
by: Bill Dupray posted: 2008-12-29 10:34:00
Viewed 2512 times. 12 Comments.
Reuters breathlessly calls him uber-cool.
The president-elect, looking uber-cool with his White Sox baseball cap on backwards, flipped the shaka to a crowd of about 30 people as he left a gym on a Marine Corps base on the Hawaiian island of Oahu, where he is vacationing.
Funny, I don't allow my kids to wear the baseball cap backwards. Just always seemed to me like a thuggish, punk look. And yet Reuters just thinks it's awesome.
Is This a President?

Tags: Obama, Barack Obama,
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I wonder how many Marines had their daily work-out disrupted so the gym could be cleared to allow The One to do his exercise routine?
Oh, and by the way... Real Men smoke Camel non-filters!
What's worse -- the adoring msm or their rock star/messiah? Just too cool for me, I guess.
And a White Sox fan, to boot. ;)
he looks like a girl from the hood - one of the punks that deals only bigger weight and doesn't use.
what a pathetic sight.
Dunno Bill, I dont think it matters what the hell he wears on vacation. That should be kept pretty private in my opinion. Bush wore a cowboy hat and there were people who probably had a problem with that too - but I doubt its anything we should be privied too.
If he was wearing a Che t-shirt, thats another story.
It probably doesn't matter what he wears on vacation. It matters more than a little that purportedly serious news organizations are using the kind of girly gushtalk usually confined to notes passed in junior high (or, in this century, texted with heavy use of emoticons). Seriously, they'll nominate him for the Nobel Prize for Economics if he can calculate the tip right in the Oval Room.
PS: I still love Leif Garrett. Now HE is uber-cool;)
'The One' is sooo uber cool he also 'pulled off' the traditional 'Shaka' greeting. In case you're not cool enough to know what that is, let NewsMax can help you out:
The hand gesture, also a common greeting in surfer culture, consists of curling the three middle fingers and extending the thumb and little finger.
At least he didn't use his traditional gesture:
http://thedemocraticdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/obama-finger.jpg
I don't mind the backwards hat myself, in principal. However, it doesn't look very presidential does it?
Challenge, can anyone prove this wrong?:–
1. Constitution Article II requires USA President to be “natural born citizen”.
2. BHO’s website admits his dad was Kenyan/British, not American, citizen when BHO was born.
3. BHO is therefore not a “natural born citizen” (irrespective of Hawaiian birth or whether he may be a 14th Amendment “citizen” of USA) — as confirmed in the Senate’s own McCain qualification resolution agreed to by BHO.
4. Supreme Court has already docketed two upcoming conferences, 1/9/09 and 1/16/09 — between dates Congress counts electoral votes (1/8/09) and Presidential inauguration (1/20/09) — to address Berg Case and fashion relief on BHO’s eligibility to be President.
5. Since no facts are in dispute, Supreme Court rules on Summary Judgment to enjoin BHO’s inauguration as President.
6. Therefore, BHO is not inaugurated as President.
7. Vice President Elect Biden is inaugurated Acting President under the 20th Amendment to serve until new President is determined — the procedure for which determination to be set out by Congress and/or the Supreme Court so long as in conformance with the Constitution.
Natural born citizen means that you are born here in the united states or on US territory, such as a military member has a child on a US base over seas. Has nothing to do with your parents. It is the reason so many illegal immigrants want their children born here.
It is for this reason that Obama's birth certificate is in question, as only THAT can prove that he is a natural born citizen.
ted, my first reaction is that you state that SCOTUS passes "summary judgment," that presumes that SCOTUS is acting as a trial court - that it holds original jurisdiction in these matters. that is not my understanding.
my understanding is that the several SOS's at the state level are the targets of the suits. the substance being that they cannot place an unqualified person on the ballot. that the prospective ballotee (?) must affirmatively support their qualifications for the office they seek. the SOSs have thus far not done that.
the SCOTUS cases are a matter of law - do the SOSs have to require the affirmative qualification by prospective ballotees? if the answer is yes, then bambi needs to produce the cert. if the answer is no, then anybody can run for anything - and it will take some evidentiary standard - preponderance, etc - in order for the burden of proof to shift from the claimant back to the prospective ballotee.
that is my understanding of these cases. so summary judgment? no. off-point. i thin berg's issue - and you may be bringing that in here - is that he filed requests for admissions which were ignored. that means that there are no material issues in controversy. i doubt it would happen, but in theory, you could see SCOTUS directing the trial court to conduct further proceedings consistent with appropriately filed and unresponded to ROAs. THAT would be the basis for filing for a summary judgment.
does that help?
Wow bill you dont let your kids wear their hats a certain way thats pretty rediculous and you and everyone else here should be ashamed of wasting your lives argueing over how he wears his hatas and also should be ashamed of being destroyed by a little kid
good day america
I wouldn't want my fingerprints on anything this administration or congress proposes. Reid told reporters the bill would be introduced on Tuesday, and that it would include an extension of the tax breaks... Reid did not say how expensive the jobs bill would be. The Senate had been considering a package of roughly $80 billion. The House passed a larger jobs bill before Christmas, but now plans to unveil a different bill independent of that package, which did not garner Republican support.
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Back in November, the House passed its health care bill by a narrow 220 to 215 margin, with 39 Democrats voting against it. Since then, the one Republican who voted for it — Joseph Cao — has indicated that he would not support the bill a second time around given the weaker language on abortion in the Senate version. In addition, Florida Rep. Robert Wexler already retired prematurely. Factor in Murtha’s death today, and Pelosi is down to 217 votes — one short of passage. To pass the bill at some point in the next few months, she’ll need to flip a Democrat who is already on record voting against the bill.
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Don't think that Republicans can't be sucked in when an anti-Wall Street lynch mob gets its blood up. Recall that Sarbanes-Oxley, the devastating antigrowth response in 2002 to the Enron and Worldcom scandals, was passed with virtually unanimous support by Republicans in Congress, and signed by a Republican president. Recall that last year 85 House Republicans voted for a 90% tax on bonuses for any employee of any bank that took more than $5 billion in TARP money. Investors got some good news last Friday. Stocks resisted following through on Thursday's sharp plunge after (Congress) reached an impasse on bank re-regulation. That's a nice down payment on what investors need a lot more of now: proof that the GOP won't join Democrats in a populist rush to seek revenge against Wall Street.
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Just two years after Mr. Obama helped his party pull in record Wall Street contributions — $89 million from the securities and investment business, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics — some of his biggest supporters, like Mr. Dimon, have become the industry’s chief lobbyists against his regulatory agenda. Republicans are rushing to capitalize on what they call Wall Street’s “buyer’s remorse” with the Democrats. And industry executives and lobbyists are warning Democrats that if Mr. Obama keeps attacking Wall Street “fat cats,” they may fight back by withholding their cash.
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The Dow, down almost 104 points, had its 10th triple-digit move in 16 trading days. Shares of big banks pulled the market lower, extending a slump that has led to four straight weekly losses.I can't, for the life of me, understand why bank stocks would be dropping. Inexplicable.
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Contrary to President Obama's promises, voters say special interests have more influence on the political process now than they did a year ago, according to a new poll. The poll, paid for by groups looking to curb the Supreme Court's recent campaign finance ruling, found that majorities of both Republicans and Democrats say special interests have increased their influence since the president took office, and they say Mr. Obama has not done enough to fight back.
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If the starting point for this meeting is the job-killing bills the American people have already soundly rejected, Republicans would rightly be reluctant to participate,” the pair explained in a letter to White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel. They also said President Barack Obama should remove reconciliation from the table. Using budget reconciliation rules to move healthcare reform in the Senate would mean Democrats would only need 51 votes on procedural measures instead of 60... On Sunday afternoon however, Obama refused to say he would start from scratch.
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An announcement from his office said Murtha died at 1:18 p.m. at the Virginia Hospital Center, where he had been admitted last week after having his gallbladder removed at Bethesda Naval Hospital.
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The scientist at the centre of the “climategate” email scandal has revealed that he was so traumatised by the global backlash against him that he contemplated suicide. Jones, 57, said he was unprepared for the scandal: “I am just a scientist. I have no training in PR or dealing with crises.”Actually, he's using the term "scientist" loosely there, given that real scientists don't do what he did. And while he may not have any training dealing with crises, he sure was good at generating one: it was called the global warming crisis.
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But he's wearing a "swoosh" tee and prolly smokes Kools 'cuz he de man.