IF WE WANT LIP SERVICE FROM OBAMA WE WILL PAY FOR IT.
No living President has taken the LOW ROAD like Barack Hussein Obama; a full fledged member of the Black Lives Matter Tear Down America Movement. Hussein, a Suicide Bomber in his own right, is heading to the Peach State, the home of Gone With the Wind; the Deep South of the Confederacy, trying his utmost to rouse up the great grandsons and great daughters of slaves. He is a suicide bomber roadshow, hoping to arouse the crowd to vote for two flaming liberals. The Senate is at stake. Georgia must make a choice, Destroy America or Keep in America Great.

The progressive wing of the Democrat party is going all in on this one. Don’t let it happen. A loss of the Senate will cut Biden’s cajones off for the next four years. We must due to him what he did to us – four years of investigations. Hunter Biden is a criminal, Joe Biden is a criminal. WE WANT JUSTICE.
VOTE LOEFFLER, VOTE PERDUE, KEEP IN AMERICA GREAT – DON’T LET RADICAL LEFT GO BEZERK, YOUR LIFE IS AT STAKE
President Trump is heading to Georgia on Saturday, seeking to boost the two GOP senators heading into critical runoffs while simultaneously complicating their path to victory.
Republicans view Trump’s presence as key to rallying the base, but many are concerned his attacks on the voting system and Republicans in Georgia could have a negative impact on the Jan. 5 races that will decide the Senate majority for the next two years.
Trump will hold a rally Saturday evening with Sens. Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue.
How Georgia’s Senate race pits the Old South against the New South
“There’s a third rail of politics in the South. And it’s race.”
Georgia’s campaign ads tell a tale of two states: Raphael Warnock’s ads are bright and sunny, featuring the pastor expounding on health care policy, telling his family story and walking a puppy. But the majority of Kelly Loeffler’s spots take a grimmer tone, attacking Warnock as “the most dangerous, radical candidate in America.” In one ad, the camera pans across a photo of Warnock, who is Black, darkened and superimposed over footage of riots. “Saving the Senate,” the narrator intones, “is about saving America … from that.”
It could work. But with Georgia’s demographics shifting, Loeffler’s approach — a familiar playbook tailored to older, whiter voters who skew Republican — is just as likely to prove out of step with a changing electorate. It’s pitting the politics of the Old South, often characterized by thinly-veiled racist rhetoric and maintenance of the predominantly white status quo, against the New South’s increasingly young and racially diverse constituency. This fundamental tension is shaping the contours of the messaging wars in the Senate race — and could reverberate in the broader region for decades to come.
Republicans remain confident that their strategy is effective, one that appeals to both their predominantly white voting base and communities of color.