected Alaska 's governor a little over a year and a half ago. Her previous office was mayor of Wasilla, a small town outside Anchorage. She has no foreign policy experience.1

        * Palin is strongly anti-choice, opposing abortion even in the case of rape or incest.2

        * She supported right-wing extremist Pat Buchanan for president in 2000. 3

        * Palin thinks creationism should be taught in public schools.4

        * She's doesn't think humans are the cause of climate change.5

        * She's solidly in line with John McCain's "Big Oil first" energy policy. She's pushed hard for more oil drilling and says renewables won't be ready for years. She also sued the Bush administration for listing polar bears as an endangered species—she was worried it would interfere with more oil drilling in Alaska.6

        * How closely did John McCain vet this choice? He met Sarah Palin once at a meeting a photo-op with her 5 kids. They spoke a second time, last Sunday, when he called her about being vice-president. Then he offered her the position.7

       *She will shoot you with her AK 47.

       *She crossed the line and interfered with law enforcement to attempted to have her ex brother in law fired. what happened is she got the boss that wouldn't fire him fired.

    Sounds like more of the same with the lawyers Bush had tanked.

  6. Would give you a serious answer if you had asked a serious question.

    So my answer is that Obama named his lover as his VP nominee


  7. im not really following you...

  8. Only time will tell how much impact Senator John McCain's choice of Vice President, Governor Sarah Palin has brought. If you didn't like what Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton was saying, then this woman is the one for you. She is thoroughly anti-Clinton, all of the way. I wish you well. Peace!!!

  9. I seriously think McCain made a terrific choice........

    ......for the Democrats.

    I can finally breath easy knowing that Obama will be the

    next president, and we'll get the war-mongering GOP

    clowns out of the White House.

  10. With multiple media outlets confirming now that Governor Sarah Palin will indeed join the Republican ticket as John McCain’s running mate, McCain has clearly chosen to play offense rather than defense.  Instead of a safe choice, such as closest runner-up Mitt Romney or genial Everyman Tim Pawlenty, McCain took some risk with a relative newcomer to national politics.  Palin will inject risk, excitement, controversy, and an unexpected historic note to the Republican convention.

    First, though, let’s assess the risk.  Palin has served less than two years as Governor of Alaska, which tends to eat into the experience message on which McCain has relied thus far.  At 44, she’s younger than Barack Obama by three years.  She has served as a mayor and as the Ethics Commissioner on the state board regulating oil and natural gas, for a total of eight years political experience before her election as governor.  That’s also less than Obama has, with seven years in the Illinois legislature and three in the US Senate.

    However, the nature of the experience couldn’t be more different.  Palin spent her entire political career crusading against the political machine that rules Alaska — which exists in her own Republican party.  She blew the whistle on the state GOP chair, who had abused his power on the same commission to conduct party business.  Obama, in contrast, talked a great deal about reform in Chicago but never challenged the party machine, preferring to take an easy ride as a protegé of Richard Daley instead.

    Palin has no formal foreign-policy experience, which puts her at a disadvantage to Joe Biden.  However, in nineteen months as governor, she certainly has had more practical experience in diplomacy than Biden or Obama have ever seen.  She runs the only American state bordered only by two foreign countries, one of which has increasingly grown hostile to the US again, Russia.

    And let’s face it — Team Obama can hardly attack Palin for a lack of foreign-policy experience.  Obama has none at all, and neither Obama or Biden have any executive experience.  Palin has almost over seven years of executive experience.

    Politically, this puts Obama in a very tough position.  The Democrats had prepared to launch a full assault on McCain’s running mate, but having Palin as a target creates one large headache.  If they go after her like they went after Hillary Clinton, Obama risks alienating women all over again.  If they don’t go after her like they went after Hillary, he risks alienating Hillary supporters, who will see this as a sign of disrespect for Hillary.

    For McCain, this gives him a boost like no other in several different ways.  First, the media will eat this up.  That effectively buries Obama’s acceptance speech and steals the oxygen he needs for a long-term convention bump.  A Romney or Pawlenty pick would not have accomplished that.

    Second, Palin will re-energize the base.  She’s not just a pro-life advocate, she’s lived the issue herself.  That will attract the elements of the GOP that had held McCain at a distance since the primaries and provide positive motivation for Republicans, rather than just rely on anti-Democrat sentiment to get them to the polls.

    Third, and I think maybe most importantly, Palin addresses the energy issue better and more attuned to the American electorate than maybe any of the other three principals in this election.  Even beyond her efforts to reform the Oil and Natural Gas Commission, she has demonstrated her independence from so-called “Big Oil” while promoting domestic production.  She brings instant credibility to the ticket on energy policy, and reminds independents and centrists that the Obama-Biden ticket offers nothing but the same excuses we’ve heard for 30 years.

    Finally, based on all of the above, McCain can remind voters who has the real record of reform.  Obama talks a lot about it but has no actual record of reform, and for a running mate, he chose a 35-year Washington insider with all sorts of connections to lobbyists and pork.  McCain has fought pork, taken real political risks to fight undue influence of lobbyists, and he picked an outsider who took on her own party — and won.

    This is change you can believe in, and not change that amounts to all talk.  McCain changed the trajectory of the race today by stealing Obama’s strength and turning it against him.  Obama provided that opening by picking Biden as his running mate, and McCain was smart enough to take advantage of the opening.


  11. Can we have this one again only in English this time?  Thanks.

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