MaxThreshold
Footballguy
I'm starting to feel better and better about Hillary being the Democratic nominee.
Let's win one for the Grifter!Reports circulating that she makes it official on Sunday!
Let's do this!![]()
Well...maybe not that excited, but I couldn't help myself because I get so few opportunities to push the buttons for the Hillary haters around here.Seriously?Reports circulating that she makes it official on Sunday!Let's do this!![]()
Oh, stop being so humble. You're always pushing our buttons.Well...maybe not that excited, but I couldn't help myself because I get so few opportunities to push the buttons for the Hillary haters around here.
Not so hard in your case Max, you are like one of Pavlov's dogs.Oh, stop being so humble. You're always pushing our buttons.Well...maybe not that excited, but I couldn't help myself because I get so few opportunities to push the buttons for the Hillary haters around here.
A negative favorability among independent women?As is typical for Clinton, more women view her favorably than men, 54 percent to 42 percent. Still, her standing with women has dropped 9 points from two years ago.
Her ratings have suffered among independent women, with 44 percent viewing her favorably and 48 percent unfavorably. That’s a profound drop since June 2013, when that group viewed her favorably by almost a 2-1 ratio, 60 percent to 33 percent.
That's interesting to me because I think the 'first woman' will be almost the whole theme of her campaign.The historic possibility of a woman becoming president isn't a major influence on attitudes. The vast majority of poll respondents–83 percent–say they wouldn't be more or less inclined to vote for Clinton because she would be the first female president.
She has dropped 22 points in 27 months?The e-mail controversy may be one of the factors depressing Clinton's overall standing. Just 48 percent view her favorably, down four points since December and marking the first time her standing has fallen below 50 percent in Bloomberg polls dating to September 2009. Her high was 70 percent in December, 2012.
Even 26 percent of Democrats believe she has purposefully withheld e-mails or deleted them.
http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-04-10/bloomberg-politics-poll-democrats-and-independents-don-t-want-a-hillary-coronationAnd the percentage of Democrats who say they will definitely vote for her if she is the Democratic nominee has dropped a full 10 points, to 42 percent from 52 percent in a Bloomberg poll in June, 2013. Just 18 percent of poll respondents say they definitely will vote for her for president, compared to 23 percent two years ago.
If you mean that they're both crooks, you're correct.timschochet said:Hillary's smart and sexy. It's been a long time since we've had someone this prepared to be President. The last one was Richard Nixon...
omgomgomgomgomgomgomggggg..............The Associated Press @AP
BREAKING: Hillary Clinton says she's running for president in 2016, wants to be country's `champion'
Which is funny, because she's part of that "upper class" / 1 percenters she rails on (for political purposes, of course). You think SHE'S going to give up anything? No way. That's for everyone else to do.The video featured a few minutes of people telling us stuff they're looking forward to, and 10 seconds of Clinton. Except for her comment about the upper class having all the advantages (a nod to Warren populism) it was all upbeat and positive. The music sounded like the opening them to a Disneyland attraction.
i don't think you're interpreting this correctly. I think she wants the campaign, at least in the opening stages, to be about the American people and not her. You act like she has something to hide, or that, like Sarah Palin in 2008, her handlers are afraid for her to face reporters. It's the exact opposite IMO. Hillary believes that despite her name recognition, the public doesn't know her at all. She's going to campaign this time around just like she did after she lost Iowa- she was very sympathetic then. I think she's going to be very open with the public and the press (but not about the conspiracy Benghazi and email stuff that nobody outside of conservative haters are interested in anyhow).20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
Yeah I have to say I really dislike this populist angle, (I always do). Guess she has to do some of it though. You're going to hear a lot of this crap from both parties and it will be nauseating. But effective.Which is funny, because she's part of that "upper class" / 1 percenters she rails on (for political purposes, of course). You think SHE'S going to give up anything? No way. That's for everyone else to do.The video featured a few minutes of people telling us stuff they're looking forward to, and 10 seconds of Clinton. Except for her comment about the upper class having all the advantages (a nod to Warren populism) it was all upbeat and positive. The music sounded like the opening them to a Disneyland attraction.
Behghazi and the email scandal are just TWO incidents that go toward gaining the trust of the American people. Not sure how her NOT being open and honest about those two helps her gain that trust.i don't think you're interpreting this correctly. I think she wants the campaign, at least in the opening stages, to be about the American people and not her.You act like she has something to hide, or that, like Sarah Palin in 2008, her handlers are afraid for her to face reporters. It's the exact opposite IMO. Hillary believes that despite her name recognition, the public doesn't know her at all. She's going to campaign this time around just like she did after she lost Iowa- she was very sympathetic then. I think she's going to be very open with the public and the press (but not about the conspiracy Benghazi and email stuff that nobody outside of conservative haters are interested in anyhow).20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
We'll have to agree to disagree on whether or not those issues will make any difference to anyone who isn't already opposed to her. I rather doubt it.Behghazi and the email scandal are just TWO incidents that go toward gaining the trust of the American people. Not sure how her NOT being open and honest about those two helps her gain that trust.i don't think you're interpreting this correctly. I think she wants the campaign, at least in the opening stages, to be about the American people and not her.You act like she has something to hide, or that, like Sarah Palin in 2008, her handlers are afraid for her to face reporters. It's the exact opposite IMO. Hillary believes that despite her name recognition, the public doesn't know her at all. She's going to campaign this time around just like she did after she lost Iowa- she was very sympathetic then. I think she's going to be very open with the public and the press (but not about the conspiracy Benghazi and email stuff that nobody outside of conservative haters are interested in anyhow).20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
I suppose. She's a dishonest slimebag, but she's the Democrat's dishonest slimebag and that's OK.We'll have to agree to disagree on whether or not those issues will make any difference to anyone who isn't already opposed to her. I rather doubt it.Behghazi and the email scandal are just TWO incidents that go toward gaining the trust of the American people. Not sure how her NOT being open and honest about those two helps her gain that trust.i don't think you're interpreting this correctly. I think she wants the campaign, at least in the opening stages, to be about the American people and not her.You act like she has something to hide, or that, like Sarah Palin in 2008, her handlers are afraid for her to face reporters. It's the exact opposite IMO. Hillary believes that despite her name recognition, the public doesn't know her at all. She's going to campaign this time around just like she did after she lost Iowa- she was very sympathetic then. I think she's going to be very open with the public and the press (but not about the conspiracy Benghazi and email stuff that nobody outside of conservative haters are interested in anyhow).20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
Not Benghazi.Benghazi.![]()
Keep strong Max
ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern age20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
It's not about anything so far.i don't think you're interpreting this correctly. I think she wants the campaign, at least in the opening stages, to be about the American people and not her.You act like she has something to hide, or that, like Sarah Palin in 2008, her handlers are afraid for her to face reporters. It's the exact opposite IMO. Hillary believes that despite her name recognition, the public doesn't know her at all. She's going to campaign this time around just like she did after she lost Iowa- she was very sympathetic then. I think she's going to be very open with the public and the press (but not about the conspiracy Benghazi and email stuff that nobody outside of conservative haters are interested in anyhow).20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
Not a fan but he did speak in front of a large audience, and (ideas aside) by all accounts it was a good speech.ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern age20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
Kate McKinnon is nailing crazy eyes Hillary.
Um, don't you remember that in 2008 Hillary spoke in front of large audiences, gave plenty of interviews to reporters and participated in all the debates? And she still came very close to winning the nomination.Not a fan but he did speak in front of a large audience, and (ideas aside) by all accounts it was a good speech.ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern age20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
It didn't start out that out that way with Palin, but that brings up another thing they share in common:Um, don't you remember that in 2008 Hillary spoke in front of large audiences, gave plenty of interviews to reporters and participated in all the debates? And she still came very close to winning the nomination.Not a fan but he did speak in front of a large audience, and (ideas aside) by all accounts it was a good speech.ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern age20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
So, she is suddenly now afraid to face scrutiny when she is only announced Democratic candidate, with no serious opposition on the horizon? This is not Sarah Palin redux, where her handlers are afraid she will flub a question about what periodicals she reads.
She is intentionally starting out low key so as not to give the impression that she thinks this is a coronation. She will give the speeches and interviews in time, but when that happens you will find some reason to be critical of that too (as you seemingly do with every move she makes).
You contradict yourself. If they both do worse the more they get in front of people, then Hillary couldn't have started doing better once she fell behind (unless you claim she got in front of people less, which isn't supported by the facts).SaintsInDome2006 said:It didn't start out that out that way with Palin, but that brings up another thing they share in common:squistion said:Um, don't you remember that in 2008 Hillary spoke in front of large audiences, gave plenty of interviews to reporters and participated in all the debates? And she still came very close to winning the nomination.So, she is suddenly now afraid to face scrutiny when she is only announced Democratic candidate, with no serious opposition on the horizon? This is not Sarah Palin redux, where her handlers are afraid she will flub a question about what periodicals she reads.SaintsInDome2006 said:Not a fan but he did speak in front of a large audience, and (ideas aside) by all accounts it was a good speech.Fennis said:ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern ageSaintsInDome2006 said:20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
She is intentionally starting out low key so as not to give the impression that she thinks this is a coronation. She will give the speeches and interviews in time, but when that happens you will find some reason to be critical of that too (as you seemingly do with every move she makes).
- They both do worse the more they get in front of people.
- Hillary did start doing better in 2008 once she fell behind
Granted, you're right about that.You contradict yourself. If they both do worse the more they get in front of people, then Hillary couldn't have started doing better once she fell behind (unless you claim she got in front of people less, which isn't supported by the facts).SaintsInDome2006 said:It didn't start out that out that way with Palin, but that brings up another thing they share in common:squistion said:Um, don't you remember that in 2008 Hillary spoke in front of large audiences, gave plenty of interviews to reporters and participated in all the debates? And she still came very close to winning the nomination.So, she is suddenly now afraid to face scrutiny when she is only announced Democratic candidate, with no serious opposition on the horizon? This is not Sarah Palin redux, where her handlers are afraid she will flub a question about what periodicals she reads.SaintsInDome2006 said:Not a fan but he did speak in front of a large audience, and (ideas aside) by all accounts it was a good speech.Fennis said:ted cruz announced via a single tweet. welcome to the modern ageSaintsInDome2006 said:20 seconds of screen time? Wow they are really keeping her out of the way of people and reporters.
She is intentionally starting out low key so as not to give the impression that she thinks this is a coronation. She will give the speeches and interviews in time, but when that happens you will find some reason to be critical of that too (as you seemingly do with every move she makes).
- They both do worse the more they get in front of people.
- Hillary did start doing better in 2008 once she fell behind
If you are hoping people click on that, it may not have been the best verbage.
It's true, there's zip, zero, nada about her policies or stands.Ilov80s said:Her website lacks some important details such as positions and policies.
This stuff is sure to work. Keep it coming!
Are you expecting some shocking surprise here?It's true, there's zip, zero, nada about her policies or stands.Ilov80s said:Her website lacks some important details such as positions and policies.
https://www.hillaryclinton.com/
No, I just expect something here.Are you expecting some shocking surprise here?It's true, there's zip, zero, nada about her policies or stands.Ilov80s said:Her website lacks some important details such as positions and policies.
https://www.hillaryclinton.com/
Honestly, part of it's shtick- it cracks me up how much she angers so many people. However, it's not trolling- if you see me writing something over the top, then you'll know it.Tim, are you a Hillary fan and if so why do you like her?
Do you really think it won't be there?She doesn't anger me. I just thought that policy would be a good thing to put on her website.
I am sure it will. However, this was a pretty big launch. Her social media launch today attracted millions of people to her site. Policy should be a place to start at, not to fill in later.Do you really think it won't be there?She doesn't anger me. I just thought that policy would be a good thing to put on her website.