Thursday, October 9, 2008

The most popular anti-Obama product



WND Exclusive WND BEST-SELLERS

The most popular anti-Obama product

Magnetic bumper sticker selling faster than hotcakes

Posted: October 07, 2008
8:30 pm Eastern

© 2008 WorldNetDaily

http://shop.wnd.com/store/item.asp?ITEM_ID=2382

The election is approaching quickly, and the alarm over the possibility of a President Barack Obama is rising as the highly popular NObama 08 Magnetic Bumper Sticker has returned to the top position among best-sellers at Shop.WND.com.

The bumper sticker, which had held the No. 1 spot for most of the summer, trailed last week to this week's No. 2 product, "Shocked by the Bible," by WND executive news editor Joe Kovacs.

But the statement about the candidacy of the Illinois senator has surged back, just as more information about his agenda appeared to be coming in a news conference in Kenya, where Obama has been involved with political leader Raila Odinga.

Suddenly, however, the Kenyan government stepped in and detained WND senior staff reporter Jerome Corsi just as he was preparing to announce the findings of his investigation.

Corsi, the author of the No. 1 best-selling book "The Obama Nation (Book)" was picked up by authorities and denied the opportunity to present his information.

Corsi has documented Obama's long history of connections to Kenya, where the senator's father worked as a government economist. Corsi was in Kenya to find answers to a few lingering questions – especially regarding the links between Obama and Prime Minister Odinga.

His scheduled news conference was to "expose details of deep secret ties" between Obama and "a section of Kenya government leaders."

He also was to address a "plot to be executed in Kenya should Senator Obama win the American presidency."

The bumper sticker reflects an opinion not just about a political candidate but all of the issues that come with a candidate, such as abortion. GOP candidate Sen. John McCain has a long record of supporting pro-life positions, and Obama has advocated for abortion even beyond what the National Abortion Rights Action League has sought.

As WND reported, the issue was in the news recently when an Obama campaign television commercial not only attacked McCain but also took aim at an unusual target: a 31-year-old woman who was born alive after her mother's botched abortion.

Obama's commercial calls McCain's ads "the sleaziest ever, truly vile." When the screen shows clips of abortion survivor Gianna Jessen and the ad she made asking Obama to reverse his stance on born alive infant protection legislation, the Obama ad calls Jessen's appeal "a despicable lie."

The Obama advertisement can be seen below:

The attack on Jessen has angered pro-life advocates.

"It is despicable, repulsive and beneath contempt that Barack Obama would attack Gianna Jessen," says Jill Stanek, a pro-life columnist who testified before Congress in support of the federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act, in a statement on Jessen's website. "She is a courageous abortion survivor and living miracle who would not be with us today if Obama's policies had been in place when she was born."

Jessen herself released a statement saying, "Mr. Obama is clearly blinded by political ambition given his attack on me this week. All I asked of him was to do the right thing: support medical care and protection for babies who survive abortion – as I did."

There also have been other controversies for Obama: The suggestion from terrorists they'd like to see Obama win, Rev. Jeremiah Wright's anti-white, anti-American diatribes, Michelle Obama's comment that for the first time as her husband pursued the Democratic nomination for president she was proud of her country, the donation of more than $30,000 to Obama's campaign that came in from residents of Gaza, the endorsement from a former Communist Party leader and Obama's relationship with former Weather Underground supporter Bill Ayers.

The bumper sticker, measuring 15 inches by 3-3/4 inches, is magnetic, so it's perfect for a car, a refrigerator, a file cabinet … in fact any metal surface.

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