You're next.What took you so long?
If either one of you ever had an original thought it was lost in the endless bullshit of dimocrap talking points you post up here.
Good bye. Originally Posted by gfejunkie
Bush43 was highly qualified right? He had a 77 average in History from Yale, ..... Originally Posted by flghtr65Did you vote for John Kerry?
Bush had a MBA. What was Obama's gap? Originally Posted by JD BarleycornWhen Obaminable produces his LSAT and undergraduate transcript(S), along with this law school transcripts ... NOT TO MENTION his application and acceptance to Harvard ... we can "revisit" this topic.
Bush43 was highly qualified right? He had a 77 average in History from Yale, ran the Texas Rangers into the ground and then ran the USA into the steepest recession since the Great Depression. Originally Posted by flghtr65.
Twenty miles from the glittering center of Chicago, at the farthest edge of the South Side, dozens of two-story brick buildings stretch for block after weary block. It was here where America provided public housing for African-American veterans of World War II and it was here, in the 1980s, that Barack Obama became a community organizer. Working with a band of outspoken mothers, Obama first auditioned his oratory and gained public notice. The despair evidenced by the many dilapidated buildings, and the seeming mockery of the project’s flowery name, Altgeld Gardens, prompted Obama to recount years later how an elementary school principal believed the children here no longer laughed like children. “Their throats can still make the sound, but if you look at their eyes, you can see they’ve shut off something inside,” Obama quoted the principal as saying.
…or all its impact on Obama, Altgeld Gardens today seems far from the kind of success story politicians like to tout. Dozens of buildings are boarded up, with fences surrounding much of the property. The roads are a potholed mess. Blinking lights illuminate a series of towers where police have mounted cameras.
Last fall, Obama returned here for a television interview, walking past the boarded-up buildings, waving at children, and promising not to forget the residents as he runs for president. “It was, it is, a tough, tough place,” he said.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/ar...vocacy/?page=2
The United States "today seems far from the kind of success story politicians like to tout. Dozens of buildings are boarded up, with fences surrounding much of the property. The roads are a potholed mess. Blinking lights illuminate a series of towers where police have mounted cameras." Originally Posted by I B HankeringFIFY. In January 2017. Figuratively speaking, "of course."