You can support the rape apologist all you want.
So now someone is not allowed to support a candidate just because you oppose the other one more?
So now someone is not allowed to support a candidate just because you oppose the other one more?
Wait, a default on the national debt is your best case scenario? What's the worst case?If we win the Senate and hold the House, while Obama sneaks through, there is a pretty fair chance that the next time the debt limit issue comes up we can force the country into default and save it. I'll take my chances with Akin's ignorance for a shot at a blissful ending.
I've never understood why blanking one letter turns a curse into an acceptable word, anyway.IIRC you're allowed to curse on the internet.
I honestly still think Akin wins actually, but it won't be because he got help from the establishment.
If you drive through rural Missouri you'll see a lot of Todd Akin signs.
Because he's mainstream in the GOP![]()
So, how could Akin win? Since 2008, Missouri has swung as hard to the right as has any state in the country. First there are long term demographic shifts at play - not exactly a new trend, but an accelerating one. In a nutshell, ascendant conservative Republican legislators have repelled gays, immigrants, and young, mobile progressives, just as the continuing growth of Branson, Mo. (the live music capital of the world) and the conservative Springfield metro area have attracted hordes of conservative evangelicals and retirees. It was a vicious cycle: the more retrograde the political debate, the more progressives left Missouri or avoided it in the first place. And the more progressives disappeared, the more conservative the electorate became, and the more reactionary the debate. The burgeoning strength of grassroots conservatives in Missouri became apparent in 2010 when Republicans rode the wave to legislative majorities of 106-57 and 26-8 in the state House and Senate, respectively.
Not only is Southern Missouri strongly evangelical, but much of the heavily Catholic St. Louis metro area is strongly pro-life as well. And socio-political life in much of the region - especially the conservative areas of South St. Louis city and County - revolves around the parish church. This gives the anti-abortion movement a rare one-two. rural-urban punch, something it lacks in most states outside the South, and explains how Rick Santorum walloped Mitt Romney 55 percent to 25 percent in the Missouri presidential primary. It also explains how someone with Akin’s primitive views could possibly remain competitive.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81743.html#ixzz27gbRmDKS
There's a politico article how Akin could still win.
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81743.html
So then it's a reverse of what's happened in OT?
It used to have more than one conservative that could hold his own in a debate.Did OT used to be more conservative?
Did OT used to be more conservative?
It used to have more than one conservative that could hold his own in a debate.
It's kind of hard to tell if the nutty far-right Akin is bringing down the ticket or phony Romney who is much more liberal than the character he's putting forward to his audience.
Of course he isnt a rape and incest type, so long as the womenfolk are "legitimately" raped they wont get pregnant anyways! If they do get pregnant clearly they are just boy who cried wolfing the situation.
So now someone is not allowed to support a candidate just because you oppose the other one more?
My comment, however, was basically that if you make the rape exception, it seems to be more to punish sex than it is to really protect innocent human life, because if its about innocent human life, like it is for me, and not about punishing women, it shouldn matter WHY she's pregnant.
Comments by Republican Todd Akin once again are stirring controversy, this time with a claim that U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill was not acting "ladylike" during their recent debate.
Akin said Thursday that McCaskill's demeanor during last week's debate differed vastly from her 2006 campaign against Jim Talent, which he contends demonstrates she thinks he's going to win this fall.