Here it is , October of 09 and Obama STILL isn't for real. We have teleprompter "it's gonna" "we're gonna" I'm gonna" and his ME,MY, I as he spends. Iraq is not concluded yet--just removed from press coverage. He was going to get the terrorists in Afgahnistan but now--NOPE! Stay tuned!
The health care bid isn't in writing..he wont share it on the web...and it's about lawyers making money any way! not health care!
Spend money! The economic stimulus didn't ,and cash for clunkers was a clunker way to stimulate or auto industry.
Cap and trade is a major tax to come! Only that and we now see ACORN was vote rigging on a grand scale! We only touched the tip of the iceberg on this!
Now he got the Nobel Peace prize and maybe he should give it to the person who really won it!
The Obamaprompter is a stuffed suit! More Americans will catch on in the months ahead!
HEY! Has anyone been saving our oil industry with tire gauges,out there? How's it working?
In His Candidate’s Voice
The speech lit a fire. Meet Obama's editor.
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Jon Favreau has the worst and the best job in political speechwriting. His boss is a best-selling author who doesn't really need his help, having written the 2004 speech that catapulted him onto the national stage. At the same time, the same boss also happens to be capable of delivering a speech in ways that can give his audience the goosebumps.
But Barack Obama is more than a little busy campaigning across Iowa and New Hampshire right now. So it was Favreau who led the team that wrote Obama's victory speech in Des Moines last week—a moment that prompted the TV pundits to drop months of skepticism about Obama's candidacy to make breathless comparisons with the Kennedy era.
For Favreau, a 26-year-old jean-clad staffer (who is no relation to the comedian of "Swingers" fame) who worked in Obama's senate office, the contrast with the 2004 election could not be starker.
Back then Jon Favreau had one of the worst jobs on the Kerry campaign. He was the kid who put together "the audio clips"—the bundle of overnight stories that helped the campaign's senior staff get up to speed on the latest radio news. A graduate of Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., he had interned in Kerry's senate office and joined the campaign right out of college.
When Kerry's campaign showed signs of imploding—before recovering again in Iowa—Favreau was one of the few people left in the office when they needed a new speechwriter. "They couldn't afford to hire one," he recalled. "And they couldn't find anyone who wanted to come in when we were about to lose to Dean. So I became deputy speechwriter, even though I had no previous experience."
When Kerry lost in 2004, Favreau thought he was finished with politics. "After the Kerry campaign, after all the backbiting and nastiness, my idealism and enthusiasm for politics was crushed," he said. "I was grateful for the experience I got, but it was such a difficult
experience, along with losing, that I was done. It took Barack to rekindle that."
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