Too funny for words: Source by AP via Yahoo.
It is amazing how much fail the teabaggers and conservatives produce every single day.
This is just a short and sweet entry, but stories like these can really make those who support the President giddy. Can every democrat running for office and/or election cite news like these and just POUND it into the mainstream media at every chance? Can even the liberal-leaning commentators like Alan Colmes and Bob Becker rub news like these in Hannity and Beck's faces?
A majority of people in South Carolina didn't vote for Barack Obama and many didn't want any part of his stimulus cash, and folks in a particularly poor, hard-hit swath near the Georgia line were no exception. Until the money showed up.
About $1.6 billion was used to create 3,100 temporary jobs in a rural corner of the state cleaning up the Savannah River Site, which already employed about 9,000 and churned out radioactive metals for the nation's nuclear arsenal during the Cold War.
"I am convinced it's what kept Aiken's economy stronger than most communities during these poor economic times," said David Jamison, president of the chamber of commerce in that solidly Republican city just north of the nuclear facility. "I think it has worked exactly like the way Washington had in mind. ... I see it every single day."
You see, Obama loves everyone, even those who despise and hate him. He will always reach out his hand. I am tempted to ask the haters, especially the religious ones: "This kind of attitude, who does this remind you of??"
The democrats have a winning message for this november. Can they be smart and stay on message? Would they have the guts to call out detractors and liars? Things are looking bright, folks... it's high times for people with common sense get into action and start WINNING.
Here's the kicker quote of the original story:
So far, though, that chunk of the $787 billion appears to be doing what the president promised: keep unemployment rates already among the highest in the nation from skyrocketing and give residents some hope that they could fight through the worst economic decline since the Great Depression.