Friday, March 7, 2014

Who vote's for people that we don't like.


Tinker
Did you ever wonder why in the world does the American people living in New York really vote for people that the rest of the American people around this country don't like?
The people in New York seem to want to vote for the men and women that other American people don't like.
Why do they do that?

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio couldn't get invited to my neighborhood corner bakery for coffee if he lived around the Robins AFB in Warner Robins, Georgia. Because the civil/military people working and living here would simply walk on by whenever he would talk about what he said up there in New York, down here. New York State political difference of option seems to go much deeper than just a different political point of view to me.
And I have seen that friction of a divided political and emotional point of view throughout the Northeastern part of the United States compared to the rest of America as a hold. Except for the far Northwestern states like Washington, Oregon, California. The difference in the American people economical/emotional attitudes are separated and apart from each-other in a very deep way.
I ask myself all the time just how in the world did the people living in New York vote for a guy like Mayor Bill de Blasio who I wouldn't give the time of day to?
Can You Guess Who the ‘Least Popular Senator in the Country’ Is in Less Than 3 Tries?

Mar. 6, 2014 10:01pm Jason Howerton
 
A new Public Policy Polling (PPP) survey released on Thursday suggests that Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) is the “least popular senator in the country.” The results shouldn’t be that shocking as McCain has a low approval rating among both Republicans and Democrats.

The Republican has an approval rating of just 30 percent among all Arizona voters while 44 percent of respondents also disapprove of his job performance and 16 percent aren’t sure, according to the poll by the left-leaning PPP.

FILE – In this Oct. 11, 2013, file photo, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. talks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File 
Among fellow Republicans, McCain has only a 35 percent positive approval rating and a 55 percent disapproval rating.

McCain isn’t up for reelection until 2016, but the latest numbers could indicate that his time as a Republican U.S. senator could be coming to an end. He has been serving in U.S. Congress since 1982, starting in the House of Representatives. He was elected to the Senate in 1986.

“PPP conducted the poll from February 28 to March 2 among 870 registered Arizona voters,” HuffPost notes.
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