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And he didn't let the "he just doesn't understand" argument go unanswered this time
-- yes, he said, there were indeed things he didn't understand, like how one could invade a country that had nothing to do with 9/11. Both men tried their very hardest to prove to the undecided voters onstage
-- and more importantly, at home -- that they felt their economic pain. How can we trust either of you, asked one blunt onstage voter, Teresa Finch. "I can understand your frustration and your cynicism," Obama said. "Teresa, thank you. I can see why you feel that cynicism," McCain said. As for the town-hall format, a setting McCain enjoys, it hardly felt like a town hall at all. The questions had been selected by moderator Tom Brokaw beforehand, and once they were asked, never was the questioner heard from again. The onstage voters seemed more like bit players in a show than actual participants. Clearly there was no way of knowing if the debate had changed any of their opinions. If they were anything like Rani Rosborough, an undecided voter who watched from home in University Park, Md., then, well, it didn't. "I did think Obama commanded the attention better," said Rosborough, a registered Republican. "And I'm displeased with these negative attacks and comments toward Obama. On the campaign trail, as well, Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin seem to be engaging in more personal attacks." On the other hand, she said, "I came in 50-50, and I'm leaving 50-50. These debates are not very substantial. There are lots of statements made, but not much supporting them with facts. "I just don't find them very helpful."
[Associated
Press;
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