October 08, 2008

Town Halls, Ugh

Never follow the advice of losers. Seems simple right? You see a shambling wreck on the street with a sign that says; "Repent. The end is neer" Do you follow his advice? I don't. Because he is a loser. It may sound harsh. But it's common sense. You don't follow the advice of people who have driven their own lives into a ditch.

This is why I didn't vote for Bush in 2000. People kept asking me; "Aren't you tired of the Clinton drama." Sure. But George Bush is a loser. He ran his oil company into the ground. He ran his baseball team into the ground. And now, we clearly see that he is the worst President in history. He is a loser. Always has been. Always will be.

McCain is a loser. His distinguished military career involves crashing five planes and becoming a POW. One of his crashes lit the ship on fire and it burned for a week. He came home, got into Congress, and immediately sold his vote to Keating and was censured. Then came the Iraq war and time and time again he got it wrong. Even the surge, which the right wing media has spun as a success, is actually too early to call. A state of affairs we don't hear too much about with our fixation on the economy and the election. His insistence there cost us billions and will likely have simply drawn out our failure in Iraq.

This is why I was glad when Barack blew John McCain off about his 'Town Halls'. Look. The format sucked. And having ten of these things would have been a nightmare. Barack didn't follow the advice of John McCain because it was a dumb idea. A dumb idea that came from a loser. And winners, like Barack, don't follow the advice of losers, like John McCain.

Don't vote for McCain. He is a loser. He doesn't know how to win. Being mavericky is not a strategy for winning. Being prudent, doing the right things, working consistently towards success, that's how you win in politics. Barack is smart. He knows how to win.

For once, please, just once, let's actually get someone in the White House who is a winner. We need that. Right now. We need that.

Posted by jherr at October 8, 2008 05:25 AM
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