After a major firestorm in the media after Barack Obama said, "You can put lipstick on a pig, It's still a pig," today Obama explains his remarks and blames the media for overreacting.
At this point from the reactions by the audience when Obama first made the remark, the media, the GOP and even Clinton supporters, shows that no matter what Obama meant by his comment, the "perception" of what he implied is catching far more attention from across the Internet.
Despite the fact that Obama, McCain, other politicians and every day people have used that lipstick on a pig remark previously, since Sarah Palin gave her speech at the Republican Convention last week, which was watched by million of voters where she said, "You know the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? Lipstick," now any reference to "lipstick" automatically brings to mind that portion of the speech.
Differing opinions on whether the comment was innocent or a deliberate reference to Palin can be seen across a broad spectrum of Internet sites, comment sections of blogs and news forums and on television, but the one point that keeps coming to the forefront is, shouldn't the reaction to the comment been thought of before making it.
In politics perception is important and the more people see and hear about this, whether from John McCain's new ad, television commentators, bloggers, the media or Obama himself trying to explain it, the more people will continue to identify any reference to lipstick with Palin's speech.
Obama and his campaign is imploding in front of our eyes, they cannot understand how quickly things have turned around, they do not know how to handle the influx of Independents gravitating towards McCain, or women that are coming from all walks of life and jumping on the McCain/Palin bandwagon and they are spinning out of control.
The Obama campaign does not have much longer to continue to flail and their supporters seem intent on doing everything they can to help him implode from within by spreading rumors, attacking Palin and generally helping the McCain campaign far more than they are helping their own candidate..
Hot Air reminds people of another "innocent" gesture from Obama during the primaries between he and Hillary Clinton.
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