The Respectfully Republican Conversation

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  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Awwww, LuAnn, you are so sweet.  STOP IT!!!  LOL  Nah, you're right.  These threads do not need to be deleted.  We'll get over whatever.  There will be somethings we won't forget.

    Ebann, that was beutiful from your husband, Ron.  Thanks for sharing.

    HI HARLEY, MY FRIEND! 

    My dh and I waited  for two hours in line on Friday.  He went to our precinct and one near by to see how many voters were out.  NONE!  Unless they were inside.  I believe I heard in some places in Greensboro there are no lines.  That doesn't mean all over this state there are no lines.  I told him at least we had voted AND we went out to lunch after...fried shrimp! 

    HARLEY, that reminds me.  The next time we meet and go out for lunch we'll have to go to this little restaurant where dh and I went.  It's inexpensive and good MOST of the time.

    Shirley

  • acarr
    acarr Member Posts: 104
    edited November 2008

    Hi Shirley,

    I guess I feel a little better after venting, even though I bit my tongue and didn't say half of what I would like to say. LOL!  I really do fear for our country.  Right now, it doesn't look good for John McCain.  -- Amy

  • Rosemary44
    Rosemary44 Member Posts: 2,660
    edited November 2008

    It's coming down to Florida and Ohio.  Nail biting time till they fully report.  North Carolina is upsetting me....Shirley, do something.

  • LuAnnH
    LuAnnH Member Posts: 8,847
    edited November 2008

    Sorry Rosemary, but Obama just landed Ohio.  I am interested though to see the popular vote within 1 % yet electoral votes so far apart.  Seems so odd how that can happen.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Well, Rosemary, if I could I'd throw a shoe at a few people.  I see Texas is doing pretty good for McCain.  I was getting scared there in the beginning.  I'm hoping we can hold on to more Senate seats. 

    Being that McCain is such an old person he sure did a helluva job running around for almost two years.  He even had to carry his own luggage there for awhile because they didn't have any money.

    Well, Virginia just went for Obama. 

    I will offer my Congratulations for the Obama supporters when all is said and done.

    Electorial votes right now...220 for BO and 138 for Mac.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Card check...BO voted for..end of secret ballot for union elections.  Will BO go along with this or will he scoot over toward the middle?

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    At 11:00 Obama has been announced to be our next President by Fox News.  Chicago is going nuts.  I wouldn't be in the middle of that crowd for nothing!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    For those on the Obama thread CONGRATULATIONS!  I would bring you my congrats "in person" but I'm not welcomed there.  Frown

    Shirley

  • LuAnnH
    LuAnnH Member Posts: 8,847
    edited November 2008

    Shirley, you are a good lady!  I know you are not smiling the way I am right now but lets hope he can do what he says!  If not, its only 4 years

  • ibcspouse
    ibcspouse Member Posts: 613
    edited November 2008

    He was not our guy, but he is the next President.  I will respect the Office that he holds.  I hope the eloquence and optimism he portrayed will keep our country strong.  May the next four years bring prosperity and a cure to the beast known as breast cancer.

    Hail to the Chief.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    LuAnn, you deserve to smile.  I hope Obama proves us wrong.  I hope he ends up being a very good president.   I mean that.  I want our country to flourish. 

  • Rosemary44
    Rosemary44 Member Posts: 2,660
    edited November 2008

    Me too, congrats to all his supporters.  Enjoy.

    Well, Shirley and all, we had fun discussing the issues.  I'm going to miss Sarah.  I had such high hopes for us ladies.  I'll have to think about where I'm going to spend my $1000 refund check.  Then Pelosi wants to send us some money too.  Hey, we're in the chips.

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited November 2008

    I have avoided these threads for the past couple of months.

    I am so sad that a good candidate was led so far astray from his message, personal achievements and previous beliefs, by an election team who told him to try and mean everything to everyone.  I do belive that that and his choice of a VP were his undoing.

    Let it be known that "to thine ownself be true", is not just a quote, but a true belief.  I am so sorry that he was not true to himself.

    I have prayers for Obama, his family and our Congress, Senate and country.

  • LuAnnH
    LuAnnH Member Posts: 8,847
    edited November 2008

    I cannot say I am so impressed with this speech by John McCain, what a wonderful and respectful speech that has to be the hardest speech to ever give.  Well done John McCain!

  • AnnaM
    AnnaM Member Posts: 1,387
    edited November 2008

    prayers for all the candidates and for our country and all the dear souls in it

  • spar2
    spar2 Member Posts: 6,827
    edited November 2008

    Am sad, but I love my country and will support my president.  What a wonderful speech from McCain, such sincerety, love, and respect was shown.  God bless him.

  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited November 2008

    The race is over.

    McCain's speech was one of his best--the McCain we used to know. I feel that he will work to make change a positive one in this country.

    Despite our political differences, every one of us should be PROUD to be an American right now. Pround to be able to voice our beliefs without fear of prisons or executions or coups.

    I'm proud to have friends, brought together by a common cause, who feel so passionately about this country.

    Anne

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Yes, LuAnn, it must have been a very hard speech after campaigning for so very long.

    Dotti, there are/were answers we wanted answered.  We never got the answers.  We wanted to know what has Obama ever done..ever gotten accomplished.  There's a lot of questions, but my hope is that Obama will lead this country and do a wonderful job. 

    One person on the other thread said she would transfer to another country if McCain won.  I said no one's making me leave my country. 

    I don't think McCain was mean.  No meaner than Obama.  Obama mocked McCain..made fun of him...things that McCain brought up that we wanted answers to. 

    Now, I have to pray for God to give me peace about this election.  I'm grateful that I had somewhere where I could go for "support" and discussion on this topic.  I found that my friends who were voting for McCain didn't want to talk about the election.  I found that so many people didn't know one thing about either candidate.  One brilliant person just found out that McCain had graduated fifth from the bottom of his class and she was voting for Obama.  She knew nothing about Obama either.  When I pointed out some things her BRILLIANT friend (as she put it) from California didn't know squat and my emails, she said, drove him nuts.  I asked her to have him email me.  You see, when someone makes up their mind they don't care to hear about the candidate...they just know they're voting for him/her.

    I'm proud of McCain and the campaign he ran.  However, when he left for Washington..my brother and I talked about this..his a repub from Texas...we knew he had made a mistake.  And it was used against him.

    Obama ran a great campaign as well.  He had so much more money than McCain. 

    I shouldn't rehash things that can't be undone.  It's done and we have a new president.  Now, I will watch and see what he's going to do. And I pray he does what's right.  And I hope he makes the rest of the world love us again.

    Shirley

  • Believer0711
    Believer0711 Member Posts: 351
    edited November 2008

    I'm very sad and hurt. McCain conceded with so much dignity, sincerity and gratitude. God bless you John McCain! I just truly pray that Obama is who and what he says he is, and not one dirty opportunistic politician. Sigh. I continue to pray for America. May we stand united.  

    Aurora

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Anne, I agree.  And thank you for being so kind. 

    Shirley

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Well, it will be nice seeing children in that big Whitehouse again!  They are adorable!

    Shirley

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    How disappointing and sad for our country.

  • suzfive
    suzfive Member Posts: 456
    edited November 2008

    Congrats to all the Obama supporters. I sincerely hope for all of our sakes that he does a good job. He will have a majority so no excuse not to get things done. If he does a good job, I may even vote for him in four years. One thing is for sure - no one in their right mind will ever take federal campaign funds for an election ever again.

  • mke
    mke Member Posts: 584
    edited November 2008

    McCain's speech was very gracious indeed.

  • pinoideae
    pinoideae Member Posts: 1,271
    edited November 2008

    Two great speeches tonight, first McCain did a really great speech, and in part said:   

    McCain  urged all Americans to join him in congratulating Sen. Barack Obama on his projected victory in the presidential election.  "I pledge to him tonight to do all in my power to help him lead us through the many challenges we face," McCain said before his supporters in Phoenix, Arizona. (John McCain no doubt will continue to make a great positive impact in the United States of America).

    And then Obama did a really great speech, and in part said:  

    Let us resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long. Let us remember that it was a man from this state who first carried the banner of the Republican Party to the White House - a party founded on the values of self-reliance, individual liberty, and national unity. Those are values we all share, and while the Democratic Party has won a great victory tonight, we do so with a measure of humility and determination to heal the divides that have held back our progress. As Lincoln said to a nation far more divided than ours, "We are not enemies, but friends...though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection." And to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn - I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your President too.

    I have no doubt Barack Obama will be a great President. 

  • CherrylH
    CherrylH Member Posts: 1,077
    edited November 2008

    Thank you Summer. I believe so as well.

    Cherryl

  • Odalys
    Odalys Member Posts: 2,103
    edited November 2008
    Good morning friends. This is in deed the greatest country on earth! Congratulations to the Obama supporters. I will forever believe McCain was the best candidate for the job but the country has spoken so I will pray Obama proves us Republicans wrong.

    Have a great day everyone.
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2008

    Well, Russia is speaking LOUDLY!

    Shirley

  • Odalys
    Odalys Member Posts: 2,103
    edited November 2008

    What happened Shirley?  I'm at work w/o access to news.

  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited November 2008

    Congratulations to the Obama supporters.  Although I favored McCain, I appreciate the historic nature of this election and I congratulate the U.S. for finally jumping this very big hurdle.  I think it's wonderful that an African American has been elected president.  Personally I wish that it had been a different African American, but so be it. 

    While I recognize and applaud the significance of this election for America, I have to say that I do find it a bit amusing the way that the talking heads on t.v. are patting themselves on the back and talking about the global significance of this election, saying that the election of an African American has moved the U.S. to the front of the line as a shining example of a country where race is not a barrier to success.  There is no question that the global reaction to the election of Barack Obama is very positive.  After 8 years of George W. Bush, who was so unpopular outside of the U.S., there is pleasure at the election of a Democrat.  Many around the world also hope that by electing a 'global' president (black, white, Kenyan, American, Indonesian), the U.S. will have a more global perspective and a better understanding of cultures beyond the U.S..  And the rest of the world shares with Americans the delight in seeing the race barrier in the U.S. finally broken. But breaking the race barrier was an issue of U.S. historical significance; in so many countries around the world, these types of barriers have already been broken.  In countries where you'd least expect it, either a woman or someone of ethnic/racial minority has already held the leadership and/or run for the leadership without race or gender being an issue.  Margaret Thatcher in the U.K..  Gold Meir in Israel.  Indira Ghandi in India.  Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan.  Angela Merkel in Germany.  Nelson Mandela in South Africa.  Alberto Fujimori in Peru.  The election of an African American as president of the United States is very significant for the U.S. and this is recognized globally, but globally in many ways this simply catches the U.S. up with much of the rest of the world.   For that, it's wonderful and it's about time.  Now if only the glass ceiling could be broken and a woman could finally be elected!

    As for what happens to the U.S. and the world under Obama's leadership, that remains to be seen.  If he tries to implement much of what he has talked about during the campaign, I think the honeymoon will be over quickly, both in the U.S. and globally.  And the results will not be good.  On the other hand, Obama has said that he is pragmatic and not an ideologue, and if he tosses aside the campaign promises and forgets about positions he has taken in the past and instead governs based on the needs of the current times, he may do very well.  Let's hope.

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