quote:Op maandag 24 maart 2008 11:07 schreef Montov het volgende:
quote:Op maandag 24 maart 2008 11:13 schreef Montov het volgende:
Hier een voorbeeld hoe belangrijk context en nuance kan zijn: http://www.crooksandliars(...)than-chris-matthews/
In McCain's eigen woorden:quote:While McCain’s conservative credentials have been questioned during the campaign, there is no doubt his health plan reflects a strong conservative ideology.
Senator McCain's health plan clearly reflects a belief that we need to put as our first priority getting at the things that make health care so expensive and frustrating for consumers rather than, as he would put it, promising everyone a painless access to a system that isn't working.
quote:"For all the grandiose promises made in this campaign, has any candidate spoken honestly to the American people about the government's role and failings about individual responsibilities? Has any candidate told the truth about the future of Medicare? Its costs are growing astronomically faster than its financing, and leaving its structural flaws unaddressed will hasten its bankruptcy. Has any candidate warned that we have a personal responsibility to take better care of our children and ourselves? Yet that is the only way to prevent many chronic diseases. Has any candidate insisted that genuine and effective health care reform requires accountability from everyone: drug companies, insurance companies, doctors, hospitals, the government, and patients? Yet that is the truth upon which any so-called solution must be based.
“Democratic presidential candidates are not telling you these truths. They offer their usual default position: If the government would only pay for insurance everything would be fine. They promise universal coverage, whatever its cost, and the massive tax increases, mandates, and government regulation that it imposes. I offer a genuinely conservative vision for health care reform, which preserves the most essential value of American lives—freedom.”
http://www.guardian.co.uk(...)bama.uselections2008quote:Barack Obama gained a boost yesterday when the first poll taken since his make-or-break speech last week on race put him back ahead of Hillary Clinton. A nationwide Gallup poll put Obama on 48% to Clinton's 45%. The same poll last week, taken at the height of the row over Obama's minister in Chicago, Jeremiah Wright, gave Clinton her first lead for weeks, 49% to his 42%.
Ik vraag me echt af wat haar bezielde om dit te claimen als het verzonnen is. Veel stemmen zul je er toch niet mee winnen en als een dergelijke leugen uitkomt, dan loop je toch serieuze imagoschade op.quote:Op dinsdag 25 maart 2008 11:08 schreef NLweltmeister het volgende:
CBS News Video Contradicts Clinton's Story
CBS' Sharyl Attkisson Was On Hillary's Bosnia Trip - And Got A Warm, Sniper-Free Welcome
http://www.cbsnews.com/st(...)ws/main3964921.shtml
Die kan je afschijven, tijd om de handdoek te gooien voor Hillary
We landed under sniper firequote:Op dinsdag 25 maart 2008 11:08 schreef NLweltmeister het volgende:
CBS News Video Contradicts Clinton's Story
CBS' Sharyl Attkisson Was On Hillary's Bosnia Trip - And Got A Warm, Sniper-Free Welcome
http://www.cbsnews.com/st(...)ws/main3964921.shtml
Die kan je afschijven, tijd om de handdoek te gooien voor Hillary
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0(...).html?nclick_check=1quote:Why we should fear a McCain presidency
It may seem incredible to say this, given past experience, but a few years from now Europe and the world could be looking back at the Bush administration with nostalgia. This possibility will arise if the US elects Senator John McCain as president in November.
Over the years the US has inserted itself into potential flashpoints in different parts of the world. The Republican party is now about to put forward a natural incendiary as the man to deal with those flashpoints.
The problem that Mr McCain poses stems from his ideology, his policies and above all his personality. His ideology, like that of his chief advisers, is neo-conservative. In the past, Mr McCain was considered to be an old-style conservative realist. Today, the role of the realists on his team is merely decorative.
http://mediamattersaction.org/freeride/myths/#1quote:It sometimes seems that you can't read a story about John McCain without seeing him referred to as a "maverick." But is it true?
Perhaps no word has been used to describe John McCain more often than "maverick." In January and February of 2008 alone, McCain was called a "maverick" more than 1,300 times in newspapers and on television. And those who use the label to describe McCain rarely explain just what he has done to earn it. But a closer examination of his record shows that McCain isn't quite the maverick that he is made out to be. The truth is that McCain's breaks from the Republican Party line are few and far between. According to Congressional Quarterly's "party unity" ratings, since he came to the Senate in 1989, there have been only three years in which McCain voted with his party less than 80 percent of the time. When he has gone against the party line -- such as on campaign finance reform, global warming, or tobacco regulations -- McCain has taken a position that was overwhelmingly popular with the public, meaning that when he takes a "maverick" stance, he's gaining support with the public -- and hardly taking a political risk.
Just as important, McCain's acts of independence aren't so much on high-profile issues as they are on issues that the press makes high-profile, precisely because of McCain's involvement. In all these cases, something important happens in the media when McCain opposes his party. When an ordinary senator crosses party lines, he or she will join members of the other party and perhaps have occasional opportunities to be quoted or interviewed on the issue in question. When McCain crosses party lines, on the other hand, the story the news media write undergoes a shift: It then becomes a story not about a conflict between Democrats and Republicans, but a story about John McCain and his rebellion. This is why McCain is perceived to be much more of a maverick than Republicans such as Olympia Snowe or Susan Collins, who actually break with the GOP far more often. Yet journalists continue over and over to call McCain a "maverick," seldom questioning whether there might be more to the story.
Nee. Ik sta achter elke mening die gegeven wordt door mijn gebookmarkte communistische websites.quote:Op dinsdag 25 maart 2008 17:30 schreef Shreyas het volgende:
Mondique, heb je misschien ook nog zelf een mening of enig commentaar op de dingen die je quote?
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