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Sunday, 22 January 2012

Stephen Colbert, Herman Cain Powertrain missing in South Carolina

I have many of South Carolina was not in the Stephen Colbert, Cain took the train.

Herman Cain went to primary school on Saturday, despite the efforts of the comedian in turn, the joke of the results of the primaries on Saturday, urging fans to vote for the former executive director of The Godfather, and his name is still on the ballot - only a few thousand people - 1 percent of the vote.

Colbert welcomed the former as an alternative candidate to vote for him in his Comedy Central program last week. Super PAC formed to help the taunts, including commercial air Cain is "This is not surprising that Washington does not work even for the presidency ... Send a message. On January 21, Herman Cain, one vote".

But despite the positive reception of the College of Charleston on Friday at the campus, and when they held a joint meeting with Caine Colbert, and said that college students interviewed their friends did not take seriously enough as a joke by following at the polls their own on Saturday.

"I personally, and I found time," Seth Whisnant, 24, a student at the University of South Carolina who voted for Ron Paul.

Said Steve Kropski, 26, a student at the Faculty of Law at the University of South Carolina, said he believes most people will have the support of Colbert Cain as a joke.

"I can not imagine that people [actually vote for Cain, but do not underestimate that there are some people who did not."

Lindsay said Lipscomb (20 years), a student at the University of South Carolina voted for Newt Gingrich here in Colombia this afternoon, he did not think Colbert trick was "prudent" because it can remove the voice of the viable candidates.

"It's just going to have votes and distort the margins of all," adding that she believes that Cain was a "great candidate" with "a lot of excellent points."

Said one student, and Ron Paul political supporter who thought that students are the ones who would vote for Cain are people who do not have a strong preference first.

"Some people just take it seriously because no other candidates care about, do not care to vote at any of them," said Chetna Mehra, a son of 21 years at the University of Southern California, who voted in favor of Ron Paul. "But we hope you did not take it seriously."

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