Friday, June 20, 2008

The Hypocrisy Candidate

Having turned from the reform candidate into the biggest liar ever, the question is, will the media put any emphasis on exposing Barack's cynical manipulation of the masses.
This is the reward Senator McCain gets for becoming the flag-bearer for the modern public-finance crusade. He is going to be hugely outspent, even as he is "attacked" by Mr. Obama, a candidate who entered the campaign as a "reformer" and who will no doubt end a half-billion dollars later proclaiming himself to be even more of a reformer.
But Barack's candidacy can not survive without spending more money than anyone in history - the only way to escape being held responsible for the Obamafia, the unique clan of malicious thugs he surrounded himself with the launch his political career, is to so control the nation's airwaves that there will be no room for the true story to be told.

Sen. Barack Obama's decision to go back on his word and reject federal campaign financing is being hailed by fellow Democrats as a brilliant move. It is anything but.

At this point you have to be oblivious to reality or lacking in intellectual abilities to believe a thing this guy says, and Barack is banking on making sure that no one knows what's real about him.
Sen. Ben Cardin, a Maryland Democrat, said Friday on Washington all-news radio station WTOP that Obama is doing the "right thing" by rejecting federal financing because his campaign has generated small donations from more than 1 million small donors.
Isn't it ironic that the nation's intellectual elite are so firmly behind a man who makes the Richard Nixons and Richard Daleys of the world look like reformers?
This party-line flim-flammery is unprecedented in recent Democratic presidential campaigns. Obama's decision is emblematic of his uncanny ability to renege on promises, brush off transgressions as if they were unimportant, and prevaricate with an ease that inspires marvel.
But worse than Barack's decision is the maliciousness with which he uses the language of reform and his candidacy as a movement to cloak the truth of what's motivating the decision. He's pretending that his decision to go back on a commitment made just 7 months ago is one designed to help repair the influence of money in politics.
If we don't stand together, the broken system we have now, a system where special interests drown out the voices of the American people will continue to erode our politics and prevent the possibility of real change. That's why we must act. The stakes are higher than ever, and people are counting on us.
He mocks his supporters when he says
I have an important announcement and I wanted all of you –- the people who built this movement from the bottom-up -– to hear it first.
The only movement going on here is the kind that takes place in the rest room.

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