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The Ultimate List of Obama Flip-Flops

Follow the bouncing beliefs.

• The Surge: "It's fascinating to watch Barack Obama change his opinions on the U.S. troop surge in Iraq... Here's a combo -- a Los Angeles Times report on deletions of Obama's previous anti-surge position on his Web site plus a YouTube video showing his flip-flops on the issue."

• Gay Marriage: "Obama before the election: States should decide gay marriage. Obama during the election: California’s attempt to decide gay marriage for itself is 'divisive and discriminatory.' "

• FISA: "Like everything Barack Obama says, that pledge was operative only as long as it was in Obama's political interest."
• NAFTA: "OK, this is pathetic: Obama now says that his anti-NAFTA rhetoric during the campaign was a bit 'overheated.'"

• Publicly financed campaigns: "If I am the Democratic nominee, I will aggressively pursue an agreement with the Republican nominee to preserve a publicly financed general election."

• DC Handgun Ban: "After a day spent paying lip service to both sides of the debate while studiously avoiding the issue of whether the actual statute at stake in Heller was unconstitutional, he finally bites the bullet (no pun intended) and addresses it.."

• School Vouchers: "Barack Obama told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel in February that he was open to voucher programs, but just last week announced his intentions to squash the DC pilot program."

• Guantanamo Bay: "I’m curious as to what’s motivating this [new] compromise. Is there any logic behind it or is it a simple something-for-both-sides political solution?"

• Illegal Immigration - [In March 2004], Obama was asked if the government should "crack down on businesses that hire illegal immigrants." He replied "Oppose." In a Jan. 31, 2008, televised debate, he said that "we do have to crack down on those employers that are taking advantage of the situation."

• Marijuana - "[In] January 2004, Obama [said] he supported eliminating criminal penalties for marijuana use. In the Oct. 30, 2007, presidential debate, he joined other Democratic candidates in opposing the decriminalization of marijuana."

• Abortion - "Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama says “mental distress” should not qualify as a health exception for late term-abortions, a key distinction not embraced by many supporters of abortion rights."

• Iraq: "At a time when [the Surge appears to be working], is that the right time to try and set time tables for withdrawing all American troops? [Kroft asked. Obama replied,] “Yeah, absolutely. I think now is precisely the time..." [Kroft:] “And you pull out according to that time table, regardless of the situation? Even if there’s serious sectarian violence?” Kroft asked.“No, I always reserve as commander in chief, the right to assess the situation,” Obama replied."

• Death Penalty: "Ten years ago, when Obama was running for statewide office in an [exclusive] Chicago district, he opposed the death penalty. He now supports the ultimate penalty."

• Faith-based initiatives - "During the recent Obama pander tour... the presumptive Democratic nominee unnecessarily endorsed President Bush's faith-based initiative, a sort of patronage program that rewards religious activists for their political support with public grants."

• Wearing a U.S. Flag Pin - "You'll notice Barack Obama is now wearing a flag pin. Again. During the primary campaign, he refused to, explaining that he'd worn one after 9/11 but then stopped because it "became a substitute for, I think, true patriotism." So why is he back to sporting pseudo-patriotism on his chest? Need you ask? The primaries are over."

• Reverend Jeremiah Wright - "'I can no more disown (Jeremiah Wright) than I can disown my white grandmother' - then wiped away a tear and hailed him as the second coming of Abraham Lincoln. Three months later, with Wright disowned, grandma embraced and the great "race speech" now inoperative, not a word of reconsideration is heard from his media acolytes."

• Welfare Reform: "Barack Obama aligned himself with welfare reform on Monday, launching a television ad which touts the way the overhaul "slashed the rolls by 80 percent." Obama leaves out, however, that he was against the 1996 federal legislation which precipitated the caseload reduction."

• The Cuba Embargo: "In January 2004, Obama said it was time "to end the embargo with Cuba" because it had "utterly failed..." ...in August 2007, he said he would not "take off the embargo" as president because it is "an important inducement for change.""

• Single-payer Healthcare - "Contradicting what Obama said at the debate, the old footage shows the senator saying, “I happen to be a proponent of single-payer universal healthcare coverage. That’s what I’d like to see.”At the debate, Obama stated: “I never said that we should try to go ahead and get single-payer... Single-payer healthcare is an euphemism for socialized medicine."

• Special Interest Contributions: "In January, the Obama campaign described union contributions ...as "special interest" money. Obama changed his tune as he began gathering his own union endorsements... [referring] respectfully to unions as the representatives of "working people" and ...he is "thrilled" by their support."

Divided Jerusalem: "Many on the right of the political spectrum... welcomed Obama’s remarks at AIPAC, but the clarification of his position left several cold."

• Meeting with Iran's leaders without preconditions - "Barack Obama has returned to the no-preconditions policy for meeting with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, according to Obama foreign-policy adviser Anthony Lake. Financial Times also discovered in its interview with Lake that Obama has reversed himself on Iraq, now saying that the withdrawal is off."

• Palestinian elections - "[In 2006,] Obama [said]: “There is no room at the negotiating table for terrorist organizations. That is why I opposed holding elections in 2006 with Hamas on the ballot.... But During His 2006 Trip To The Middle East, Obama Met With Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas And Said The Election Represented An “Opportunity…To Consolidate Behind A Single Government.”

• The threat posed by Iran: "Yesterday [in Oregon, Obama said], "I mean think about it. Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, these countries are tiny compared to the Soviet Union. They don't pose a serious threat to us the way the Soviet Union posed a threat to us....You know, Iran, they spend one-one hundredth of what we spend on the military. If Iran ever tried to pose a serious threat to us, they wouldn't stand a chance." Today in Montana, Obama changed his tune: " Iran is a grave threat. It has an illicit nuclear program. It supports terrorism across the region and militias in Iraq. It threatens Israel's existence. It denies the Holocaust..."

• The Patriot Act: " In 2003, he said he was against the Patriot Act, but voted for it in 2006."

• Gays in the Military: ""In 2003, he said he was against the repeal of DOMA, but now he's for it in 2007. In 2003, he said he'd have to "examine specific legislation" dealing with LGBT discrimination in the military, now he's completely for ending "don't ask/don't tell".""

• Coal: "Although summer hasn’t officially begun, flip-flop season is well underway and it appears Senator Obama has joined the club... On Tuesday Obama, whose support for coal-to-liquid has been widely criticized by environmentalists, sent out a press release clarifying his position on liquid coal."

• Wiretapping: "Netroots activists who helped Barack Obama to become the Democratic party's presumptive presidential nominee are unmoved by the senator's explanation of his change of heart on a pending bill regarding warrantless wiretapping."
 
Thats funny........when I go vote, it has never entered my mind how the candidate smiles....I don't remember that EVER being a consideration when casting my to the guy with the best smile......

Well..............to each his own.....

When you go vote?

When was the last time you went to vote and had any criteria at all besides whether an (R) was next to the candidate's name?
 
Motts been suckin' up the stupid pills along with his koolade.....and his perception will never change.....stupidity must be hard to overcome.......

makes me pity him and apple....


I see you gave me a "shout out", again. Thanks. :D

By the way, did you watch the video Sedan put in post #53? That's Romney to a "T".
 
Santorum has no chance to win the nomination that is why people are blowing off his Iowa victory. Look at his polling in the rest of the states. Look at his money. The guy is not electable in a national election.

And Newt may hang around but with his baggage and lack of principle and scorched earth policy is not going to win it either.

If you are a primary voter you really have two options. You can vote for someone on principle based on their stances/positions etc. or you can vote for someone who you believe is most likely to beat the incumbent in the office. Polling makes it pretty clear Romney has the best shot to beat Obama which is why many Republicans are voting for him even if they have some disagreements with him.

I understand this Cawacko, but if Newt wins S Carolina, after Santorum won Iowa, how does Mitt keep up this facade of being inevitable? It almost seems like you are saying that any primary Mitt loses is meaningless; the only ones that count are the ones he wins.

And I understand that you and the people you know are betting on MItt because he has the best chance of beating Obama (the conventional wisdom at this point), but apparently this isn't exactly settled in the minds of many Republican primary voters yet.

We'll see what happens in S Carolina. If Mitt pulls that out then that along with his manufactured, media and power elite approved inevitability, will win him the nomination. I am a bit curious as so see what would happen and what you guys would be saying if he doesn't win S Carolina though, I have to admit. But with Newt's ex wife talking a mile a minute, the chances of that happening took a hit.
 
I understand this Cawacko, but if Newt wins S Carolina, after Santorum won Iowa, how does Mitt keep up this facade of being inevitable? It almost seems like you are saying that any primary Mitt loses is meaningless; the only ones that count are the ones he wins.

And I understand that you and the people you know are betting on MItt because he has the best chance of beating Obama (the conventional wisdom at this point), but apparently this isn't exactly settled in the minds of many Republican primary voters yet.

We'll see what happens in S Carolina. If Mitt pulls that out then that along with his manufactured, media and power elite approved inevitability, will win him the nomination. I am a bit curious as so see what would happen and what you guys would be saying if he doesn't win S Carolina though, I have to admit. But with Newt's ex wife talking a mile a minute, the chances of that happening took a hit.

I'm not sure if there is a correlation between one's politics and one's betting belief (please forgive me for the use of apostrophes, have been drinking heavily tonight very good buddy got named partner at Orrick Herrington) but I believe if Republicans were forced to bet who would win they would say Romney. As a Democrat I'm sure you would like the worst Republican candidate to win. Fair enough. But as you know even from 2008 the nomination may not be swode up in the first three primaries. Taking a total of the three states Romney still leads.
 
I'm not sure if there is a correlation between one's politics and one's betting belief (please forgive me for the use of apostrophes, have been drinking heavily tonight very good buddy got named partner at Orrick Herrington) but I believe if Republicans were forced to bet who would win they would say Romney. As a Democrat I'm sure you would like the worst Republican candidate to win. Fair enough. But as you know even from 2008 the nomination may not be swode up in the first three primaries. Taking a total of the three states Romney still leads.

No, I am not rooting for Newt to win. You never know what can happen in a general, however unlikely, and I believe him to be an extremely dangerous megalomaniac. I am just interested in how the right wing picks their candidates. It seems to me the money and power elite hand picked Mitt ages ago, and the double authoritarians in the base who need big daddies to take orders from, go right along with it. It's interesting to observe.

Sounds like fun Cawacko! (your night out I mean)
 
No, I am not rooting for Newt to win. You never know what can happen in a general, however unlikely, and I believe him to be an extremely dangerous megalomaniac. I am just interested in how the right wing picks their candidates. It seems to me the money and power elite hand picked Mitt ages ago, and the double authoritarians in the base who need big daddies to take orders from, go right along with it. It's interesting to observe.

Sounds like fun Cawacko! (your night out I mean)

(I'm always a good time but yes tonight was fun in honor of my friend). (I'm also an awesome wingman. I should have pretended to be one when I was single because all the women I guess can sense I'm taken and will actualy talk to me now...)

I'm a registered Republican Darla. I admire and respect the success Mitt had in private equity. As a politician he doesn't move me. And while the honest truth is I don't see that much difference between Romney and Obama I'd prefer the R to win by default. Therefore Romney is the best candidate. I'm a Republican and I think Newt and Santorum are not worthy candidates. They have too many faults. I think the best the R party has to offer is Chris Christie, Jed Bush and Mitch Daniels. None of them are running. Among the current candidates Romney has the best chance. Now granted many people follow Cawacko's lead but I think many came to the same conclusion as me on their own.
 
I didn't watch the debates, so I surfed some news sites for articles about it.

Was Ron Paul even there? If you go by the news articles he certainly was missing. I have seen 3 CNN articles that never mentioned him once. I'm typically not a conspiracy theorist, but the media seems bound and determined to give him no coverage.


And is it just me or is Newt looking more and more like one of the muppets from the theatre balconey?
 
(I'm always a good time but yes tonight was fun in honor of my friend). (I'm also an awesome wingman. I should have pretended to be one when I was single because all the women I guess can sense I'm taken and will actualy talk to me now...)

LOL I would love to see a video of you out for the night.
 
(I'm always a good time but yes tonight was fun in honor of my friend). (I'm also an awesome wingman. I should have pretended to be one when I was single because all the women I guess can sense I'm taken and will actualy talk to me now...)

I'm a registered Republican Darla. I admire and respect the success Mitt had in private equity. As a politician he doesn't move me. And while the honest truth is I don't see that much difference between Romney and Obama I'd prefer the R to win by default. Therefore Romney is the best candidate. I'm a Republican and I think Newt and Santorum are not worthy candidates. They have too many faults. I think the best the R party has to offer is Chris Christie, Jed Bush and Mitch Daniels. None of them are running. Among the current candidates Romney has the best chance. Now granted many people follow Cawacko's lead but I think many came to the same conclusion as me on their own.

Okay Big Daddy!
 
so, what was the big, explosive disclosure......I didn't watch the interview myself but there doesn't seem to be a lot of news about it this morning..........
 
It's awesome Newt puts teabaggers in a trance with channeling Palin's faux outrage at the elite media. King Kong fucking balls, the Clinton attack dog was asking his wife if he could have a mistriss after he fell in love with the ditz on the side.
Newt live to provide comedy a few more weeks. Thank you anti-education teabaggers, hate on the lamestreem media deserves it and the comedy channel is desperate for material.
 
I didn't watch the debates, so I surfed some news sites for articles about it.

Was Ron Paul even there? If you go by the news articles he certainly was missing. I have seen 3 CNN articles that never mentioned him once. I'm typically not a conspiracy theorist, but the media seems bound and determined to give him no coverage.


And is it just me or is Newt looking more and more like one of the muppets from the theatre balconey?


:rofl: I knew there was something vaguely familiar about him but I couldn't put my finger on it.
 
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I think Newt's wife is going to take a hit. Don't forget, she is auditioning for first lady. And while I think most people can turn a polite, blind eye to an extra-marital affair, this particular revelation is going to strike most women as, well, really skanky:

"Marianne Gingrich said she "knew" that her husband was unfaithful when he refused to answer yes or no when she asked him directly, but she said it was especially hurtful to learn later that Callista Bisek (now Gingrich) stayed in her bedroom in Washington with him, the same place her husband would call her from every night. "He always called me .. and always ended with 'I love you.' Well, she was listening," Marianne told ABC's Brian Ross, her voice dropping to a near whisper."

We all already know Newt's a disgusting pig, but wow on Callista. That's a bit beyond the pale IMO. Screwing another woman's husband in the woman's very own bed? Listening to the man you just screwed telling his wife he loves her? Can't really get my mind around this.

That's a skank. Sorry.
 
Yeah, I kinda think there is a NO SKANK POLIY in the White House!!!

Newt is going to get Cained without a reach around in slow motion and it's going to be better than watching the hangover!
 
I think Newt's wife is going to take a hit. Don't forget, she is auditioning for first lady. And while I think most people can turn a polite, blind eye to an extra-marital affair, this particular revelation is going to strike most women as, well, really skanky:

"Marianne Gingrich said she "knew" that her husband was unfaithful when he refused to answer yes or no when she asked him directly, but she said it was especially hurtful to learn later that Callista Bisek (now Gingrich) stayed in her bedroom in Washington with him, the same place her husband would call her from every night. "He always called me .. and always ended with 'I love you.' Well, she was listening," Marianne told ABC's Brian Ross, her voice dropping to a near whisper."

We all already know Newt's a disgusting pig, but wow on Callista. That's a bit beyond the pale IMO. Screwing another woman's husband in the woman's very own bed? Listening to the man you just screwed telling his wife he loves her? Can't really get my mind around this.

That's a skank. Sorry.

Newt says Marianne is lying!

Who are you going to believe?

Newt the horribly wronged victim of the despicable left wing media? Or the despicable left wing media that aggressively defends Obama by continuously assaulting innocent Republican candidates with questions?!?
 
Newt says Marianne is lying!

Who are you going to believe?

Newt the horribly wronged victim of the despicable left wing media? Or the despicable left wing media that aggressively defends Obama by continuously assaulting innocent Republican candidates with questions?!?

I almost always believe the woman. :) Some here claim that makes me a "sexist". I think it just makes me realistic!

She seemed quite believable IMO.
 
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