Corvus Maximus wrote: » Sandy has done the Romney camp no favours and the endorsement Obama got from New Jersey's Republican Governor Chris Christie's was also a blow. But it is important to remember that the states affected by Sandy are Obama states. If turnout is affected by this, then it could really benefit Romney in an already very close race.
He has flat out insulted russia. i dont know much about politics but i know that you dont insult another world power and call them your worst enemy when they have nukes f**King idot
If he doesn't get in he is pritty much going to jail becouse he has comitted 2 federal crimes. He cant be proscuted however while he is running for president (some law or another).
Franticfrank wrote: » World leaders do this all the time. Whatever about nukes, you should go to jail when you invade another country when you accuse them of having chemical weapon stockpiles and they really don't.
mikemac1 wrote: » Gary Johnson ftw Excellent candidate and the big two parties both deserve a kicking
Lenin Skynard wrote: » Definitely will be glued to it. Great entertainment these are. I'm hoping Obama takes it.
For all his faults I honestly reckon, generally speaking, Bush did what he thought was right, however error prone and disastrous it might have turned out. Romney is plain evil with a monarchist like contempt for the common working man, and yet he is bizarrely managing to persuade a great deal of the white working class to assist him solidfying the power and wealth of the super wealthy. And we thought we had it bad with people voting along civil war lines, compared to this sh1te we are not all that bad.here
Drakares wrote: » we're going to be heavily affected by whoever wins.
Drakares wrote: » Romney is bad news. I really hope Obama wins.
jack presley wrote: » I don't stay up to watch our own election results so I'm not going to watch some other country's.
BraziliaNZ wrote: » Has anyone seen this little sweetheart yet? Bronco Bamma, haha https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuLuOH0FMBM
Dravokivich wrote: » Was reading about it earlier. Don't get how there's so much coverage for it. It's just a kid saying something, she'd be too young to even realise what any of this presidential campaign is about. Then adults chiming in saying they are tired of it as well. Well fúck me, why don't they disband democracy already?
BobbyPropane wrote: » American Politics. Who looks the best. Who is for abortion, who is against abortion. Which one won the debate I'll vote for him. He's black I'll vote for him. He's black I wont vote for him. Romney is a republican who will most likely ruin America in the long run with his pro capitalism funding from oil and car companies. Obama is a socialist who will cause anarchy and not help with economic recovery. You only get two choices in the land of freedom.
Matt_Trakker wrote: » I hear that a lot, but is it really true? Like honestly, I'm trying to think of something that's happened since Obama came to power that has had an effect on my personal life. I honestly can't think of anything. And don't just say 'the economy' that was a shítstorm b4 Obama. Same goes for Afghanistan & Iraq. OK he killed Osama, big whoop, but I'm not entirely comfortable with Obama's murderous leaning and complete lack of respect for court systems & justice. Wouldn't it be better to bring war criminals to trial and then hang them? I really don't think that America has the same influence any more.
We very much hope that whichever of these men wins office will prove our pessimism wrong. Once in the White House, maybe the Romney of the mind will become reality, cracking bipartisan deals to reshape American government, with his vice-president keeping the headbangers in the Republican Party in line. A re-elected President Obama might learn from his mistakes, clean up the White House, listen to the odd businessman and secure a legacy happier than the one he would leave after a single term. Both men have it in them to be their better selves; but the sad fact is that neither candidate has campaigned as if that is his plan. As a result, this election offers American voters an unedifying choice. Many of The Economist’s readers, especially those who run businesses in America, may well conclude that nothing could be worse than another four years of Mr Obama. We beg to differ. For all his businesslike intentions, Mr Romney has an economic plan that works only if you don’t believe most of what he says. That is not a convincing pitch for a chief executive. And for all his shortcomings, Mr Obama has dragged America’s economy back from the brink of disaster, and has made a decent fist of foreign policy. So this newspaper would stick with the devil it knows, and re-elect him.
MadYaker wrote: » American politics is in a sorry state. This has been the nastiest election ever.
pickarooney wrote: » How does that work? Did Sandy specifically hit Democratic parts of New York and New Jersey?
Chuck Stone wrote: » The day a Libertarian gets near the White House is the day he's either sold out or he gets a bullet in the face.
Herb Powell wrote: » If Obama "didn't get anything done" in his first term, it was because of congress, opposing him at every step, seemingly for the sake of it. The system is fuccking stupid.