Muscatine

A little bit about a lot of things

Posted in: Muscatine

 

I have no obligation to prove what you present. BTW brainiac Fox is your other ego, FOX is the topic.Wink

 

I did not present anything, dummy. That's the point! DUH! We get to keep considering you a proven-again LIAR because you cannot prove you are NOT a liar!!!

 

You certainly are under no obligation to prove you are not a liar; however, I get to enjoy knowing I have beat you at your own game again, don't I?

 

 "We do understand why you enjoy FOX."  A posted sentence by you, davieboy, that cannot be proven.

 

"You want people to believe..." Another lie by you, davie. You cannot prove what I want.

 

See all these words you did not utter, davie? They are all lies.

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An important "extract" from the Rasmussen report in the link above:

 

"Sixty-eight percent (68%) of Republicans and 62% of unaffiliated voters say media bias is the bigger problem in politics, a view shared by just 37% of Democrats. The plurality (46%) of Democrats says campaign contributions are a bigger problem.

Sixty-five percent (65%) of Mainstream voters and 54% of the Political Class agree that the bigger problem facing politics is media bias.

Just before the November 2008 presidential election, 68% of voters said most reporters try to help the candidate they want to win, and 51% believed they were trying to help Democrat Barack Obama. Just seven percent (7%) thought they were trying to help his Republican opponent, John McCain.

Fifty-one percent (51%) of voters say the average reporter is more liberal than they are. Eighteen percent (18%) say that reporter is more conservative, and 20% think their views are about the same ideologically as the average reporter’s.

As far as voters are concerned, liberal is the most unpopular of five common political labels.

Sixty-two percent (62%) believe that what the media thinks is more important to the average member of Congress than what voters think. Sixty-seven percent (67%) say the news media have too much power and influence over government decisions.

In a survey in February of last year, 57% of Americans said political donors get more than their money back in terms of favors from members of Congress. Fifty-one percent (51%) said you can influence a governor or member of Congress for less than $50,000 in contributions.

However, 68% believe that requiring the disclosure of all campaign contributions is more important that limiting those contributions."

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