The "Equal Pay Act" was passed 45 years ago, but pay still is not "equal". Women make 77 cents to every dollar her male counterpart makes.
John McCain said “We have not done enough. And I’m committed to making sure that there’s equal pay for equal work. That there is equal opportunity in every aspect of our society. And that is my record and you can count on it.”
Saturday, July 12, 2008
John McCain: Town Hall Meeting 07/11/08
Friday, July 11, 2008
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Words, Words, Words Mere Words
Obama says he will meet Jon McCain any where, any time, any place for town hall meetings.
So, BO, Where's the beef?
So often you say one thing and do another.
BO cannot be trusted to keep his word.
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Can You trust the News Media to Give You the Right Information About the Candidates?
Does the news media have bias?
Who really picks who will be the next president? You? Does the media bombard you information about the candidate "they have chosen"?
The answer may be surprising. And you thought it was your choice.
Fair.org has put together some interesting facts regarding the media coverage from December 26, 2007 through February 5, 2008.
FAIR found the candidates were put into a relatively clear three-tier system by the networks; we’ll call them high-, medium- and low-visibility candidates. Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney fell in the high-visibility category; John Edwards, Rudy Giuliani, Mike Huckabee and Fred Thompson fell in the medium-visibility category; and Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, Dennis Kucinich, Ron Paul and Bill Richardson fell in the low-visibility category. (Some candidates, including Democrat Mike Gravel and Republican Duncan Hunter, received no coverage at all during the study period.)
Total mentions on Nightly Network News
Number of times each candidate appeared on World News, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News (12/26/07–2/5/08). An appearance was tallied each time a candidate was mentioned, had a soundbite or interview, or had a campaign ad included in the newscast.
The media has decided Obama is the person to be the next President of the United States.
Will you let this happen?
Tell the media "Hell no, we won't go". No Obama today. No Obama ever.
Please go to John McCain's website and give money if you can..or time.
Who really picks who will be the next president? You? Does the media bombard you information about the candidate "they have chosen"?
The answer may be surprising. And you thought it was your choice.
Fair.org has put together some interesting facts regarding the media coverage from December 26, 2007 through February 5, 2008.
FAIR found the candidates were put into a relatively clear three-tier system by the networks; we’ll call them high-, medium- and low-visibility candidates. Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney fell in the high-visibility category; John Edwards, Rudy Giuliani, Mike Huckabee and Fred Thompson fell in the medium-visibility category; and Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, Dennis Kucinich, Ron Paul and Bill Richardson fell in the low-visibility category. (Some candidates, including Democrat Mike Gravel and Republican Duncan Hunter, received no coverage at all during the study period.)
Total mentions on Nightly Network News
Number of times each candidate appeared on World News, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News (12/26/07–2/5/08). An appearance was tallied each time a candidate was mentioned, had a soundbite or interview, or had a campaign ad included in the newscast.
The media has decided Obama is the person to be the next President of the United States.
Will you let this happen?
Tell the media "Hell no, we won't go". No Obama today. No Obama ever.
Please go to John McCain's website and give money if you can..or time.
Monday, July 7, 2008
Sunday, July 6, 2008
John McCain TV Ad - A Better Way
John McCain understands we must become energy independent. He is ready to explores all options.
Carbon taxes won't work, this tax would be passed on to the people who can least afford it, the working class. Most can't afford to go out and buy $30,000 automobiles.
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