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Gunner Asch[_6_] Gunner Asch[_6_] is offline
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Default Obama has created more hatred and disunity than any president in history.

On Sun, 17 Jul 2011 06:33:32 -0700, Larry Jaques
wrote:

On Sat, 16 Jul 2011 23:20:37 -0500, Ignoramus29044
wrote:

I think that Obama has created a lot of hatred and disunity among
Republicans.


The amazing thing is that his actions haven't done that among the
Democrats, whom he has built up and then let down I don't know how
many times so far in his presidency.

When are you guys going to wake up? Use the wipers on your rose
colored glasses, please. See what's really going on. Please look at
both sides of the issues carefully. You're seeing rosewash.

Tell me who is better off in health terms with Obamacare, Ig. See if
you can scare up a single stat of it actually working. Then scare up
stats on how many doctors and other medical people are retiring
because of it. Look at the lawsuits from dozens of states, etc.

Now move on to other areas he's "helped". Any actuals yet?


http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com...n-five-points/

Dem ID down five points
CNN Ticker Producer Alexander Mooney

(CNN) – The number of Americans identifying themselves as Democrats is
at its lowest point in seven years, according to a new survey by Gallup
- a warning sign for the president and his party as the next race for
the White House gets set to begin.

According to the annual Gallup survey of party identification, 31
percent of Americans say they are Democrats – a number that is down five
percentage points from 2008 and is the same as it was in 2003 – the year
following impressive Republican gains in the House and Senate.

But Democrats can take some solace in the fact that an even smaller
percentage of Americans (29 percent) identify themselves as Republicans,
despite the GOP's hugely successful midterm elections that resulted in a
change of control in the House of Representatives. That percentage is up
2 points from last year but still significantly below the 34 percent
that said they affiliated with the GOP in 2004.

Meanwhile, those Americans who say they identify with neither party has
shot up to 38 percent, up 3 points since 2008 and among the highest it
has been in the 22 years Gallup has conducted the survey.

In a separate 2010 Gallup poll seeking to pin down the leanings of
independent voters, 45 percent of Americans said they were Democrats or
independents who leaned Democrat while 44 percent said the same about
Republicans. The 1-point advantage for President Obama's party is the
smallest in seven years.

The survey results are based on aggregated numbers from 21 different
Gallup and USA Today/Gallup polls conducted in 2010. In all, the results
include information gathered from more than 25,000 interviews with U.S.
adults by telephone.



And the trend is increasing.....


--
Maxim 12: A soft answer turneth away wrath.
Once wrath is looking the other way, shoot it in the head.