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I'd like to see that, but he doesn't have a chance.

2007-02-23 03:55:59 · 12 answers · asked by Aneesa S 4 in Politics & Government Elections

12 answers

I'd deffienetly like to see that happen. He has a great pottential, a proud background, and is ready to do what's right for this country. I deffienetly cannont stand another republican as president, and I think america is ready for a change. I wish I could vote for him, only I'm 11, lol.

2007-02-23 08:32:53 · answer #1 · answered by 10916a 3 · 1 0

I disagree. I think that Hillary's negative campaign tactics are going to backfire on her and Obama's message is going to set well with Americans who are sick of partisan politics. He has the ability to inspire people, which could also be valuable in a time when so many people are dismayed by government and the way it runs. It will be interesting to see what happens, but if he can get past Hillary, he can win. Bill O'Reilly stated two days ago that he thought Obama could beat Guliani in a head to head matchup.

2007-02-23 12:03:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Oprah likes him, as a matter of fact she spent the better part of an hour promoting his run for the office. It is safe for me to say that if Oprah likes him I don't! How could anyone at this time select a person for the job is beyond me. But Oprah did!! More than likely her second choice will be Hillary. Let's all wait and see.

2007-02-23 14:54:11 · answer #3 · answered by TanTom 3 · 0 0

I wouldn't vote for him based on his family history and child experiences

His mother was an atheist and his step father was a Muslim Indonesian. Indonesia is very corrupt and there is a raise in Muslim extremists in the area

so in my opinion - No I will not vote for someone who is raised in a corrupt environment and Islamic extremists environment

2007-02-23 15:24:24 · answer #4 · answered by cerbie86 1 · 0 0

i would like to see him given a chance

2007-02-23 12:02:57 · answer #5 · answered by ♥JaMeS's MoMmY♥ 4 · 3 1

WASH—Jan 15—KIN-- He was born of a Muslim father and an atheist mother, who in his own words was "a lonely witness for secular humanism, a soldier for New Deal, Peace Corps, and position paper liberalism." She divorced when he was two years old and remarried another Muslim living in Indonesia, where the young man was educated in Catholic and Muslim schools in one of the most radical Islamic countries in the world. Though his father and stepfather were both Muslim, he tries to mitigate their religion by saying that by the time his mother married them, they had become atheists. After he was ten years old, he mostly was raised by his atheist grandparents.

The New York Daily News reports that he changed his life in his junior year of college at Columbia: he said he stopped doing drugs, ran three miles a day, and "He went to socialist conferences at Cooper Union and African cultural fairs in Brooklyn and started lecturing his relatives..." After graduating Columbia and then Harvard, he began working in Chicago supporting social programs. He recruited a local United Church of Christ Church on a government-sponsored community outreach. Around 1988, he joined the church because, he says, "that religious commitment did not require me to suspend critical thinking, disengage from the battle for social justice, or otherwise retreat from the world that I knew and loved."

The United Church of Christ is not to be confused with the "Church of Christ." The United Church of Christ, however, supports homosexual marriage, abortion, environmental justice, globalism, the International Criminal Court, the Palestinian movement and believes that Israel is illegally occupying the covenant land. The UCC seems to conveniently justify and legitimize his beliefs that social progressivism is equal to Christ and he writes in his memoirs that his own salvation was not an "epiphany." He reasoned after his daughter asked about life after death, "I wasn't sure what happens when we die, any more than I was sure where the soul resides or what existed before the Big Bang."

His name is Barak Hussein Obama. And he is running for President. He is courting evangelical Christians from the pulpit at Rick Warren's Saddleback church and by using public proclamations reported in the news media. Some Christians are saying he is a Democrat that evangelical Christians can support. Many have suggested that his Islamic and atheist upbringing combined with his social progressive membership in the United Church of Christ make him an outstanding presidential candidate. Others believe he may be a threat to the national security. Will the real Obama please stand up? Jesus said in Matthew 7:15, "Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves."
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2007-02-23 12:01:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

No one has a chance against Hillary.

2007-02-23 13:30:52 · answer #7 · answered by rp 4 · 0 3

I don't think he has a chance either. I believe he is a lot of show.

2007-02-23 11:59:10 · answer #8 · answered by TCSO 5 · 3 2

i would like to c.

2007-02-23 12:02:34 · answer #9 · answered by Difi 4 · 3 1

Not me.

2007-02-23 13:05:01 · answer #10 · answered by mnwomen 7 · 0 0

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