52% of young people would vote to impeach Obama (1 Viewer)

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What I don't understand is how these people were convinced that anything would be different in his second term.
 
What I don't understand is how these people were convinced that anything would be different in his second term.
I don't get it, either, but apparently the disastrous rollout of Obamacare finally opened their eyes.
 
Yeah, he may not get re-elected in the next election.
 
I don't get it, either, but apparently the disastrous rollout of Obamacare finally opened their eyes.

What I find sad, but also extremely comical, is that Obama has essentially done everything that people hated Bush for. Patriot act, spying, war, all of that good stuff, and he RAN on an open and honest government. It would be hilarious if it wasn't so sad. It just shows that people are suckers. They'll believe anything.
 
Most of my friends didn't vote in the last election. Of the ones that did, most of them were not very well informed and voted for Obama because it was the cool thing to do. To be fair, I think most of them would have voted for Obama even if they were informed, just based on their social opinions.
 
Yeah, he may not get re-elected in the next election.
That's not the point. The success of Obamacare is dependent on the millennials. If they choose to not participate, Obamacare is dead, and so are the Democrats in the 2014 elections.
 
Most of my friends didn't vote in the last election. Of the ones that did, most of them were not very well informed and voted for Obama because it was the cool thing to do. To be fair, I think most of them would have voted for Obama even if they were informed, just based on their social opinions.
You may be right, but it seems the chickens are coming home to roost. The rollout of Obamacare may be the single most effective argument against Liberalism that was ever invented.
 
Young people rarely vote nowadays, and those that do vote for who their parents tell them to. Half of those surveyed were too young for the 2008 election.
 
You may be right, but it seems the chickens are coming home to roost. The rollout of Obamacare may be the single most effective argument against Liberalism that was ever invented.

It's a Republican plan, and there's nothing liberal about it except the total lack of price controls. It's mainly dictatorial with elements of facism and forced servitude.
 
Young people rarely vote nowadays, and those that do vote for who their parents tell them to.
According to Obama's election team, winning over the young voters was a crucial part of their success. Now it seems they are losing them in droves.

Half of those surveyed were too young for the 2008 election.
Yes, that's what the article said, but they will be voting in the future, and it doesn't look like they're too crazy about big, intrusive, and expensive federal programs.
 
What I find sad, but also extremely comical, is that Obama has essentially done everything that people hated Bush for. Patriot act, spying, war, all of that good stuff, and he RAN on an open and honest government. It would be hilarious if it wasn't so sad. It just shows that people are suckers. They'll believe anything.

Bush also got elected twice on the same tellemwhattheywannahear plan. That's how the game is playrd.
 
According to Obama's election team, winning over the young voters was a crucial part of their success. Now it seems they are losing them in droves.


Yes, that's what the article said, but they will be voting in the future, and it doesn't look like they're too crazy about big, intrusive, and expensive federal programs.

So they'll never vote republican, the true party of big government and deficits.
 
It's a Republican plan.
Not sure how you came to that conclusion. Obamacare was shoved through Congress by the Democrats and was a strictly partisan affair. It didn't get a single Republican vote.
 
Sorry I've been out of the loop, what are we impeaching him for this time?
 
Yeah, that's the reason.

:biglaugh:

Look, I know you're out of touch with today's youth, what with them always being on your lawn, but even you should be able to see through Obama's "liberal" mask to his true Republican heart of gold.
 
Today's youth are too stupid and follow Obama too blindly. I have a feeling they would think a vote to impeach Obama was a positive for him and this country.

Impeach? Well, that's must be a good thing. Sounds peachy, no?
 
Impeach? Well, that's must be a good thing. Sounds peachy, no?

Apparently impeach was Shooter's word. His link says recall. "Yeah, I recall Obama. He's that old dude in the white house, right?"

barfo
 
Apparently impeach was Shooter's word. His link says recall. "Yeah, I recall Obama. He's that old dude in the white house, right?"

barfo

To be fair to shooter its not just his word.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opini...11e3-be07-006c776266ed_story.html?tid=rssfeed

History will record that on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013, the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary met to consider the impeachment of Barack Hussein Obama.

They didn’t use that word, of course. Republican leaders frown on such labeling because it makes the House majority look, well, crazy.

It is, Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) said from the dais, “the word that we don’t like to say in this committee, and I’m not about to utter here in this particular hearing.”

One of the majority’s witnesses, Georgetown law professor Nicholas Rosenkranz, encouraged the Republicans not to be so shy. “I don’t think you should be hesitant to speak the word in this room,” he said. “A check on executive lawlessness is impeachment.”

This gave the lawmakers courage. “I’m often asked this,” said Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.) “You got to go up there, and you just impeach him.”

Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-Tex.), who has said there are enough votes in the House to impeach Obama, added: “We’ve also talked about the I-word, impeachment, which I don’t think would get past the Senate in the current climate. . . . Is there anything else we can do?”

Why, yes, there is, congressman: You can hold hearings that accomplish nothing but allow you to sound fierce for your most rabid constituents.

The Republicans in the House know there is no chance of throwing this president from office. Yet at least 13 of the 22 Republicans on the panel have threatened or hinted at impeachment of Obama, his appointees or his allies in Congress. They’ve proposed this as the remedy to just about every dispute or political disagreement, from Syria to Obamacare.

Tuesday’s hearing was titled “The President’s Constitutional Duty to Faithfully Execute the Laws.” The unanimous view among Republicans was that Obama had not done his duty, and it’s true that this president has stretched the bounds of executive authority almost as much as his predecessor, whose abuses bothered Republicans much less (and Democrats much more).

But what to do about it? They’ve failed at cutting off funding, they’ve had difficulty suing Obama in court and they lost the 2012 election. That basically leaves them with the option of making loud but ineffectual noises about high crimes and misdemeanors.

In recent days, Rep. Steve Stockman (Tex.), one of the more exotic members of the Republican caucus, has distributed proposed Articles of Impeachment to his colleagues. Last month, 20 House Republicans filed Articles of Impeachment against Attorney General Eric Holder. Around that time, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) accused Obama of “impeachable offenses.”

Rep. Trey Radel (R-Fla.), before his cocaine arrest and guilty plea, invoked the prospect of impeaching Obama over gun policy. Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) raised the specter of impeachment over Obama’s threat to bomb Syria without congressional approval. Rep. Kerry Bentivolio (R-Mich.) said it would be his “dream come true” to write the Articles of Impeachment, and Rep. Bill Flores (R-Tex.) said that if “the House had an impeachment vote it would probably impeach the president.”

Sen. Jim Inhofe said Obama could be impeached over the attack on Americans in Benghazi, Libya, while fellow Oklahoma Republican Sen. Tom Coburn said in August that Obama was “getting perilously close” to meeting the standard for impeachment (though he called Obama a “personal friend”). Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) thought it would have been an impeachable offense if Obama unilaterally raised the debt ceiling. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) branded Obama “lawless.”

On the House Judiciary panel, impeachment has been floated by GOP Reps. Jason Chaffetz (over Benghazi), Louie Gohmert and King (default on the debt), Darrell Issa (presidential patronage), Trent Franks (Defense of Marriage Act enforcement) and Lamar Smith (who said Obama’s record on immigration comes “awfully close” to violating the oath of office). Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.) gets creativity points for proposing the impeachment of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

At Tuesday’s hearing, the committee chairman, Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), accused Obama of “picking and choosing which laws to enforce” and of being “the first president since Richard Nixon to ignore a duly enacted law simply because he disagrees with it.”

Contributed Smith: “The president has ignored laws, failed to enforce laws, undermined laws and changed laws, all contrary to the Constitution.”

The majority’s witnesses added to the accusations. George Washington University’s Jonathan Turley said Obama had “claimed the right of the king to essentially stand above the law.”

This excited Franks, who embraced impeachment back in 2011. Obama’s actions, he said, “could be considered royal prerogatives, which is, if my history’s right, what we had that little unpleasantness with Great Britain about.”

Yikes! Why bother with impeachment? They need a revolution.
 
Young people don't like Obama because he is too conservative.

Exactly. Free phones, having your parents pay for health insurance until age 26, and not putting everyone on welfare is just too much for the Liberal Arts majors whose parents are paying for their tuition.

Now that they found out that their "free" health care may involve them actually paying for it, instead of just, like, you know, getting it for free, they are outraged!

Jeebus...
 
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Sorry, but the premise is dumb.

I can see why a whole class of people graduated college in debt only to find Obamanomics and ObamaCare ruining their job market. Yay, they get to be on their parents' insurance plan until age 26. That doesn't make up for having to live in their parents' basement until age 30 or older.
 
Sorry, but the premise is dumb.

I can see why a whole class of people graduated college in debt only to find Obamanomics and ObamaCare ruining their job market. Yay, they get to be on their parents' insurance plan until age 26. That doesn't make up for having to live in their parents' basement until age 30 or older.

That sounds cushy. I wish I'd had it that easy.
 

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