[Citizen Alert Update] “My Name Is Barack, and I Am — Where, Who, What Did I Just Say?”
By SusanUnPC on May 10, 2008 at 9:26 AM in Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton
CITIZEN ALERT UPDATE: In the first comment below, WestPalm4Hillary noted, “Great, and THIS is the guy the Democrats want with control of ‘the button’.” Which reminded me of something we haven’t written about in a while — one of BO’s many (and they are countless) excuses for the votes he made, didn’t make, maybe made, or Planned Parenthood or the mob Chicago pols forced him to make, or was just “present” to make in the Illinois State Senate. Via the LA Times, January 8, 2008:
Obama said oops on 6 state Senate votes
He pushed the wrong button, he asserted at the time. Two of the admitted flubs were on hotly contested issues.
Susan’s Note: You know, it’s one thing to go “oops” when you (yeah, right) push the wrong button in a state senate vote, but … in the White House?! God help us all! (And, um, dare I ask … what might have affected his brain so adversely??? Huh?)
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(1) “I am a patriotic citizen of the United States — all 57 of them!”
(And I did not know that Alaska and Hawaii are in the same corner! AND I am really confused now, because I know that Barack Obama has banished Michigan and Florida which, even with my poor math skills, leaves only 48 states!)
(2) “Timmuh, er, Matt, er Timmuh, er Matt”
Barack Obama interviewed by Matt Lauer — or whoever the hell that was — on Today show 5/5/08
(3) From the The Guardian, UK, May 2, 2008:
Barack Obama was showing signs of campaign fatigue. Sitting on a picnic bench in a park on Pagoda Street, Indianapolis, in discussion with a group of 30 supporters, he told a story about the “modest” background of himself and his wife, Michelle. And 10 minutes later, seemingly having forgotten, he told them it all again.
In contrast, from the Los Angeles Times, May 6, 2008:
An energized Hillary Clinton strikes a populist tone
The New York senator shows no signs of fatigue as she addresses supporters in Indiana and North Carolina.
By Noam N. Levey, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 6, 2008EVANSVILLE, IND. — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton had been campaigning for more than 16 hours when she strode onto the stage at Evansville Central High School just before 11 p.m. Monday.






















