Location: land of the Lilliputians, In the state of insanity
Posts: 24,185
Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
60 min. long and 13 questions. By the way, why did Obama have three town hall meeting when he said that the 100 day mark is not important and he was not even going to consider it. Hmmmmmm. I mean, ummmmmmm,
This is what I got from it all, "uuuu, ummmmmm, Bush bad, ummmmm you know. Its not my fault, ummmm, uuuu, Bush bad." He did say that he didnt want to grow government. Yea right. Also, I like how he glossed over the fact that the economy was not an issue during the election. How did yall like the, "Ummm, uuu , you know, the economy was not an issue untill after my election.Ummm, theworse economy since the great depression. Ummmm , uuu, ummm, you know, if I had only the problems all the other begining presidents had, Id be a well off." I recall in August, Sept., and Oct., that being a major issue of the debats. Obama must love the fact that America has ADD and cant remember things beyond the 15 sec. mark.
The new administration of Blame Bush, and bad mouth the opposition to try to win the next election. Sound a lot like fascismto me.
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kaafir mushrik
Unintended consequences and God have one thing in common: Liberals don’t believe in either of them.
RE: Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
Got to admit that he looked and sounded downright awful. He surely was no better than Bush on his worst day. I couldn't believe how he kept going on and on with that question on how he has been enchanted, humbled and a couple of other things during his term so far. Why in the world would he be stretching out such a stupid question?? Then again it probably killed a good bit of time and he helped himself escape some more serious and pertinent questions!
RE: Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
Quote:
ORIGINAL: Steve863
Got to admit that he looked and sounded downright awful. He surely was no better than Bush on his worst day. I couldn't believe how he kept going on and on with that question on how he has been enchanted, humbled and a couple of other things during his term so far. Why in the world would he be stretching out such a stupid question?? Then again it probably killed a good bit of time and he helped himself escape some more serious and pertinent questions!
Scripted questions. Scripted answers. Good thing he ended it in time for Lost. I'd have been unduly stressed if his blathering interrupted good television...
O'Reilly interviewed him during the campaign and asked 40 questions and got 40 answers in 30 minutes. Real questions. Not poofy garbage about "enchantment..." What a joke.
Location: land of the Lilliputians, In the state of insanity
Posts: 24,185
RE: Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
Quote:
ORIGINAL: Steve863
Got to admit that he looked and sounded downright awful. He surely was no better than Bush on his worst day. I couldn't believe how he kept going on and on with that question on how he has been enchanted, humbled and a couple of other things during his term so far. Why in the world would he be stretching out such a stupid question?? Then again it probably killed a good bit of time and he helped himself escape some more serious and pertinent questions!
I couldnt agree more.
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kaafir mushrik
Unintended consequences and God have one thing in common: Liberals don’t believe in either of them.
Barack Obama, the World's Greatest Orator (â„¢all news organisations), didn't exactly cover himself in glory when the BBC's political editor Nick Robinson asked him a question about who was to blame for the financial crisis. Normally word perfect, Obama ummed, ahed and waffled for the best part of two and a half minutes. Here, John Crace decodes what he was really thinking ...
Nick Robinson: "A question for you both, if I may. The prime minister has repeatedly blamed the United States of America for causing this crisis. France and Germany both blame Britain and America for causing this crisis. Who is right? And isn't the debate about that at the heart of the debate about what to do now?" Brown immediately swivels to leave Obama in pole position. There is a four-second delay before Obama starts speaking [THANKS FOR NOTHING, GORDY BABY. REMIND ME TO HANG YOU OUT TO DRY ONE DAY.] Barack Obama: "I, I, would say that, er ... pause [I HAVEN'T A CLUE] ... if you look at ... pause [WHO IS THIS NICK ROBINSON JERK?] ... the, the sources of this crisis ... pause [JUST KEEP GOING, BUDDY] ... the United States certainly has some accounting to do with respect to . . . pause [I'M IN WAY TOO DEEP HERE] ... a regulatory system that was inadequate to the massive changes that have taken place in the global financial system ... pause, close eyes [THIS IS GOING TO GO DOWN LIKE A CROCK OF **** BACK HOME. HELP]. I think what is also true is that ... pause [I WANT NICK ROBINSON TO DISAPPEAR] ... here in Great Britain ... pause [****, GORDY'S THE HOST, DON'T LAND HIM IN IT] ... here in continental Europe ... pause [DAMN IT, BLAME EVERYONE.] ... around the world. We were seeing the same mismatch between the regulatory regimes that were in place and er ... pause [I'VE LOST MY TRAIN OF THOUGHT AGAIN] ... the highly integrated, er, global capital markets that have emerged ... pause [I'M REALLY WINGING IT NOW]. So at this point, I'm less interested in ... pause [YOU] ... identifying blame than fixing the problem. I think we've taken some very aggressive steps in the United States to do so, not just responding to the immediate crisis, ensuring banks are adequately capitalised, er, dealing with the enormous, er ... pause [WHY DIDN'T I QUIT WHILE I WAS AHEAD?] ... drop-off in demand and contraction that has taken place. More importantly, for the long term, making sure that we've got a set of, er, er, regulations that are up to the task, er, and that includes, er, a number that will be discussed at this summit. I think there's a lot of convergence between all the parties involved about the need, for example, to focus not on the legal form that a particular financial product takes or the institution it emerges from, but rather what's the risk involved, what's the function of this product and how do we regulate that adequately, much more effective coordination, er, between countries so we can, er, anticipate the risks that are involved there. Dealing with the, er, problem of derivatives markets, making sure we have set up systems, er, that can reduce some of the risks there. So, I actually think ... pause [FANTASTIC. I'VE LOST EVERYONE, INCLUDING MYSELF] ... there's enormous consensus that has emerged in terms of what we need to do now and, er ... pause [I'M OUTTA HERE. TIME FOR THE USUAL CLOSING BOLLOCKS] ... I'm a great believer in looking forwards than looking backwards.[/align][/align]...uhhhmmmm eerrr has he done this before? [/align]
RE: Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
He moved his lower lip and the lies began to roll. Just like Pelosi. If either of them told me the sun would come up in the east tomorrow, I would get up to check it out.[:@]
RE: Ummm, what, ummm, uhmmm, did you, ummm think, umm of the press confernece, ummmm, uuuuu umm.
Quote:
ORIGINAL: Doe Dumper
Did anyone listen to Mark Levin giving commentary as he was giving the speech and answering the softballers afterwards. Priceless!!
Listen to it today. Yes, it was priceless.
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Ronald Reagan: 'Everybody that is for abortion has already been born'
"I never said I was worth it. I only said I wouldn't do it for less " William F. Buckley Jr.