Kucinich drops out

The Diebold / zio-media campaign against Kucinich has succeeded.

The Diebold machines gave him only one percent of the New Hampshire primary. The Iowa caucus shut him out. MSNBC broke their contract with him, and would not let him debate in Nevada.

Kucinich, 61, also must drop out to hold on to his Congressional seat. He faces four challengers in the Democratic congressional primary March 4, and needs money. Rival Joe Cimperman has been critical of Kucinich for focusing too much time outside of his district while campaigning for president.

On 19 December 2007 his brother, Perry Kucinich, was found dead in his apartment.

Kucinich said he will not endorse Obama or Hillary.

Kucinich said he became a presidential candidate because the Democratic Party had become warmongers.

When he was mayor of Cleveland, he refused to privatize a publicly owned utility. This caused the city to default, and drove Kucinich from office.

After the city's financial troubles, he faced death threats, and was forced to wear a bulletproof vest when he threw out the first ball at a Cleveland Indians game. He barely survived a recall vote. Today he’s called a hero for his courageous stand. In 1998, the Cleveland City Council issued him a commendation for having the foresight to not privatize the city’s electrical utility.

In 1978 he lost his bid for re-election as mayor of Cleveland to Republican George Voinovich, who went on to become governor and then U.S. senator.

After that, Kucinich spent more than a decade trying to get back into politics - traveling around the country and then working as a teacher, consultant and television news reporter.

In 1994 he was elected senator in the Ohio state legislature.

In 1996 he won a seat in the U.S. Congress.

Kucinich has blasted nightmarrish “free trade” deals like NAFTA and CAFTA. He marched with protesters in Seattle during a meeting of the World Trade Organization.

As a presidential candidate he has proposed a Department of Peace, and backed universal health care.

He also pushed for impeachment of Cheney.

MSNBC
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Italian Premier Romano Prodi resigned after his government lost a risky Senate confidence vote, obliging him to end his 20-month-old government.

The vote was 161-156.

Prodi sped Italy's withdrawal from Iraq. He will most likely be replaced by a right wing, pro-war, pro-Israel coalition.

Elected in April 2006, Prodi has had a shaky government from nearly the start. But it lurched toward collapse after a small Christian Democrat party, whose votes were vital to a coalition majority in the Senate, yanked its support earlier this week in the latest squabbling among his allies.

Prodi tried and failed twice as prime minister. Last time, it was communists in 1998 that revolted against him half way through his five-year term. A decade later, Catholics turned against him after 20 months.

The Italian economy has lagged the euro zone for more than a decade, and has seen 61 governments since World War II.

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How could he ever believe to have a chance not scoring high on the "Good for Israel List"?

Let this be a lesson for the remaining candidates that they have no chance unless they submit 100% to their Zionist masters!

Power does not originate from casting votes but from counting them!

Made Brani | Fri, 2008-01-25 04:23

At least Kucinich tried. Now he has to fight the zionist campaign that seeks to drive him from Congress altogether.

Kucinich has been consistently anti-war, and anti "free trade" agreements (which are designed to create monopolies, thus destroying free trade).

Jews hate him.

Abdul Alhazred | Fri, 2008-01-25 04:37

I agree with you - how sad.

And this is not going to change until the US population decides to take back its country. The question is: Will it or has it already accepted that it is the slaves of criminals?

Made Brani | Sat, 2008-01-26 00:45
Grim Reaper | Sat, 2008-01-26 01:43

That boy was our last hope....No there is another.

With politics one is always forced to make concessions. There is also the spectrum that goes from "the candidate I like the most" down to "the lesser of two evils".

Kucinich, IMHO, was the most honest person in the race. The MSM shut him out of the debate because he was strongly against the war. Hillary would not have been able to lie the way she has if K had been there to remind people of what she actually did and said.

K is strongly anti-war and he stands for the working man. I didn't like K's positions on gun control, abortion or gay marriage. Still, I thought he was the best one out there.

As the campaign goes on we move closer to choosing the lesser of evils. I think Ron Paul is honest. I don't think he is a tool of the zionists. He is anti-war and anti-MIC. He wants to bring our troops home from around the world. That would go a long way toward balancing the budget.

Edwards is taking a populist stand against the corporations. I don't like the fact that he campaigned in israel before he started here. To me, that's like sending a birthday card to the devil.

As far as Obama goes, I think he's less bought than Hillary. And he voted against the bankruptcy bill. He's very smart, and I think he is for the working man. On the other hand, where is all that money coming from? These politicians make like concessions that turn into bigger concessions...next thing you know they own a concession and they're selling franchises.

Hillary and the rest are evil, blood sucking vampires.
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Also, I just wanted to say "thank-you" to Abdul Alhazred (AA, though I'm sure he doesn't drink) for all of your informative and well-researched posts. You help to keep WUFYS a cut above. I don't always comment, but I often read.
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"Stop judging by appearances, but judge justly."

Christopher Marlowe | Sat, 2008-01-26 22:21

“Kucinich, IMHO, was the most honest person in the race.“

I think Gravel is also honest. He is still the favorite of me and Nepos Libertas. Remember that debate on 26 Sep 07 in Hanover, New Hampshire? When criticized for declaring bankruptcy and denying credit card companies of $90,000 in unpaid debts, Gravel said,

“Donald Trump has been bankrupt a hundred times. So I went bankrupt once in business. Who did I bankrupt? I stuck the credit card companies with $90,000 worth of bills, and they deserved it!”

“If you want to make a judgment of who can be the greediest people in the world when they get to public office, just look at the people up here,” Gravel said, motioning to the other candidates on stage. “Many of them have done very, very well in public office. I left the Senate no better than when I went in.”

“I didn't like K's positions on gun control, abortion or gay marriage. Still, I thought he was the best one out there.”

I also did not agree with K's stance on gun control, abortion or gay marriage. However Kucinich was staunchly opposed to “free trade” agreements, which are designed to eliminate free trade. I would have voted for him on that issue alone.

“Ron Paul is honest. I don't think he is a tool of the zionists. He is anti-war and anti-MIC. He wants to bring our troops home from around the world. That would go a long way toward balancing the budget.”

Better yet, Paul says he wants to do away with the Fed and the IRS. This would quite literally change the entire world.

“Edwards is taking a populist stand against the corporations. I don't like the fact that he campaigned in israel before he started here. To me, that's like sending a birthday card to the devil.”

Yes, and in recent debates, Mike Huckabee has been trumpeting his support for zionism, proudly proclaiming that he has been to ziostan nine times. The poor bastard has no idea that zionists absolutely despise Baptists.

“As far as Obama goes, I think he's less bought than Hillary. And he voted against the bankruptcy bill.”

And I see that Hillary did not vote on the bankruptcy bill.

"Obama seems very smart, and I think he is for the working man. On the other hand, where is all that money coming from? These politicians make like concessions that turn into bigger concessions...next thing you know they own a concession and they're selling franchises."

Where is Obama’s money coming from? Where else? It comes from the Pritzker family, a zionist Jew cabal in the Chicago area that owns the global chain of Hyatt hotels. In November 2004 -- an election year marked by Republican gains -- Penny Pritzker put Obama (Democrat) in the Senate by a 70% landslide. Pritzker is on Obama’s campaign’s finance committee. She is a member of all major zionist groups, plus the Council on Foreign Relations, the Real Estate Roundtable, the Urban Land Institute, the Commercial Club of Chicago, the Young Presidents' Organization, and the Chicago Network. Forbes lists Penny Pritzker as one of the most powerful women in the USA. The headquarters of Obama’s campaign is in Chicago, supported by Pritzker.

Jews support Obama in order to maintain the illusion of choice. In the USA the only vote that counts is the Jewish vote, and Jews will never let a shwartzer like Obama into the White House. Not only are zionists racists, they fear that Obama might actually listen to Black concerns.

Hillary has been selected, and she knows it. Irrespective of her campaign platform, I think she’s a megalomaniac.

Abdul Alhazred | Sat, 2008-01-26 23:49

unclesam wakeup

It ain't racism when it's the truth!

by Grim Reaper

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