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Anna_Scott
Guest
His participation in the proceedings strongly conveys a message of support, more than Notre Dame giving øbama a platform implies support for his abortion position. If he didn’t want people to be confused, the reverend should have declined, unless he did support him, in which case the correct conclusion could be drawn.
But they didn’t speak at øbama’s inauguration.
Look, a big deal is made out of a politician who flip-flops. Similarly, Warren’s efforts are a lot less credible than they would have been had he not created the impression of supporting øbama in the first place, which is my whole point. This is not to say his comment is without merit.
What did the voter hope for? Like “Free to choose” [Choose what?], “Hope and change” were left open-ended [Hope for what? Change what?] so the voter could fill in his own desires. But øbama made one thing crystal clear in his campaign: he said he was going to “fundamentally change the way this country works.” Anyone with an IQ above room temperature [to borrow a quote] should have been able to figure out that to “fundamentally change the way the country works” would require scrapping the fundamental [founding] documents, i.e., the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the Declaration of Independence … and starting over from scratch, which is what he is doing. In the thread, “Guarantee free exercise of religion; Obama says no way,” poster Pfaffenhoffen wrote in post #37, “After a brilliant demagogue speech, an old lady, friend of mine, came and said: “Oh! He spoke so well!” And I asked: “What did he say!?]" And the respectably old lady replied: “Son! I do not know! But he spoke so well!”
So there you have it.
Then you have to address the question of whether or not øbama is even capable of doing [much less wants] what the voter “hoped” for. Given his prior non-record, answering that question is a no-brainer.
As I recall, they were opposed to the original bill because it included abortions, but supported it after øbama agreed to change it so that no government money would fund abortions. It should be intuitively obvious to the most casual observer that it was an empty promise because now the bishops are fighting a rear-guard action, trying to keep it from being imposed on them through the rules that govern Catholic employee benefits. Once that hurdle is overcome, øbama will be free to put abortions back into his healthcare bill. Thus, “Lucy” will have jerked the “football” away from “Charlie Brown” one more time.
sedonaman,The people don’t realize the precarious position they are in. Someone like øbama can order his czars to write a regulation that has the force of law, and it gets done ASAP. There is nothing we can do about it short of mustering a fortune to hire the best legal minds to fight it out all the way up to, and including, a hostile Supreme Court.
IOW, make us all into good little dhimmis.
CAF had a ban (unless it has been lifted) on all discussions of political candidates, including naming a candidate, alluding to a particular candidate, using euphemisms for a candidate, or referring to surrogates for a particular candidate. link: forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=218702.
I think we’re getting into risky territory, since our President is a candidate for re-election; and you are basically insulting anyone who voted for him.
Anna