October 25, 2009

Passing Health Care – and McCain’s wife is a ****???

By citizen
Topics:
Healthcare

Hey McCain! Speaking of the Clinto Failure, which you commonly do, wouldn’t you agree the world seemed a better place back then?

I understand thast every administration has its failures…but I just find it ironic that you can often speak of the Clinton administrations failure, but never seem to mention any form the Bush administration.  Maybe you’re just an angry old man, and even more angry after not just losing, but getting your ass wiped all over the U.S. of A in the presidential elections.  

Don’t be angry at anyone else for your mistakes, we didn’t ask you to choose the most ridiculous and embarrassing political partner to run with you.  (Although I do extend my gratitude to you, for I began to watch SNL from that point on)

“At least I don’t plaster on the makeup like a trollop, you c*nt.” –to his wife, Cindy, after she playfully twirled his hair and said “You’re getting a little thin up there,” as reported in the bookThe Real McCain by Cliff Schecter (Watch spoof video

Oh McCain, to your own wife Mindy?  I mean Cindy.  Or is it Wendy?  I confuse them like I do that number of homes you own.

McCain: Dems Will Pass Health Care, “Blue Dogs Bark But Never Bite”



Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/25/mccain-dems-will-pass-hea_n_333001.html

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) predicted on Sunday that health care reform would pass, while a fellow Republican senator was more skeptical.

Appearing on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” McCain said that the man he battled for the presidency in 2008 had “the vote” now to get health care legislation through Congress.

“I think that Blue Dogs bark but never bite, so I don’t think they have a problem over in the House side,” said the Arizona Republican. “I think in the Senate, Democrats are very aware that they don’t want a repeat of the Clinton failure in 1994. So I think it is likely they will get something through but it is not clear to me what it is.”

McCain went on to whack the president for abandoning a campaign pledge to hold deliberations around health care in transparent, public settings. “The fact is there has been no change,” he said. “There is a room where there are a few Democrats in it and some administration officials and they are writing this entire bill. I don’t think the American people like that very much.”

But the key takeaway from his Sunday morning interview was his belief that health care would pass — almost assuredly with either one or no Republican supporters. Sen. Orrin Hatch, (R-Utah) wouldn’t go quite as far as his colleague, predicting simply that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) would bring the public option to a vote.

“We know that the process is going to go there,” the Utah Republican told CNN’s “State of the Union” with John King.

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