Just click the link and read the post. Pretty witty.
Just click the link and read the post. Pretty witty.
Obama's historic victory only confirms one thing: charisma, more than anything, determines election results.
Have you heard of these guys yet? I can't make up my mind if this is good stuff or just stuff. The songs are hard to listen to, but the acrobatic guitar playing is entertaining.
First, I don't see how anyone can think "their candidate" came out a winner tonight. Both Obama and McCain managed to sound, look and act anything but presidential. When they could have clarified how they were actually going to improve things, they only clarified how the other candidate was going to ruin America. When asked a direct question, they glazed over a direct answer and instead found a way to insert what they had already repeated 15 times in the prior 20 minutes. When asked repeatedly to follow the rules they'd agreed to, they continued to break them and then tattle on the other guy when he broke them. They even managed to piss off Tom Brokaw.
Here are a few interesting discussions you might want to get in on:
This thing is spreading like wildfire, BUT . . . .just in case you haven't seen it, I give you Sonseed, and then the David Crowder version:
Here is my take on the pathetic game the Cowboys put up yesterday against the Skins.
While trying to make sense of what's going on with our economy, I came across the following posts and thought I would share:
Maria Halkias reports today in the Dallas Morning News that the National Retail Federation predicts holiday sales will rise only 2.2 percent this year to $470 billion in light of our country's continuing financial woes.
Let's not all make a run on the bank at once.
Sure, times are tough, but let's keep in mind that the prediction is still for an increase in our shopping spending this year when compared to last year. I might not be forking out the 4 percent the Federaton was predicting, but they're still betting on me beating last year's feat.
Gift cards are getting hit the hardest to only $25 billion this holiday season. Boo-hoo.
Things aren't looking good right now, but this useless stat is not a sign of the coming depression. What will be interesting is to see how we as consumers really react come Christmas. Will we forego our comforts and luxuries and gluttonies as we celebrate this year? I doubt it.
I'm starting to think Phil Gramm was right about us whiny Americans.

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