September 7th, 2008, 12:39 AM
|
#1 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: 10 miles from Pootie Tang
Posts: 18,655
|
John McCain playing second fiddle to Sarah Palin
Quote:
McCain-Palin becoming Palin-McCain?
Associated Press
The banners, buttons and signs say McCain-Palin, but the crowds say something else.
"Sa-rah! Pa-lin!" came the chant at a Colorado Springs rally on Saturday moments before Republican nominee John McCain took the stage with Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, a woman who was virtually unknown to the nation just a week earlier. The day before, thousands screamed "Sa-rah! Sa-rah! Sa-rah!" at an amphitheater outside Detroit.
"Real change with a real woman," read one sign at a Wisconsin rally. "Hurricane Sarah leaves liberals spinning," cried another.
In the short time since McCain spirited the 44-year-old first-term governor out of Alaska and onto a national stage as his running mate, Palin has become an instant celebrity. And since her speech at the Republican National Convention, watched by more than 40 million Americans, she is emerging as the main attraction for many voters at their campaign appearances.
"She's the draw for a lot of people," said Marilyn Ryman, who came to see her at the Colorado rally inside an airport hangar. "The fact that she's someone new, not the old everything we've seen before."
McCain has sought to portray Palin as a bulldog who will help him "shake things up" on Capitol Hill.
Washington, he said Saturday, is "going to get to know her, but I can't guarantee you they'll love her."
"We do!" came a cry from the crowd.
At a rally in Albuquerque later, McCain acknowledged the juice she has injected into his campaign.
"The response to her has been overwhelming, it's been incredible," he said.
Perhaps recognizing the excitement she is generating, the McCain campaign was planning to keep Palin with McCain for several more days, rather than dispatch her to campaign by herself, as had initially been discussed.
On Saturday, McCain and Palin rode their post-convention wave into the competitive West, where Democrats have made recent gains in traditional Republican strongholds.
After a day of talking up economic themes in the Midwest, the pair attracted thousands at a rally in Colorado Springs, a city at the foot of Pike's Peak that is home to many conservatives and military families.
It was McCain's first appearance in Colorado since the Democrats had their convention in Denver last month.
Both campaigns consider the battleground state in play with the election less than two months away.
"Colorado, it's going to be a hard-fought battle here," Palin said. As soon as she began speaking, a group of supporters interrupted her with a cheer of "Sa-rah! Sa-rah!"
Palin is even getting the star treatment from celebrity magazines, Web sites and television programs, which have played up her personal story as a mother of five children, one of whom is 17 years old, unmarried and pregnant.
The excitement with which people are turning out to see Palin could complicate a key line of attack that the McCain campaign has been building against Democrat Barack Obama for months.
Republicans have sought to cast Obama's support as nothing more than shallow adoration and hype befitting a movie star. They have mocked his appeal among Hollywood types and compared his star status to that of lightweights like Paris Hilton and Britney Spears. They say there is nothing of substance to back up the candidacy of the Illinois senator.
Palin herself asked in her convention speech what happens "when the stadium lights go out, and those Styrofoam Greek columns are hauled back to some studio lot — what exactly is our opponent's plan?"
Obama has been careful in his comments about her, saying Saturday that she has flip-flopped on spending earmarks, but also calling her a "skillful politician."
While campaigning in New Mexico, which is shaping up to be another competitive state, Palin and McCain staged their own Hollywood-like entrance at a rally.
After a rousing introduction by actor Robert Duvall, McCain and Palin made their entrance by bounding off a "Straight Talk Express" bus that drove straight into the rally's convention hall, underneath a giant America flag that was raised like a curtain.
As a delighted crowd screamed its approval, the rally was clouded by either exhaust or stage smoke.
Voters interviewed at rallies said their support for McCain has been cemented with his pick of Palin, who is a social conservative and reassures many who were wary about McCain on those issues.
Patricia Hoskins said she was already backing McCain but that Palin "really lit the fire under me."
And in the brief time that McCain and Palin have been campaigning since she introduced herself to the nation, many women at their events have said they identify with her personal struggles. "She's every mom," said Lindsey Denny, a mother of 7, including a set of quintuplets, two of whom have special needs like Palin's infant son with Down syndrome. Denny said Palin's inclusion on the ticket was "110 percent" the reason why she went to see her Saturday.
McCain-Palin becoming Palin-McCain?
|
 Poor McCain, he's coming in second to a hockey mom. And how hasn't that Straight Talk Express not crashed and burned with all of the bullshit McCain and Palin are spewing?
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 12:44 AM
|
#2 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Texas
Posts: 21,123
|
But I like it in the movies/TV thread! You can be sure we are gonna see this on "Hallmark Hall of Fame" one day!
__________________
I didn't start out to collect diamonds, but somehow they just kept piling up.-Mae West
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 12:46 AM
|
#3 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: 10 miles from Pootie Tang
Posts: 18,655
|
 I didn't even realize that I was still in the movie thread until after I posted it. Oops.
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 01:01 AM
|
#4 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: the Peachy state of Ga
Posts: 4,692
|
I went to see Carlos Mencia tonight. The Fox was packed. He did his normal beener jokes. He started telling a joke (but at the time it didn't seem like a joke) he was telling us to vote for Obama. This happened in good old democratic Hot Lanta and Carlos got booed and some people left before he finished his joke.. and there was a joke. I was really shocked.
He told a few jokes about Palin too and it amazed me how many people (mostly women) stood up and cheered for her.
---------
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 01:09 AM
|
#5 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: 10 miles from Pootie Tang
Posts: 18,655
|
It depends on what kind of a crowd he had. If you had more of a Republican/conservative crowd then that would make sense. Plus, it is the South.
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 01:14 AM
|
#6 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: the Peachy state of Ga
Posts: 4,692
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by kingcap72
It depends on what kind of a crowd he had. If you had more of a Republican/conservative crowd then that would make sense. Plus, it is the South.
|
Kingcap it's Atlanta - Elton John doesn't live here for nothing. It was a great audience. Talk about a mix of people. Black white asian mexican old young...... he did a great job of the Olympics.
Atlanta is the south by name only - there are so many transplants here, we only learn the southern drawl to carry on the tradition.. I'm Georgian via Washington D.C.
south these days is way south of Atlanta.
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 01:30 AM
|
#7 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: 10 miles from Pootie Tang
Posts: 18,655
|
Thanks mods for moving this thread. Appreciate it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by GaPeach
Kingcap it's Atlanta - Elton John doesn't live here for nothing. It was a great audience. Talk about a mix of people. Black white asian mexican old young...... he did a great job of the Olympics.
Atlanta is the south by name only - there are so many transplants here, we only learn the southern drawl to carry on the tradition.. I'm Georgian via Washington D.C.
south these days is way south of Atlanta.
|
Ah well, maybe people didn't want somebody telling them who to vote for. Who knows?
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 03:48 AM
|
#8 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In WhoreLand fucking your MOM
Posts: 45,172
|
women standing up and cheering for that THING that is basically the antithesis of everything the women's movement has accomplished.
Stupid.
__________________
"I can't help it if their ego suffers bystander trauma from my vivisection of their argument"
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 02:11 PM
|
#9 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 5,602
|
Quote:
|
As a delighted crowd screamed its approval, the rally was clouded by either exhaust or stage smoke.
|
YUM!
__________________
|
|
|
September 7th, 2008, 02:34 PM
|
#10 (permalink)
|
|
Elite Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 8,707
|
So, as far as popularity goes she's already topping that ticket 
If the stupids, who - unfortunately - are often also fanatics, go out
in herds to vote for the Repugs, and old McSame can't keep up with
his Barracuda, he'll be six feet under and America will soon follow
with Ms. Moosefest at the helm 
__________________
Warren Beatty: actor, director, writer, producer.
***** celeb
|
|
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:52 PM.
|