Are we supporting Bam? Is he the right manager for the economy and war?

Ambrose Aban:
Many of you queers have asked me this: Are you supporting Obama? It is always hard for me to say, yes or no. Yes because of his message of hope and change at the begining when he was campaigning against Hillary. No because McCain is way more experienced, more decisiive, crisp, clearer, and more to the point. McCain uses none of that deep, profound speech to get his messages across. It is always easy to understand McCain than Obama. McCain is not going to support same sex marriage. At least he means it and being honest about it, and risk losing the gay votes for being honest about it. McCain even said that he would rather lost in November than losing the war.

Chris Goodrige:
Obama should just stop saying anything about hope and change. He should just go on saying that things are going to suck less. That's all. But for some of you Americans, it is too late...

Phil Spencer:
Obama is becoming more and more unbelievable. At the recent forum on values and faith, which was chaired by an evangelical pastor, Rick Warren, Obama was swallowed alive by McCain although the media still think he is still the better candidate. On top of that, the media (and his camp) accused McCain of cheating. And the worst -- he took McCain's $5 million joke seriously only to show his weakness and his inability to accept he is the weaker one.

Ambrose Aban:
Many of my American friends, gays included, have said that Obama is, bit by bit, showing that he is not the strategic manager for the economy and war. Just like McCain, Obama is not supporting same-sex marriage, just so you know. He even said it clearer than McCain last Saturday.

Jefferey Johnson:
So true. When you look at his face when he answered the question, he was forcing himself to say what he said. It was totally not believable. So, like many of you gays out there, of course I'm supporting Obama. But as an observer, I think McCain is the right manager for our ailing economy, the war, and healthcare. Actually since his primary days with Hillary, many of Obama's answers about same-sex marriage, economy and healthcare, war, etc, have not sat well with me, too.


George Tyler:

What’s very sad and true is, I don’t believe him at all. I think he will fail without Hillary Clinton (and Bill) in the White House. But Obama is trying to win an election by being “centrist.” At the expense of my rights and yours as well.

Phil Spencer:
But we cannot have another Bush in there for the next four years or eight years.

Jefferey Johnson:
I don't think McCain is going to be like Bush. And I don't Obama is going to be like Bill Clinton, either. They are all different in their approach and the way they think and do things. Obama or McCain (whoever is winning in November) will be advised and assisted by so many people in the White House. The new president will not make his own decision. The war by Bush was not Bush's fault 100% although people think that it was 101% his wrongdoing. It was not. And Obama knows that.

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