Quote Originally Posted by Psycho4Bud
Way to much bad blood there now to have this happen and from here on out it'll be getting nothing but worse. A party divided and they were feeling SO sure about this time around.

Have a good one!:s4:
I think the division is all fake and everyone sees right through it. The two differ very little on policy, but in order to make it seem like there is a more dramatic choice between them, they blow the little differences out of proportion. It's a campaign tactic more than a real difference. They both have pretty thick skins and know this is all just about politics. It hasn't gotten very nasty or personal yet and they could patch it up easily. I think that is what will happen and then the joint ticket will move on to stomping poor McCain into the gorund. He'll look like a nasty piece of road pizza by the time this thing is over --- flat as a pancake, with unrecognizable bits smeared all over the pavement, smelly remains being picked at by crow and racooons. Poor bastard.

Too bad McCain didn't get the nomination 8 years ago. He's a good man and would probably be a good president, and he definitely would have done better in these past 8 years than dumbass dubbya. The time was right for a change 8 years ago, and Bush the moron barely sqeaked a victory out of it (with the help of the Supreme Court). But now the times are ready for a change again, and poor McCain doesn't have a prayer.
dragonrider Reviewed by dragonrider on . Drawn-out Dem fight could cost prez race With Republicans rallying around John McCain, Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama could imperil their partyâ??s quest for the White House by engaging in a prolonged nomination fight expected to sap money and organizing strength from their campaigns, political analysts said. The fractious battle prompted an unusual intervention yesterday by Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean, who said Sens. Clinton and Obama should consider making a deal to avoid a showdown at the Rating: 5