mitt

A blog about Military, Personal Journals, and Politics.
About BakersfieldSuperman


Member Since:
January 16, 2008
Last Signed In:
August 31, 2008
Profile Views:
361
Blog Views:
11888
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
Obama camp lies about Daddy Yankee endorsement because Daddy Yankee likes McCain more
Bill Clinton all but endorses McCain, saying Obama can't deliver
The Surge Worked call Obama and tell him
Question for the Democrats in the room
Yeah the guy is a racist but its ok, he supports Obama
Is Obama really going to leave Clinton with no hope
Obamas going to Denver
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid questioned McCAin on Temperment
Negitive Obama Makes Me Mad, now this house stuff
I got 5 On it...
Archives
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL

Share!


. McCain leads Barack Obama 51% to 41% and Hillary Clinton 51% to 41% (see http://rasmussenreports.com... http://rasmussenreports.com... blocked::http://rasmussenreports.com... href="http://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/ politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_electio n/general_election_match_up_history" target="_self">recent daily results). McCain is now viewed favorably by 56% of voters nationwide and unfavorably by 41%. Obama’s reviews are 46% favorable and 52% unfavorable. For Clinton, those numbers are 44% favorable, 54% unfavorable (http://rasmussenreports.com... http://rasmussenreports.com... blocked::http://rasmussenreports.com... href="http://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/ politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_electio n/overall_favorable_ratings_for_presidential_cand idates" target="_self">see recent daily results).

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Thursday, March 27, 2008 at 12:15 PM
Permalink - Comments [12] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 38 times

Democratic Presidential Candidate Clinton lied to all of us about her visit to Bosnia.

She lied that's a Fact.

Let me explain, this is misspeaking:

"I was at work an hour ago...I mean two hours ago."

This is lieing:

"I was at work an hour ago and then I talked to the boss, got a raise and then fixed the coffee maker"

See the difference?

The difference is making up series of events that never happened, just like Clinton did when saying she was forced to cancel a greeting ceremony because of sniper fire. Which never happened.

How can anyone honestly say that's miss speaking? you can't just make up the fact of being shot at and when called out on it say oh I miss spoke!@!! Seriously wtf is that?

Tell me how can you really want Clinton for president when she outright lies to you?

(This by the way is the least of reasons not to want her as President**full disclosure I am a Republican and not a fact fearing Liberal)

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 at 04:36 PM
Permalink - Comments [37] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 142 times

I'm curious if John McCain came to Bakersfield or the surrounding area and had a town hall meeting would you go to listen and hear his case?

Would you take part and ask him a question?

Would you consider voting for him?

Or do you think Liberals would go to just disrupt the event?

I'm am not Liberal that's for sure, but I went to a Hillary event at CSUB and I didn't disrupt anything but when Q & A came they didn't take questions and I really wanted to ask some. One of the 5 speakers (only two of which were American, it was the ugly Betty event)

Anyways the guy wearing a cast on his arm said it cost 30000 dollars to get his arm taken care of, I'm sure he meant 3000 but even that is ridiculous and he said how the Health care system in Britain and ...well anyway I wanted to ask questions is the point.... 

I'm just curious what would you do? would you go like me to listen and hear the case or would you just disrupt it?

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, mccain, hillary, clinton, liberal, democrat, republican
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 at 02:46 PM
Permalink - Comments [26] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 111 times

OK so Bill "Mr. Go-tee" Richardson endorse Obama and stated that super delegates should follow the peoples will (aww he says he want it to be democratic) and that everyone should vote that way presumably not just to vote for Clinton.

Well correct me if I'm wrong but isn't the state that Bill Richardson is from the same state that the people there, picked Clinton over Obama in a Democratic primary?

So isn't he going against the thing he said by endorsing Obama just so he can become a democratic veep? Seems pretty underhanded to me, but maybe I'm wrong, I wish someone could explain it to me?

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, election, Obama, president
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 at 11:18 AM
Permalink - Comments [6] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 30 times

Seriously,

No matter what you can count on three things,

Death, Taxes and liberals wanting to raise them lol, j/k i meant that liberals won't accept facts the disprove whatever they are saying....

Capitalism works...fact

The Iraq War is succeeding in small part due to the surge, that has decreased levels of violence and provided Political progress not seen in the country for years...fact

Socialized health care is bad, look at the British and Canada to the north for example, those people come here for health care...fact

Islam's Koran says kill Christians and Jews, ...fact (stop pretending a little old lady woman is just as likely to blow them selves up for Jihad as a young Muslim)

Clinton has no experience to be president, the presidential cook has more of her so called experience...he's been there longer lol...fact

Obama who's campaign is based on judgment, didn't have the judgment to know what his rev of 20 years was saying...fact

***by the way if he didn't here any of his "inflammatory comments" which he denied and then admitted (because its insane to claim you didn't hear it) but let say he stuck to the original story it would mean he went to a church for 20 years and had no idea what was being said...yeah I want a guy that obtuse in the White house****

Well enough of my rant, I just get crazy with Libs

oh heres one more I saw yesterday, Obama said he not a Liberal, are you kidding me?

Obama is a liberal...fact

If your going got be anything you should be proud and not hide it from people

I'm a Republican and proud, if your a liberal, Democrat, White, Black, Mexican. Jewish, Baseball player, wife, husband, whatever, be proud of it.

Represent what you are...

If no other reason be proud that your an American...

-Bako Superman

 

 

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, conservative, liberal, muslim, america, election, Obama, clinton
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 at 10:57 AM
Permalink - Comments [86] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 165 times

So I didn't see anyone posting on this but I was just wondering what everyone thought about these obama comments? the typical white person?

It just seems to me that someone so concerned and qualifed to unite usand bring change seemsto speak and live in a world ruled by race.

Personally I think of obama as my Aunt and Uncle in in Virgnia, they swear thier not racist but that firmly believe that thiers a black park and a white park.

Obama doesn't think he racist but has views, no doubt he got from his church, that are. 

  

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, Obama
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Saturday, March 22, 2008 at 03:32 PM
Permalink - Comments [57] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 161 times

Dear Obama

I can't believe it. He talks about how comments Wright made can be considered by some as wrong and how Wright introduced him to Christianity which was not like those comments made public recently. How he couldnt seperate himself from him and wouldnt..

Well you said before you didn't here those (controviersial) remarks, now you have. You know the racist and anti american ones.

And I can't believe that your personal spiritual adviser only advised and helped shape your view of religion with out shaping your thoughts on Race and America to be more inline with his own.

Considering what you were listening to every week by chioce, it not hard to imagine why your wife was never proud of America until Barrack Obama ran for President. It not hard to imagine why the members of Trinity would say that the good rev. Wright comments were not radical, that they are just black America.

Whats hard to believe is that you don't share some views with your good friend and adviser Jeremiah Wright that I and many Americans, rightly so, are concerned with.

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, Barrack Obama, presidential election, election, race, racist, Jeremiah wright
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Tuesday, March 18, 2008 at 10:21 AM
Permalink - Comments [4] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 62 times

I read this article today and some one called Mark Abernathy albeit indirectly a "bozo", who uses "bozo" in describing anything?

Seriously though, I really don't care about this, I for one happen to think Zack Jacquie and Jean are great, but even if you disagree, this article was garbage.

This whole idea of debt as unethical, give me a break. You can go to any city, county, state, hell election and politician will owe money, they have and always will. Republican or Democrat.

This really seems like a hit piece to me. 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, Jean, zack, cit council, elections
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Monday, March 17, 2008 at 08:59 AM
Permalink - Comments [7] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 124 times

The obama response to Rev Wright sermons and hate speech

I thought I would post this so you could see what he says...I still don't think it enough just because I find it hard to believe that considering his relationship to the man which he choose to make, that obama would not have heard what he preached on a regular basis. I mean this idea that he never heard these thing the preacher said, really c'mon its not hard to find out what a man beleives if your a close friend of 20 years...

I do believe you are entitled to believe and say whatever you want, but I don't think a presidential candidate should embrace "Wrights" Christianity. I just don't agree with it.

 Hopefully the video appears.http://www.youtube.com/watc...

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, election, Obama, Jeremiah wright, hate speech
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Saturday, March 15, 2008 at 04:43 PM
Permalink - Comments [3] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 37 times

I want to know if anyone else has been hear

that the Clinton Campiagn is the one who put together the Jeremiah Wright qoutes together and leaked it to the press. WIth the sole purpose of hurting Obama and convincing everyone that he's a racist.

I don't have to have much of an imagination that Clintons crew is responsible for leaking it to the press..

Sound very clinton to me, to be on the offensive like this.

 

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, clinton, Presidential 08, elections
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Friday, March 14, 2008 at 03:22 PM
Permalink - Comments [13] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 63 times
The Surge in Iraq: One Year Later
by Lt. Gen. Raymond T Odierno
Heritage Lecture #1068

I returned from Iraq a little over two weeks ago, and trust me, it's great to be in Washington and in your company today. After nearly 15 months in Iraq--most­ly spent focusing on where we are and where we're going--it's a pleasure to step back and reflect a bit about where we've been. I'd like to speak with you about Iraq in 2007, to include the surge, its implemen­tation, and my assessment of its impact.

Baghdad: Before the Surge

As I prepared to depart Fort Hood, Texas, for Baghdad in late November 2006, the Coalition effort in Iraq was at a crossroads. The United States had just held mid-term elections; a new Secretary of Defense had been appointed; and the long-awaited recom­mendations of the Iraq Study Group were about to be published.

Stories in the press described the situation in Iraq as spiraling out of control. One Los Angeles Times arti­cle discussed the rising level of sectarian violence in Baghdad and how this violence seemed to feed on itself. Placing his account in context, the writer men­tioned that al-Qaeda had detonated a bomb in the Shia neighborhood of Sadr City the previous week, killing over 200 people. This was the latest in a steady run of high-profile attacks since the Golden Mosque bomb­ing of February 2006 in Samarra. And for at least one Shiite living in Baghdad, it was the last straw.

After months of standing apprehensively on the sidelines, the 27-year-old shopkeeper signed up with Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army, feeling obligated to do so for his own family's protection. Illustrating how vio­lence was increasingly consuming the capital city, the article also told of a 33-year-old Sunni Arab who decided to join a militia ostensibly for the same rea­son, to protect his community. In reality though, thousands of fighters in Baghdad took an expansive view of their role as "protectors," and their actions consequently fueled the cycle of violence.

Taking the offensive against Iraqi civilians on the other side of the sectarian divide, many launched attacks that elicited retaliation, which, as the situa­tion deteriorated, only provided justification for the next round of brutal reprisals. Sunni and Shia alike tolerated the extremists in their midst because the Iraqi Army and Police, in some cases, could not be trusted and, in most cases, lacked the capacity to protect the population.

The activities of militias and death squads helped to sustain the cycle of violence in the capital city, and their continued growth stemmed--most fundamen­tally--from an absence of security. With the violence came fear. Attitudes hardened as survival became the one imperative; allegiances formed along sectarian lines; and civilian deaths accumulated. Close to 2,000 Iraqis lost their lives as a result of ethno-sec­tarian violence in November 2006 alone, and the count exceeded this grim benchmark the following month. Corpses were found in trash heaps and along Baghdad's side streets by the dozens each day.

Al-Anbar: Before the Surge

In al-Anbar province, things were actually get­ting better, but the positive signs had not yet become evident. Also in late November, The Wash­ington Post ran a story entitled "Anbar Picture Grows Clearer...and Bleaker." The article discussed the findings of an assessment that characterized the province as lost--with al-Qaeda in Iraq exerting control over the daily lives of Anbaris more so than any other political or military organization.

The Post summarized a Marine intelligence report, stating "Between AQI's [al-Qaeda in Iraq's] violence, Iran's influence, and an expected U.S. drawdown, the...situation has deteriorated to a point that U.S. and Iraqi troops are no longer capa­ble of...defeating the insurgency in al-Anbar."

In fact, the province's tribes had already begun to turn against AQI. Nonetheless, the broad sentiment among the Sunni was that their worst fears of being marginalized--even subjugated--in a Shia-domi­nated Iraq were coming to fruition. Many commen­tators at the time used the term "civil war" to describe the conflict. Given the situation in Bagh­dad and Anbar, it was hard to dismiss this as care­less exaggeration.

When I arrived in Iraq, General George Casey, then the Multinational Force commander, chal­lenged me to break the cycle of sectarian vio­lence. Breaking the cycle and reducing the violence required securing the population and stopping accelerants, our term for those carrying out the attacks and thus triggering the subsequent reprisals. We had made efforts in Baghdad along these lines before, but not to the point where they had yielded any significant or lasting gains.

Establishing Basic Security: Late 2006

Coalition forces could concentrate on selected areas and clear them of extremists. But when these areas transitioned to Iraqi control as our units moved on to other parts of the city, the Iraqi Securi­ty Forces (ISF) left behind were incapable of "hold­ing" the ground we had won. The challenges involved with securing the population were simply too great for the ISF at the time.

In some cases, the ISF itself was complicit in attacks against the civilians its units were charged to protect. Another obstacle to solidifying security gains was political in nature. Then, as now, sustainable security demanded a political solution, with the chief feature being a government of Iraq (GOI) commit­ment to national reconciliation. Still today, we see some GOI intransigence, but they are making progress.

In late 2006, the progress we can observe now was unthinkable. In short, we could hardly expect successful transition or meaningful reconciliation without basic security. Establishing security for the population was a prerequisite for further progress. It was essential. And to make a decisive impact, we needed more combat power and a change in approach.

However, it is important that I mention one other factor that informed our planning and deci­sion-making process. On December 19, 2006, we captured some mid-level al-Qaeda leaders just north of Baghdad. Upon them was a map that clearly depicted al-Qaeda's strategy for the total and unyielding dominance of Baghdad, betting that control of Iraq's capital and its millions of cit­izens would give them free rein to export their twisted ideology and terror.

Indeed, al-Qaeda did operate with impunity in several areas surrounding the capital that we call the "Baghdad Belts," using these sanctuaries to intro­duce accelerants of violence. This strategy was sim­ilar to the way in which Saddam Hussein employed his elite Republican Guard forces to control the city. It was clear to us that Coalition forces would need to clear AQI from these belts and deny these enemies safe havens in order to control Baghdad.

Offensive Operations: Early 2007

From January to June 2007, the surge forces deployed gradually to Iraq, but we adjusted our strategy even before the first additional Brigade Combat Team arrived. Implementing the surge involved much more than throwing extra resources at a problem. It meant committing ourselves to pro­tecting the Iraqi populace--with a priority to Bagh­dad--while exploiting what appeared to be nascent progress against AQI in Anbar.

It meant changing our mindset as we secured the people where they worked and slept and where their children played. It meant developing new tac­tics, techniques, and procedures in order to imple­ment this concept. We began to establish Joint Security Stations and Combat Outposts throughout Baghdad. We erected protective barriers and estab­lished checkpoints to create "safe neighborhoods" and "safe markets," improving security for Iraqis as they went about their daily lives.

Changing our approach also meant introducing more balance in our targeting by going after both Sunni and Shia extremists. I should point out that this modification required the government of Iraq's cooperation, and it is significant to note that we got it. Shia militia leaders conducting extra-judicial kill­ings would no longer get a free pass.

Changing our approach meant reinvigorating our partnership with the Iraqi Security Forces and improving their capacity. It meant improving our ability to integrate our military efforts with the expertise of other government agencies--largely through Embedded Provincial Reconstruction Teams. Finally, it meant determining where best to employ the surge forces in and around Baghdad and Anbar and sequencing their employment so that they had the greatest impact.

Many have discussed how we implemented this change in strategy - building up forces and capabil­ity through the spring of 2007; launching Phantom Thunder--a set of simultaneous operations across Baghdad and its surrounding belt areas; and quickly following up that with Phantom Strike in order to keep extremists off balance.

Results: A Change in Attack Trends

Throughout these offensive operations, we main­tained constant focus on job one--protecting the population. By November, we could claim that attacks had dropped to their lowest levels since 2004-2005. There were 30 attacks in al-Anbar province during the last week in October. One year prior, there had been over 300. Today there are under 20 incidents per week in all of Anbar.

The change in attack trends in Baghdad was also dramatic; it reflected a marked reduction of nearly 60 percent. In 2006, civilian deaths throughout Iraq were over 3,000 in the month of December. In less than a year, they had plummeted by 70 percent. In the Baghdad Security Districts specifically, ethno-sectarian attacks and deaths decreased by 90 per­cent over the course of 2007.

Obviously, it's entirely too early to declare victory and go home, but I think it's safe to say that the surge of Coalition forces--and how we employed those forces--have broken the cycle of sectarian violence in Iraq. We are in the process of exploiting that success.

Explaining the reduction in violence and its stra­tegic significance has been the subject of much debate. It's tempting for those of us personally con­nected to the events to exaggerate the effects of the surge. By the same token, it's a gross oversimplifica­tion to say, as some commentators have, that the positive trends we're observing have come about because we paid off the Sunni insurgents or because Muqtada al-Sadr simply decided to announce a ceasefire. These assertions ignore the key variable in the equation--the Coalition's change in strategy and our employment of the surge forces.

Suggesting that the reduction in violence result­ed merely from bribing our enemies to stop fighting us is uninformed and an oversimplification. It over­looks our significant offensive push in the last half of 2007 and our rise in casualties in May and June as we began to take back neighborhoods. It overlooks the salient point that many who reconciled with us did so from a position of weakness, rather than strength. The truth is that the improvement in secu­rity and stability is the result of a number of factors, and what Coalition forces did throughout 2007 ranks among the most significant.

In December 2006, the number of American fighting battalions in the Baghdad Security Districts was 13. By the following summer, there were 25 con­ducting operations from dozens of Joint Security Sta­tions and Combat Outposts in the heart of the city. Throughout Baghdad and the surrounding belts, Coalition forces were not only attacking the enemy, they were establishing and maintaining a presence in places that had long been sanctuaries of al-Qaeda.

At the same time, we were going after Shia extremists--those responsible for the displacement of Sunni families, sectarian-motivated executions, and intimidating the populace in general. We launched precise, targeted raids repeatedly against the worst offenders. Given additional troops, the Coalition employed them to protect the population. This commitment to the people of Iraq made a dif­ference both directly and indirectly.

Successful Partnerships: Police and Citizens

Partnered with the Iraqi Security Forces, our operations fragmented what were once well-estab­lished AQI support zones, disrupted the network's operations, and forced its leaders (those who sur­vived) to shift their bases elsewhere--in many cas­es, out of reach of Baghdad. Likewise, Coalition forces knocked Shia extremists off balance and drove many away from the capital. I believe our operations injected a healthy dose of confusion into the Mahdi Army's ranks, caused many intermedi­ate- and lower-level leaders to overreact, and ulti­mately prompted Muqtada al-Sadr to call for a ceasefire to restore order and to recast the image of his organization as a humanitarian rather than a military one. No doubt, our efforts to disrupt Mahdi Army leadership figured significantly in Sadr's decision.

The surge of Coalition forces also helped bring about a surge in Iraqi Security Force capacity. More U.S. brigade combat teams meant more partnered units for the Iraqi Army and National Police. When it comes to developing the ISF, there is simply no substitute for partnership.

Embracing and enabling the concept of pro­tecting the population also built momentum for bottom-up reconciliation, allowing this process to expand beyond Anbar into other provinces. Enhanced security and persistent Coalition force presence encouraged Iraqis who wanted to stand up and reject AQI to do so without fear of retaliation. Joint Security Stations and Combat Outposts had a clear, noticeable effect on the Iraqi people not only physically, but more importantly, psychologically.

So, what did we do with these citizens that made the choice to reject al-Qaeda and extremism? Acknowledging the potential risks of dealing with former adversaries, our commanders seized upon the opportunity and hired them to assist in local security where Iraqi Army and Iraqi Police were lacking. Initially known as Concerned Local Citi­zens, but now called the Sons of Iraq, a grassroots movement sprung up akin to neighborhood watch­es. Mainly Sunni at the beginning and wary of the Shia-led government, these groups turned to the coalition and offered their services to provide pro­tection for the population.

In so doing, we were able to keep young Sunni men away from extremism, provide jobs and income, and gain valuable intelligence on the insur­gency, improvised explosive devices, and caches. But they were also looking for legitimacy. The impact of the Sons of Iraq went beyond security and paved the way for improvements in basic services, economic progress, and local governance. As word of their success spread, so did the program--and it continues today. Only paying them meager wages and not providing weapons and ammunition, the program has been an unqualified success.

Additionally, there is a second-order effect in that every dollar paid to the Sons of Iraq gets spent at least two additional times as they provide for their families and then local markets buy wholesale goods to stock their stands. In places where we have employed the Sons of Iraq, we average a ten-fold increase in the markets, for example going from 40 to 400 stands. Finally, the Sons of Iraq are now branching out across Iraq and increasingly include Shia groups and, in some cases, mixed sect groups.

Setting the Stage for Hope

Generally speaking, when security conditions improve, a narrow focus on survival opens up and makes room for hope. Hope provides an opportuni­ty to pursue improvements in quality of life. Along these lines, the surge helped set the stage for progress in governance and economic develop­ment. In a very real way and at the local level, this subtle shift in attitude reinforced our security gains--allowing Coalition and Iraqi forces to hold the hard-earned ground we had wrested from the enemy while continuing to pursue extremists as they struggle to regroup elsewhere.

In Baghdad, al-Anbar, and in many other areas of Iraq, the story in early 2008 is about improving people's lives and building government capacity, and about their expectations regarding the future. For the government of Iraq, the surge has provided a window of opportunity. This window will not remain open forever.

To capitalize on the reduction of violence in 2007, Iraqi leaders must make deliberate choices to secure lasting strategic gains through reconciliation and political progress. This set of choices and their collective effect will be decisive, I think. This view puts things in context.

The future of Iraq belongs to the Iraqis. The improved security conditions resulting in part from the surge of 2007 have given the Iraqis an opportu­nity to choose a better way. In the last week, several major pieces of legislation have been passed by the Iraqi parliament: accountability and justice, provin­cial powers, and amnesty law.

Conclusion

Let me close by emphasizing that there was much sacrifice to achieve these gains. Let us all nev­er forget those whose lives have been changed for­ever because of injuries and those who gave their lives fighting for the ideals of liberty as well as their loved ones. Their sacrifices were and are not in vain, and because of them the Iraqis have the right to choose their own destiny.

The gates of freedom remain open today because of our fallen comrades: noble and gallant warriors who gave everything so others can enjoy life, liberty, and happiness. We will honor their memory and remain dedicated to ensuring their sacrifices are never forgotten.

I am honored to serve in the greatest Armed Forces in the world, and I'm proud of what it stands for. We have not finished our mission, but we have proven our mettle. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to talk to you this morning, and God Bless America.

Lieutenant General Raymond T. Odierno is the Commanding General of U.S. III Corps.

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, elections, Iraq, war, Iraq War, The Surge
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Friday, March 14, 2008 at 02:30 PM
Permalink - Comments [6] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 21 times

 

 

 

 

I thought you might like this, any idea of wo said it? Its someone you probably dont like but know of...

 

“How do you tell a Communist? Well, it’s someone who reads Marx and Lenin. And how do you tell an anti-Communist? It’s someone who understands Marx and Lenin.”  

Posted in these Groups:
Topics:
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Friday, March 14, 2008 at 02:28 PM
Permalink - Comments [6] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 43 times

Barack Obama had Rev. Jeremiah Wright marry him and been his spiritual advisor for years. He consulted him before his Presidential run and also relied on him for his state runs.

All I know him saying that he's like an uncle i dont agree with sometimes is nuts.

I wouldn't sit through one sermon this guy made, his racist, anti American view is not one I would share let alone make me want to bring my family onto.

Remember Barrack choose this, would you?

Check out the link

http://www.youtube.com/watc...

*sorry I dont know how to get the video to just pop up

 

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: Politics, bakersfield, election, president, Barrack, Obama, Jeremiah wright
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Friday, March 14, 2008 at 10:10 AM
Permalink - Comments [73] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 124 times

I wonder do teachers at CSUB and BC teach that socialism is good? If anyone has taken a class let me know.

I mean there is no society that has ever existed that socialism worked in favor of the people and right now we have the Democratic party nominating two people that think Socialism is a good thing.

I wonder if out teachers, like Clinton and Obama, think that it is in fact a good idea?

Posted in these Groups:
Topics: bakersfield, Politics, blogs, LIFE, News, bakersfield.com, entertainment
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 05:06 PM
Permalink - Comments [18] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 88 times

Absolutely he was right to apologize for that. A lot of people are Saying oh McCain is being so wimpy why is he apologizing, People have told me he needs to be tough and go after Obama.

Well its true he needs to after Obama, which he is, on the issues.

 But when it comes to attacking a guy by saying his middle name in a negitive way and try to imply that he somehow linked to being a Saddam like character is a uneducated move.

In Politics a lot of times an attack hurts the attacker because it goes to far. This is one of those times.

John McCain did a great job by distancing himself from those remarks made by a man that has no idea just what the effect of his remarks could be

Posted in these Groups:
Topics:
posted by BakersfieldSuperman on Sunday, March 2, 2008 at 03:42 PM
Permalink - Comments [32] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 104 times