Re: Buckwheat Punks Hitlary, Quotes Bubba-Stiffy as Support



Wake up ***, Hillary is going to win the nomination.

Big question if she can win the WH, but she already has the nod on the
ticket.


"Patriot Games" <Patriot@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:46fe7ef3$0$32518$4c368faf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

http://www.newsmax.com/insidecover/obama_bill_clinton/2007/09/29/36777.html

Obama Seeks Support Quoting Bill Clinton

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Democratic presidential hopeful Barrack Obama said Saturday his public
service experience trumps that of rival Hillary Rodham Clinton's, and he
tried to use her husband's words to make his point.

Obama, a first-term senator from Illinois, said his background as a
community organizer, lawyer, professor and state senator is more valuable
than Hillary Clinton's experience "working the system" as first lady and
in
other roles.

In doing so, Obama tried to throw former President Clinton's words back at
him, quoting comments Bill Clinton made in a 1992 debate with the first
President Bush.

"The same old experience is not relevant. ... And you can have the right
kind of experience and the wrong kind of experience," Clinton said at the
time.

"He's exactly right," Obama said at a rally. "What we need to do is put an
end to the wrong kind of experience."

Obama cited his success in helping to enact campaign finance reform as an
Illinois legislator and an ethics overhaul while in the U.S. Senate. He
said
the nation does not need "the kind of experience that tinkers around the
edges instead of doing something fundamental about how lobbyists operate
in
Washington."

"We need the kind of experience that I think I bring to this race, of
bringing people together to get things done," he said.

In a recent television interview, Bill Clinton was asked to compare
questions about Obama's experience with similar questions he faced when he
ran for the White House in 1992.

Clinton noted that he was governor of Arkansas at the time, when the major
issue of the day was not a foreign war but restoring the economy. He said
he
was closer to Obama in experience in 1988, when he decided not to enter
the
presidential race.

"And I really didn't think I knew enough, and had served enough and done
enough to run," he told Bloomberg Television. "That doesn't mean that he
shouldn't. That's his decision."





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