Yeah, since it is on Huffpo and the great liberal comedian John Stewart said it, clearly seals the deal.
The jewish guy who pretends not to be Jewish by changing his name for showbiz purposes is THE be-all and end all for this discussion.
I'd say that Stewart is doing all he can to try and protect HIS guy because he knows how bad that gaffe was. In Washington, a gaffe = accidently telling what you believe. Most of us saw who Obama really IS and what he believes. Remember that Alinsky said that ridicule is the most potent weapon. Only, this time it isn't working. Most of us saw right through the empty suit and his words.
I still can't figure out why so many young folks think that they are getting 'news' from Stewart and Colbert.
Perhaps you'd be better served by reading just WHERE this 'you didn't build it' narrative came from. This was no gaffe but rather the progressive movement's messaging.
http://legalinsurrection.com/2012/07/oba...professor/
Quote:This narrative is cribbed almost verbatim from the narrative of George Lakoff, a progressive linguistics activist and Professor at Berkeley. Like Warren, Lakoff was one of the academics who helped frame how the Occupy Wall Street movement presented itself. Lakoff’s writings and theories seek to transform progressive politics and he is a frequent speaker on how progressives can reframe the political debate.
Again, another example of the far left's obsession with semantics and word games to make a despicable ideology appear nice (and 'fair' to the losers in life).
Quote:The approach of Elizabeth Warren and Barack Obama is a cribbed narrative of the progressive movement which seeks to realign our individual-centered political dialogue around the individual’s indebtedness to the government.
The louder they scream about this, the more effect it is having. If you are getting flack, you are over the target. Obama seems peeved that somebody would dare quote his own words against him. (Dang - where's my teleprompter?) It's getting under his skin and he is losing support. Can't remember which poll it was, but his support among business folks is at 35% and dropping.