Military Donors Back Ron Paul & Obama, and NOT McCain

by Mountaineer | February 4, 2008 at 02:39 pm
690 views | 0 Recommendations | 2 comments

Photos

Military Donors Back Ron Paul & Obama, and NOT McCain

Military Donors Back Ron Paul & Obama, and NOT McCain

see larger image

uploaded by Mountaineer

"In the 4th quarter of 2007, individuals in the Army, Navy and Air Force made
those branches of the armed services the No. 13, No. 18 and No. 21, contributing
industries, respectively. War opponent Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, received the most
from donors in the military, collecting at least $212,000 from them. Another war
opponent, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, was second with about $94,000.

Soldiers love Ron and Barack, and lobbyists love Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY,
the No. 1 recipient of lobbyist cash, receiving $823,000 in 2007 from the
lobbying industry, which gave about $2.7 million overall."

 

For full story go to :  

Military Donors Back Ron Paul & Obama, not McCain.

Advertisement
recommend Sign In or Join to post comments
0
libertysilver

It is a sad state of affairs we are in, in Iraq.  It is no surprise to me that Ron Paul is raking in the donations


from the military.  Historically, our soldiers fought for freedom against those who would take it away.


 They fought for what "they" believed in.  Not some agenda to take over the world.


I think those who oppose Ron Paul's philosophy, will someday be suffering for attempting to harm a


man of goodwill.  Never have I met a kinder man of such intelligence.


 The military know that he is the one who cares about them.  He cares about the real meaning of this country.


And is in the biggest fight for freedom that this country has ever seen.


 But they will soon know, that Ron Paul is probably one of the greatest men of our time.


 

0
Mountaineer

AMEN to THAT!!!!

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in Culture

 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from