To: TribalPrincess2U
Scott doesn't need the Tea party, he's got unregistered single women 90-10/
Massachusetts is very peculiar. Most of the voters are a good deal more conservative than their elected representatives, who are selected by the communist hard core that owns the Democrat party lock, stock & barrel.
Scott has found the key to their hearts. If the Dems nominate another icy white bitch who's commie connections are easily demonstrated, Scott will win in a landslide.
Warren has been described as "Martha Coakley without the charm".
Go Warren!
24 posted on
08/20/2011 12:38:46 PM PDT by
Jim Noble
(To live peacefully with credit-based consumption and fiat money, men would have to be angels.)
To: Jim Noble
Massachusetts is very peculiar. Most of the voters are a good deal more conservative than their elected representatives, who are selected by the communist hard core that owns the Democrat party lock, stock & barrel.
When you speak to regular people here (not moonbats, who are just nuts), you find that they are more libertarian and independent-minded. They unfortunately still buy the old myth of democrats being "for the working man" and Republicans being "for the rich". The fact that anyone with an 'R' after their name on the ballot won a Senate seat is amazing in that respect.
In these terrible times, I'll take any bit of improvement or bolster any firewall. Scott Brown being right half of the time (or 74% if you take the ACU number) is better than another angry, America-hating, malevolent liberal. I don't think Scott Brown hates America, but I bet Elizabeth Warren has a very different view.
If he wins a proper election and feels safer in his seat, maybe Scott Brown will make the conservative choice more often. Is it ideal? Not at all. But when Brown won I felt, for the first time in all the years I've been voting, that I have an elected representative in Congress who MIGHT give a damn about what a conservative constituent thinks. I'll take that over going back to the alternative.
37 posted on
08/20/2011 1:02:47 PM PDT by
LostInBayport
(When there are more people riding in the cart than there are pulling it, the cart stops moving...)
To: Jim Noble
Also, I wonder hos the district shapes affect that. To begin with, I dont know anyone in Ma and I dont know anyone who has lived there, but looking at the map, it seems that some of the conservative areas in Boston are split into districts that extend all the way to the sea. Ive also heard Gloucester is somewhat conservative. I just wonder what it would look like if Boston had one or two all encompassing districts and the rest were parts of suburbs, rather than how it looks now with districts starting at a point in Boston and growing out like a triangle to cover the suburbs.
40 posted on
08/20/2011 1:12:04 PM PDT by
Raider Sam
(They're on our left, right, front, and back. They aint gettin away this time!)
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