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View Full Version : Right comment, wrong pig



Little-Acorn
09-10-2008, 10:25 AM
Barack Obama made a comment yesterday to the effect that you can put lipstick on a pig but it's still a pig. Coming as it did after Sarah Palin's speech where she desribed herself as a "hockey mom" and then cracked that the only difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull was lipstick, many believed that Obama was referring to palin as a "pig". Indeed, it's hard to imagine his being so tone-deaf as to not spot the comparison.

Whether he meant it that way or not, his comment was far more appropriate than he may have realized... but not for the McCain campaign. Unlike the Obama campaign which has been pushing the same old big-government nanny-state socialism his party has been supporting for more than seventy years, the McCain campaign has been promising actual change from what government has been doing (exploding budgets, massive pork, countless new "entitlements" etc.) for the last few generations. Of course, if a politician actually delivers on his campaign promises, that will be startling - only Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush have come anywhere close, and they missed a number of them, especially Bush. Whether McCain can deliver or not, at least he's promising real change.

But Obama's comment, though aimed at McCain's campaign, actually describes his own to a T, far better than it describes his opponent's. Obama is promising nothing more than what his party has been backing for nearly a century: More government "help", more takeovers of private business, more taxes, more spending, retreat in war, and appeasement rather than defeat of foreign enemies. Calling that "change" is exactly like putting lipstick on a pig: Anybody can see through it, and tell that it's the same old undesireable swine it's always been.

The only difference is, nobody is fooled by the pig, while some of the more gullible Democrats apparently ARE fooled by the "Change" mantra that Obama has stuck onto the same old, tired socialism. Fooled enough to think that there is some difference between Obama's offering and the offerings of the last twenty-something Democrat con artists to run for the office.

Yes, Barack, if you put lipstick on a pig, it doesn't change the fact that it's a pig. Unfortunately for you, we've heard enough of the same noise out of Democrats for the last several decades, to recognize the same old grunting and squealing that's going on under the new "Change" paint.

stephanie
09-10-2008, 10:37 AM
:clap:little- acorn

I was thinking the same thing..

bullypulpit
09-11-2008, 06:48 AM
Barack Obama made a comment yesterday to the effect that you can put lipstick on a pig but it's still a pig. Coming as it did after Sarah Palin's speech where she desribed herself as a "hockey mom" and then cracked that the only difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull was lipstick, many believed that Obama was referring to palin as a "pig". Indeed, it's hard to imagine his being so tone-deaf as to not spot the comparison.

Whether he meant it that way or not, his comment was far more appropriate than he may have realized... but not for the McCain campaign. Unlike the Obama campaign which has been pushing the same old big-government nanny-state socialism his party has been supporting for more than seventy years, the McCain campaign has been promising actual change from what government has been doing (exploding budgets, massive pork, countless new "entitlements" etc.) for the last few generations. Of course, if a politician actually delivers on his campaign promises, that will be startling - only Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush have come anywhere close, and they missed a number of them, especially Bush. Whether McCain can deliver or not, at least he's promising real change.

But Obama's comment, though aimed at McCain's campaign, actually describes his own to a T, far better than it describes his opponent's. Obama is promising nothing more than what his party has been backing for nearly a century: More government "help", more takeovers of private business, more taxes, more spending, retreat in war, and appeasement rather than defeat of foreign enemies. Calling that "change" is exactly like putting lipstick on a pig: Anybody can see through it, and tell that it's the same old undesireable swine it's always been.

The only difference is, nobody is fooled by the pig, while some of the more gullible Democrats apparently ARE fooled by the "Change" mantra that Obama has stuck onto the same old, tired socialism. Fooled enough to think that there is some difference between Obama's offering and the offerings of the last twenty-something Democrat con artists to run for the office.

Yes, Barack, if you put lipstick on a pig, it doesn't change the fact that it's a pig. Unfortunately for you, we've heard enough of the same noise out of Democrats for the last several decades, to recognize the same old grunting and squealing that's going on under the new "Change" paint.

Indeed. McCain with his slavish adherence to Bush administration doctrine and policy is the pig. Ms Palin is the lipstick.

But more to the point, it proves what Rick Davis said the other day, "This election is not about issues...". Rather than actually talk about the issues...did anyone actually talk about them during the RNC?...the McCain campaign follows the wearily familiar pattern of attack and smear established by none other than Karl Rove. But the McCain campaign should stick to what it knows, and Lord knows, it ain't the issues.

stephanie
09-11-2008, 07:04 AM
Indeed. McCain with his slavish adherence to Bush administration doctrine and policy is the pig. Ms Pain is the lipstick.

But more to the point, it proves what Rick Davis said the other day, "This election is not about issues...". Rather than actually talk about the issues...did anyone actually talk about them during the RNC?...the McCain campaign follows the wearily familiar pattern of attack and smear established by none other than Karl Rove. But the McCain campaign should stick to what it knows, and Lord knows, it ain't the issues.

Oh bull puckey...everyone with half a brain knows what the ISSUES are...you Democrats think by telling people you will take money from the working class to give to all the bums over and over, is "Issues" that people want to hear...well hows that working out for ya??

bullypulpit
09-11-2008, 07:09 AM
Oh bull puckey...everyone with half a brain knows what the ISSUES are...you Democrats think by telling people you will take money from the working class to give to all the bums over and over, is "Issues" that people want to hear...well hows that working out for ya??

Please be specific about McCain's discussions of policies. Please be specific and provide links.

stephanie
09-11-2008, 07:20 AM
Please be specific about McCain's discussions of policies. Please be specific and provide links.

you be specific about where he is NOT...see it goes both ways..
as I said, THE PEOPLE know what their issues are and whether a candidate is addressing them...Most self-reliant Americans don't need to hear over and over what the Government is going to do for them...the number one issue is Protecting the country from foreign or domestic enemy...so..who do you think they are trusting to do that right about now..?:poke:

theHawk
09-11-2008, 08:17 AM
Bully, I have yet to hear Obama, or any Dim for that matter, explain how raising taxes on the rich is in any way going to help the "poor" people. I have yet to hear Obama define what "poor" is. So please Bully, explain to us how taxing some rich business owner is going to help Joe Blow in Scranton get a new job? Or raise his income if he already has a job? Or help lower his energy costs?

At the RNC, I heard specifically what McCain/Palin will do. They are going to encourage (through tax breaks) businesses to start refining energy sources right here in America. Whether its on off shore oil platforms, building new natural gas pipelines, clean coal technology, wind and solar power, building new nuclear plants, or promoting the big automakers to start making more all-electric vehicles, its all using American workers on American soil. These types of changes on our country aren't going to come from overtaxing the rich business owners, it will come by encouraging them to do it without penalizing them.