Exploring Opinions on Mitt Romney's Candidacy

  • News
  • Thread starter ThomasT
  • Start date
In summary: Iowa, for example. In summary, the GOP has a lot of options, but Romney seems to be the most likely candidate. Romney has some issues, but he is competent and intelligent. He is also from Massachusetts, which could make the difference in a close election.
  • #701
BobG, I think many recent immigrants from Mexico aren't strongly aware of the US political climate or which side favors or opposes what, except for the immigration issue. Mexican newspapers play up this issue.

You must also understand that Mexican history classes teach that a large portion of the US southwest used to belong to Mexico and that the US stole that land from them. I believe the truth is closer to the US forced Mexico to sign over the land under duress. I checked my own history books from middle school and they simply say the US acquired the land from Mexico. This is really a sore point with Mexicans and in their minds gives them the right to cross the border illegally.

Given the many negative news stories they see about how Texas and Arizona treat illegals, I doubt that a Cuban vice presidential candidate would sway many Mexican immigrant voters.

Disclaimer: My wife and daughter were both born in Mexico and are naturalized US citizens. I have lived on the US-Mexico border and worked in Mexico for 5 years. I travel to Mexico regularly and read the newspapers which gives me a feel for how Mexicans view the US.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #702
BobG said:
Wouldn't selecting Rubio help Romney narrow the gap between him and Obama with Latino voters? (Obama leads Romney among Latinos 69% to 22%)

Or would selecting a VP of Cuban ancestry just point out the fact that undocumented Cuban immigrants receive different treatment than other undocumented immigrants? Measures to curb illegal immigration are aimed primarily towards Mexican immigrants, while there's little to no effort made to curb illegal immigration among other groups

At least Rubio would help Romney among Cuban-Americans in Florida. On the other hand, Cuban-Americans in Florida have voted heavily Republican ever since Kennedy's Bay of Pigs.

...
I hope the coming campaign sees a minimum of this kind of Sen Rubio-is-different-from-other-Hispanics, he's-Cuban, ethnic division message, aka the Tio Tomas message.

As to this
BobG said:
...Measures to curb illegal immigration are aimed primarily towards Mexican immigrants, while there's little to no effort made to curb illegal immigration among other groups.
Yes the US southern border is the largest illegal entry point and gathers most of the prevention resources, but the "Mexican" (versus Latin American) and "little or no" characterizations go too far:

FAS said:
...The number of Cubans intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard or the U.S. Border Patrol reached a post-Mariel high of almost 40,000 in 1994...
...
Although the vast majority of foreign nationals apprehended by the U.S. Border Patrol agents are Mexican nationals, apprehensions of unauthorized migrants from other countries have more than quadrupled in recent years.
 
Last edited:
  • #703
mheslep said:
I hope the coming campaign sees a minimum of this kind of Sen Rubio-is-different-from-other-Hispanics, he's-Cuban

I too would like to see more of a focus on the issues rather than on ethnicity, however I also strongly dislike the use of Hispanic as a race, as in black, white or Hispanic. Lumping all people who speak Spanish into one cultural group makes about as much sense as lumping all French speakers together, combining French, Congolese Canadians and Haitians, among others, into one cultural group.
 
  • #704
Jimmy Snyder said:
I should run for office. Between my positive ads for myself and my opponent's negative ads against me, no one will even know my opponent's name.

Let's be real here.

If negative advertising didn't work, why would it be used so commonly?

Many people don't vote for the best candidate. They often vote for the candidate that isn't the candidate they don't like.
 
  • #705
jduster said:
Let's be real here.

If negative advertising didn't work, why would it be used so commonly?

Many people don't vote for the best candidate. They often vote for the candidate that isn't the candidate they don't like.
Quick, what is the name of my opponent?
 
  • #706
Sorry, too slow. Quick, what's my name?
 
  • #707
Wouldn't selecting Rubio help Romney narrow the gap between him and Obama with Latino voters? (Obama leads Romney among Latinos 69% to 22%)

No, that gap is too large to close up between this time and the election. Obama would literally have to insult all of Hispanics heavily in order for Romney to see the gap close. Selecting Rubio (who, mind you, is of Cuban descent) wouldn't help Romney's campaign either.

I am seriously doubting Romney now that he has assigned to his campaign of foreign policy advisers Bush's old crew. To me that is a huge misstep and doesn't look good. I am doubting my decision because of these idiotic actions he is taking.
 
  • #708
Romney is looking weak and rudderless, IMO. He has tacked hard to the right during the primaries, but he doesn't have the credentials to back that up. He'll have to shift hard-left for the general election, and that will prompt Republicans to stay home in November, absent compelling local races. This could be a year in which the coat-tails are turned so that down-ticket races might help his party, but he could hurt Republicans in local races.

I could be entirely wrong about this, but the 2012 election season looks to be messy.
 
  • #709
phoenix:\\ said:
... Hispanics heavily in order for Romney to see the gap close. Selecting Rubio (who, mind you, is of Cuban descent) wouldn't help Romney's campaign either.
Why not? He's very popular.
 
  • #710
mheslep said:
Why not? He's very popular.

There's a big difference between the treatment Cubans get, and the treatment other Hispanics get, wrt immigration.

When it comes to immigrating to the United States, Cubans get preferred status. Thanks to the Cuban Adjustment Act, which was enacted in 1966 -- or four years after Rubio's grandfather came to the United States -- Cuban refugees who flee the Island and reach the U.S. shoreline have a clear path to legal residency and eventual citizenship.

Mexican immigrants aren't so fortunate. So when Cuban-Americans do what Rubio has done since arriving in the Senate 16 months ago and take a hardline against illegal immigration, Mexicans and Mexican-Americans have been known to cringe. After all, that's easy for them to say.

http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/26/opinion/navarrette-rubio-vp/index.html?hpt=hp_bn7
 
  • #711
turbo said:
Romney is looking weak and rudderless, IMO. He has tacked hard to the right during the primaries, but he doesn't have the credentials to back that up. He'll have to shift hard-left for the general election, and that will prompt Republicans to stay home in November, absent compelling local races. This could be a year in which the coat-tails are turned so that down-ticket races might help his party, but he could hurt Republicans in local races.

I could be entirely wrong about this, but the 2012 election season looks to be messy.

Why would Romney have to shift hard-left? He'll have to shift to the center I would think.
 
  • #712
lisab said:
There's a big difference between the treatment Cubans get, and the treatment other Hispanics get, wrt immigration.



http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/26/opinion/navarrette-rubio-vp/index.html?hpt=hp_bn7


CNN said:
...After all, that's easy for them [Cubans] to say.
Easy? I think that's a bit silly. After living under a dictatorship and crossing 90 miles of shark infested ocean, where if they don't drown then more likely than not the US coast guard will pick them up and turn them back, then sure, they get some breaks, as do other immigrants to the US from other oppressive countries.

gal_revolucioncubana_boat.jpg


Also: apparently legal visa immigration from Mexico and El Salvador total ~75K per year, Cuba 3K.
 
Last edited:
  • #713
turbo said:
Romney is looking weak and rudderless, IMO.
I have to agree. Compared to, say, Obama, Romney seems to me to be a relative lightweight.

What we can count on wrt a Romney presidency, imo, is the maximization of the power and influence of the financial sector. The very thing that has almost crippled the American, and world, economy.

Imho, Romney is a dangerous man. I sincerely believe that his election would contribute to the apparent downward trend of the US.

Though, I do agree with his statements regarding the limiting of immigrants -- which, interestingly, seem to be at odds with those of one who's touted as being a prime candidate for his vice president ... Rubio.
 
  • #714
Oltz said:
Just to refresh everyone on the Romney plan. Ohh and to mention that he actually has a fairly detailed plan something that we still have never seen from the current administration unless we "pass it so we can read it".

I have just re read the PDF detailing each of these points and must honestly say I can not out right shoot down any of them which I was suprised by. Can someone like Evo or another more "liberal" person please actually read the 59 points and maybe even the entire PDF and give a real "dem" review ?

I still am not sure what I think of Romney, but these seem like sane and reasonable points. The simple existence of a coherent plan makes me feel better about him and his team.

http://mittromney.com/sites/default/files/shared/BelieveInAmerica-PlanForJobsAndEconomicGrowth-Full.pdf

59 Policy Proposals That Will Get America Back To Work
1. Maintain current tax rates on personal income
2. Maintain current tax rates on interest, dividends, and capital gains
3. Eliminate taxes for taxpayers with AGI below $200,000 on interest, dividends, and capital gains
4. Eliminate the death tax
5. Pursue a conservative overhaul of the tax system over the long term that includes lower,
flatter rates on a broader base
6. Reduce corporate income tax rate to 25 percent
7. Pursue transition from “worldwide” to “territorial” system for corporate taxation
8. Repeal Obamacare
9. Repeal Dodd-Frank and replace with streamlined, modern regulatory framework
10. Amend Sarbanes-Oxley to relieve mid-size companies from onerous requirements
11. Ensure that environmental laws properly account for cost in regulatory process
12 Provide multi-year lead times before companies must come into compliance with
onerous new environmental regulations
13. Initiate review and elimination of all Obama-era regulations that unduly burden the economy
14. Impose a regulatory cap of zero dollars on all federal agencies
15. Require congressional approval of all new “major” regulations
16. Reform legal liability system to prevent spurious litigation
17. Implement agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea
18. Reinstate the president’s Trade Promotion Authority
19. Complete negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership
20. Pursue new trade agreements with nations committed to free enterprise and open markets
21. Create the Reagan Economic Zone
22. Increase CBP resources to prevent the illegal entry of goods into our market
23. Increase USTR resources to pursue and support litigation against unfair trade practices
24. Use unilateral and multilateral punitive measures to deter unfair Chinese practices
25. Designate China a currency manipulator and impose countervailing duties
26. Discontinue U.S. government procurement from China until China commits to GPA
27. Establish fixed timetables for all resource development approvals
28. Create one-stop shop to streamline permitting process for approval of common activities
29. Implement fast-track procedures for companies with established safety records to conduct
pre-approved activities in pre-approved areas
30. Amend Clean Air Act to exclude carbon dioxide from its purview
31. Expand NRC capabilities for approval of additional nuclear reactor designs
32. Streamline NRC processes to ensure that licensing decisions for reactors on or adjacent to
approved sites, using approved designs, are complete within two years
33. Conduct comprehensive survey of America’s energy reserves
34. Open America’s energy reserves for development
35. Expand opportunities for U.S. resource developers to forge partnerships with neighboring countries
36 Support construction of pipelines to bring Canadian oil to the United States
37. Prevent overregulation of shale gas development and extraction
38 Concentrate alternative energy funding on basic research
39. Utilize long-term, apolitical funding mechanisms like ARPA-E for basic research
40. Appoint to the NLRB experienced individuals with respect for the rule of law
41. Amend NLRA to explicitly protect the right of business owners to allocate their capital as they see fit
42. Amend NLRA to guarantee the secret ballot in every union certification election
43. Amend NLRA to guarantee that all pre-election campaigns last at least one month
44. Support states in pursuing Right-to-Work laws
45. Prohibit the use for political purposes of funds automatically deducted from worker paychecks
46. Reverse executive orders issued by President Obama that tilt the playing field toward organized labor
47. Eliminate redundancy in federal retraining programs by consolidating programs and funding streams,
centering as much activity as possible in a single agency
48. Give states authority to manage retraining programs by block granting federal funds
49. Facilitate the creation of Personal Reemployment Accounts
50. Encourage greater private sector involvement in retraining programs
51. Raise visa caps for highly skilled workers
52. Grant permanent residency to eligible graduates with advanced degrees in math, science,
and engineering
53. Immediately cut non-security discretionary spending by 5 percent
54. Reform and restructure Medicaid as block grant to states
55. Align wages and benefits of government workers with market rates
56. Reduce federal workforce by 10 percent via attrition
57. Cap federal spending at 20 percent of GDP
58. Undertake fundamental restructuring of government programs and services
59. Pursue a Balanced Budget Amendment
Which is not possible?
 
  • #715
Rajput9572 said:
Which is not possible?
What's your point?
 
  • #716
How often has a primary for the Presidency had all but one candidate drop out this far ahead of the convention? Romney is the only (viable) person running and the convention isn't until August. He has no one to campaign against (in the primaries), that should save him tons of money.
 
  • #717
Evo said:
How often has a primary for the Presidency had all but one candidate drop out this far ahead of the convention? Romney is the only (viable) person running and the convention isn't until August. He has no one to campaign against (in the primaries), that should save him tons of money.

We can look as recently as 2008 for the Republicans
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republ...,_2008#Withdrew_or_suspended_during_primaries

Everybody who took at least 3rd place in one state was out of the race by the middle of March, except for Ron Paul
 
  • #719
Did you know Mitt is short for Mittens? Mittens Romney, what silly parents he has!
 
  • #720
http://www.alice965.com/Pics/Stupid%20News/mitt-romney-mittens-the-cat-for-president.jpg

Btw, is that list of policy proposals serious?

I mean, I see two or three non-insane ideas, like easing regulations on nuclear power plants... but the rest? That's like a Reagan-era middle finger to everyone earning less than half a mil a year, isn't it?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #721
feathermoon said:
Did you know Mitt is short for Mittens? Mittens Romney, what silly parents he has!

Milton Willard Romney.
 
  • #722
Max™ said:
Btw, is that list of policy proposals serious?

I mean, I see two or three non-insane ideas, like easing regulations on nuclear power plants... but the rest? That's like a Reagan-era middle finger to everyone earning less than half a mil a year, isn't it?

Most of them seem pretty reasonable to me. Only one I can't really see as possible is the last one, "Pursue a Balanced Budget Amendment." The presidency has absolutely nothing to do with the amendment process. To amend the Constitution, you need a 2/3s vote from each house of Congress and then ratification by 3/4s of the state legislatures. Or the states can call a Constitutional convention in which at least one amendment must be proposed, and then again 3/4s of the states legislatures must ratify it (this method has never been used).
 
  • #723
Max™ said:
http://www.alice965.com/Pics/Stupid%20News/mitt-romney-mittens-the-cat-for-president.jpg

Btw, is that list of policy proposals serious?

I mean, I see two or three non-insane ideas, like easing regulations on nuclear power plants... but the rest? That's like a Reagan-era middle finger to everyone earning less than half a mil a year, isn't it?

There's a long list. Could you be more specific with some examples where you think people are getting the finger and why?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #724
CAC1001 said:
Most of them seem pretty reasonable to me. Only one I can't really see as possible is the last one, "Pursue a Balanced Budget Amendment." The presidency has absolutely nothing to do with the amendment process. To amend the Constitution, you need a 2/3s vote from each house of Congress and then ratification by 3/4s of the state legislatures. Or the states can call a Constitutional convention in which at least one amendment must be proposed, and then again 3/4s of the states legislatures must ratify it (this method has never been used).
Yes though the President's political initiative would be critical. With regards to Presidential legislative ability, that requires a phone call to any member of the President's majority party leadership in the House/Senate saying, "Here's the President's legislative proposal, go put it on the agenda. Thanks".
 
  • #725
59 Policy Proposals That Will Get America Back To Work
1. Maintain current tax rates on personal income Who does this benefit?
2. Maintain current tax rates on interest, dividends, and capital gains Who does this benefit?
3. Eliminate taxes for taxpayers with AGI below $200,000 on interest, dividends, and capital gains This is the definition of "throwing someone a bone", is it not?
4. Eliminate the death tax Who does this benefit?
5. Pursue a conservative overhaul of the tax system over the long term that includes lower,
flatter rates on a broader base Gee, so we should move towards a more regressive tax structure than we have, while cutting back on revenue that goes towards social programs which mostly benefit the poorest members of society?
6. Reduce corporate income tax rate to 25 percent *snerk*
7. Pursue transition from “worldwide” to “territorial” system for corporate taxation Interesting though, what exactly is it supposed to do?
8. Repeal Obamacare Not a bad idea, since the program that got through isn't nearly enough to fix the problems it should address, though I love that Romney dislikes a neutered version of Romneycare so much.
9. Repeal Dodd-Frank and replace with streamlined, modern regulatory framework Hey, it's not like we could crash the economy again in the same way, right?
10. Amend Sarbanes-Oxley to relieve mid-size companies from onerous requirements
11. Ensure that environmental laws properly account for cost in regulatory process
12 Provide multi-year lead times before companies must come into compliance with
onerous new environmental regulations Why not, doesn't hurt anyone who matters, right?
13. Initiate review and elimination of all Obama-era regulations that unduly burden the economy I'm curious what he means by "burnen the economy" and can't help but think it means "sort of almost prevents us from running the same scam we've been pushing since Reagan got people to buy trickle-down hooey".
14. Impose a regulatory cap of zero dollars on all federal agencies Why?
15. Require congressional approval of all new “major” regulations Isn't that already required? What good would it do?
16. Reform legal liability system to prevent spurious litigation
17. Implement agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea
18. Reinstate the president’s Trade Promotion Authority Yeah, because clearly the problem is that we don't have enough authority to promote trade, rather than because we don't export anything except military power anymore.
19. Complete negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership
20. Pursue new trade agreements with nations committed to free enterprise and open markets Translation: find some new shmucks to game.
21. Create the Reagan Economic Zone Yes, because Reagan-esque economics are so wonderful, oh wait, they are if you happened to get in on the game before it was rigged against everyone else.
22. Increase CBP resources to prevent the illegal entry of goods into our market
23. Increase USTR resources to pursue and support litigation against unfair trade practices
24. Use unilateral and multilateral punitive measures to deter unfair Chinese practices
25. Designate China a currency manipulator and impose countervailing duties Brilliant, let's see how much we can hurt the country that owns most of our debt!
26. Discontinue U.S. government procurement from China until China commits to GPA
27. Establish fixed timetables for all resource development approvals
28. Create one-stop shop to streamline permitting process for approval of common activities
29. Implement fast-track procedures for companies with established safety records to conduct
pre-approved activities in pre-approved areas
30. Amend Clean Air Act to exclude carbon dioxide from its purview Well, I do agree here, carbon dioxide shouldn't be considered a pollutant.
31. Expand NRC capabilities for approval of additional nuclear reactor designs I agree completely, more nuclear plants and a more comfortable nuclear policy is a good thing.
32. Streamline NRC processes to ensure that licensing decisions for reactors on or adjacent to
approved sites, using approved designs, are complete within two years Again, sounds good.
33. Conduct comprehensive survey of America’s energy reserves I'm sure we left some massive oil fields around here somewhere, check the couch cushions!
34. Open America’s energy reserves for development
35. Expand opportunities for U.S. resource developers to forge partnerships with neighboring countries
36 Support construction of pipelines to bring Canadian oil to the United States Does he not know where we get most of our oil?
37. Prevent overregulation of shale gas development and extraction
38 Concentrate alternative energy funding on basic research
39. Utilize long-term, apolitical funding mechanisms like ARPA-E for basic research
40. Appoint to the NLRB experienced individuals with respect for the rule of law Yes, because clearly the problem with the NLRB is all the inexperienced shmucks casually ignoring laws.
41. Amend NLRA to explicitly protect the right of business owners to allocate their capital as they see fit Why not, nothing bad could happen from it, right?
42. Amend NLRA to guarantee the secret ballot in every union certification electionDoes he not understand that guaranteeing a secret ballot is merely an attempt to give employers power over union forming activities? Oh wait, he likes being able to fire people who work for him, of course he understands this.
43. Amend NLRA to guarantee that all pre-election campaigns last at least one month What? You already have to file a petition for an election 6 months in advance, now he wants to arbitrarily require that it lasts a certain period of time besides that?
44. Support states in pursuing Right-to-Work laws Ah yes, because it's better to be forced to accept lower wages while one benefits from collective bargaining without paying dues than to be forced to join a union to work at a unionised establishment. Clearly there are so many good reasons to be against joining unions that we should weaken them as much as possible.
45. Prohibit the use for political purposes of funds automatically deducted from worker paychecks Yeah, heck with unions being able to use their dues to try to get politicians who might favor unions into office!
46. Reverse executive orders issued by President Obama that tilt the playing field toward organized labor >.> Tilt the playing field "back" towards organized labor "slightly". Screw those workers, we need to bring back slavery I say!
47. Eliminate redundancy in federal retraining programs by consolidating programs and funding streams,
centering as much activity as possible in a single agency
48. Give states authority to manage retraining programs by block granting federal funds
49. Facilitate the creation of Personal Reemployment Accounts
50. Encourage greater private sector involvement in retraining programs
51. Raise visa caps for highly skilled workers
52. Grant permanent residency to eligible graduates with advanced degrees in math, science,
and engineering
53. Immediately cut non-security discretionary spending by 5 percent Yes, we spend too much on things that don't involve blowing people up. Government doesn't exist to help people, just shoot them.
54. Reform and restructure Medicaid as block grant to states *sigh*
55. Align wages and benefits of government workers with market rates Can't have any wage slaves getting by without strugging, can we?
56. Reduce federal workforce by 10 percent via attrition Nice choice of words.
57. Cap federal spending at 20 percent of GDP Interestingly, the last time spending was like that was pre-great depression and during the periods with the best growth was when spending was from 25 to 40% of GDP.
58. Undertake fundamental restructuring of government programs and services
59. Pursue a Balanced Budget Amendment Big whoop, you want to balance the budget? Cap Defense spending at $600 billion a year, that'll cancel the "social security shortfall" completely. What else you got?

So yeah, lots of stuff to screw poor people, union workers, those who don't have, and lots of stuff to exclusively benefit those who have at the cost of everyone else suffering.

How is that not a giant Reagan-esque middle finger, again?
 
  • #726
I'm just going to cover a couple of bulletin points because it's too much work to try to talk about all of them

Max™ said:
1. Maintain current tax rates on personal income Who does this benefit?
Everybody who doesn't get their taxes increased? If you want to make a point make it, don't ask stupid questions and hope that we figure it out for you.
6. Reduce corporate income tax rate to 25 percent *snerk*
Ah yes, snerk. Well recognized as a decisive concluding argument.
[7. Pursue transition from “worldwide” to “territorial” system for corporate taxation Interesting though, what exactly is it supposed to do?
You only tax income that is earned in the country. If a corporation makes money selling stuff in Europe, they get taxed in Europe. If they move that money back to the US, they might be liable for taxes to the US government as well. This means that sometimes multinational corporations just avoid bringing money to the US, which is generally bad for the economy.
14. Impose a regulatory cap of zero dollars on all federal agencies Why?
Are you trying to argue with Mitt Romney in this forum? Did you even try to look this up? It doesn't make you sound smart or witty when you ask "Why would you ever want to do this?" when the arguments for why you would do something like this are well documented and easily found by googling the exact words in the bullet point. You're supposed to be demonstrating to us how terrible his plan is.

15. Require congressional approval of all new “major” regulations Isn't that already required? What good would it do?
No actually this is not how it works. For example
http://www.epa.gov/lawsregs/basics.html#regulation
And required congressional approval would backlog regulations requests. The argument (or at least one argument) would be that only legitimate regulations would be created and useless ones that exist only to expand the bureaucracy would die. I'm sure others would also reason that the ability to create regulations is essentially ceding legislative authority to the executive branch, separation of powers yadda yadda.

18. Reinstate the president’s Trade Promotion Authority Yeah, because clearly the problem is that we don't have enough authority to promote trade, rather than because we don't export anything except military power anymore.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_exports
You mean... second largest exporting country in the world? OK sure.

21. Create the Reagan Economic Zone Yes, because Reagan-esque economics are so wonderful, oh wait, they are if you happened to get in on the game before it was rigged against everyone else.
Do you even know what "Reagan Economic Zone" is referring to? It has very little to do with what most people would call "Reagan economics", seeing how it doesn't even refer to domestic economic policy.

25. Designate China a currency manipulator and impose countervailing duties Brilliant, let's see how much we can hurt the country that owns most of our debt!
So we should just let China do whatever they want because they have a lot of debt? In particular enact one sided trade wars to allow them to accumulate more power over us? Yes good logic. And by most please be aware that it is fractionally less than half, only about 8%
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_public_debt#Foreign_ownership
45. Prohibit the use for political purposes of funds automatically deducted from worker paychecks Yeah, heck with unions being able to use their dues to try to get politicians who might favor unions into office!
Do you realize that your description of the process is exactly the way that Romney would phrase it? And the reason he would do so is because it sounds (and kind of is) slimy and underhanded. Do you support limiting a large corporation's ability to spend unlimited money electing candidates who will support their agenda?
56. Reduce federal workforce by 10 percent via attrition Nice choice of words.
Are you aware that attrition has essentially a technical meaning? In particular nobody is fired when you reduce the workforce through attrition. It's not a nice choice of words, it's a legitimate means of describing the process through which the workforce will be reduced.

59. Pursue a Balanced Budget Amendment Big whoop, you want to balance the budget? Cap Defense spending at $600 billion a year, that'll cancel the "social security shortfall" completely. What else you got?
Umm...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_States#Budget_for_2010
In 2010 we spent 700 billion (rounding up from wikipedia) on defense. So you propose saving 100 billion
The deficit in 2010 was
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_federal_budget#Deficit
1.17 trillion. No, you did not balance the budget, I'm sorry.Overall I grade your rant attempt a D. No sourcing of facts (of which several were erroneous, so I can see why you couldn't find any sources for them), and very little in the way of justification for why you disliked things beyond snarky comments
 
  • #727
Just thumbing through ...

Max™ said:
...36 Support construction of pipelines to bring Canadian oil to the United States Does he not know where we get most of our oil?
The US gets *most* of its oil from ... 1) US domestic production, 2) Canada, 3) Saudi Arabia, ...

Max™ said:
...

How is that not a giant Reagan-esque middle finger, again?
When I read all that sarcasm I see your middle finger, not Gov. Romney's.
 
Last edited:
  • #728
Dorry, I don't know well how to use the quoting system.

Office_Shredder said:
I'm just going to cover a couple of bulletin points because it's too much work to try to talk about all of themEverybody who doesn't get their taxes increased? If you want to make a point make it, don't ask stupid questions and hope that we figure it out for you.

Ah yes, snerk. Well recognized as a decisive concluding argument.

How is that worse than just posting a 59-point plan without justifying each of the points?

Office_Shredder said:
You only tax income that is earned in the country. If a corporation makes money selling stuff in Europe, they get taxed in Europe. If they move that money back to the US, they might be liable for taxes to the US government as well. This means that sometimes multinational corporations just avoid bringing money to the US, which is generally bad for the economy.

Why cater to them? They benefit greatly from being US companies. Or let's shame them into doing it. Despite all the whinning about the weight of regulations, they are making record profits and some are paying zero taxes. What else should we give them?

Office_Shredder said:
Are you trying to argue with Mitt Romney in this forum? Did you even try to look this up? It doesn't make you sound smart or witty when you ask "Why would you ever want to do this?" when the arguments for why you would do something like this are well documented and easily found by googling the exact words in the bullet point. You're supposed to be demonstrating to us how terrible his plan is.

Why should s/he have the burden of arguing how terrible the plan is, and not the OP arguing the effectiveness of the plan?

No actually this is not how it works. For example
http://www.epa.gov/lawsregs/basics.html#regulation
And required congressional approval would backlog regulations requests. The argument (or at least one argument) would be that only legitimate regulations would be created and useless ones that exist only to expand the bureaucracy would die. I'm sure others would also reason that the ability to create regulations is essentially ceding legislative authority to the executive branch, separation of powers yadda yadda.

Why is this a good idea? I mean beside the tired old line of the government being the enemy.Re cutting the military budget:
Just because cutting $100 billion does not by itself balance the budget, that does not mean it should not be done. It is a nice chunk of more than 8% of the deficithttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_exports
You mean... second largest exporting country in the world? OK sure.Do you even know what "Reagan Economic Zone" is referring to? It has very little to do with what most people would call "Reagan economics", seeing how it doesn't even refer to domestic economic policy.So we should just let China do whatever they want because they have a lot of debt? In particular enact one sided trade wars to allow them to accumulate more power over us? Yes good logic. And by most please be aware that it is fractionally less than half, only about 8%
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_public_debt#Foreign_ownership
Do you realize that your description of the process is exactly the way that Romney would phrase it? And the reason he would do so is because it sounds (and kind of is) slimy and underhanded. Do you support limiting a large corporation's ability to spend unlimited money electing candidates who will support their agenda?
Are you aware that attrition has essentially a technical meaning? In particular nobody is fired when you reduce the workforce through attrition. It's not a nice choice of words, it's a legitimate means of describing the process through which the workforce will be reduced.Umm...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_States#Budget_for_2010
In 2010 we spent 700 billion (rounding up from wikipedia) on defense. So you propose saving 100 billion
The deficit in 2010 was
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_federal_budget#Deficit
1.17 trillion. No, you did not balance the budget, I'm sorry.Overall I grade your rant attempt a D. No sourcing of facts (of which several were erroneous, so I can see why you couldn't find any sources for them), and very little in the way of justification for why you disliked things beyond snarky comments

Sorry, this came out horribly. How do I find out how to do the multiple quotes, please?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #729
Bacle2 said:
Sorry, this came out horribly. How do I find out how to do the multiple quotes, please?

Start with the first post you want to quote and click "Multi Quote". Then do the same for the second, third, etc. until you get to the last one. For that one, click "Quote" and that puts you into the reply page.
 
  • #730
Sorry, this came out horribly. How do I find out how to do the multiple quotes, please?

I just format my posts by hand like that. Whenever you want to quote something just type [*quote]text you want quoted [*/quote] without the *'s. I don't trust those newfangled multi-quote buttons.

Looking back at my post I came across a bit sharper than I should have at points and I want to apologize for that.

Vis-a-vis too many points to discuss... the requirements for Romneys political propaganda and the requirements for posting on the politics forum here are different (the requirements here are much more stringent). You posted your concerns and I replied to the ones that I thought were most egregious, for the sake of productive conversation I think you should just pick a couple for us to go into more detail that you feel sum up the negative themes of his campaign
 
  • #731
Bacle, I tried to fix the quotes for you as best I could (the main problem is your slashes were backwards), but I suspect the post is not what you want it to be. I can delete it if you want.
 
  • #732
Bacle2 said:
How is that worse than just posting a 59-point plan without justifying each of the points?
Details here:
http://www.mittromney.com/sites/default/files/shared/BelieveInAmerica-PlanForJobsAndEconomicGrowth-Full.pdf
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #733
mheslep said:
Details here:

Thanks Mheslep I was about to re post that PDF for people to actually read since we are now essentially down to Mitt as the candidate.

I may re read it myself since I have not read it since originally posting the list and file.
 
  • #735
Ron Paul has stopped campaigning.
Yahoo.com
Tomorrow we will see how Romney does unopposed. I can't figure out why uncommitted delegates haven't come out openly for Romney. What are they waiting for?
 

Similar threads

Replies
126
Views
19K
Replies
45
Views
6K
  • General Discussion
Replies
21
Views
4K
  • General Discussion
4
Replies
123
Views
19K
  • Poll
  • General Discussion
Replies
10
Views
6K
  • General Discussion
15
Replies
492
Views
44K
Replies
3
Views
322
Replies
3
Views
779
  • General Discussion
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
900
Back
Top