Michelle: I’m Warning You, Don’t Fuck With Barack Anymore

Mrs. Hussein said Mr. Hussein hath reached his “boiling point”…
Look, bitch, if he can’t handle a fucking Democratic Primary campaign, then his ability to handle a general election campaign seems a little in question, and he sure as hell wouldn’t be able to handle the Presidency.
But beyond the Rev Wrong thing, and beyond any shit with Tony Rezko that is stinking up the place, the interview with the guy who described what it was like to have a VBIED go off in his garage 35 years before the acronym VBIED had ever ever been invented was a little troubling because the person who had claimed responsibility for that VBIED was William Ayers’ wife, whatever the fuck–picture John Tuturro in “Quiz Show” saying this–her name is, Bernardine “Van Fucking” Dohrn! I believe.
The fact that Obama launched his political career with a party in her front room, and the fact that he refuses to denounce Bonnie and Clyde are going to pretty much guarantee that this lying sack of racist shit will ever be President of the United States.
So, Michelle, who gives a fuck if Barry hit his “boiling point”? I think America hit it’s “Boiling Point” with you just a few weeks before we hit it with your husband…
So go back to your nice little Chicago hospital/incestuous political circles and make some more appointments of low-life America haters like yourself to positions in the cafeteria skullery.
Fuck your husband’s “boiling point”…
This from The Telegraph:
Barack Obama is struggling to contain his anger and frustration over the constant barrage of questions about his character and judgment, his wife has revealed.
Michelle Obama lifted the lid on the irritation felt by the leading Democrat candidate for the White House at the way anti-American outbursts by his pastor, Jeremiah Wright, have dogged his campaign.
He is said to be itching to turn all his fire on John McCain, the Republican candidate, who is benefiting most from Mr Obama’s protracted tussle with Hillary Clinton.
Mrs Obama told a rally in Durham, North Carolina, on Friday that only her husband’s desire to change US politics had helped him to control his feelings: “Barack is always thinking three steps ahead – what do we need to do to make change.”
Her husband was thinking “I can’t let my ego, my anger, my frustration get in the way of the ultimate goal,” she said.
“Barack has been characterised as many things that have nothing to do with who he is.”
Senator Obama has known the Rev Wright for more than 20 years, but he was forced to end their friendship last week over repeated claims by his pastor that America was to blame for the 9/11 attacks and for spreading the Aids virus.
New polls show the affair may have derailed Mr Obama’s chances of sealing a double win in Tuesday’s North Carolina and Indiana primary elections, which might have ended Mrs Clinton’s hopes.
Instead, in just a week, Mrs Clinton has reversed a narrow Obama lead in Indiana and is closing fast in North Carolina, where Mr Obama had hoped for a convincing win.
A poll on Saturday found 58 per cent of voters believe his de-nunciation of the Rev Wright was merely an act of political expediency.
The Rasmussen survey found 56 per cent of voters thought it likely that Obama shares some of his pastor’s anti-American views.
A senior Democrat strategist privy to Obama’s campaign said: “He’s sick of the battle against Clinton. He wants to get stuck into McCain. His people have had to remind him that this thing isn’t over yet and he needs to focus and put her away.”
In a press conference on Friday, Mr Obama conceded: “We’ve had a rough couple of weeks, I won’t deny that. I don’t think what happened with Rev Wright was helpful.”
While Mr Obama retains an almost unassailable three-figure lead in pledged delegates from the round of primary elections, he still needs a strong showing on Tuesday, when the two largest states remaining in the Democratic contest vote, in order to slow Mrs Clinton’s momentum – and with it her claims that she is emerging at the 11th hour as the stronger candidate.
He needs to split the remaining half-dozen states that have yet to vote with the former First Lady, and to win the backing of at least a third of the remaining 300 undeclared super-delegates to secure the nomination.





