| Romney Wouldn’t Accept VP Slot ... Not That McCain’s Offering
SANFORD, FLA. -- As he continues his unrelenting focus on the economy a day before the critical Florida primary, Mitt Romney said that hes not interested in being John McCains running mate. Hes a hero, but his views on the economy I think are sort of summed up by his own statement that its not really something he understands that well, Romney said of McCain at an airport rally attended by over 200 people. Hes said that a couple times and indicated that when he chose his vice president, it would have to be someone who really understood the economy. Well, I do understand the economy Im not going to be any vice president to John McCain either. There seems to be no love lost between Romney and McCain whose attacks on one another have become increasingly vitriolic and sometimes personal.
Your Comments : Natives misuse $40m: Ganilau
Think the Fijian people are renting there land for to little, and should charge alot more, look at the oversea prices...Up the prices, and give direct to the landowner...dont rip them off.... STK of Aotearoa of New Zealand (70 days and 1 hour ago) Ratu Epeli's statement is a clear reflection of ignorance and naivety. The statement is one sided and shows only one side of the equation. It might be true that $40m is collected or shared by landowners per annum. Ratu Epeli either deliberately or ignorantly failed to reveal how many landowners are involved. Even if you conservatively argue that $40m annual lease money is shared amongst 50,000 landowners, it only gives a landowner an average of $800 per annum. Ratu Epeli might like to tell the landowners which University that provides academic services worth $800 per annum.
Viewing all entries for: January 2008
THEY like it spicy down here in South Carolina. Locals pour hot sauce on their catfish, on their grits, even on their greens. Their politics is spicy too. Charleston, a city with some of the richest and poorest people in the state within spitting distance, has a political scene "as gothic as New York City," a local journalist says. Some folks who live in the historic mansions in Old Charleston actually commute to New York regularly. Meanwhile North Charleston has pockets of desperate poverty, and there are people living in run-down trailers not far outside town. The polls are open today in a state that has once again reminded America of its reputation for hard-ball politics. After all the antics of the past week, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards are in the hands of Democratic primary voters.
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