This Obama the rock star, Mr. holier than thou persona takes yet another gigantic leap into the absurd as if you thought that couldn't be possible with his "Greek God From Hollywood"set in front of 80,000 suckers tonight, and this whole Football stadium love fest will prove to be the most monumentally ridiculous waste of money and precious public resources ever in presidential politics for the eventual losing candidate.
How this continuous ridiculousness translates into a better man for the job is beyond me, and hopefully most Americans see through the latest "I am the King" imagery and choose the right man for president, which at this juncture in history is definitavely not him.
Invesco Field Roman Obama Coliseum...
http://elections.foxnews.com/...
Is this really necessary? Even the normally viscous loons at Daily Kos think Obama's gone way over the top with all this Anointed One imagery which is a sign that they at least manage to have some semblance of intelligence left.
Invesco Fiasco
Obama seeks a personal touch within a huge stadium:My Way News - "DENVER (AP) - Barack Obama aims to weave the personal with the political Thursday as he explains to 75,000 supporters in a massive stadium - and millions more at home - how as president he would make a difference in their lives.The sweep of history provided weight to words yet spoken: The previous evening Obama became the first black man to be a major political party's presidential candidate, and his acceptance of the Democratic nomination comes on the 45th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I Have a Dream' speech.Obama's unique personal story was sure to be included in his acceptance address Thursday night. Still, he also planned to talk about problems facing Americans today, from health care and education to international threats, campaign manager David Plouffe said.'I think what Sen. Obama wants to do is make sure everyone watching at home is going to have a clear sense of where he wants to take the country, that we're on the wrong path and Barack Obama is going to put us back on the right track both here at home and overseas,' Plouffe told ABC's 'Good Morning America.'John McCain, Obama's Republican rival, offered mild criticism ahead of Obama's speech, saying Thursday that he admires and respects Obama but 'I don't think he's right for America.' continued
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