Posted:
October 23, 2011 -- 5:03 pm Eastern By Drew Zahn -- © 2011 WND
The national magazine Newsweek is about two weeks too late in coming out with
its "Yes, We Cain!" cover featuring presidential hopeful Herman Cain.
While Newsweek features the Atlanta businessman on its Oct. 24 issue with
the clever pun on the candidate's name, WorldNetWeekly came out with a
nearly identical cover … on Oct. 9, 2011.
WorldNetWeekly, a gorgeous, full-color digital magazine, brings every WND
story, column and feature of the week prior to subscribers' computers through
nearly 400 magnificently designed pages, many with interactive and animated options.
It's available for download when you want, as often as you want. And it doesn't
go away the next day - leaving you frantically searching for headlines you previously
glanced at but didn't have time to open.
"It's also an entertaining package," says WND CEO Joseph Farah, "complete
with jokes, cartoons, crossword puzzles - features that tend to get lost amid
the hectic work week. You can take your time with WorldNetWeekly."
In fact, WorldNetWeekly recognized that Cain was primed to make a run for
the White House quite a bit earlier, publishing its first "Yes, We Cain!" issue
back on July 25, 2010:

Although Cain is a regular, weekly columnist on WND
and host of the popular radio talk program The Herman Cain Show, he is perhaps
best known as the CEO of Godfather's Pizza who transformed a company teetering
on the verge of bankruptcy into a household word. And as some will remember, Cain
is also famous for using the language and logic of everyday business to expose
the fallacies inherent in Clinton assumptions about "Hillarycare" during a 1994
televised town hall meeting. [Click for YouTube
clip].
Never elected to public office and without a major money machine behind him, the
black conservative businessman is astonishing friend and foe alike as he emerges
as a major player in what many consider to be the most important presidential
election in modern American history.
In 2008, a relative unknown named Barack Obama secured the Democrat Party's nomination
behind the popular catchphrase, "Yes, we can!"
Cain has likewise come from relative obscurity on the national scene to become
a frontrunner in the race for the Republican nomination, surging the once unlikely
candidate to post significant leads in many state and even national polls - hence
the pun on the last presidential election, "Yes,
we Cain!"
Drawbridge
had an early Herman Cain for president post: May 7, 2011:
Here's
our race card: Herman Cain for President
Herman
Cain also made a big hit in the South Carolina GOP debate, as reported by Dr.
Frank Luntz.