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Romney: 5,000. Obama: 0. Is the race over yet?

Romney. Killed. It. I thought the debate was over after the first 20 minutes.

Naturally, the Left seized onto an insignificant and trivial point: Mitt Romney wants to stop federal funding of PBS, including Sesame Street.

From Breitbart (emphasis mine):

Halfway through, they should have stopped the fight.

Gov. Mitt Romney eviscerated a staggering and bewildered President Barack Obama tonight in one of the most lopsided presidential debates in American history. Throughout the debate, which focused on domestic policy, Obama looked shaken, rarely looking at the camera, reciting old talking points and filibustering as Romney gave a master class at the University of Denver.

The debate had been described as a must-win for Romney–and he delivered. Using a rapid-fire style that had not been seen even in the numerous Republican primary debates, he bobbed and weaved through Obama’s attacks and moderator Jim Lehrer’s interjections, launching bullet-point policies that displayed not just a familiarity with the wonkish details but a focus on the travails of ordinary people he had met on the trail.

Again and again, Romney returned to his theme: creating jobs. He did–as expected–take Obama to task for misrepresenting his policies, principally Romney’s tax policy, which Obama referred to, even after being corrected, as a $5 trillion tax cut. But Romney exceeded expectations in focusing on the end result he wished to attain–and which, he said, the president wished to sacrifice: creating jobs for a struggling American workforce.

Obama could not have pleased anyone except those playing drinking games at home, with familiar references to corporate jets (drink!), job training programs (drink!), and tax cuts for shipping jobs overseas (drink!). And for these tired suggestions, most of which appeared in Obama’s talking points in 2008, Romney reminded the president that he had four years in which to enact his policies, to which the president could only nod.

Romney came armed with some memorable one-liners. He called Obama’s economic policy “trickle-down government.” He called the decline in household incomes under the Obama administration the “economy tax.” And–most memorably–he attacked Obama’s green energy subsidies, including Solyndra, Fisker, Tesla, and other failures: “You don’t just pick the winners and losers. You pick the losers.” Obama had nothing in response.

Obama refused–as he has done throughout the campaign–to adopt the stance of the incumbent, and tried to fight as the insurgent challenger, as if his own record were not up for debate. But Romney refused to let him escape–and soon Obama began making several blunders, stating at one point that he had conversations with Americans about their health care “four years ago”–i.e. not since he has taken office. He even turned his frustration upon moderator Jim Lehrer at one point, accusing him of interrupting him.

Lehrer, for his part, was quicker to pounce on Romney with follow-up questions, giving Obama a wider berth. Yet Romney did not let Lehrer divert him from his message or cut off his defenses. He even teased the moderator with his proposal to cut funding from PBS, among other government programs. It was a fearless and clarifying performance.

On health care–which might have been Romney’s weakest issue–Romney argued for the repeal of Obamacare as the best Tea Partier might have done, attacking the board that the law sets up to ration care as a cost control mechanism. The best that Obama could do was remind voters–as if they did not already know–that Romney had passed a health insurance law in Massachusetts. He had to concede one of the best arguments Romney offered–that Obamacare has actually increased the cost of insurance so far.

Romney missed a few–very few–opportunities, taking a long time to defend his tax policy by pointing out that it would be revenue-neutral because it would encourage economic growth. And Obama did put a few points on the board, reminding viewers (twice) of his popular Race to the Top education program, and that he had amassed experience as commander-in-chief with which Romney cannot (yet) compete.

Yet Obama seemed uneasy simply to have a worthy opponent on the other side of the stage. He could not even articulate his oft-repeated philosophy of government in the most basic terms, borrowing from the likes of Barney Frank in describing government as “the things we do together.” Romney gave a straight answer: that the role of government is simply to defend the principles of the Constitution and the founding documents, without replacing the roles of individuals and communities in helping the less fortunate.

Even conservatives who predicted that Romney would do well could not have imagined that he would do this well. It was as complete a victory as any presidential challenger has ever scored–and it exceeded even the hopes of Romney’s most fervent supporters. Obama came across as a politician–a rattled one, grinning and frowning, searching for a way out. Romney came across as a problem-solver, and–amazingly–more in touch with the American people.

There are two more presidential debates, following next Thursday’s debate between the vice presidential candidates. And so Obama will have a chance to redeem himself. But it will be back to the drawing board for Team Obama, while Team Romney will build upon a win they have anticipated for many months and may enjoy for many months hence.

#WeREverywhere

#DemocratSongs Takes On America’s Top 40. #WeWillWin

On Twitter, right now there is a trending topic called #DemocratSongs. I assume that #RepublicanSongs was up there at some point, but considering how the conservative movement is just stronger on Twitter…

Anyways. Some info can be found over at Twitchy.

So why not come up with my own? Well, of course, I did. The first that came to mind was “Hail to the Debtskins” – a fitting song, cause Barry is in DC and all. But then I decided to take to the American Top 40 list, and, well, here’s just a bit of what I came up with:

  • Call Me Poverty
  • Some Country That I Used To Know
  • What Makes You Bankrupt

But, as I scrolled through the list, I realized that a lot of these songs describe our country under Obama so well in one way or another. Take a look:

  • Wild Ones – I’m talking about Leftists. Duh.
  • Where Have You Been – Come on, Messiah. We need you.
  • Scream – Y’all know that’s what we’re all doing!
  • Starships – Too bad we don’t even have a manned space program anymore.
  • Brokenhearted
  • Wide Awake
  • Back In Time – Let’s GO back in time, eh?
  • Let’s Go – And get the hell outta this sinking ship.
  • Chasing The Sun – Thankfully our horizon (that is, the election) is approaching quickly!
  • Want U Back – Founders? Reagan? Plain ole common sense? Maybe we need all of them back.

;

REMEMBER: #WeWillWin

Debating Young Liberals: Using History And Facts To Win

Some of my liberal buddies (and even a few conservative pals) decided to actually conjure some sort of defense for Barack Obama, so I shut them down with the following “comment.”

First, however, let me show you what they said. I’ve removed everyone’s names, so no worries.

*My post on Facebook*
College tuition rates in the United States have increased by 25.19% since President Obama took office. Student loan debt in this country is 1 TRILLION dollars. Where are the solutions?

Their answers:
Don’t go blaming Obama, he proposed not raising the tuition but congress fucked it up soooooo, yeah

Dude most of your posts are extremely impartial…all u do is blame Obama for everything

One of my favorite – this really shows the leftist idea of tolerance:
most of the loans belong to retards who graduate with art/history majors

A troubled conservative friend:
I’d just like to say that it’s impossible for a democratic president to do anything with a republican controlled congress and there is no way that any president can fix all of the issues in just 4 years…
More ignorance (or just being subject to brainwashing by liberal teachers, as I’ve outlined before)
if you are going to blame the president then alberto the economic crisis that we are in now was started under bush so..
Let alone 2 years, he has proposed legislation. Congress did not pass it bc of the 50/50 split. If you were so politicaly saavy you’d know Obama has tried to stop it.

My comment (my favorite paragraph is the last one):

You can’t fix all the issues in 4 years, but you can at least make a lot of progress. Many presidencies have made significant progress within the first term, whereas others have failed miserably (Ford and Carter, for example). You can definitely compromise, and since I /am/ politically savvy, I do know that there have been jobs acts that have been passed, even this year, in compromise. But there’s a limit, and when your country has so much debt (you know, it’s only slightly larger than our economy) and you have a president who has been duped by a failed ideology that never works (examples: African-Americans, inner cities, Detroit), well, how can you accomplish anything?

The economic crisis can actually be traced back to Clinton. He wanted houses to be more affordable to minorities and the like (a good idea, undoubtedly), but he went about it by essentially bullying Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other banks into giving our SUBPRIME mortgages. The ensuing housing bubble that was created as the economy increased (under Bush) eventually popped (because people couldn’t pay their mortgages any more, not to mention the face that people borrowed too much and went into credit card/mortgage debt). So don’t even bullshit me for ONE second.
http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/subprime.htm
http://pithocrates.com/2011/11/06/bill-clinton-created-the-subprime-mortgage-crisis-with-his-policy-statement-on-discrimination-in-lending/

Obama did try to stop the economic crisis. He passed several stimulus bills – which all pretty much turned out to be ineffective, save for about a million jobs (which is a tiny part of the workforce). He passed the Obama-GOP tax cuts – a compromise. He passed Dodd-Frank, which really harms business more than helps it, and he passed Obamacare, which is horrendous towards business. He also passed the bailouts, which were a wonderful example of government favoritism (crony capitalism) that cost taxpayers billions of dollars – you know, the same sort of thing that Occupy and the Tea Party are protesting.

He has also kept the corporate tax rate at 35%, which is the highest in the world. Cutting that would get GOP support very quickly. He also has proposed to raise taxes on the rich by double digits, even though the richest people in this country already contribute to 70% of the money that the federal government takes in (which only 53% of the population that can pay taxes actually do, mostly because of dumb loopholes – and no, most of those people are not rich people, but poor and middle-class folks). He also shut down offshore drilling and decreased onshore federal drilling – which prevented job growth (just check out North Dakota’s unemployment rate, which is so low because of oil and natural gas investment). He also put a stop to the Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring millions of barrels of Canadian oil to the US and create 20,000 American jobs – much better than our continued purchases of oil that’s been artificially raised in price by a false shortage created by OPEC nations, like Iran and Saudi Arabia).

————————————————————————————————————

This is why I blog. To hopefully educate someone out there to see the light (which I did) and become a conservative – which I did.

UPDATE:
Both Reppundit and I have now gotten into this fight. We won’t back down. Updated comments:

Reppundit:
I think that the Heritage foundations report on Collegiate education and its solutions to fix the ever-growing tuition rate is a good read. http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2012/02/higher-education-assessing-the-presidents-proposal-on-college-tuition-costs

Fixing issues caused by careless defense spending for an oil interest war (Iraq) isnt simple. See people call Obama a “socialist”(which isnt bad in any sense, just republicans all hyped up because it inst capitalism), yet he is a crony capitalist?

FDR didnt fix much in his first term, yet he ended up serving three terms and became one of the most celebrated presidents of all time.

Dont give me any of the keyline oil crap, you cant propose such a huge investment with little time for him to review it. The issue with Republicans is there self absorbed interests and lack of open minds. They are so focused on”Christianity” that they’ve become oblivious to the fact that this country does not have an official religion and that the founding fathers where all deist. They run their senate campaigns on ideals of Christianity and such but then just go and fullfill their personal wishes with that power( not saying democrats dont do it but atlest they are a bit more openminded)

Reppundit:
I suggest you watch this cartoon adaptation of F.A. Hayek’s classic treatise on the dangers of government intervention into the economy. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tq2SpWPZZY

I’m sorry, I was one of the people in March to get a job and I make 8 an hour which suffices me enough. To make it clear I am anti war, anti organized religion, and anti drug.

My responses:

Issues caused by an oil-interest war?

First of all, the involvement of the USA in the Iraq war was not for oil interests. It was to remove Saddam Hussein from power, increase US influence in the region, and spread democracy. It was not for oil, and war actually troubles economies so oil prices could have increased (which they did, from time to time, but Bush actually handled that well – by allowing offshore drilling and increasing federal drilling onshore).

Socialism is bad because it crushes private enterprise, removes personal freedoms, takes away lots of money from individuals (via high taxes), and would not work in a large heterogeneous country like ours. Ever checked out the financial crises of Greece, Spain, and Italy? The London riots of the UK? The fall of the German welfare system? Those are all reasons that socialism doesn’t work. It’s a recipe for bankruptcy.
FDR also placed us into a recession in the middle of the Depression’s recovery and had a dastardly court-packing scheme. So much for constitutional respect and balance of power. His massive spending did not solve much; it just raised morale a bit. It was the US involvement in WWII that actually pulled us out of the recession and led us to have the greatest and fastest economic growth ever.
You claim to be tolerant/open-minded as a liberal, but you seem to despise religion. Have you ever taken a gander at the First Amendment? Organized religion has been a very large catalyst for change and fixing society. The Catholic Church is still our nation’s largest social “welfare” provider, and before the 1960’s, churches helped out the poor with healthcare costs, homelessness, etc. If you disagree with religion, that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t exist just because you think so.
Keyline oil crap? 20,000 jobs isn’t crap, and neither is the idea that we should support hydrocarbon fuels. Not to mention that the federal government had no investment at all in Keystone, no risk, nothing. The State Department was reviewing the environmental effects of the pipeline for THREE YEARS. That was not a “little bit of time.” Plus, liberals always praise Obama’s fast decision making when he had to make the “tough decision” to go after Bin Laden. Didn’t he have only a LITTLE BIT of time to review that? That was a much bigger decision than this, I’d say. But since this actually would move nutjob environmentalists away from him, he couldn’t do it. Zero guts, the man has.
Christian ideals are freedom (Exodus story) and being made by God to have free will. Our nation’s Declaration of Independence itself states that our Creator (a reference to God, hence the capitalization) has given us inalienable rights. Many of the Commandments were foundations for our laws. To say this country wasn’t created on Christian ideals is ridiculous. To say all the founders (or even most of them) were Deist is not accurate. Some of them promoted God and the Bible, but for the most part they remained silent beyond a support for religious toleration. For some clarification: http://www.patheos.com/Resources/Additional-Resources/Founding-Fathers-Were-Not-Deists-John-Fea-02-02-2011.html
Oh, and he practices crony capitalism by giving federal money to private corporations that suit his will – something that is similar to socialism, which is where the government controls many aspects of private enterprise.
————————————————————————————————————
Facts. Reasoning. Closing loopholes of hypocrisy. Somehow, those are strange things.

Romney Has Substantial Lead Over Obama In Florida

The good news is just going to keep on coming!

Not only can Obama not even win a majority of counties in Kentucky (he won 61, while 67 counties voted as ‘uncommitted’), he can’t even hold down other primaries. In other news, Romney’s got a 6-point lead in Florida.

Here’s the text of the article:

Mitt Romney has now taken a 6-point lead over President Barack Obama in the battleground state of Florida.

A new Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday found Romney now besting Obama 47 percent to 41 percent among likely Florida voters. That’s a shift from earlier this month when a Quinnipiac poll found Romney and Obama statistically tied in the state. In March, Obama led Romney 49 to 42 percent in the Sunshine State.

If Romney were to add Florida Sen. Marco Rubio to the ticket, the presumptive Republican nominee would expand his lead in the state only slightly, according to Quinnipiac. Forty-nine percent of Florida voters say they’d choose a Romney/Rubio ticket versus 41 percent who say they’d vote for Obama and Vice President Joe Biden. (The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 2.4 percentage points.)

Romney’s improved standing in the state is in part due to voter angst over Obama’s job performance. Just 45 percent of Florida voters view the president favorably, compared to 50 percent who see him negatively. Fifty-two percent of Florida voters disapprove of the job Obama is doing in the White House. An equal number say the president doesn’t deserve a second term in office.

Romney’s favorable rating is one point lower than Obama’s at 44 percent, but just 35 percent view him negatively. Meanwhile, half of Florida voters say Romney would do a better job handling the economy, compared to 40 percent who prefer Obama.

But Obama still has one major advantage: Voters continue to say he’s more “likable” than Romney. Seventy-six percent say Obama is “likable” compared to 58 percent for Romney.

There’s also a great opinion piece over at Fox News that talks about Obama’s flubs with the Catholic electorate. The text of that article is below:

The news Monday that 43 different Catholic entities across the country are suing the Obama administration, in response to the Health and Human Services’ (HHS) rule mandating employer health care coverage of contraception, abortion-inducing drugs, and sterilization, comes as a blow to the president’s strength among Catholics, a demographic that helped carry him to victory in 2008.

This news comes on the heels of the the latest CBS News/New York Times poll which finds Mitt Romney now leading President Obama among women, yet another demographic that he previously commanded.

If Mr. Obama was hoping to once again rely on Catholics and women to help carry him to electoral success in 2012, it appears as though he is miscalculating.

A recent survey by the Pew Research Center shows that, despite the administration’s self-portrayal as the champion of “women’s issues” amidst a supposed Republican “war on women,” the president’s reelection advantage among women has declined in recent months as well as with another key demographic — Catholics.

Obama was ahead among Catholics by 9 points in early March, and is now trailing by 5 points.

The Pew survey finds that, among Catholic voters with an opinion, 47% would today vote for President Obama, and 52% for former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney.

That same margin, were it to hold on Election Day, would mark a swing of 18 million voters away from Obama.

The loss of these Catholic votes alone would remake the 2008 electoral map, delivering Florida to Governor Romney and leaving the president no margin for error in Colorado or Ohio.

Women appear to be unimpressed by the Democratic strategy of alleging a “war on women,” with the president in the role of their defender.  And that very strategy to turn women against Republicans has only served to alienate Catholic voters – including, of course, Catholic women.

The “war on women” narrative was a strategic shift, invented after polls revealed strong public support for exempting religious employers and charities from the heavy-handed HHS mandate.

The Obama administration no doubt knew it would lose some support with Catholics in the mandate. But they surely did not anticipate the strong and unified voice with which Catholic leaders, in particular bishops, responded even after the administration offered a compromise widely rejected as an accounting gimmick.

In the most comprehensive survey conducted on the issue yet, Washington-based public opinion firm QEV Analytics recently found that some 50% of regular churchgoing Catholics heard a statement during Mass setting forth the bishops’ serious misgivings about the insurance mandate. Of all the Catholics who heard this statement, most apparently agreed with it.

The administration likely gambled that minor losses with the Catholic vote would be more than compensated for by surging support from women, in particular young, single women. But the QEV findings indicate that this was a major miscalculation.

Even among women under age 45, the survey found that a majority – 54% – support the Church’s position that religious institutions should not be required to violate their own teachings.

Among women age 45 or older 58% felt the same; they question the wisdom of a mandate that would leave many faith-based charities no choice but to curtail their services to the needy, or close down altogether.

As for whether the government should single out birth control to be mandated and cost-free when so many other drugs are not, again a clear majority of women — sixty-three percent — say “no.” After all, is your mother’s blood pressure medication or your child’s asthma medicine free by federal decree?

When all of the QEV findings are added up, the mandate has yielded no advantage for the administration among the young female voters it was presumably targeting: only 17% of women under 45 say they are more likely to vote for Obama because of it, while 26% say they are less likely.

And among every other category of women, the issue turns out to be a loser, while also carrying a very tangible cost among Catholics: Twenty-nine percent say they are now less likely to vote for the president because of this issue, more than double the 13% who say it makes them more likely to support him.

For its part, reading only the approving editorials of the secular press, the Obama political team may view its election tactics with religious groups and women as working.

The administration will no doubt feel emboldened to assert yet more federal power over religious groups in a second term.

If the quickly changing sentiments among Catholics and women are any indicator of things to come, however, the administration is not going to get that chance.

Unfortunately, what follows below is something that we shouldn’t be celebrating, even though it outlines Obama’s continued failures as president. Many thanks to Crossroads Generation for finding this info. This particular post can be found here.

Young Americans face incredibly high unemployment rates, and many are giving up looking for work. Even among those young Americans with a job, many are only working part-time but are looking for full time work.

  • The unemployment rate for Americans 18-29 is 11.6% (Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics).
  • This number doesn’t include young Americans who have given up. Between Obama’s inauguration and April 2012, there are 1.4 million more young Americans who aren’t even in the workforce as employed or looking for work. (Source: BLS).
  • Thirty-two percent of 18-29 year olds in the U.S. workforce were underemployed in April 2012. Source: “One in Three Young U.S. Workers are Underemployed,” Gallup, May 9, 2012: http://www.gallup.com/poll/154553/One-Three-YoungUnderemployed.aspx)
  • When new graduates find jobs, their starting salaries tend to be lower than those who graduated a decade earlier, and may never catch up. (Source: “For Most Graduates, Grueling Job Hunt Awaits,” Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2012)
  • For Americans under 24 without a college degree, one in five who are looking for a job cannot find one. (Source: “Generation Jobless: For Those Under 24, a Portrait in Crisis,” Wall Street Journal, November 7, 2011)

Students graduating during Obama’s term in once have had it worse than students graduating before his presidency. The debt burden those graduates took on to get their degree has risen as well.

  • Fewer than half of the students who graduated from college during Obama’s presidency were able to find a full-time job within a year of graduation, compared to nearly three out of four graduates finding full time work in the years before Obama took office. (Source: “For Most Graduates, Grueling Job Hunt Awaits,” Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2012)
  • Student loan debt is now over $1 trillion. (Source: “Student Loan Debt Exceeds One Trillion Dollars,” NPR, April 24, 2012: http://www.npr.org/2012/04/24/151305380/student-loan-debt-exceeds-one-trillion-dollars)
  • Nearly two thirds of the class of 2010 graduated with debt, averaging $25,000 of debt per graduate. (Source: “For Most Graduates, Grueling Job Hunt Awaits,” Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2012)

Young Americans want to be independent, but the bad economy is keeping young Americans from living on their own and making the life choices they want.

Obama’s support among young voters has fallen from where it stood in 2008.

  • According to the most recent Harvard Institute of Politics study, just barely half of young people approve of Obama’s job as president, and only 41% approve of his handling of the economy. (Source: http://www.iop.harvard.edu/Research-Publications/Survey/Spring-2012-Survey)
  • Democrats’ lead among voters under 30 fell by sixteen points from the 2008 to 2010 exit polls, from a 29 point lead on the House ballot in 2008 to a 13 point lead in 2010. (Source: Media Exit Polls, 2008 and 2010)

Recap & Response: Obama’s Failures In The First Two Years Remembered

I just got a bit infuriated at this load of garbage titled “Republicans Across The U.S. Are Trying To Disenfranchise Voters – What Are You Going To Do About It? “

Shudder. One again, we see liberals ensuring that the only people who don’t vote on time are poor, non-white immigrants. Talk about stereotyping and seeing past race. Let’s keep on letting dead people vote, too. JFK definitely wasn’t elected by any vote tampering in Chicago, right?

Right?

Oh.


Read what I posted below (in the comments section of the above article) about Obama’s miserable failures – in just the first 2 years of his presidency!

“After all, most of the Republicans in these state legislatures rode in on then same wave of apathy and downright stupidity that allowed the Republicans to get control of the U. S. House. All those whiny people who weren’t happy that Obama didn’t do everything all at once and decided to stay home and teach him a lesson also stayed home from elections that decided who their local and state elected officials would be. And now they’re paying for it.”

Obama knew that midterms would come up. Should he have focused more on domestic issues in the first 2 years?
Probably.
But he had a failed record on domestic issues when the Dems had total control of Congress and the White House. Multiple stimulus packages, a horrendous healthcare law (that was, and still is, opposed by a majority of Americans all over the political spectrum), virtually ignoring the BP oil spill site/Gulf Coast for days – and then botching cleanup efforts between the govt and BP, a shutdown of new offshore drilling, the Dodd-Frank law, failing to close Gitmo, not being clear or inspiring on Iraq/Afghanistan, increasing the federal debt, ignoring entitlement reform, and having net job loss (Even by now, 22 months of economic ‘growth’ has not made up everything Obama lost before), all caused Democrats to be pushed back. Parties in power always get punished for bad things, even if some of them are not in the hands of the party. For our president to say he’s going to turn around everything, and then claim he never had the ability to – well, that’s just him trying to save face for the fact that his policies failed.

Everyone says that he inherited a bad economy, but he had 2 years to implement whatever policies he wanted. Two years to do whatever he wanted to turn around the economy – which he promised he would do. He blew it off, and whatever he did pass did nothing but slow industries, hamper job growth, and, frankly, piss off a majority of Americans. If you think all those people are dumb, well, you’ve been duped. Even now, his policies have had no substantial effect. Our economic growth is tiny, the dollar is weak, and the major reason unemployment has gone down is because of people leaving the workforce (specifically, it’s responsible for 4/5 of the changes to the unemployment rate). Just last week, 365,000 people applied for unemployment benefits for the first time. Not promising.

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