Bill Clinton is a smart guy.
He once said that if one candidate is appealing to your fears and the other one is appealing to your hopes then you better vote for the person that wants you to think and hope.
See
Obama is the right choice.
Bill Clinton is a smart guy.
He once said that if one candidate is appealing to your fears and the other one is appealing to your hopes then you better vote for the person that wants you to think and hope.
See
Obama is the right choice.
Immediate members of my own Family fit into these groups.
Still.
Una Voz
Visit Amigos de Obama HERE
http://fosforo.net/obamacumbia.mp3

Viva Obama With English Subtitles:
We’ve seen this phenomena before—when you cannot argue with a man, you either belt him in the mouth or shout him down. That may be an emotional cathartic but it does nothing to advance a cause. – Rod Serling
Rod Serling at Moorpark College
( if the vid won’t play from the screen use the link below )
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMpfRmWfjrs
It’s a family joke.
Anyway.
The version of this song rocks
so the rest of you can still enjoy
the moment
amm
( click above for the full story )
We did the politics.
Okay.
What next.
We can talk story.
I know.
Talk Story.
Plus we can sing.
It’s Aloha Friday After all
Besides
I wore a t-shirt with a dancing skeleton on it and my lucky bracelet with little silver bone charms on it when I ran our caucus sight and people were good with that…after all, they had more important things to think about.
read on
amm
Look at this hip cat. It’s Barack ‘Barry’ Obama. His yearbook photo was always gonna be the best lookin’. I mean, can you imagine Hillary Clinton‘s thanking “the Choom Gang”? I bet the Chooms were a local group who specialised in acid fonnnk! Or they sounded like Billy Ocean. Either way, Baz had an afro, and afros look cool.People
have told me how much better things would be for us all if we
went back
and
reclaimed a time when things were better.
This scene from ” The Twilight Zone ” describes
what we should probably take into consideration
before we do that.
Walking Distance
written by Rod Serling
Robert Sloan: Martin.
Martin Sloan: Yes, Pop.
Robert Sloan: You have to leave here. There’s no room, there’s no place. Do you understand that?
Martin Sloan: I see that now, but I don’t understand. Why not?
Robert Sloan: I guess because we only get one chance. Maybe there’s only one summer to every customer… That little boy, the one I know – the one who belongs here – this is his summer, just as it was yours once. Don’t make him share it.
Martin Sloan: Alright.
Robert Sloan: Martin, is it so bad where you’re from?
Martin Sloan: I thought so, Pop. I’ve been living on a dead run and I was tired. And one day I knew I had to come back here. I had to get on the merry-go-round and listen to a band concert. I had to stop and breathe, and close my eyes and smell, and listen.
Robert Sloan: I guess we all want that. Maybe when you go back, Martin, you’ll find that there are merry-go-rounds and band concerts where you are. Maybe you haven’t been looking in the right place. You’ve been looking behind you, Martin. Try looking ahead.