Mark today on your calendar - it's the day the media fell out of love with Herman Cain.
If you're keeping score here, you'll notice that these things run in a cycle of a few weeks. For a few weeks the media falls in love with a candidate and then they slash him or her to pieces in matter of days once they've had enough of them. Rick Perry got his turn on that ride directly before Cain, and Bachman was before Perry. I suspect Gingrich is too damaged already to take ride and Santorum is just a joke. That leaves Ron Paul and you aren't going to hear the press bring him up if they don't have to. Oh wait!! John Hunstman... well, if you forgot about him like I just did, that says a lot about him.
Cain leads in several polls today, but you'll see that go away by Thursday and Romney will be back on top. If you want to make a projection on who the nominee is going to be, I guess you just look at who has had the most consistent performance. That would be Romney - always first or second.
My money is on Perry or Romney provding the gossip on the alleged sexual harrassment. They want him out so bad they will do whatever it takes. Might have even been Karl Rove. Elite Republicans are just as bad as liberal democrats. It's all about power.
Posted by: voter | October 31, 2011 at 03:57 PM
They are doing to Cain what they did to Clarence Thomas.
Libs will lie to take someone down who doesnt fit their mold. That mold being a black man like Obama. They think the ends justifies the means.
Posted by: the lynching of another black conservative | November 01, 2011 at 09:51 AM
Well you better talk to your conservative republican candidates cause they are the ones doing this.
Posted by: Texaswoman | November 01, 2011 at 10:13 AM
Former AIG chief sues U.S. for $25 billion
Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, former chairman of American International Group (shown in 2003 file photo), is back in court with a lawsuit against the federal government.
Former American International Group CEO Maurice "Hank" Greenberg thinks he got a raw deal, and he wants the government to pay up. Greenberg filed a lawsuit in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims asserting that the government bailout and takeover of the insurance giant was an unconstitutional seizure of private property, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday.
Posted by: Carl Starr | November 21, 2011 at 11:30 AM