Funny

Alvin Greene's presence on the ballot in the South Carolina Senate race continues to cause problems for the state's Democratic Party, which is still declining to embrace their candidate.
 
what's the story on this guy, I saw a black host on CNN basically saying this guy was high during the interview.
 
I'm starting to come around to the idea that the guy is somehow an anomaly that just won in his own right because of a lack of voter information.

Maybe he actually did pay his own filing fee and is just living in his own world in his mind, because obviously he is not able to effectively articulate himself to the world.

What a waste of a golden opportunity! The guy got his fifteen minutes and has proven to be a vegetable. The average person would do much better with the chance he has, and he is definitely not average.
 
I'm starting to come around to the idea that the guy is somehow an anomaly that just won in his own right because of a lack of voter information.

Maybe he actually did pay his own filing fee and is just living in his own world in his mind, because obviously he is not able to effectively articulate himself to the world.

What a waste of a golden opportunity! The guy got his fifteen minutes and has proven to be a vegetable. The average person would do much better with the chance he has, and he is definitely not average.

so the whole deal is he's a simpleton and benefitted by the kick the assholes out movement?
 
:lol:


How did Alvin M. Greene, an unemployed military veteran who lives with his father, come up with the $10,400 filing fee for the Democratic Senate primary he won Tuesday?

As pressure mounts on Greene to answer speculation that he might have been a Republican plant -- an accusation he denies -- a small cadre of supporters is coalescing to defend the 32-year-old novice, who was victorious without benefit of campaign staff members, contributors or even speaking events.

In an interview Friday at his father's home outside Manning, Greene said he got the money from a personal bank account containing money he saved before being discharged from the Army last summer. He declined to show documentation of the account.

"I saved the money from the Army," Greene said. "Army, Army, Army, Army money. My personal Army money." Then, he had a question of his own: "Can I get paid for this interview?"



Vic Rawl, who was the presumptive Democratic nominee in South Carolina's U.S. Senate race until his upset loss this week to unemployed military veteran Alvin Greene, is now calling for an investigation into the results.


How much of a loser is Vic Rawl, to get beat by Alvin Greene.
 
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