Dr. Zoltan’s Culture of Intellectuals
Rules:
Users will be civilized and intellectual.
Stay on topic or start a new thread.
Keep slang and cursing to a minimum.
You are here to communicate. You should learn how to type and spell correctly.
No porn.
No racism.
No violence.
No religious fanaticism.
No lower class conversation of any kind.
Youth Culture is frowned upon. If you are a young human with too much nervous energy, you should should shut off your computer right now and volunteer for community service.
From Wikipedia: An Internet troll, or simply troll in Internet slang, is someone who posts controversial, inflammatory, irrelevant or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum or chat room, with the intention of provoking other users into an emotional response or to generally disrupt normal on-topic discussion.
It is not amusing to act less intelligent than you really are. Trolls will be banned immediately.
JOIN: Culture of Intellectuals
-Dr. Zoltan!


If some of you think that Barak Obama is the next president only because he is the best qualified, think again. The fact of the matter is that John McCain ran an awful campaign. Qualifications have nothing to do in our American election process because what really matters who has the most points at the end of the day. Think of politics like a football game. Two teams face off and battle it out for 60 minutes and one team ends up with the most points. It doesn’t matter which team you like better: if your team loses your team loses. If your team continues to lose you may stop watching them for the rest of the season. From picking Sarah Palin to the “Joe the Plumber” bit, McCain’s campaign looked desperate. Then there was the fact that he had no clear and resounding message. Obama yelled “Change!” and McCain echoed “Change!” Furthermore, anyone who thinks that Obama is the next president because he got there by chance doesn’t understand how well his campaign was run. It was a calculated and efficient campaign that will go down in history as a blueprint in how to run a campaign.