Senator sorry for 'monkey' slur

Quote from ktmexc20:

Oh there is definitely a difference between 'political correctness' (I'm against pc by the way. ie: profiling, etc...) and a down right ehthic slur.
Here's the definition of macaca / macaque

Since his mom is French Tunisian where the the word is commonly used as a slur, It's not far fetched to assume that it was used around the house in his youth. It's pretty obvious from the clip that he was degrading the guy.

Lastly, I've become somewhat of a political junkie in the last 5 years, and imo this guy thinking he'll make it to the highest office in the nation is really quite funny.

So would calling someone a "monkey" disqualify them for public office? I recall that howard Cosell landed in the Al Campanis hot soup years ago when he called a football player a monkey. Somehow he survived it.

But what is so outlandish about George Allen thinking he could be president? Is it more outlandish than George Bush thinking he could make it? Or John Kerry?

Allen was a highly popular governor and a highly popular senator. He has never had a hint of scandal about him, and has taken a consistent, principled approach to issues. He seems to be very likeable, gets along with hs colleagues well and clearly has a certain Reaganesque quality about him.

He played quarterback for the Univ. of Virginia, and his father was Hall of Fame coach George Allen. His brother is Bruce Allen, GM of some NFL team, forgot which one.

Any way you slice it, he is a serious contender who will have tons of appeal in republican primaries, unlike say John McCain or Rudy Guilianni, who will have to explain away their liberal positions on core issues.
 
Hi AAA,

Quote from AAAintheBeltway:

So would calling someone a "monkey" disqualify them for public office?
The presidency? I don't think he'll survive this tidbit of indiscretion.
I recall that howard Cosell landed in the Al Campanis hot soup years ago when he called a football player a monkey. Somehow he survived it.

But what is so outlandish about George Allen thinking he could be president?
Merely my opinion AAA... I watch a lot of political news and commentary (with an effort to be balanced from possible bias: cspan, fox, msnbc, cnn... ) I've seen Allen quite a few times, and I just don't get the warm feeling of thinking "Now here is a leader". Actually I get the strong feeling of him as a follower rather then a leader.
Is it more outlandish than George Bush thinking he could make it? Or John Kerry?
No your right. They're total dumb asses too, imo.


Allen was a highly popular governor and a highly popular senator. He has never had a hint of scandal about him, and has taken a consistent, principled approach to issues. He seems to be very likeable, gets along with hs colleagues well and clearly has a certain Reaganesque quality about him.

[...]

Any way you slice it, he is a serious contender...
I respectfully doubt it.
...who will have tons of appeal in republican primaries, unlike say John McCain or Rudy Guilianni, who will have to explain away their liberal positions on core issues.

I just don't see it AAA. I don't think George Allen has or ever had real presidential potential.

Plus the thing that disturbs me the most about politics in general, is corporate / special interest influence over Washington. I get the feeling he welcomes it. I hope that voters weigh that (detrimental, imo) influence when they vote, regardless of who it is. We need to find our way back to the fundamental principal of "For the people by the people" !

kt
 
Quote from TM_Direct:

I was at the rally...the senator was right for singling out this guy...here's what we saw:
You certainly display your intelligence well TM.
 
Quote from ktmexc20:

You certainly display your intelligence well TM.


Yeah, Yeah, Meanwhile, if you could do this you wouldn't be trading right now would you!
 
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