corianderstem
Blue Crack Distributor
Ha. Thanks for confirming that.
As someone who grew up in Mississippi...I suspect a lot of Alabamians would take great offense at that.To be fair, the two states are basically the same thing
Public Policy Polling, March 12
In Mississippi only 12% of voters think Obama's a Christian to 52% who think he's a Muslim and 36% who are not sure. In Alabama just 14% think Obama's a Christian to 45% who think he's a Muslim and 41% who aren't sure. Mitt Romney dominates the 'Obama's a Christian' vote in both states. He leads Santorum 42-28 with those folks in Mississippi and has a 38-21 lead over him with them in Alabama. In Mississippi Newt's winning the 'Obama's a Muslim' vote 39-28, but in Alabama it's a three way tie with all of the leading candidates at 31%.
"Pretty much on board with," what a bizarrely flip way to characterize those findings.Alabama's pretty much on board with interracial marriage, with 67% of voters thinking it should be legal to 21% who think it should not be. There's still some skepticism in Mississippi though--only 54% of voters think it should be legal, while 29% believe it should be illegal. Newt cleans up with the 'interracial marriage should be illegal' crowd in both states. He's up 40-27 on Romney with them in Mississippi and 37-28 with them in Alabama.
Not sure quite how those compare to the national percentages.Finally there's considerable skepticism about evolution among GOP voters in both Alabama and Mississippi. In Alabama only 26% of voters believe in it, while 60% do not. In Mississippi just 22% believe in it, while 66% do not. Romney wins the 'voters who believe in evolution' vote (33-27 over Gingrich in Alabama, 38-32 over Gingrich in Mississippi.) Santorum wins the 'voters who don't believe in evolution' vote (34-33 over Gingrich in both Alabama and Mississippi with Romney at 26%).
In Mississippi only 12% of voters think Obama's a Christian to 52% who think he's a Muslim and 36% who are not sure. In Alabama just 14% think Obama's a Christian to 45% who think he's a Muslim and 41% who aren't sure.
i know. up until the mid-90s it had the excuse of not having much in the way of money, but that was why they legalised gambling. and it's brought in a lot of money for the state. sure revenue's down because of the economy, but that doesn't explain why back in 2002 they were still hovering at or near the bottom.I'd heard that, too, about Mississippi. Even if it's not in last place anymore, it often hovers near the very bottom of the list. You'd think the state would want to do something about that.
KhanadaRhodes said:i know. up until the mid-90s it had the excuse of not having much in the way of money, but that was why they legalised gambling. and it's brought in a lot of money for the state. sure revenue's down because of the economy, but that doesn't explain why back in 2002 they were still hovering at or near the bottom.
Fox News, Al Qaeda's least favorite TV network
Fox News gets no love from Al Qaeda.
Documents taken from Usama bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan and disclosed in an exclusive Washington Post report had Al Qaeda leaders ripping Fox News while discussing media strategy. The terror network's "media adviser," Adam Gadahn, the American traitor known as "Adam the American," was discussing with bin Laden plans to mark the 10-year anniversary of 9/11 and how to get the word out. Here's what he told bin Laden, who Navy SEALs killed in a May 2, 2011 raid on his squalid Pakistan compound:
“It should be sent for example to ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN and maybe PBS and VOA. As for Fox News let her die in her anger,” Gadahn wrote.
The terrorist group's mouthpiece went on to vent his rage at America's top-rated cable news network:
“From a professional point of view, they are all on one level — except (Fox News) channel, which falls into the abyss as you know, and lacks objectivity, too."
The media should not be privatized. Chasing ratings does not make for informative news coverage. If a democracy is based upon having informed citizens, than its media system should be obligated to inform. These media are not. They are obligated to make their parent companies lots of money.
Sounds like Al Qaeda has been reading the previous 48 pages of this thread.
Or getting press releases from Media Matters.
When Childers was criticized on Twitter for her message, Childers responded and said she was "asking for opinion."
Anywho, keep it classy, Fox News .
Or better yet, ignore any story that originates from Twitter
Right, so what ever happened to professionally representing the organization you work for in public, huh?An employee of Fox News tweeting is hardly the same thing as broadcasting the story. Why not blame Twitter rather than FNC?