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ronpaulGoogle Ron Paul
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Adding a new review will overwrite your old one. Any player can add a review. chief of police of Malibu... real reactionary...
Ossas99 on Monday August 4, 2008 mean dude
WEBBAAA on Sunday June 22, 2008 Really unpleasant player.
nunes on Sunday June 22, 2008 this guys has no respect for flags, u flag thirty times and he doestn care when there is 3 and 2 place he can kill
Robin's_hood on Sunday May 11, 2008 Wtf with ginola 133.
DIrty player and cheater
Henrik on Sunday April 20, 2008 An optimist.
rubeole on Sunday April 13, 2008 Not saying anything bad about RonPaul, Flawlezz. I'm fine with the way he plays Kdice. We were having a debate on politics. I don't expect your intellect to be able to grasp the subject though. But once again for the record I'm not saying anything bad about RonPaul. Never had a problem with him as far as the game goes. Flawlezz on the other hand is a douchebag.....lol. Thanx for making me look that stuff up RonPaul. I love our history and you were right about me getting the Lincoln-Douglass thing wrong. I was thinking about the general election on that one. Peace out and more power to the Republican Party in general.
Mudshovel on Saturday April 12, 2008 102 not 104 as I previously stated. That is 24% of the delegates and not 4% as you previously stated. Because Seward did not have the nescessary amounted needed it went to a second then a third ballot which Lincoln then won on. The problem with your deluded theory is that McCain has the needed amount of delegates to win. Unlike Seward at the time. So once again I will say it. McCain is the Republican nominee barring his death or a very very major scandal involving him.
Mudshovel on Saturday April 12, 2008 never had a problem with this guy played with him many times and very respectful player anything mudshovel says about anyone I question.
flawlezz on Saturday April 12, 2008 Here you go buddy. I believe his 104 delegates is a whole hell of a lot more than 4% of the vote.
Holding their breath
After the first ballot, Seward, as expected, led with 173 votes. Lincoln was next with 102. Cameron received 50; Chase got 49; Bates 48; and the rest received a handful each.
A second ballot was immediately called for, and the Lincoln camp knew that their man would gain strength. Vermont was the first state to make a major shift--all 10 votes went to Lincoln, a significant blow to Seward. As the roll call continued, Lincoln gained a few votes here and a few there, while Seward?s tally remained largely unchanged.
When Pennsylvania?s turn came, the Lincoln men held their breath. Whereas only four votes from Pennsylvania went to Lincoln on the first ballot, a whopping 48 went to him on the second. Seward supporters sank in their seats. Lincoln clearly had the momentum. The final tally on the second ballot was 184 for Seward and 181 for Lincoln.
A hush fell
Ballot three began. Lincoln continued to pick up votes--4 more from Kentucky, 15 from Ohio--while Seward lost votes. When the pencils stopped scratching, Lincoln had 231 and a half votes--one and a half short of those needed for the nomination.
A hush fell, and all eyes turned toward D. K. Cartter of Ohio, who stuttered
Mudshovel on Saturday April 12, 2008 |