[olug] OT: evil poll

T. J. Brumfield enderandrew at gmail.com
Thu Oct 30 00:17:51 UTC 2008


I'd pick Australia.  They have mixed US-democracy with English common
law.  Their parliament can't take money of any kind, but are well
paid.  Juries determine right and wrong as opposed to legal and
illegal.  And all the other Marines used to rave about the women in
Australia.

-- T. J.

On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 7:14 PM, Craig Wolf <cjwolf at mpsomaha.org> wrote:
> I firmly believe that this country is going to hell in a hand basket quickly.  I have started to consider what other country in the world I could handle living in because of the direction we are headed.  Don't get me wrong, I love my country, I did 10 years in the military, and maintain my flag on my house BUT I do NOT believe the the rich leaders we have, have us in their hearts.  I see power hungry, greedy individuals that just need me for one day every 4 years to get their rocks off.  That includes BOTH parties.
>
> I am putting my vote where my mind and heart tell me is someone that would treat us better, or at least with more respect.  If I wanted to live in a communist country I would move REALLY far east to a Russian area (so, extreme on the Democratic side).  If I wanted to live in a Nationalist country...hmmmm, still moving east I guess (extreme Republican side).  I just want to live my life without the interference of a govt. that could care less about me then they care about how many taxes they can suck out of me and grow a bureaucratic mess.
>
> I am just tired of the asses and fat animals in general.  Put someone else in their and make the 2 parties consider what is REALLY important to the life blood of this country and not what is going to get them elected.
>
>>>> Sam Tetherow <tetherow at shwisp.net> 10/29/08 5:54 PM >>>
> glassbooth.org?
>
> It matched me about 80% with  Bob Barr which didn't surprise me much.  I
> am surprised at the lack of Obama support on the list though.  The tech
> field usually tends so far to the left.
>
> For those not voting for McCain or Obama, I'm curious about your
> reasoning.  Obviously your candidate will not win, do you still vote for
> them because you are trying to send a message to those running for
> office that there is support for their ideas or do you refuse to vote
> for someone you don't support?
>
> For the record I'm voting McCain.
>
>    Sam Tetherow
>    Sandhills Wireless
>
> Thomas D. Williamson wrote:
>> When the primaries were still going on there was a web site that asked
>> about forty questions on policies the various candidates held and then
>> gave a list of candidates that came closest to matching the list. When
>> I was done there was no candidate that match all my issues exactly of
>> those who were candidates I think the list was something like this:
>>
>> Dennis Kucinich
>> John Edwards
>> Hilary Clinton
>> Barack Obama
>>
>> I did hear an interview with Ron Paul, and although I did not agree
>> with his policies, I felt on the principles he spoke of he would have
>> been a more interesting candidate to follow.
>>
>> So for the actual election next week I will be voting for Obama.
>>
>> Tom Williamson
>>
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