Brown had nothing but compliments and respect for Obama.
Well, Hell. You should quote one of those compliments then.
Used to be..yes. There were times where there was less argument and more debate, but those are few and far between now More the pity.It certainly seems like the debates here used to be at least a little more serious and fact based.
Care to speculate on Brown's opinion after the cameras were shut off?
Sure, he thinks you suck and you're fat, ugly, and bloated.
Sure, he thinks you suck and you're fat, ugly, and bloated.
Sure, he thinks you suck and you're fat, ugly, and bloated.
Glad to see you leading the way in keeping the debates here serious and fact-based.
minkey said:that's not very nice.
It was more that you posted that the debates here used to be serious and fact-based, and then just a couple of posts later said something stupid in the same thread.She asked me to speculate, how can speculation be fact based? That brings up a good point though. Maybe it's silly to speculate and better to stick to the facts.
"Ohhhh. Turns out it was a false alarm, everything is fine.
Hey didn't your guy rush out a stimulus package because of the emergency economic situation? You liked that one though.
WASHINGTON – One of President Barack Obama's economic advisers said Sunday that the economy is fundamentally sound, a striking reversal from the Democrat's campaign rhetoric as his administration now guides the nation's financial health amid dire conditions.
During the fall campaign, Obama mercilessly mocked his Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, for declaring, "The fundamentals of our economy are strong." Obama's team painted the veteran senator as out of touch and failing to grasp the challenges facing the country.
On Sunday, economic adviser Christina Romer was asked during an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" if the fundamentals of the economy were sound. "Of course they are sound," she replied.
Just a week ago, White House Office of Management and Budget director Peter Orszag declared that "fundamentally, the economy is weak."