This election is something else, isn't? I mean we have both sides of the political fence just foaming at the mouth like rabid dogs at each other simply barking up a storm. Everyday it's more of the same. One day someones getting accused of wanting to be like Jesus and on the next day the other guy is getting flack because he just put lipstick on a pig. Ridiculous! That's what it is, all of it. I know we go through this every four years and each time we complain about how the candidates keep skirting the issues instead to talk about Vietnam boating trips, or something like that. But this time around it's almost like both candidates have this "come with me if you want to live!" mentality. It's almost like they think there ain't gonna be a next time so buddy, you had better strap up and jump on cause the train to shangri-la is leaving and if your not on it, well tough, cause when were gone the first horseman is gonna nuke your sorry tail and when your lying there in a pile of ash don't come crying to me because I tried to warn you that the other guy didn't have enough experience!
"Vote for me, vote for me, vote for me!" they say. "Only we know how to give someone free pills, we are the only one that can hog tie the country together, Only we know the secret to world peace. It's not that hard to end a war. We know the secret," one says, "because we studied with the great political master in mountains of Saskatchewan. I snatched that stone from his hand, that stone is mine. I waxed on and waxed off till my political skills are notorious. I have to register my politics in any state I go because it is a lethal weapon. I could swiftly end your debate quickly from just ten paces away, I cannot miss."
"Oh yeah?", the other would reply. "Well your party killed my father when I was just a little boy and now it's time to exact my revenge." And then they would fight, ravaging the land with they're mayhem. Style vs. style, discipline vs. discipline, bucking donkey vs. charging elephant. This would go on non stop for several days as they continue to get more bruised and more bloody, neither combatant showing signs of giving in. They would stop to monologue just long enough to give the impression that something sensible was going on. When suddenly Barack Obama would learn that John McCain was his Father. This being a truth to much for the world to take they would agree to finally to form the ultimate dream ticket. They would put their magic rings together and join their forces vanquishing the free world from all evil.
Come on! Who do you take us for? were not stupid! John McRib and Obama Rama might as well join forces because we'd be getting just about the same choice we have now. It's insane what's going on.
Thank goodness for the third party. Ah yes, the awkward friend that's pleased to hang around despite the ridicule and indifference that it endures. It's really sad what the third party has to go through in the name respect. That's why I'm always pleased when the third party strikes out in a victory.
No, I'm not giving breaking news that somehow Bob Barr's numbers somehow jumped miraculously
a thousand percent but it is something almost as satisfying. This last Wednesday Republican outsider Ron Paul and Independent Ralph Nader appeared on The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer and presented a strong case against the current campaigning process in America.
Here's how it went down:
BLITZER: Let's talk about what's going on right now with third party candidates. Joining us here in THE SITUATION ROOM is Ron Paul, the congressman himself. And he's here, together with the Independent presidential candidate, Ralph Nader.
Gentlemen, thanks very much for coming in.
REP. RON PAUL (R), TEXAS: You're welcome.
BLITZER: All right. Tell our viewers, Congressman, why you decided to reject your fellow Republican, John McCain.
PAUL: He doesn't represent anything I believe in. You know, I represent -- I believe what Republicans should believe, and I campaigned on that and got a lot of support. But I can't support somebody that virtually disagrees with all my positions.
BLITZER: What about Barack Obama?
PAUL: Well, I don't think he agrees any more. And I don't see any difference between the two candidates.
I know there's a lot. You have to have a horse race going, and you have to talk about something, but really there's no difference.
And that was part of -- we think the system is very biased. Our system doesn't allow alternative candidates, third party candidates. But the debate isn't there either because they pick on little things. And the issues that we picked out, we hardly hear anything from the candidates.
BLITZER: So is it fair to say -- you want a third party candidate to win. Would that candidate be the man sitting next to you right here in THE SITUATION ROOM, Ralph Nader?
PAUL: Ralph is a good friend. But we agree on tactics and what we're doing, and we agree on these very important issues, but quite frankly, he probably won't have joined my campaign and I probably won't join his campaign.
BLITZER: So you won't vote for him?
PAUL: No, I don't plan to. But I plan...
BLITZER: Who do you want to vote for?
PAUL: ... to get as many votes for him as possible because it will take the votes away from Obama. And that's where we have the agreement.
BLITZER: So you want to stop Obama, is that what you're saying?
PAUL: Well, no, I want to change the system. I want Ralph Nader and the third party candidates, all of them, to be in the debate. I mean, that's the only debate.
There's no debate going on. This is a ritual. This is a charade.
BLITZER: Let's bring in Ralph Nader.
What's your goal right now? You're not going to be elected president of the United States. You know that. Ron Paul knows that. What is your goal in aligning yourself, in effect, with Ron Paul?
RALPH NADER (I), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Well, if we're in the presidential debates, it might be a Jesse Ventura, a three-way race. But -- and yet today, we put together...
BLITZER: Three presidential debates, but the Presidential Debate Commission has set a bar that's pretty hard for you to overcome.
NADER: Yes, since it's controlled by the two parties, as you know. Today I think it was a historic day because we, Ron Paul and the candidate for the Green Party, the candidate for the Constitution Party, and me and Bob Barr agreed on four major areas: foreign policy, get the soldiers back, end the war in Iraq, stop being imperialistic, privacy, deal with the repeal of the Patriot Act, the revision of FISA, the Military Commissions Act, and, you know, get rid of torture. And a third is the national debt. You know, deficits are now used for reckless government adventurism.
BLITZER: The national debt has nearly doubled over the last eight years.
NADER: Yes. And the Iraq war is financed from deficit spending.
BLITZER: And the fourth issue?
NADER: And the fourth issue is the Federal Reserve is now a government within a government. It is totally out of control. Congress doesn't control it. It's funded by the banks.
And we either have constitutional government or we don't. Because of this, Wolf, here's the question: Is there anything left for the American people to decide about their country?
BLITZER: Here is what the CNN/Opinion Research/"TIME" magazine poll shows in two key battleground states right now. In Michigan, 45 Obama, 42 McCain. Ralph Nader, 6 percent; Bob Barr, 2 percent; Cynthia McKinney 1 percent.
In New Hampshire, another battleground state, Obama, 48; McCain, 43; Nader, 4 percent; Bob Barr, 2 percent.
You know the accusations, Ralph Nader, that were leveled against you in 2000, that you stole the election, in effect, from Al Gore. He would have carried Florida if you had not been a candidate. You got 90,000-plus votes in Florida. He lost by 500 votes.
What do you say to those people who are saying you're just trying to spoil this election right now for Barack Obama?
NADER: I say two things. They're factually wrong about 2000. If you ask Al Gore why he lost, he'll say it was the Electoral College because he won the popular vote and it was stolen in a variety of ways before, during and after Election Day, from Tallahassee to the five politicians on the Supreme Court.
Now, I have news for you. The last four major polls, when they poll Obama and McCain, and then they poll Obama, McCain and they put Nader/Gonzalez in the poll, McCain does worse. Does worse.
BLITZER: But you think your presence hurts McCain more than Obama?
NADER: That's what the polls say.
BLITZER: What do you think? BLITZER: And it's explained on our Web site, votenader.org.
PAUL: I have no idea. We have to wait and see. But some people say, well, you're going to hurt McCain. And I'm not hurting anybody. But I expect that they'll be as many votes, maybe they will come from the liberals that will vote for him.
BLITZER: Ron Paul, you and I...
(CROSSTALK)
NADER: It's the two parties that are hurting our country.
BLITZER: I want both of you to answer honestly. And both of you are straight forward, you have nothing to hide. Give me your honest assessment right now.
Who is the lesser of two evils right now, John McCain or Barack Obama?
PAUL: I don't do that. Evil is evil.
If you vote for one that you think is a little less, actually you get tricked into that. You think that you vote for a Republican to balance the budget, and they're worse than the Democrats. That's what the people are sick and tired of. You vote for the Democrats to end the war and they expand the war as much as the Republicans.
BLITZER: I'll rephrase the question for Ralph Nader.
Who is the lesser of two bads right now?
NADER: The lesser of two bads is not good enough for the American people. We need the best.
BLITZER: But you agree -- you've been watching politics all these years -- it's unrealistic to assume a third party candidate is going to be elected president of the United States.
NADER: No, but we can push the two parties to address what's troubling the American people economically, politically, socially for their children and the world.
BLITZER: So your goal is to get these four issues on the agenda. And on these four issues that you're talking about, who is better, which of these two presidential candidates?
NADER: They're both bad on these four issues. The great constitutional questions about who's going to run this country in all kinds of ways, the people, or the domination of the corporations over our government, are off the table for McCain and Obama.
BLITZER: So one final question for Ron Paul.
You say you're not necessarily going to vote for Ralph Nader, but you want a lot of your supporters to vote for Ralph Nader. Will you go out there and do what you so successfully did during the primarily campaign, raise money on the Internet for these third party candidates?
PAUL: Probably not, because it's tough raising money for somebody else. We're doing this for some congressional candidates, and it's not as easy as when you're the candidate himself.
So I don't think I will do that. But I want to be engaged in the issues and try to push this country, but I really want the American people to wake up and challenge the system. You can't get in the debates, you can't get on the ballots, the parties are the same. There's really no choice in the system. We don't have good democratic process here.
We go overseas and fight wars to promote democracy. At the same time, we listen to these glib debates going on that's really irrelevant to these four important issues. That's what our goal is.
NADER: Which our majority support.
BLITZER: And we're going to focus in on those issues, because we want to make sure that we get to the bottom of these critical issues for all of our viewers. Ron Paul, Ralph Nader, thanks for coming in.
NADER: Thank you, Wolf.
BLITZER: Some might say you're the ultimate odd couple, but I'll leave that for some of the commentators and pundits.
NADER: Talk to the American people.
BLITZER: We'll see what they say.
NADER: Check out constitutional safeguards. That's the key here.
BLITZER: Thanks guys.
NADER: Thank you.
PAUL: All right.
How awesome was that. That is exactly what the mainstream media needs to hear. What more can I say? Here's to you guys, here's to you.
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