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To: Brumar89 who wrote (487321)5/16/2012 10:31:45 AM
From: FUBHO   of 536135
 
Obama's April fundraising drops to $43.6 million (down $10 million from previous month)

By Jeff Mason

WASHINGTON | Wed May 16, 2012 8:10am EDT


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama's re-election campaign and Democratic groups affiliated with it raised $43.6 million in April, a decrease from the previous month despite the start of a robust general election campaign against Republican Mitt Romney.

Ninety-eight percent of the donations were less than $250 in April and the average donation came in at $50.23, campaign manager Jim Messina said in a video released on Twitter.

Though big donations are critical, the campaign highlights its low-dollar donations to illustrate the kind of grassroots support it hopes will push the president to victory in November.

More than 437,000 people donated last month and 169,500 were first-time donors, Messina said. Nearly 2 million people had donated to help Obama's re-election as of this week.

Obama's campaign and its affiliates raised more than $53 million in March.

The drop in April money raising came even as Obama's opponent for the November 6 election became clear.

Republican Rick Santorum dropped out of the race for his party's nomination on April 10, clearing the way for Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, to take on the mantle of presumptive Republican nominee.

Obama's campaign, which had long expected Romney to be the president's opponent, switched quickly into general election mode, but that does not appear to have motivated supporters to increase their giving compared to the previous month.

A campaign official noted that fundraising at the end of the quarter is typically higher than it is at the beginning.

Despite expectations that the campaign will match or exceed the roughly $750 million Obama raised in the 2008 election cycle, his advisers have been concerned for months about the effect of money raised by Super PACS and other outside groups to influence the race.

In an effort to encourage donors to pony up with more cash, Obama campaign manager Jim Messina spelled out in a video released on Wednesday the amounts of money being spent to defeat the president. He noted those amounts before revealing the campaign's April fundraising haul.

Some $57 million had been invested in negative advertising against Obama since October, he said.

"One of the most important things we can do is get our arms around the fact: this election is going to be close, given the historic challenges the nation faced when the president first came into office," Messina said.

"Oil company executives and other special interests are dumping millions of dollars in Super PAC attack ads."

MASSIVE OPERATION

Aside from two recent political rallies, Obama has spent most of his campaign-related events over the last several months raising cash. Republicans have chided the president for spending time fundraising, and seemed to relish in the April decline.

"Barack Obama is still the Fundraiser-In-Chief but even he is struggling to sell the American people on his brand of Hype and Blame that has left millions without jobs, a struggling housing situation and record deficits and debt for future generations," said Kirsten Kukowski, a spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee.

The month of May could be on track for a fundraising increase.

Obama said last week he believed same-sex couples should be able to wed. Following that announcement, he held a fundraiser in Los Angeles at the home of actor George Clooney that raised nearly $15 million. An uptick in fundraising from invigorated members of the president's political base would not be reflected in the April figures.

The April fundraising figures include money that went directly to the Obama campaign as well as the Democratic National Committee and other joint fundraising committees.

Messina said the campaign had opened new field offices across the country and hired more staff in anticipation of a close race.

Going through the campaign's various strategies to reach the 270 state electoral votes needed to win the election, Messina said the campaign had hired 12 new staff members in Colorado - an important swing state - and new offices in New Mexico and Nevada. He said the campaign was building a "massive operation" in Florida, opening five new field offices there last month.

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To: Geoff Altman who wrote (487308)5/16/2012 10:41:22 AM
From: unclewest   of 536135
 
Hey, I've got high cheekbones too.... That's it, I'm applying to Harvard Law tomorrow


Thanks for the explanation.
I knew there was something wild about when we met.

:>)

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To: LindyBill who wrote (487309)5/16/2012 10:46:44 AM
From: Tom Clarke1 Recommendation   of 536135
 
Icelandic politician moves 30-ton boulder onto his property so he can hang out with elves

After surviving an automobile accident unscathed in 2010, Icelandic Member of Parliament Árni Johnsen attributed his good fortune to a family of "hidden people" who lived in a boulder near his car wreck.

According to Johnsen, some kindly elves used their magical powers to prevent his demise, and he's repaying their good deed by moving the creatures' 30-ton rock house to his home in Höfðaból, where they will enjoy a "window-side" view of the environs. As the MP told the Icelandic newspaper Morgunblaðið:

I had Ragnhildur Jónsdóttir, a specialist in the affairs of elves from Álfagarðurinn in Hellisgerði, Hafnarfjörður, to come look at the boulder with me [...] She said it was incredible, that she had never met three generations of elves in the same boulder before [...]

She said an elderly couple lives on the upper floor but a young couple with three children on the lower floor [...] But they asked whether the boulder could stand on grass. I said that was no problem but asked why they wanted grass. ‘It's because they want to have sheep.'


Is one elected as a liaison of Elvish Affairs or selected by political patronage? Until I receive a firm answer, I'll simply assume Björk must first anoint the appointee with a scepter made of woven clover. The Icelandic Review also published the following two paragraphs regarding this incident. Please note that these paragraphs were not cribbed from the Dungeons & Dragons Monster Manual:

The boulder will be moved on the ferry Herjólfur and the elves will travel in a basket lined with sheep skin so that they can be comfortable on the journey.

Ragnhildur explained to Árni that when he was in the accident everything went crazy on Hellisheiði. Elves from all neighboring settlements were called out and there was much confusion until one large being took control of the situation.


Thank goodness for that "one large being." Johnsen should count his blessings that these were friendly elves and not imps.

io9.com 

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To: unclewest who wrote (487290)5/16/2012 10:49:33 AM
From: Joe Btfsplk3 Recommendations   of 536135
 
as the French would say, "He is a mensch"

Oy veh!

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From: longnshort5/16/2012 10:50:40 AM
4 Recommendations   of 536135
 
It appears there is even more affirmative action, equal opportunity mocking to be done regarding Elizabeth Warren and the Lefties who enable her. Politico reports that a Fordham piece called her “Harvard’s first woman of color.” No, for reals. Diversity! Or something.

Elizabeth Warren has pushed back hard on questions about a Harvard Crimson piece in 1996 that described her as Native American, saying she had no idea the school where she taught law was billing her that way and saying it never came up during her hiring a year earlier, which others have backed up.

But a 1997 Fordham Law Review piece described her as Harvard Law School’s “first woman of color,” based, according to the notes at the bottom of the story, on a “telephone interview with Michael Chmura, News Director, Harvard Law (Aug. 6, 1996).”

Rut-roh! The internet never forgets, Sacaja-whiner! And Twitter never passes up an opportunity for well-deserved mocking.

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To: unclewest who wrote (487319)5/16/2012 10:51:22 AM
From: Tom Clarke   of 536135
 
Greeks withdraw $894 million in a day: Is this beginning of a run on banks?

worldnews.msnbc.msn.com 

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To: unclewest who wrote (487317)5/16/2012 10:53:07 AM
From: D. Long1 Recommendation   of 536135
 
The best veteran's unemployment program they could recommend is handing every vet an application for employment at Cintas. Those guys hiring practices are the equivalent of a veterans' full employment act.

Good pay, lots of opportunity to advance, and fantastic benefits.

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To: Joe Sixer who wrote (487320)5/16/2012 10:53:31 AM
From: alanrs   of 536135
 
That's a pretty good effort. Maybe the guy won't want his old job back.

ARS

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To: DMaA who wrote (487316)5/16/2012 10:54:17 AM
From: Tom Clarke   of 536135
 
I thought it was pretty funny...

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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (487324)5/16/2012 10:56:48 AM
From: D. Long   of 536135
 
I think that guy hit his head in that accident. Really hard.

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