Fuck Romney

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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby Elvis » Sat Nov 03, 2012 12:46 am

a 1,000 year reign


Wonderful, just wonderful.


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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby psynapz » Tue Nov 06, 2012 12:19 am

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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby jcivil » Tue Nov 06, 2012 10:54 pm

Just to have the slug front and center.

(Obomney cometh slutz!)

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xgqg94 ... rise_music
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby Luther Blissett » Wed Nov 07, 2012 1:42 pm

seemslikeadream wrote:
norton ash wrote:The Romney/Ryan candidacy is just getting too 'unbelievable.' I mean, McCain/Palin was a patsy ticket, but this is like 1919 Chicago White Sox bad.



All Koch Kings horses and all the Koch Kings men won't put Humpy GOP back together again

GOP Civil War Is Coming as Mitt Romney Campaign Flails in Video’s Wake
by Robert Shrum Sep 18, 2012 7:32 AM EDT
The video carping about government moochers may well have sealed it. Mitt Romney is going down, and the fight already is on for the future of the Republican Party. The battle will be bitter—and prolonged, says Robert
There is a civil war gathering in the Republican Party. It looks more and more like a dispirited and disappointed collection of factions, preparing to lay blame for a lost presidential election and to do battle to shape a new direction for the Grand Old Party.

Last week the view hardened that the Republican nominee was in close to terminal trouble. Having lost the summer as he let the Obama campaign define him, having lost the conventions when he let Clint Eastwood step all over his acceptance speech, Mitt Romney spectacularly lost his head on Sept. 11 during the mob attack on U.S. diplomats in Egypt and Libya. He came across as a low-life opportunist rushing to exploit a national tragedy in order to score political points and then doubling down on this venal dumbness with a smirking and contentious press conference. This week he may well have finished the job, with a video leaking of him referring to 47 percent of the electorate as government moochers.

Romney’s advisers have taken to bashing the press for covering the bad news, a near-certain sign of a losing campaign, as is the simultaneous effort to quarrel with the methodology of polls showing him trailing in the battleground states with almost no way of reaching 270 electoral votes. The surveys were largely in the field before Romney’s graceless and craven charge that the Obama administration sympathized with those who murdered the nation’s ambassador to Libya and three other Americans. More polls are on the way, and for Mitt the Knife, with his self-inflicted wounds, most of the numbers won’t be pretty.

John Heilemann, who knows a game change when he sees it, rendered a damning verdict in New York: “Romney … badly missed the mark.” Heilemann cited the array of GOP leaders, strategists, and commentators who declined to offer even faint support or instead outright rebuked their own candidate, on and off the record. He pointed to the broader narrative emerging in the media across the ideological spectrum: Romney is losing, knows he is losing, and is starting to panic.


There are the ritual caveats. The Republican standard-bearer could transform the race during the debates. Despite the Obama enterprise’s predictable and tactically savvy efforts to pump up the deflated expectations for his performance, Romney seems unlikely to morph into a latter day John F. Kennedy. It’s far more likely that he will be on the defensive about his false claims and his Medicare-shredding, Social Security–threatening, education-slashing, middle-class tax-raising policies, all designed to shower more money on those who already have the most.


Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney campaigns at Van Dyck Park in Fairfax, Va., Sept. 13, 2012. (Win McNamee / Getty Images)

In an America where the party of angry white men increasingly speaks for and to a permanent minority, it could take another defeat and maybe another before the GOP comes to its senses.
Moreover, you can’t run on the economy if you don’t have specific economic proposals—or won’t answer basic questions about a 59-point plan that, in critical areas, offers zero details. In the latest New York Times/CBS numbers, the president now leads where Romney had for months: which candidate would “do a better job handling the economy and unemployment?” If Romney doesn’t have the economy, what can he run on? Banning contraception? Or bankrupting the auto industry?

Or maybe exogenous events will ride to the rescue. But one of them, last week’s Federal Reserve decision to launch an open-ended third round of “quantitative easing,” helps the stock market and Obama in the short run and the unemployed over a longer term. The decision strengthens perceptions that the nation is on the right track, a sentiment already on the rise in the wake of Bill Clinton’s and President Obama’s convention speeches. Chasing another news cycle and the tale of his own flagging campaign, Romney promptly and predictably condemned the Fed for doing its statutory job, which is not only to control inflation but also to promote job creation and full employment. It was a transparent tic from a candidate who’s been rooting for a slowdown all along.

What else is left, another foreign crisis? First, that’s when Americans tend to rally around a president, especially one who’s demonstrated coolness, judgment, and a sure sense of command, which is exactly what Obama has done. He’s in an extraordinary position for a Democrat of holding a decided advantage on foreign policy, national security, and fighting terrorism. In contrast, Romney instinctively says the wrong thing, which frequently makes him look not only out of touch but out of his depth, unready for a job that demands the capacity to cope with unanticipated and potentially mortal dangers.

And Romney won’t make up lost ground by pursuing a makeover on daytime TV. Last week he told Kelly Ripa that he’s a “fan” of Snooki from Jersey Shore and likes to sleep wearing “as little as possible.” The latter elicits an image we didn’t need. The show was taped as the Middle East upheaval escalated. It wasn’t humanizing, but cringe-inducing. “Jersey Shore canceled—and Romney soon will be,” was the reaction of one Republican pro.

After the first debate, see if the doubts become a rout. One measure will be the conduct of the Republican super PACs. The corpulent moneybags of casino magnate Sheldon Adelson probably will continue to flow into the presidential ad wars; after all, Adelson stuck with Newt Gingrich as Gingrich struck out in the Republican primaries. But hardheaded operatives like Karl Rove could shift their resources to Senate and House contests. They’ll deny it even if they do it. And it wouldn’t be good news for Democrats; the possibility—or probability—is already worrying party officials.

Such a scenario also would set the stage for the GOP’s post-Romney civil war. The Tea Party Republicans who detest, or more accurately hate, this president will be maddened by his reelection. They will rage against it as illegitimate, stolen, un-American. You name it, they’ll say it. And they will tear at the GOP’s 2012 nominee as insufficiently conservative and insist that Republicans in the Senate and House block a second-term Obama at every turn.

A prudent party might venture at least a measure of cooperation and compromise, to prevent the standing of Republicans from collapsing as the economy moves back to prosperity. This is what smart GOP strategists will recommend. And it’s precisely what John Boehner will fear to do lest he lose his House speakership—or with hope, his minority leadership—to the lean and hungry Eric Cantor.

So with Romney consigned in 2013 to his four-car elevator mansion in La Jolla, Calif., the president may face daunting challenges to governing even as he once again reaches across the aisle. His mandate could prove momentary, which is what happened to Harry Truman, who achieved almost nothing domestically in the four years after his upset win in 1948. At least this time, the Supreme Court will be saved from a right-wing coup and health-care reform won’t be dispatched to extremist defenestration. And Democrats could hold the high ground for elections to come.

This outcome—in an Obama second term, in 2016, and campaigns beyond—will be magnified or modulated by the course of the irrepressible conflict between the Jeb Bush Republicans and the Paul Ryan Republicans. The two men represent very different paths. Bush stands for a tempered conservatism; he understands the impending demographic doom of a reactionary, anti-Hispanic Republican Party. He’s writing a book on immigration; as he said this summer: “Don’t just ... say immediately we must have controlled borders. Change the tone ... think we need a broader approach.” Ryan, on the other hand, champions a hardline approach on immigration, along with virtual repeal of the New Deal and the social progress of the 1960s.

Bush’s attitude—I’ll borrow from his father and call it “a kinder, gentler” conservatism—could be broadly acceptable in the country, even if his brother George was all but anathema at the 2012 Republican convention. Ryan is out of step with the majority of Americans not only on immigration but on his budget plans and across a wide range of domestic policy. If Romney goes down, then Bush, the practical choice, and Ryan, likely to be lionized on the right, will be the 2016 front-runners for each faction of the GOP. Meanwhile, Republicans on Capitol Hill will have to determine whether to be modestly practical—or relentlessly ideological.

Which way will this civil war go?

Undoubtedly it will be bitter. The true believers will fulminate that they were tricked by the establishment into accepting Romney, John McCain, and free-spending, big-government fellow traveler George W. Bush. The Tea Partiers are a minority in America but almost certainly a majority in what could become a smaller and smaller Republican Party. And the GOP’s experience in California suggests that one beating, or even several, may not yield a GOP self-correction but a dug-in revanchism. The state party’s response has been to lurch rightward. The result, as McCain’s chief 2008 strategist Steve Schmidt predicts, is that Republicans could soon become “the third party” in the nation’s largest state—behind Democrats and independents.

In an America where the party of angry white men increasingly speaks for and to a permanent minority, it could take another defeat and maybe another before the GOP comes to its senses. Surely Romney himself would have been better off in the general election if he had defended his Massachusetts health-care reform and sounded occasional notes of pragmatism and compassion. But then, of course, he never would have been the nominee. He could even have let us assume he wore pajamas to bed. Now hovering over his apparently desperate march toward a concession speech is the specter of Republicans fighting their protracted civil war. Someday, somehow, someone will do for the conservative side of our politics what Bill Clinton did as the progressive who brought Democrats back to the mainstream. But post-2012, maybe even Ryan won’t be pure enough; it could be full-Santorum ahead.


I'd like to discuss the future of the front-facing, public identity of the GOP and build off of this gem that seemslikeadream posted a couple of months ago.

Consciously subjecting myself to the mainstream spectacle last night, including Fox News which was highly telling / entertaining, I started seeing many pundits calling for the GOP to "double-down" on conservative values, saying that Romney was too moderate a candidate. Ask my liberal friends, and they would tell you that the dreams of rich, racist old white men are unequivocally over, and that the party must begin to moderate themselves. Other "third ways" include: softening on social issues but hardening for corporatism and core conservative values of governing; going autocratic, theocratic, but more smiley, happy, cult-like; pump-faking a "worker's party," disturbingly fascist, etc. etc.

I think that most here accept that there is a dissonance between the public persona and the party machinery, but that the personality of the message has real effects on the American voter. The electorate is still changing, becoming more atheistic, open, communicative, egalitarian, especially in the traditionally-conservative parts of the country that are close to urban centers and throughout the upper midwest.

While Chris Christie might represent one direction for the party (socially moderate, pragmatic, fiscally conservative, corporatist, patriarchal, a bully — essentially organized crime paraded as politics), and I believe he does have a long future and will lead one branch of revanchist republicanism, I don't think that this will represent the primary thrust of the GOP. We already see plenty of conservatives painting him as some sort of traitor or "other."

I think that the main thrust — and the approach that will be more "populist" — will be a marriage of the old tea party with traditional, proto-, or neofascism, with real power behind it. Despite representing far less of the popular opinion, I think we should be wary of attempts to establish this kind of direction by force. All told, the directives of the Koch Brothers, Ken Lewis, Dimon, Kristol, etc have been pretty feeble thus far and we know they are capable of much, much worse, and much more overt power-grabbing.

But then again — is any of it really necessary? My Facebook feed was disappointing, to say the least. I have one friend — articulate, law school grad, graf writer — post a pretty long screed about how this election has left him feeling quite empty. I know from my friendship with him that he'd side much more closely with me if "victory" were more realistic. Everyone else is over the moon, implying that this election represents an unimaginable progressive victory, and that we'll never have to worry about anything ever again. I asked Facebook if the Obama Administration will go back to any of the 2008 campaign promises on climate change that were all broken, or if that's something we're not talking about anymore. The response was typical — he most definitely will, he just needed time and the reelection. Yet the same machinations keep trudging on — environmentally, economically, politically — but people still feel comfortable "enough" to ignore them.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby 8bitagent » Wed Nov 07, 2012 2:43 pm

Great article repost. That's the big question they're examining today on the news circuit. Given how the GOP banked on and allowed their party reps to go into crazy land with the rape/women/etc comments and other positions,
how can they compete with the changing face of America? Some definitely feel there will be strategists begging for the party to go more moderate, adopting perhaps even some Libertarian positions. Others contend we'll see a strong faction go all out crazy in their views(sadly I think this may happen)

It's sort of pathetic seeing Alex Jones think America would have been way better off with Romney. I almost think AJ kneels and prays to guns every night. It shows a difference...the very social policy reasons the patriot nuts wanted Romney in(anti gay laws, anti women laws, gun worship, etc) is the reason even in the end liberal critics of Obama realized had to be excited the GOP have been totally rejected.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Nov 08, 2012 11:50 am

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby justdrew » Thu Nov 08, 2012 6:33 pm

8bitagent wrote:Great article repost. That's the big question they're examining today on the news circuit. Given how the GOP banked on and allowed their party reps to go into crazy land with the rape/women/etc comments and other positions,
how can they compete with the changing face of America? Some definitely feel there will be strategists begging for the party to go more moderate, adopting perhaps even some Libertarian positions. Others contend we'll see a strong faction go all out crazy in their views(sadly I think this may happen)

It's sort of pathetic seeing Alex Jones think America would have been way better off with Romney. I almost think AJ kneels and prays to guns every night. It shows a difference...the very social policy reasons the patriot nuts wanted Romney in(anti gay laws, anti women laws, gun worship, etc) is the reason even in the end liberal critics of Obama realized had to be excited the GOP have been totally rejected.


fyi, Herman Cain is calling for the party to split and the tea party to go it's own way. :partyhat
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Nov 09, 2012 8:41 am

Willard Romney, Cutting of The Help for Good
By Charles P. Pierce
at 3:29pm
One last time, let's reiterate: In the House of Romney, there are only two kinds of people — Romneys and The Help:
From the moment Mitt Romney stepped off stage Tuesday night, having just delivered a brief concession speech he wrote only that evening, the massive infrastructure surrounding his campaign quickly began to disassemble itself. Aides taking cabs home late that night got rude awakenings when they found the credit cards linked to the campaign no longer worked.
Classic.
They're all lucky they're not working in China now.

60 comments

David Martin Latchaw · Top Commenter · Stanford
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if hundreds of Romney staffers suddenly cried out, "Motherfker!"
Reply · 185 · Like · Follow Post · 13 hours ago

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby 8bitagent » Fri Nov 09, 2012 9:29 pm

And if you didn't already think Romney and company were royally messed up, there's this

Staffers working for the Romney 2012 campaign got a sudden and unwelcome lesson in fiscal conservatism Tuesday night and Wednesday morning when they tried to check out of hotel rooms or travel home. According to NBC’s “First Read” blog, campaign workers were left to pull themselves up by their bootstraps when they found that all the credit cards issued by Romney/Ryan 2012 were canceled as soon as the nominee finished his concession speech.

“From the moment Mitt Romney stepped off stage Tuesday night, having just delivered a brief concession speech he wrote only that evening, the massive infrastructure surrounding his campaign quickly began to disassemble itself,” wrote NBC’s Garrett Haake. “Aides taking cabs home late that night got rude awakenings when they found the credit cards linked to the campaign no longer worked.”

Forbes magazine explained that this is not normal protocol for political campaigns.

“In case you are wondering, this did not have to happen,” wrote columnist Helaine Olen. “The Mitt Romney for President entity does not end with Romney’s Tuesday night loss. There are papers to be filed with various federal commissions and bills to be paid.”

Raw Story (http://s.tt/1sLwa)


http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/11/09/r ... ion-night/

wow. Even to their own dyed in the wool campaign staffers and help, people who worked tirelessly for a long time day in and day out for Romney, THIS is how they get treated. wow.
We can criticize Team Obama, but they'd never do this.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:02 am

...

Hammer of Los wrote:
...

A Simple Prayer

Adorned in Emperor's Attire,
Parades he Now, the Mormon Messiah.
Shadowed by Spectres from his Past,
Surrounded Now by Hysterical Cast.

A Fortunate Son he Appeareth to be,
Yet Mayhap the Man be not so Lucky.
His Mental Health doth Take the Strain.
The Iron Man Pounds on his Brain.

The Watcher Now doth Turn his Gaze.
The Dancing Torch Light Now Ablaze.
We All Pray his Hopes wilt Tank;
The War Machine he shalt Not Crank.


...



Another messiah bites the dust.

Sometimes prayers are answered.

'Nuff said, true believers.

Yes, we are all part of God's conspiracy.

...
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Nov 15, 2012 9:26 am

Obama Was Always Out Of Romney's League
Eric Zuesse, Contributor | Nov. 12, 2012, 6:13 PM | 20,301 | 108

How A Three-Man Polling Team Completely Nailed Their Election Prediction
The day after the election, CNN headlined, November 7th, “Analysis: Why Romney Lost,” and Peter Hamby wrote that Republican operatives from around the country expressed awe at the skillfulness of the Obama campaign organization, and they admitted to have been shockingly outclassed.
Mitt Romney, who had claimed, throughout his campaign, that Barack Obama possessed no executive experience and was “just a community organizer,” and who had bragged constantly about what a great CEO he, Romney, was, turned out to be instead a CEO dwarf next to the gigantic Obama.
For example, “Democrats showed decisively that their ground game — the combined effort to find, persuade, and turn out voters — is devastatingly better than anything their rivals have to offer. ... ‘When it comes to the use of voter data and analytics, the two sides appear to be’ not even comparable,” said one expert.
“No party has ever had such a durable structural advantage over the other on polling, making television ads, or fundraising, for example,” he said. “After the dust had cleared, the GOP field operation, which had derided the Obama operation, ... seemed built on a house of cards.”
The next day, John Ekdahl, at his “Ace of Spades HQ,” headlined “The Unmitigated Disaster Known As Project ORCA,” and he, a web developer volunteer for the Romney get-out-the-vote operation, described Romney’s astounding incompetence.
He opened: “What is Project Orca? Well, this is what they told us: ‘Project ORCA is a massive undertaking – the Republican Party’s newest, unprecedented and most technologically advanced plan to win the 2012 election.’ Pretty much everything in that sentence is false. The ‘massive undertaking’ is true, however. ... And perhaps ‘unprecedented’ would fit if we’re discussing failure.” It was an untested technological monstrosity that was incompetently applied, but Ekdahl’s repeated efforts to communicate upwards in the organization in order to warn them of problems he found in it went unanswered.
“No response. I continued to do this for six straight hours. ... I even tried to call three local victory centers. All went straight to voicemail.” He closed: “The bitter irony of this entire endeavor was that a supposedly small government candidate gutted the local structure of GOTV [Get Out The Vote] efforts in favor of a centralized, faceless organization in a far off place (in this case, their Boston headquarters). Wrap your head around that.” That’s what stood at the base of what CNN’s Peter Hamby was calling the Romney team’s “house of cards.”
Mitt Romney was massively incompetent as the CEO of a large and complex organization. He surrounded himself with sycophants, to such an extent he had no idea of any problems in his own organization. He was just a repeat of George W. Bush. Both were typical aristocrats.
It turned out that the braggart CEO Romney, lied just as much about his executive skills as he did about most other things. Obama had won political victories not only because he was the best political campaigner in modern times, but also because he hired the best people in the country to run his campaigns. Obama was a crushing opponent, a great manager of a large organization.
Romney wasn’t in Obama’s league, and never had been. Romney was just a well-trained buyer, stripper, and seller, of corporations, who knew how to game the system so as to rip off workers and business competitors, and how to play governments off against each other so as to evade taxes legally and leave the public everywhere holding the bags after everything was stripped by this predator.
Romney wasn’t the libertarian mouth that politicians such as Ron Paul had been; he was the real thing, a John Galt character, a pure individualist: a functioning, and not just verbal, psychopath. That bully turned out to be simply outmatched by Obama’s sheer skill.
Republicans’ heads were now spinning; a new round of lying and faith would begin.
Also on November 7th, the Washington Post bannered “Life After Defeat for Mitt Romney,” and Philip Rucker reported that Romney “tried not to cry” when meeting with his billionaire backers. “Some top donors privately unloaded on Romney’s senior staff, describing it as a junior varsity operation that failed to adequately insulate and defend Romney.”
(“Defend Romney”? From himself?) The head of the staff responded, “Mitt never doubted his team.” But amongst aristocrats, blame always goes downward; credit always goes upward. The aristocrats were blaming their hired workers, after all; but, whenever results turned out to aristocrats’ satisfaction, they saw themselves as the “job creators,” and their workers were just cogs in the machine aristocrats thought belonged 100% to themselves. It was a “heads I win, tails you lose” type of culture. These people weren’t especially bright, but they had the advantage of being psychopaths whose focus was greed, so they were rich.
Theatlanticwire.com bannered, on the night of November 7th, “Rove’s War with Fox’s Nerds,” and Elspeth Reeve recounted and presented video of the reluctance of Fox “News” to accept, and to report, the fact that Obama had won. Karl Rove and the rest of the Romney campaign refused to accept the fact. “When Bret Baier called Ohio and the presidency for President Obama, ‘Fox phones lit up with angry phone calls and e-mails from the Romney campaign, who believed that the call was premature, since tallies in several Republican-leaning Southern counties hadn’t been ... fully tabulated.’”
They didn’t care that the same was true in Democratic areas of the state, and that all of the professional projections took all of that into account, on both sides. But Fox was the Republican Party’s operation, and the Republican Party refused to accept Obama’s win. So, Roger Ailes decided to have his beauty queen walk over to the office of the professionals, the nerds, and to be followed by the camera, to challenge those people on their calling Ohio for Obama.
A Fox “News” “insider” explained: “Anytime there’s a chance to show off Megyn Kelly’s legs they’ll go for it.” One of the reader-comments to this report noted: “The Romney campaign had a direct phone line to Fox News? Fair and balanced indeed.” Another said: “Look at how often [Obama’s man, David] Axelrod was on MSNBC last night,” as if there were any equivalency there, or as if such interviews weren’t appropriate in election coverage. The problem here was reality-denial, specifically at the sleazy operation of Rupert Murdoch and the Republican Party.
On November 8th, Murdoch’s rag, the Wall Street Journal, headlined “How Race Slipped Away From Romney,” and reported that “the lack of money earlier this year stalled his campaign, and he never really recovered.” This propaganda-sheet said “Romney ultimately garnered some $800 million or more, putting him in close competition with Mr. Obama’s robust fundraising effort.”
But they said this money wasn’t enough, because of “their slim bank account” earlier. In other words: Not enough aristocrats threw enough money fast enough into Romney’s campaign coffers – they had needed to invest still more in this incompetent than they did. But the same day, the Columbia Journalism Review bannered “WSJ Gets Lost in the Weeds with the Romney Campaign,” and called that “a seriously flawed story.”
Whom were the agents of the aristocrats trying to fool now, and how would they go about doing it?
This WSJ headline and “news” report were also featured at Yahoo News, where most of the reactions were condemnatory of Democrats and/or democracy itself, such as: “The balance has tipped and we no longer have a free democracy. When almost 50% of an uninformed electorate is dependent on government handouts (i.e. taxes taken from the productive to give to the unproductive) you can no longer have free elections.” Unless such fascist (“libertarian”) ideology were to be discredited as the lies that it is, progress would be impossible.
Also on November 8th, the AP headlined “Obama Wins the Way the Campaign Predicted.” But apparently, the aristocracy still didn’t think that Obama possessed the CEO experience necessary for the job of U.S. President – they cried for their Romney-loss.
The Electoral College result (still not reported as late as November 9th, even after 100% of Florida’s results were in) was 332 Obama, 206 Romney. Obama beat the 270 required for a win, and he did it with 62 votes to spare, which was far higher than even the election-forecasters had been predicting (and than the networks still were reporting). Most of the pre-election national polls (other than ABC, NBC, CBS, and Pew) had been way off (and Gallup was especially bad), collectively showing a tied contest (with a minuscule Romney popular-vote lead); the actual vote-count provided Obama with a 3% victory-margin in the popular vote. Obama won eight of the nine battleground states (all but NC).
Obama outperformed even the final election forecast from Nate Silver, of 313 Electoral College votes. Although all of the major election-forecasters had been predicting that Obama would beat the 270-vote mark required for a win, none had predicted he’d beat it by as much as he ended up doing. However, Romney was far less professional than the pros; basically, Obama outperformed all of the pros, and Romney underperformed them. CBS News headlined on November 8th, “Adviser: Romney ‘Shell-shocked’ by Loss,” and reported “‘He was shellshocked,’ one adviser said of Romney.”
Ann Romney broke down crying. And, “Running mate Paul Ryan seemed genuinely shocked, the adviser said. Ryan’s wife Janna also was shaken and cried softly.” All of these people who had been criticizing Barack Obama as being “weak” and “lacking in executive experience,” were mashed into tears by him. Their lies had ultimately fooled even themselves, and not just their suckers – they were shocked.
On November 8th, Taegan Goddard at politicalwire.com headlined “Romney Planned Fireworks to Celebrate Victory,” and linked to the Boston Globe story, and to the Boston Fire Department permit, issued November 5th, for a fireworks-display to be held on November 6th to celebrate Mitt’s victory. (Obama did no such thing; he didn’t need to do any such thing.)
Furthermore, instead of the Senate’s passing back to Republican control as had initially been expected, Democrats won all but one of their seriously contested Senate seats, and Obama would now enjoy around a 55 to 45 Senate-majority backing, plus the VP in the event of any Senate tie. The House of Representatives was little changed from before.
Even after Citizens United, this was still Barack Obama’s America, with his Republican friends controlling the House while representing the aristocracy publicly and unapologetically.
The conservatives’ fantasizing would go on. November 8th offered two more good summaries of how bad it was. Politicalwire.com headlined “Rachel Maddow Has the Last Word,” and Taegan Goddard linked there to her opening spiel the prior night, in which she strung together some of the major lies that conservative suckers believed about Obama. Huffingtonpost headlined “Jon Stewart Mocks Fox News’ Election Night Meltdown,” and Katia McGlynn linked there to video of the many Fox “News” reporters who had predicted a Romney/Ryan landslide, and who still refused to accept that they had been wrong.
Also on November 8th, thinkprogress.org bannered “Republicans Claim Obama Won Re-election Because Blacks and Hispanics Wanted More Handouts,” and presented many examples of Republicans saying that greed by the poor and minorities was motivating the Obama-vote. For example, at 8PM on election night, Fox’s Bill O’Reilly said: “The demographics are changing.
"It’s not a traditional America anymore. And there are 50% of the voting public who want stuff. They want things. And who is going to give them things? President Obama. ... The white establishment is now the minority. ... You are going to see a tremendous Hispanic vote for President Obama. Overwhelming Black vote for President Obama. And women will probably break Obama’s way. People feel that they are entitled to things, and which candidate, between the two, is going to give them things?”
Bill O’Reilly was the giant of cable news channels, he had twice the audience-size of anyone on any other cable network; he beat even some of the broadcast networks, and yet he was unabashedly a fascist. The Republican Party knew their market; they just ignored everyone who wasn’t part of it. Elspeth Reeve at theatlanticwire.com on November 8th headlined “A Continuum of Post-Romney Defeat Meltdowns,” and he quoted Ann Coulter: “We have more takers than makers.” In other words: the fascists blamed Obama’s victory on greed by not “the Jews” like Hitler did, but instead: women, Blacks, Hispanics, and the poor in general. The aristocrats who had made out like bandits in the 2008 economic crash that they had caused were not to blame, at all. Instead, the crash’s victims were to blame, and were too greedy. And yet Obama was so conservative that he agreed with the fascists, on this (despite his rhetoric to the contrary). Blacks and the poor suffered the biggest declines of income and wealth under his Presidency, and the top 1% received 93% of the income-gains – the largest-ever top-1% gains-share.
But Obama’s victims ended up voting for him, because the Republican Party so clearly hated and despised them. At least Obama was good on the rhetoric. Romney would have been a catastrophe in every way. Furthermore, Obama dwarfed Romney as CEO of a large organization. Romney was just an incompetent lying thug, and almost all poor people were terrified that such a person was supported by around half of the U.S. population.
The exit polls showed that, as usual, the Republican candidate was preferred by marrieds, seniors, white Christians (and especially by frequent churchgoers), upper-income, college-educated, and rural voters; and the Democratic candidate was preferred by unmarrieds, under-30s, minorities, less religious, lower income, less educated (and also Ph.D’s and other post-college-degreed), and urban voters. For example: Under $30,000 income went for Obama 63%; $30,000-$50,000 Obama 57%; but Romney won each $50,000+ group by around 52% to 55%. The only education-group that went Obama by over 55% was “No high school diploma”: it was 64%. Cities 500,000+ went Obama 69%; rural voters went Romney 61%.
On the issues: The key question was “Should taxes be raised to help cut the budget deficit?” 63% of voters said “No”; only 33% said “Yes.” This indicated that unless Obama would use the bully pulpit to reverse those figures, his Presidency and the nation could well be fiscally destroyed. The basis for his succeeding at such bully-pulpiting was, however, indicated by the answers to: “Should income tax rates” “Increase for all” (13%), “Increase only on income over $250,000” (47%), or “Not increase for anyone” (35%). In other words, though the average person didn’t know that taxes needed to be raised in order to help cut the budget deficit, the average person was strongly in favor of raising taxes on $250,000+ incomes, and there was a sizable minority (13%) who even wanted everyone’s taxes to increase. Furthermore, 55% said the U.S. economy “Favors the wealthy”; only 39% said it’s “fair to most Americans.”
The public, in other words, favored tax-hikes to make taxes fairer, but opposed tax-hikes to address the federal debt. If Obama was serious about fiscal issues, he would educate the public that $250,000+ incomes needed to be taxed more not only for fairness but also because the Bush tax cuts had largely created the federal debt in the first place and thus needed to be reversed, at least on the rich. Furthermore, perhaps because of the obvious psychopathy of Mitt Romney, 38% of voters now self-identified as “Democrat”; only 32% as “Republican.” So: the public was certainly educable on the tax-hikes issue – if Obama was willing. This would be the man’s ultimate test.
Yahoo News and ABC headlined on the night of November 8th, “Tearful Obama Credits Staff,” and showed video of “The morning after he won re-election, an emotional President Barack Obama credited his youthful staff of several hundred with running a campaign that will ‘go on in the annals of history.’ ‘What you guys have accomplished will go on in the annals of history and they will read about it and they’ll marvel about it,’ ... Obama told his team Wednesday morning inside the Chicago campaign headquarters, tears streaming down his face.”
Like any great CEO, he not only chose employees well, but he expressed well his appreciation of their superb performance. Regardless of whether Obama cared about the poor, he cared deeply about his paid staff and volunteers, who made his victories possible. They were his team, and he loved them like a father. However, remarkably many of the reader-comments to this came from Republicans, such as: “America is going down and it’s in decay! From the simplicity of been thankful for a good harvest and thanking God for it, to legalizing marijuana, same sex marriage and having a Muslim, a liberal, open minded, a radical, a socialist and communist lover in the W. House.” The market for lies from aristocrats and clergy still remained large.
On November 9th, huffingtonpost bannered “Murray Energy Corp. CEO Enters ‘Survival Mode’ After Obama Reelection, Announces Layoffs,” and reported that Robert Murray, the man who had purchased judges in West Virginia in order to keep “justice” his way, issued a letter to his employees saying, “Lord, please forgive me and anyone with me in Murray Energy Corp. for the decisions that we are now forced to make to preserve the very existence of any of the enterprises that you have helped us build.”
The author of the Crandall Canyon coal-mine collapse and other negligent homicides against his own employees was now laying off 160 miners allegedly because of Obama’s re-election. One reader-comment was “Good for them. I am likely letting go of 5 people ( and making sure we choose liberals as they should understand who employs them).” The appeal here was purely “libertarian,” or fascist.
Murray’s letter to his employees condemned the American people: “We are a country in favor of redistribution, national weakness and reduced standard of living and lower and lower levels of personal freedom.” Most of the reader-comments to that letter at the Wheeling News-Register were hostile towards Murray as being a “crook.”
When Franklin Delano Roosevelt entered the White House in 1933, after decades of Republican misrule, he used the bully pulpit and condemned the conservatives, and he won a landslide re-election. When Barack Obama entered the White House in 2008, after decades of Republican misrule, he ignored the bully pulpit and praised the conservatives and was bipartisan towards them, and the only reason he was able to win re-election at all is that he was a phenomenally gifted political campaigner.
Barack Obama was certainly no FDR. Just what he was is something that wasn’t yet clear, and was yet to be determined, by his actions. If he wouldn’t suddenly become a fighter for the public against the aristocracy, he would become even more revealed as a fake than he already was widely suspected to be. Nobody really knew what or who he was (other than politically gifted).
Despite all of Obama’s extend-and-pretend, the ideological/policy rubber would finally, now, inevitably hit the road, and Barack Obama’s core would, at last, become manifestly clear to the American public.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Nov 20, 2012 8:10 pm

Monday, a photo of Romney filling up at a gas station in La Jolla, Calif., was posted on Reddit. He appears slightly frazzled ... and/or just a little annoyed
Image
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Fuck Romney

Postby Elvis » Tue Nov 20, 2012 10:17 pm

seemslikeadream wrote:Monday, a photo of Romney filling up at a gas station in La Jolla, Calif., was posted on Reddit. He appears slightly frazzled ... and/or just a little annoyed
Image



That's Romney? Pumping his own gas??

:rofl2 :eeyaa :shock2: :D :lol: :mrgreen: :jumping: :lol2: :happyclap: :cheers: :rofl: :beer: :nahnah: :hihi:




buh-bye, Romney.


:wave:
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
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