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The final US Presidential debate

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  • Originally posted by arraamis View Post
    Forget all these polls ... the main thing to watch is FRAUD!!!



    The Republican Party is doubling down on efforts to disenfranchise Democratic Party supporters throughout Virginia, among other states in the final weeks before the November 6, 2012 election.

    Last week, Colin Small, was arrested in Harrisonburg, Virginia and charged with attempting to destroy voter registration forms when he was spotted throwing forms in a dumpster behind a shopping center. Small was hired by Pinpoint, a subsidiary of Strategic Allied Consulting, the embattled firm that was hired by the Republican National Committee to conduct voter registrations efforts in a number of battleground states. The RNC “fired” Strategic after allegations of voter fraud surfaced in Florida, but their employees are still active, now under the supervision of the state Republican committees. Strategic is headed by Nathan Sprouls, who was hired by the Romney campaign as a consultant for $70,000, and has been linked to efforts to destroy Democratic registrations in 2004, 2006, and 2008.

    Virginia congressmen Jim Moran, Bobby Scott, and Gerry Connolly sent a letter to the Department of Justice requesting investigations into the actions of Strategic Allied Consulting and Pinpoint after the Commonwealth of Virginia refused to launch such an investigation. Ken Cuccinelli, Virginia’s Republican Attorney General and 2013 gubernatorial candidate, stated that he cannot investigate the allegations of voter fraud without a request from the state’s Board of Elections, also Republican-controlled.

    Now a new scam effort is emerging. Several residents in Virginia and Florida, among other states, have received phone calls where the callers tell them a new law allows them to vote by phone, though no such law exists. The calls have particularly targeted African Americans, Spanish-speaking and elderly voters, all traditionally Democratic supporters.

    Virginia is an important battleground state in the presidential race with 13 electoral votes, and has been leaning towards Obama in recent polls, though the race has tightened more recently. The senatorial race between Democrat Tim Kaine and Republican George Allen is also close.

    http://www.examiner.com/article/repu...mpant-virginia

    Lol, look at the one "ghetto-dressed" white dude in the cartoon. . . that's scumbag steve!

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Vilicious86 View Post
      Unless you were living under a rock for the past year-and-a-half, you'd know that Obama has been pushing those policies already. He just summarized them to remind folks right before the election of what he wants to do. You know people have short attention spans.
      What I'm saying is that this probably would have been a more effective strategy had it been released before the debates.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Turd
        Romney easily took the final one. Obliterated him.
        come on, son. lololol he was a stutterin' prick up there.

        Comment


        • It wasn't a fair fight in the last debate to be honest. Romney has no foreign experience and so the President was at a huge advantage. Plus, Romney just basically agreed with almost everything that Obama said, 30 more minutes and he might have endorsed Obama...lol

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Cuauhtémoc1520 View Post
            It wasn't a fair fight in the last debate to be honest. Romney has no foreign experience and so the President was at a huge advantage. Plus, Romney just basically agreed with almost everything that Obama said, 30 more minutes and he might have endorsed Obama...lol
            Romney's ticket for the win was to ask him about the Benghazi attack on our embassy but he already fumbled that question in the prior debate and he hesitated to go back to that topic which I believe could of won him the last debate and/or put him far ahead in the polls IMO.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by jose830 View Post
              Romney's ticket for the win was to ask him about the Benghazi attack on our embassy but he already fumbled that question in the prior debate and he hesitated to go back to that topic which I believe could of won him the last debate and/or put him far ahead in the polls IMO.
              The truth is the American public for the most part doesn't give a shi.t about that though. It's ALL about the economy at this stage.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Cuauhtémoc1520 View Post
                The truth is the American public for the most part doesn't give a shi.t about that though. It's ALL about the economy at this stage.
                That is a key point ....

                Everyone knows the economy is the biggest problem, yet everyone continues to look to Government to solve the problem. In fact, many hold the President responsible for the unemployed. But how can this be, if the same people are screaming for smaller Government and less Government intervention.

                A serious contradiction.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by joseph5620 View Post
                  The huffington post averages out all of the polls and this is where it stands. Using one poll as the sole example doesn't really cut it.


                  259 Obama 206 Romney



                  http://elections.huffingtonpost.com/...ectoral-map?hw

                  Version two says that the first debate made only a small difference. If we average the polls conducted by YouGov, Rasmussen and ABC/Washington Post, then the debate shifted the nationwide vote shares by just a single point: from an Obama lead beforehand of 2% to an Obama lead of 1% afterwards. The figures have stuck close to that ever since. (YouGov's latest survey, completed this Monday, shows Obama 2% ahead.)

                  Movements in polls in the key states sit nearer version two than version one. If we average their findings then Florida tipped from Obama to Romney after the first debate, but Obama remained ahead in other key states - notably Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Nevada and New Mexico. Obama narrowly led in Virginia and Colorado before the first debate; afterwards, they were too close to call. On these figures, Obama would still win the electoral college, even if Romney won Virginia and Colorado.








                  Obama has a much shorter path to the 270 electoral votes right now.
                  LOL what a fuking biased tard. Ha,the huffington post, are you for real?

                  Here. this is a true unbiased average of the polls.

                  http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epo...llege_map.html

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by BMWM3P View Post
                    LOL what a fuking biased tard. Ha,the huffington post, are you for real?

                    Here. this is a true unbiased average of the polls.

                    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epo...llege_map.html
                    I am surprised that you're able to walk upright you damn troglodyte.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by joseph5620 View Post
                      The huffington post averages out all of the polls and this is where it stands. Using one poll as the sole example doesn't really cut it.


                      259 Obama 206 Romney



                      http://elections.huffingtonpost.com/...ectoral-map?hw

                      Version two says that the first debate made only a small difference. If we average the polls conducted by YouGov, Rasmussen and ABC/Washington Post, then the debate shifted the nationwide vote shares by just a single point: from an Obama lead beforehand of 2% to an Obama lead of 1% afterwards. The figures have stuck close to that ever since. (YouGov's latest survey, completed this Monday, shows Obama 2% ahead.)

                      Movements in polls in the key states sit nearer version two than version one. If we average their findings then Florida tipped from Obama to Romney after the first debate, but Obama remained ahead in other key states - notably Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Nevada and New Mexico. Obama narrowly led in Virginia and Colorado before the first debate; afterwards, they were too close to call. On these figures, Obama would still win the electoral college, even if Romney won Virginia and Colorado.








                      Obama has a much shorter path to the 270 electoral votes right now.
                      LOL what a fuking biased tard. Ha,the huffington post, are you for real?

                      Here. this is a true unbiased average of the polls.

                      http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epo...llege_map.html

                      Comment

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