If women did not vote, o would be out of office. Period.
If men did not vote, o would still be in office. Period.
No women voters equals no carter, clinton, clinto II, obama, obama II. What more do you need.
I’ll tell you the truth. I stood in line for an hour and a half last week to vote for Romney, when normally I can walk in, vote, and get out in 5 minutes. So much for that.
But if it would reverse the results of this election, and get Obama out and Romney in, I would give up my right to vote. I am still in shock.
White women vote republican.
If only women voted, then Nixon would have won in 1960 and we would never had gotten JFK’s 1965 Immigration Act, which doomed America.
Men voted for JFK, women against him.
The election of JFK was the end of America. Vietnam, the 60s, LBJ, government unions, and the fatal pill of immigration all came from JFK.
However, if there is one man who can take the most credit for the 1965 act, it is John F. Kennedy.
Kennedy seems to have inherited the resentment his father Joseph felt as an outsider in Bostons WASP aristocracy. He voted against the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952, and supported various refugee acts throughout the 1950s.
In 1958 he wrote a book, A Nation of Immigrants, which attacked the quota system as illogical and without purpose, and the book served as Kennedys blueprint for immigration reform after he became president in 1960.
In the summer of 1963, Kennedy sent Congress a proposal calling for the elimination of the national origins quota system. He wanted immigrants admitted on the basis of family reunification and needed skills, without regard to national origin.
After his assassination in November, his brother Robert took up the cause of immigration reform, calling it JFKs legacy. In the forward to a revised edition of A Nation of Immigrants, issued in 1964 to gain support for the new law, he wrote, I know of no cause which President Kennedy championed more warmly than the improvement of our immigration policies.
Sold as a memorial to JFK, there was very little opposition to what became known as the Immigration Act of 1965.