Today, however, the President seemed especially tickled by the answer, and chose to share with his personal thoughts on picking Obama as a VP.
"She said yesterday and she said the day after her big wins in Texas and Ohio and Rhode Island that she was very open to that and I think she answered explicitly yes yesterday," Clinton began, referring to Hillary's own answers on the topic in recent days.
"I know that she has always been open to it, because she believes that if you can unite the energy and the new people that he’s brought in and the people in these vast swaths of small town and rural America that she’s carried overwhelmingly, if you had those two things together she thinks it’d be hard to beat. I mean you look at the, you look at the, you look at the map of Texas and the map in Ohio. And the map in Missouri or -- well Arkansas’s not a good case because they know her and she won every place there. But you look at most of these places, he would win the urban areas and the upscale voters, and she wins the traditional rural areas that we lost when President Reagan was president. If you put those two things together, you’d have an almost unstoppable force," Clinton went on to say.
So, because she won Ohio and Texas by slim margins and she managed to pick up 12 additional delegates from Obama's lead, that automatically means that she might be willing to give Obama the "privilege" to be her Vice President?
Does anyone else see the insane size of the balls on these people?
She's NOT WINNING, yet, she seems to act like she is. Obama has already said he wouldn't be her VP, and yet, Hillary and Bill are still pushing for it. Why? Because if Obama is on the ticket, then people will vote for them over McCain. They know there are Democrats out there that would vote for McCain over Hillary any day of the week, and if they have Obama in their corner, they'll be more likely to sway those voters, thus, giving them the White House.
However, it shows you the tactics that Hillary is willing to stoop down to as well as her arrogance towards her political opponent, who's actually ahead of her in delegates.
What's worse, is that she's got a significant mathematical amount of odds to overcome to win the nomination. She's won a few states, but she's only won them by slim margins. That isn't enough for her to overcome Obama's delegate lead. If Obama manages to secure Pennsylvania, it's almost mathematically impossible for her to win. Obama would have to be caught in a van with a young boy for him to lose at that point.
Travis
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