RE: Forward? (Full Version)

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SternSkipper -> RE: Forward? (10/31/2012 10:20:57 PM)


quote:


Really, just lighten up. I certainly won't be judging your intellect by some typing error, I've been watching you long enough to know you're anything but a dumb blonde.

I am willing to bet you let your emotions get in the way. [;)] I'm very good at inspiring such things, namely in females http://m.washingtonpost.com/opinions/washington-post-endorsement-four-more-years-for-president-obama/2012/10/25/6ca309a2-1965-11e2-bd10-5ff056538b7c_story.html?socialreader_check=0&denied=1

You gotta admit I got your heart racing. If nothing else, I can be fun. Hell, I have slvemike4u staying up past his bed time.[:D]


Or it could just be you're not real good at owning bullshit behavior when a woman calls you on it. Why not just admit you shouldn't have made the ignorant remark in the first place intead of making it sound like some master stroke of psychological warfare?




VideoAdminGamma -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 5:03:09 AM)

Fast reply

Please stay on topic and leave the comments about each other and their lifestyles out of the discussion please.

Thank you for making CollarMe a better place,
Gamma




xBullx -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 5:32:19 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SternSkipper

Or it could just be you're not real good at owning bullshit behavior when a woman calls you on it. Why not just admit you shouldn't have made the ignorant remark in the first place intead of making it sound like some master stroke of psychological warfare?



Thanks for your contribution.




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 5:56:58 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

But I won't go there ,I am going to take the high road,simply have a chuckle and wish you a good night.


Not so much high road as flaunting your ignorance and doing the passive-aggressive thing.

Just letting you know you're stepping on toes other than just Bull's.

IWYW,
— Aswad.




xBullx -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 6:09:29 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: VideoAdminGamma

Fast reply

Please stay on topic and leave the comments about each other and their lifestyles out of the discussion please.

Thank you for making CollarMe a better place,
Gamma


Partially my bad, I surrendered the topic and joyed the pissin' contest.




DomYngBlk -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 6:44:36 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: xBullx

Thanks Aswad!


You're cordially welcome, as always, Bull.

quote:

I do believe that Putin is an issue that will come up in much greater detail no matter who might be the President of our country. Concurrently I do believe he maintains a desire or at the very least no reservation about restarting a rather chilly reunion of sorts.


Putin will come up either way, yes.

However, Obama is more of a diplomat, whereas Romney is more of a strongman in this regard, and the current situation needs a diplomat, because Putin isn't the sort to be bullied around. He isn't impressed that easily. Cool, composed, callous and calculating, that would seem an apt description. A hard man, for better or worse. And the world cannot afford two hard men going head to head with nuclear weapons. The USA can, however, afford to negotiate about how to achieve the USA's goals without the side effects Putin cannot (and should not) tolerate. Obama can handle that situation, and Russia has essentially said they'll hold off on a decision until after the election, because they're willing to proceed with negotiations with Obama, but don't trust that anything will carry over from one president to the next.

quote:

I understand the missile shield issues and wish I had a greater concept of what it is that Russia sees as alarming about a shield, I however have limited understanding of the shields offensive versus defensive capabilities.


Here is a simple rundown about Russia's perspective:

NATO wants to place a missile shield in Poland, for ostensibly legitimate reasons. The missile shield diminishes the Russian second strike capability. Without the ability to retaliate with second strike, the power balance of mutually assured destruction is lost. Putin is a Cold War era KGB man, and Romney is a bit of a hawk, so the situation clearly isn't reassuring, at least. If the USA should decide, under Romney, it wants to launch a first strike when Russia has diminished capacity for retaliation, then Russia is screwed.

The resolution, of course, is to bomb the missile installation out of existence before the problem arises. That involves a preemptive strike on Polish territory, directed at a NATO facility. I need not explain how NATO will view that. NATO will have no problem getting UN support for considering that an act of war and thus legitimizing a counterattack. Article 5 dictates that all NATO allies participate in the conflict, on the side of the USA. With a level-headed president there would be no such attack, as the cold facts dictate that an attack on Russia isn't a sensible course of action under any other circumstance than global nuclear war. For better or worse, Obama is a more level-headed man than Romney, I think.

Now, there are several ways to resolve this on NATO's side.

Russia has been extremely forthcoming, even to the point of saying they will let it go if NATO will give them written assurances that the missile shield will not be used against Russia. They're willing to let a flimsy piece of paper (to you and me, a handshake is solid, but not so to most heads of state) reassure them, despite our long standing tradition of systematically breaking our word every time we give it. This time, NATO won't even give that word. You tell me: how is Putin supposed to interpret that, other than that NATO indeed does intend to use the missile shield against Russia? And why would we be willing to risk a war to put a missile shield in place, unless we're planning a war already? Those thoughts must have occured to Putin already, and I doubt he finds them pleasant to consider.

Obama can get traction on this point, seeing as Russia really wants a peaceful resolution.

Romney has said he'll force the matter, in a way that would make it treason for Putin not to attack the installation. I (dis)credit Putin with many things, but I do not think he's the sort of man to commit treason, not even in the privacy of his own heart. He cannot, and will not, give up Russia's defenses against a nuclear strike (i.e. the deterrent of a second strike in retaliation). Romney is saying "I'll go ahead with it anyway", which is provoking a war, whether knowingly or from willful ignorance.

The most telling thing to me on this point is: the Russians are willing to listen when Obama speaks.

That's one hell of a vote of confidence right there.

quote:

I mean why would Medvedev, who I believe was the President of Russia at the time, have to report our Presidents intentions back to Comrade Putin?


Putin was the president all along, he just wasn't The President (in name) for a short while.

Discretion can be the better part of valor in politics, sometimes. There are interests on both sides that would like to see a real conflict, or at least a return to a Cold War situation. To keep the talks private and informal can make a lot of headway without getting the extremists and the nationalists (by which I don't mean mere patriots) involved in a bad way. Clinton did that when hashing out the Oslo Accords, for instance, which was arguably a step in the right direction for the Middle East.

It wasn't a major secret around these parts. Seeing as we share a border with Russia, and a tangled past with the Soviets, we pay close attention to the comings and goings over there. Indeed, it was never a given that we would come down on the side of the USA in the cold war, except the Soviets bungled some things during the time of the Nazi occupation, and the USA extended a hand in friendship at the right time. Roosevelt may have suggested that free people should look to Norway, but in the process, he accomplished having the people of Norway look to the USA, rather than to the Soviets. Some pretty strong ties have been established over the years since then. But we do have a past with the Soviets, and a shared border with Russia, both of which conspire to make them a more relevant part of the news for us than they're likely to be for you (and it's easier to get straight answers when some people here have retained social ties there).

Most likely, Obama was making preliminary inquiries, scouting to get the lay of the land.

Any eventual negotiations proper will have to be open and transparent for either side to get what they want out of it, so I wouldn't worry about this.

quote:

Moreover I believe that Putin punked and looked down on our President at the G20 summit in Los Cabos, Mexico. That pissed me off, I may not be a fan of Obama, but he is our President and I’m a bit funny about anyone outside of our family dissin’ our own.


Putin is Putin. I don't think Obama has a problem dealing with him. And, crucially, Putin doesn't seem to have a problem with Obama.

It's like with the humanitarian efforts during the Afghan war: if you want men in Afghanistan to listen, you don't send a woman to talk to them, and if you want women in Afghanistan to speak freely, you don't send a man to talk to them. The reasons may make no sense to our way of thinking, but they make perfect sense to the people we're talking to, and so we either choose not to communicate, or we choose to do the give and take thing. Obama is humble enough to put results ahead of his own pride, and I think he comes out of such things with that pride intact.

That Putin has some measure of respect for Obama seems promising. I don't see Putin punking anyone he doesn't respect. With the Chechnyans, he hasn't bothered at all. With the journalists that have been chewing him out, he has simply eliminated them in a very dismissive and dispassionate manner. And if we stop to think, you and I have traded a few jabs on occasion and I don't think we came out of that any worse for the wear; there seems to be solid mutual respect in place.

quote:

Additionally I fear Obama would be willing to appease Putin to a degree that I don’t believe we should agree too. Not that Romney wouldn’t or perhaps Romney would be to aggressive, I’m not certain, but this thread is supposed to be about Obama.


Appeasing Putin doesn't really come into it, because of the missile shield thing.

There are areas where one may need to stand up to the guy, but this is one where it's a question of provoking. I think we can agree there is a huge difference between provoking someone and simply not appeasing them. And I think Obama is capable of rationally weighing the need to be firm against the cost of conflict, and assessing the risks.

I also think he knows the difference between a legitimate grievance and mere posturing. Russia has done plenty of posturing, but they currently have a legitimate grievance that Obama is best suited to dealing with (or so I think). If nothing else, Obama already has an open ear that's listening attentively to his words, and that's a damn good place to start.

quote:

I believe as you most likely do, that a Geo-Political Conflict with Russia is not only possible, but well under way. I just hope if elected Obama realizes that the old KGB agent is playing for keeps and the chance he likes America is about as likely as a snow storm in Panama.


Putin probably doesn't like the USA, but I think it's more a question of liking Russia than of disliking the USA. More to the point, he knows his situation and his limits. If he chooses to expand, by politics or by conflict, he knows not to reach further than the old borders of the USSR. The cost of even a low intensity war on a single front would be immense for either country, and it would always carry with it a looming threat of a nuclear holocaust. Both sides can posture and rassle a bit, but if one side goes past that, it's not so much playing for keeps as choosing to die messily. Putin knows the score, and so does Obama.

The former USSR territories, or even just Russia itself, that's a pretty big sandbox.

I don't think Putin will credibly risk the extinction of our species just to get a slightly bigger one.

quote:

NBC News had a rather good article concerning this very subject today, it was titled ” As anti-US policies multiply, should next president treat Russia as friend or foe?” I’m not sure how to do those link things or I would.


From here on the sidelines, that article seems very partisan.

To me, it appears Russia under Putin is becoming more like how the rest of the world is used to seeing the USA these past 12 years. For the USA to criticize that, at least without recognizing the same flaws about themselves, seems to be a case of- if you don't mind me saying so- classic American relativism and exceptionism. The main difference, as far as I can see, is that Russia is talking about preexisting interests and demanding to be respected as an equal in global politics, while the USA is- as is often the case- talking about wars of aggression, about taking the first step, and doing so well beyond its own borders or interests. Russia seems more honest and more content to stick to the Slavic part of the playground, but is otherwise becoming the Second America, which isn't really all that much of a Cold War spectre. There's always more than one side to the truth, and from here, seeing two of those sides, I can't really say Russia is very foe-like at the moment, whereas the USA has always been rather foe-like (even as seen by an ally).

And, let's face it, Putin and Russia deserve some respect.

The kind one accords sleeping bears and sleeping dragons alike, particularly when their treasure chests are full.

quote:

As far as a civil war in the US, I don’t believe there would be something similar to 1860’s but I believe we are already in the midst of a cultural civil war. While I don’t foresee an armed intervention, it is possible; we shoot off guns in this country for much less.


A cultural civil war is the status quo, and has been for at least twentyfive centuries. It's how your current culture arose. Depending on what wins out, a cultural civil war may well be the best thing at the moment. To attain, if they can. Those words are quite applicable at this juncture. You have PM, in any case.

quote:

I do believe that you’re wrong about one thing. I sincerely believe a full blown civil war in America would not only be very detrimental to the US, but also to the rest of the world. There is a reason that Deutsch isn’t the world’s foremost spoken language.


It would be detrimental, sure. Extremely so. But nowhere near the impact of an external war.

quote:

In the end it is certain that the US can be rebuilt under Obama. What it will look like is the debate we’re having over here.


It will be more up to the people, I think. Especially with Obama.

Bit short as introductions go, but we're opening the topic, at least.

IWYW,
— Aswad.



Sorry but you are completely wrong about one being a diplomat and the other a strong man. Romney is an opportunist and will do and say what is important to the people he is talking to at the moment. He has never shown a backbone in political life and won't start now.

On the other hand, President Obama has shown that backbone, the ability to make tough decision when it is needed. Both Diplomat and Warrior.....




DomYngBlk -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 6:46:00 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

But I won't go there ,I am going to take the high road,simply have a chuckle and wish you a good night.


Not so much high road as flaunting your ignorance and doing the passive-aggressive thing.

Just letting you know you're stepping on toes other than just Bull's.

IWYW,
— Aswad.


What possible problem could you have had with what he said?




slvemike4u -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 7:03:41 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

But I won't go there ,I am going to take the high road,simply have a chuckle and wish you a good night.


Not so much high road as flaunting your ignorance and doing the passive-aggressive thing.

Just letting you know you're stepping on toes other than just Bull's.

IWYW,
— Aswad.

And I probably should apologize for that,it would be in my nature to do so.....but than you had to come along and lead with that whole "flaunting your ignorance and doing the passive aggressive thing" ....so ,no not so much as far as apologies.
What I would invite you to do is to go back to the OP and look at how he phrased the question....than check out my first post in this thread,it was totally reasonable and measured.
That leads you to his response to me....do all of that with an open mind,than get back to me on ignorance and passive aggressive .
I enjoy your posts....
But don't think for a moment I am going to sit here and silently read along as some nitwit takes potshots simply because you got in the mix.
That's not my style




xBullx -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 7:14:39 AM)

-fr-

Nevermind the moderator gents (sacastic note), I'm sure that Gamma had none of you in mind with post number 122.




slvemike4u -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 7:23:57 AM)

I'm sure Gamma can speak for herself...but you go ahead and continue to derail "your own,narrow thread" [:)]




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 10:13:13 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: xBullx

I don’t see where at this point he has room to negotiate anything, so I hope he doesn’t attempt too.


The negotiations can be as simple as giving Russia credible assurances that the missile shield installations have the purpose we claim they do. That will suffice for Russia. As far as I can tell, the media in the USA neglect to mention that Russia has given ground to Obama again and again on the issue of the missile installations. At first, they had some pretty strong demands. Now they're down to being willing to go for it if we'll just put our intentions to paper. In politics, there is nothing flimsier than paper, save for words, and so the matter should be simple to resolve. They're saying they will trust Obama's word, if he is president during the term when the installation is built, which is a pretty fair concern, as the word of a president never really outlives his presidency.

In contrast to Obama, though, Romney has said he won't negotiate on this point. If he does not, and builds the installations, Russia must attack the installations. That violates the sovereign territory of Poland, where a strong nationalist sentiment will ensure they retaliate. Of course, contrary to NATO's promises in the past, Poland was included in NATO. That means Poland can invoke article 5, in which case the USA must either get into that war, or risk NATO collapsing altogether. And we both know what a war between Russia and the USA means.

That's a crucial point: neither Putin, nor Obama, nor Romney, will have its fingers on the trigger if these installations are built. Extremists in Poland will. Heck, I wouldn't be surprised if domestic terrorists in Poland blow up the installation in the hopes of blaming it on Russia to try to force a war, seeing as they have the USA at their back in doing so. And Poland seems quite content to throw the USA and Russia into the ring together. It's about Poland being able to use the USA to attack Russia, which Poland itself cannot hope to do. These are a few of many reasons I think we should never have invited them into NATO in the first place: they're too volatile.

I don't like the idea of being used by Poland in some petty game to strike back at the schoolyard bully, and I don't think you do, either.

Obama is aware of that situation, which Romney doesn't appear to be.

quote:

I stood on a border where we did have our weapons loaded or ready to fire and looked straight across an imaginary line into the eyes of men that were locked and loaded.


And if one of those men had reached across the border to grab your rifle, would you have let him, or would you have opened fire?

That's what we're doing in Poland right now.

quote:

I don't like Putin and I don't believe we should pander to him.


I don't like him, either. Few do. The problem is he has nuclear weapons, so it's not so much pandering as being mindful of the danger and taking care not to start something we don't want to start. And Putin himself is pretty cool (in the sense of cold) as far as heads of state go. His ambitions are largely confined to East Europe, and more tied to money and oil than anything else. Poland is a different matter, and it's important to not forget that. Putin may well be right to be wary of Poland, and shaking his head that NATO would stick its hands into that hornet's nest without a good grasp of the situation.

I'm sure the border situation you mentioned had good men on both sides. That's important in situations like that, having people that are steady and disciplined when tensions run high. You don't want trigger fingers to be itchy on either side of a border that is enforced. That just causes problems that chuck the point of an invisible line out the window. Same thing goes for nuclear weapons. We can't be rash in dealing with those. The missile shield isn't a pressing issue for anyone. Poland already has article 5 protection, so the missile shield will change nothing for them. And the only nation in the Middle East that can cause more problems for the USA than the first week will bring if the missile shield is built, is Israel. We both know Israel isn't going to cockpunch its only ally. So this isn't something that needs to be rolled out now. We have time to deliberate. To work something out. Working something out seems to me the best way to open the door to a better future. It's not pandering. It's showing a little respect. And Russia has gone very far in showing respect themselves, especially when you consider how much face is involved on both sides.

If the time comes when Putin must be confronted, I've no doubt either president will do that. I just want the one with the nerves to stand on one side of that invisible line so long as the wrong move isn't made by the other side. And by what you said, you know how much more it takes to do that day after day for four years, compared to doing it for a few minutes. Most people can do a few minutes with a bit of basic training. Far fewer have the calm and discipline to stand there years later, still vigilant, still not pulling the trigger, even if some new guy on the other side taunts you a bit. Hopefully, both great nations will outlive their respective presidents.

To my mind, Obama is that guy, while Romney likes to think he is (or project an image thereof).

quote:

If the boys are strong and ready to goes as we were during the Cold War, we have bargaining strength in which we need not surrender position to appease the tyrant.


In the face of a nuclear missile (you both have that), or a thermobaric weapon (Russia has a definite edge there), the boys are just so much carbon, waiting to become new angels of apathy (nuclear) or soot stains (thermobaric). Much as we may like to think some good can survive war, the postnuclear era is like Olympeans striking people down with nothing human in it at all.

quote:

Personally I’m for any method that will rid us of nuclear weapons.


As am I, hence wanting Obama in office, so the missile shield doesn't become an incentive to build more of them.

quote:

Concurrently how is it that you are so sure that Romney is this war monger you seemingly have him made out to be? Hell, Obama has continued a good number of war time actions that Bush maintained.


I'm not trying to make Romney out to be a war monger. I'm saying he has been clear on the point of missile shields in Poland, and that this will have the consequences outlined above. In effect, that he is more likely to bring a war, even if he doesn't declare one. And let's not forget Iran, although Russia won't respond nearly as hard to an offensive in Iran as to the missile shield.

I was unfortunately not clear on how important Poland is in this context in my earlier post.

So, to be clear on Obama/Romney as regards war, I'm not impressed with Obama, and I'm not demonizing Romney.

I'm just warning that Romney is a snowball in a bad place, and we're all downhill from a whole lot of snow.

quote:

Why is it that you view Putin as having only this one recourse?


Why do cops shoot when you reach for your gun, rather than when you start squeezing the trigger?

quote:

If Putin is this volatile and demanding perhaps this missile defense system is a must.


Poland is volatile. Putin is reasonable. That makes Putin reflect some of Poland's volatility.

quote:

I mean, what’s the difference if we have these missile defense platforms in Poland, Belgium, Britain or on our coast line? The effect is the same.


Not to Russia, which has a very different relationship with those other places.

quote:

I’m ok with that, so long as they don’t shoot a damn missile our direction.


So am I. As are Obama and Putin. But not Romney. There's part of the problem.

quote:

I better understand of your point now.


Glad to hear that.

quote:

Hmmmmm, serious consideration must be levied here, I can’t logically comment much further.


The mark of wisdom, that.

quote:

I don’t see Romney as the kind that would sell out our children and their world in this manner.


If he realized it, no, I agree. I just don't think he sees it.

quote:

You have me thinking Aswad, thank you.


You're cordially welcome, as always.

When I can give people something to think about, I am happy, whatever the outcome.

quote:

I understand your point, but considering Putin is KGB, that is reason enough for me to distrust his regard for Obama.


Respect for an enemy is the most sincere respect there is, to some.

It means Putin takes him seriously, as someone he can- and must- deal with.

quote:

Additional reason to distrust the whole mess over there.


Always. [:D]

quote:

There is no valor in politics… To think so is foolish. Politicians have been the bane of free men since that notion of their existence.


Amen.

quote:

I understand. Could I trouble you to keep us informed as time marches on?


I will try.

quote:

Actually you know me well enough to know these things make perfect sense to me.


Agreed. By "our way of thinking", I meant the mainstream Western mindset, not yours and mine.

quote:

Obama is every bit as prideful as Romney, if he was willing to negotiate and that is the only quality it took, it’d be done already, he’d not have concerned himself with re-elections in matters so important. There is much more to this story than meets the eye, I assure you that.


No doubt. But building the installation takes time. Putin knows that if Obama makes a promise now, that won't have any weight unless he gets reelected. So he wants to see the work completed during the term of the person making promises about the work. That seems to be a reasonable approach.

quote:

I haven’t seen them exchange any jabs though.


You need to have a closer look. There's enough tension there that I'd be inclined to tell them to get a room already. [:D]

quote:

I hope you are correct on that, and not correct about Romney.


As do I.

quote:

The possibility exists that he thinks he could win a nuclear war. If not why not help stop the nuclear race in the Middle East?


Putin is no fool. He knows he can't win a nuclear war. He also knows the USA can't win one, either. But with a missile shield, the USA can win, while he still can't. So he can't allow that. And disallowing it means war with Poland, which means war with NATO, which means war with the USA. I hope the USA won't allow Poland to put us into that situation.

The race in the Middle East is not a problem.

Here's something few people in the USA seem aware of: most of the leaders in the region are calm, rational, well reflected people. I was stunned to read how Gen. Maj. Robert Mood characterizes al-Assad, for instance, and Mood is a man whose judgment I have no reason to doubt, and every reason to trust. No doubt, Putin knows this, given that Russia has had closer dealings with them, for longer.

And Putin knows that if any other country than Israel in that region starts to get any substantial number of nuclear weapons, he can take them off the map with thermobaric weapons without any significant fallout. They probably know that every bit as well as he does. Without a huge stockpile, which they aren't likely to get, those countries will just be painting themselves as targets. And if Putin feels the same as regards Israel as does most of the world (except the USA), then he may well be quite content to see those countries wear each other out with bickering amongst themselves.

quote:

I have a great respect for the Russian people. I’m also gaining additional understanding as to American perception with you. But then this is one of the reason many Americans get tired of hearing how war like and terrible we are. If you really examine the wars we have partaken in, none can in the end be laid solely at our doorstep.


Iraq and Afghanistan?

The rest of the world gets tired of experiencing how belligerent the USA can be.

Now, please realize that I am quite fond of the USA, and that Norway has very good relations with the USA and thinks highly of you. Even so, there were many people around me that, on 9/11, had as their initial thought either (1) "shit, now the USA will start a huge war!", or (2) "damn, that was well-deserved". Not about the people in the buildings, mind you. But the symbolic blow to the nation. I think that's troubling, when it occurs in a nation that largely loves American culture and has strong ties. It tells me something is amiss. Note that I'm not saying this to be offensive, only to say "this shouldn't be so; why is it so?"

While I'm not going to give blank check approval for his views, Noam Chomsky has made a good case that a lot of wars can indeed be laid at the US' doorsteps, and it may be worth reading some of what he has written, in order to grasp why people see things a certain way (whether they're right or not, it is good to know what is thought and why). It is rarely the case that all fault can be laid at one doorstep, but when one nation gets into it with everyone, that nation seems to be a good place to start looking for the cause, if nothing else.

quote:

You are always good for that!


I try. Part of the job description for "Devil's Advocate General". [;)]

IWYW,
— Aswad.




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 10:16:28 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: VideoAdminGamma

Please stay on topic and leave the comments about each other and their lifestyles out of the discussion please.


My apologies for straying off topic in post #124. I have taken it to PM with the relevant posters.

IWYW,
— Aswad.




DomYngBlk -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 10:58:56 AM)

Again your assumptions about Obama and Romney are way off base. That affects everything you conclude.....




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 11:41:39 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

Again your assumptions about Obama and Romney are way off base. That affects everything you conclude.....


This is possible. Time will tell.

IWYW,
— Aswad.




slvemike4u -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 11:50:05 AM)

No actually I don't think time will tell.
Only one of them will take the oath this upcoming Jan.
So we will have no opportunity, comparatively speaking to see whether or not your assumptions were off/on base.




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 1:15:07 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: slvemike4u

No actually I don't think time will tell. Only one of them will take the oath this upcoming Jan. So we will have no opportunity, comparatively speaking to see whether or not your assumptions were off/on base.


Correct, we'll only get to test about half my assumptions after the elections.

That said, Obama can only have one additional term, then it's someone else's turn.

Are you saying Romney is going to give up running again in 2016 if he doesn't win in 2012?

IWYW,
— Aswad.




slvemike4u -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 2:22:12 PM)

No,though he just might be past his sell by date ,if you take my meaning.
The man has been running for this office since 2006,I would think enough is enough,no ?
2016 will see the young turks (Christie,Rubio et al) throw their hats in the ring and I do think the Republican voter will be looking for a fresh face to oppose Hillary [:)]




Aswad -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 4:07:01 PM)

Ah, yes. I often forget how US politics work. Mea culpa.

69 might be a bit much over there.

IWYW,
— Aswad.

Edited for clarity.




Aylee -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 4:23:23 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: FMRFGOPGAL

. We have a Senate President who goes on National TV, not once, but several times to make his primary duty (and by default, his party's) to make this President a one term President. 


I always thought that Joe was more loyal than that.




slvemike4u -> RE: Forward? (11/1/2012 4:41:58 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

Ah, yes. I often forget how US politics work. Mea culpa.

69 might be a bit much over there.

IWYW,
— Aswad.

Edited for clarity.

How old do you think Hillary will be ?
So it's not that much as it is how long Romney has spent running for the office.
As far as I know ,and I could be wrong,she will be 68...but she has spent this term embellishing her qualification, not proving once again that the American voter prefers someone else.
And make no mistake about it,a loss to Obama(yes I know he is terribly charismatic )with an economy this bad to hang around his neck....translates to irrelevance when the next dance card is drawn up




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