If you had to choose Obama or Romney

Choose Obama or Romney

  • Obama

    Votes: 80 64.5%
  • Romney

    Votes: 44 35.5%

  • Total voters
    124
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Tbone

Robin
You can't have that much of a clue if a man tells you that he's going to cut taxes across the board, not add to the deficit, but can't explain how, and you still buy what he's selling.

For the record, the Post article admitted that Obama added to the deficit. Just not to the level that republicans want us to believe.

Independents will decide the election. If Romney is going to convince us that he's a better choice, he can't just tell us what he's going to do with no explanation on how he's going to do it. The right is going to drink his kool aid, but we won't.
 

Excelsior

Eagle
Gold Member
Brian said:
and this is why America is going to be bankrupt and ruined - because the voting public would rather have a charismatic leader who hangs w/Jay Z but has no fucking idea how to run anything then one was has built and run successful companies.

Because America is best run as a corporation?

I'm not sure that analogy is as direct as you seem to think. Conservatives point out the different natures of the public and private spheres all the time.

if you were to break up the US into two countries, one full of Romney supporters and one full of Obama supporters the one w/Obama voters would be a complete bankrupt clusterfuck whose themes centered on government control and wealth redistribution while Romney's half would be a thriving world power based on the principles of capitalism and the free market.

Implying that all (or, at least, most) Obama voters are of a more negative, clusterfuck creating ilk.
I don't think that holds up, but I'd be curious to know how you came to that conclusion...

it amazes me that the overwhelming majority of people i meet who support Romney are successful in what they do while the overwhelming number of Obama supporters I meet are at best low level office drones who count on the Romney supporters for their paychecks.

...and now I do.

You do understand that your anecdotes by no means provide a valid justification for making the massive generalization you just made, right? You've met at best a sliver of each electorate-their support (or lack thereof) cannot logically be used to affirm a candiadates worth, especially in light of the many valid criticisms said candidate is receiving with regards to his actual ability.

Secondly, the correlation you've tried to establish here between conservatism and economic success (implying that a nation full of Romney-supporting conservatives would be far more successful overall) doesn't hold internationally.

Also, the placement of your faith is rather interesting given the following, quite well articulated by Tbone:

You can't have that much of a clue if a man tells you that he's going to cut taxes across the board, not add to the deficit, but can't explain how, and you still buy what he's selling.

You're quite sure Romney and his supporters would bring you a capitalist world power, even when they cannot tell you how.
Interesting.
 

OGNorCal707

 
Banned
Maybe Brian and Tenderman will join Ted Nugent in revolution when the socialist dictator Obama is re-elected.




What really irks me is all these conservatives who are trying to crucify Obama voted for George W. Bush and didn't say a damn thing when he was driving our country into a ditch.
 

Excelsior

Eagle
Gold Member
253190_432815180088392_725703594_n.jpg
 

Deluge

Hummingbird
Gold Member
Brian said:
if you were to break up the US into two countries, one full of Romney supporters and one full of Obama supporters the one w/Obama voters would be a complete bankrupt clusterfuck whose themes centered on government control and wealth redistribution while Romney's half would be a thriving world power based on the principles of capitalism and the free market.

Brian said:
]it amazes me that the overwhelming majority of people i meet who support Romney are successful in what they do while the overwhelming number of Obama supporters I meet are at best low level office drones who count on the Romney supporters for their paychecks.

Do you see a correlation here?

map_6.jpg


The darker it is, the more government benefits they recieve
US%20Entitlements.jpg


poverty-in-the-united-states.jpg
 

LoveBug

Kingfisher
Catholic
Tbone said:
I wanted to hear Romney out before making a choice in the election. I'm not a faithful supporter of anybody.

But his appearance recently on Meet The Press made up my mind. I watched the show, and here's an excerpt on what happened:

"In Mitt Romney's appearance on NBC's Meet the Press on September 9, he reiterated his promise of an across-the-board income tax cut for all Americans including those like himself in the top 1%. The Romney-Ryan tax plan actually would cut taxes on income from capital, as opposed to labor, from 15% to 0%.

Romney said those tax cuts would not add to the deficit because they would be offset by eliminating loopholes and deductions. But when asked by NBC's David Gregory which loopholes and deductions he would cut, Romney was unable to name a single one."

So Mitt tells us he won't add to the deficit while cutting taxes for everybody. But he can't tell us how he's going to offset those cuts...?

I'll take my chances with Obama over another Bush.


Mitt is also high on military spending.. He probably plans to take a absolute hatchet to social spending

I also love how incredulous Mitt was on that secret tape that there are people who believe health care is a right, just goes to show how different American politics are from other developed nations
 

porscheguy

Ostrich
LoveBug said:
Mitt is also high on military spending.. He probably plans to take a absolute hatchet to social spending

I also love how incredulous Mitt was on that secret tape that there are people who believe health care is a right, just goes to show how different American politics are from other developed nations
It's not a surprise that Romney wants to ramp up military spending. Mormons are very overrepresented in the defense contracting industry.
 

Brian

 
Banned
P Dog said:
Brian said:
if you were to break up the US into two countries, one full of Romney supporters and one full of Obama supporters the one w/Obama voters would be a complete bankrupt clusterfuck whose themes centered on government control and wealth redistribution while Romney's half would be a thriving world power based on the principles of capitalism and the free market.

Brian said:
]it amazes me that the overwhelming majority of people i meet who support Romney are successful in what they do while the overwhelming number of Obama supporters I meet are at best low level office drones who count on the Romney supporters for their paychecks.

Do you see a correlation here?

map_6.jpg


The darker it is, the more government benefits they recieve
US%20Entitlements.jpg


poverty-in-the-united-states.jpg

Of course I see a correlation. For the most part, the darker the area the higher concentration of blacks and hispanics. Have you ever noticed that all the bankrupt cities/states, from Detroit to California to Illinois are overwhelmingly run by liberal Democratic majorities?
 

Deluge

Hummingbird
Gold Member
portofmanteau said:
P Dog said:
Do you see a correlation here?

map_6.jpg

Nice, I was wondering where the term "Red State" came from.

It all makes sense to me now.

I checked G's Facebook after seeing the thread about him. His last status:

Mitt Romney's 47 Percent Disproportionately Live In Republican States
mitt-romney-tax.png


EDIT: Brian, how about all of Appalachia plus Arkansas, Oklahoma and the Little Dixie area of Missouri? The states with the poorest white populations are actually Red States, West Virginia & Mississippi. It doesn't take a genius to see what I mean.
human+development+index+by+state+map.jpg


Even in the Mid West the Blue States have higher HDI's
 

Brian

 
Banned
What G fails to point out is that those heavily Republican southern states also have the highest percentages of blacks. MS, SC, LA, GA, and AL are 5 of the top 6 states in terms of blacks per capita. but they are heavily segregated where the whites vote R and the blacks vote D. compare that to liberal bastions like CA where all the minorities vote D and many of the whites do as well.

You are completely correct about Appalachia though, those poor white trash areas will always vote R and many are dependent on government help.

Look, as far as what Mitt Romney said about the 47% I think he had his theory correct but he had his numbers wrong. There is certainly a percentage of the population that is exactly as he described, but I'd say its closer to 35-40% and the breakdown is probably 10-15% R and 25% D. Not everyone who votes R is living the good life and not everyone who votes D is poor and impoverished. But there certainly in a portion of the country who meets the description Romney gave and to ignore that is isnt being realistic. And all you need to do is look at simple statistics like percentage of the population on food stamps and disability to realize the number who is dependent on Govt has risen dramatically over the last 4 years.
 

Deluge

Hummingbird
Gold Member
Brian said:
And all you need to do is look at simple statistics like percentage of the population on food stamps and disability to realize the number who is dependent on Govt has risen dramatically over the last 4 years.

Nobodies saying that isn't true, obviously it will have increased during the recession.

Non-Hispanic White Poverty Rates: 2 blue (Oregon and Michigan) and 2 purple (Ohio and Missouri). The entire top 7 is solidly Republican. On every metric, HDI, income, poverty and exclusively white poverty Red States lag behind Blue States.
 

Excelsior

Eagle
Gold Member
Brian said:
Look, as far as what Mitt Romney said about the 47% I think he had his theory correct but he had his numbers wrong.

His theory was correct, you say? His theory relies on an assumption about 47% of the population-you can't disassociate it from the numbers, because his theory relies on the numbers and their main indication (the lack of income tax responsibility). That is the basis of his argument.

This guy is ALL wrong.

But there certainly in a portion of the country who meets the description Romney gave and to ignore that is isnt being realistic.

Nobody has done this. What Republicans seem too damn quick to do is assume that this portion of the population is much bigger than it is.
Your numbers are just as wonky-instead of writing off half of the American populace, you want to write of just over a third of it.

Of that 47%, 2/3 (that's 66%) pay some form of payroll tax. Of the rest, the majority consists of those on disability (up to and including many military veterans) and/or the elderly.

The number of flat out bums (intentionally live of benefits, pay no income or payroll taxes, on welfare like its a job, etc) in this society who really do live with the intent to leech is FAR smaller than you folks consistently portray. It isn't anywhere near half or even a third of the population. Any reasonable fact-check can confirm this.

And your candidate just put half the country in that bucket. That is your problem. This "everyone for themselves" mentality where EVERYONE who isn't up on their luck (like those working families of 4 or 5 making $40-50k annually who don't pay income tax, or disable vets, or the elderly, etc) and needs a little help is some sort of bum/leech with nothing to add to society, and this belief that it is entirely ok to just shit on them with reckless abandon.
Then there's the fact that half of the people shitting on them have gotten some help themselves, directly or indirectly-ancestors who took advantage of the GI Bill/FHA home loans and other post-WW2 benefits (that would be the vast majority of white Americans today, including the many Republicans among them) or, in the case of Romney, ancestors (his father) who were once on welfare. These people, who wouldn't be where they are without these historic benefits, now shit on everyone else who gets the help they once did.

They shit on themselves and don't even know it. Its pathetic and sickening to watch.

This mentality is illogical, it is unjust, and it is, I would contend, fundamentally un-american. Oh, and this quote from your candidate, which I assume is part of the "theory" you think is correct:

[M]y job is not to worry about those people. I'll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives."

Firstly, as I already mentioned, the vast majority of that 47% should not be characterized as people who "don't take personal responsibility for their lives" or care.

Secondly, as an American president, it is his job to worry about those people, regardless of how many of them there actually are. This is the same logic that we had to apply to Obama as someone who could not be a "black" president-he was president of all the people, not just the minorities, and many of his most staunch pro-black adherents (who figure that he hasn't done enough for black people) had to accept that.

Your guy only wants to work for half the American populace, and is willing to ignore a sizable portion of his own base (much of that 47% is on his side).

Romney has no business in the white house. You'd figure that even the bulk of Republicans could see that they've got a crappy candidate who is hopelessly out of touch with the people he needs to support him, but if they can't then they deserve what they get in November.
 

LoveBug

Kingfisher
Catholic
Brian said:
And all you need to do is look at simple statistics like percentage of the population on food stamps and disability to realize the number who is dependent on Govt has risen dramatically over the last 4 years.


As has the number of people who can't find consistent, benefitted work over the last 4 years...
 

speakeasy

Peacock
Gold Member
Ben Swann is the best reporter on any mainstream tv station out there. Only one that even comes close to being fair and balanced.



Subscribe to his youtube channel.
 
The Red State/Blue State gap is uncanny when it comes to income as well:


Rank State 2009 2008 2007 2004-2006
1 Maryland $69,272 $70,545 $68,080 $62,372
2 New Jersey $68,342 $70,378 $67,035 $64,169
3 Connecticut $67,034 $68,595 $65,967 $59,972
4 Alaska $66,953 $68,460 $64,333 $57,639
5 Hawaii $64,098 $67,214 $63,746 $60,681
6 Massachusetts $64,081 $65,401 $62,365 $56,236
7 New Hampshire $60,567 $63,731 $62,369 $60,489
8 Virginia $59,330 $61,233 $59,562 $55,108
District of Columbia $59,290 $57,936 $54,317 $47,221 (2005)[8] PDF
9 California $58,931 $61,021 $59,948 $53,770
10 Delaware $56,860 $57,989 $54,610 $52,214
11 Washington $56,548 $58,078 $55,591 $53,439
12 Minnesota $55,616 $57,288 $55,082 $57,363
13 Colorado $55,430 $56,993 $55,212 $54,039
14 Utah $55,117 $56,633 $55,109 $55,179
15 New York $54,659 $56,033 $53,514 $48,201
16 Rhode Island $54,119 $55,701 $53,568 $52,003
17 Illinois $53,966 $56,235 $54,124 $49,280
18 Nevada $53,341 $56,361 $55,062 $50,819
19 Wyoming $52,664 $53,207 $51,731 $47,227
20 Vermont $51,618 $52,104 $49,907 $51,622
United States $50,221 $52,029 $50,740 $46,242 (2005) [9] PDF
21 Wisconsin $49,993 $52,094 $50,578 $48,874
22 Pennsylvania $49,520 $50,713 $48,576 $47,791
23 Arizona $48,745 $50,958 $49,889 $46,729
24 Oregon $48,457 $50,169 $48,730 $45,485
25 Texas $48,259 $50,043 $47,548 $43,425
26 Iowa $48,044 $48,980 $47,292 $47,489
27 North Dakota $47,827 $45,685 $43,753 $43,753
28 Kansas $47,817 $50,177 $47,451 $44,264
29 Georgia $47,590 $50,861 $49,136 $46,841
30 Nebraska $47,357 $49,693 $47,085 $48,126
31 Maine $45,734 $46,581 $45,888 $45,040
32 Indiana $45,424 $47,966 $47,448 $44,806
33 Ohio $45,395 $47,988 $46,597 $45,837
34 Michigan $45,255 $48,591 $47,950 $47,064
35 Missouri $45,229 $46,867 $45,114 $44,651
36 South Dakota $45,043 $46,032 $43,424 $44,624
37 Idaho $44,926 $47,576 $46,253 $46,395
38 Florida $44,736 $47,778 $47,804 $44,448
39 North Carolina $43,674 $46,549 $44,670 $42,061
40 New Mexico $43,028 $43,508 $41,452 $40,827
41 Louisiana $42,492 $43,733 $40,926 $37,943
42 South Carolina $42,442 $44,625 $43,329 $40,822
43 Montana $42,322 $43,654 $43,531 $38,629
44 Tennessee $41,725 $43,614 $42,367 $40,676
45 Oklahoma $41,664 $42,822 $41,567 $40,001
46 Alabama $40,489 $42,666 $40,554 $38,473
47 Kentucky $40,072 $41,538 $40,267 $38,466
48 Arkansas $37,823 $38,815 $38,134 $37,420
49 West Virginia $37,435 $37,989 $37,060 $37,227
50 Mississippi $36,646 $37,790 $36,338 $35,261
[edit]States ranked by per capita income

Based on 2000 Census data for 1999 [10] . For a more recent list, see http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0104652.html .
Delaware – $28,766
District of Columbia – $28,659
New Jersey – $27,006
Massachusetts – $25,952
Connecticut – $25,614
Colorado – $24,049
Florida – $23,975
New Hampshire – $23,844
New York – $23,389
Maryland – $23,305
Minnesota – $23,198
Illinois – $23,106
Washington – $22,956
California – $22,711
Alaska – $22,660
Michigan – $22,168
Nevada – $21,989
Rhode Island – $21,688
United States of America – $21,587
Virginia – $21,557
Hawaii – $21,525
Wisconsin – $21,271
Georgia – $21,154
Ohio – $21,003
Oregon – $20,940
Pennsylvania – $20,880
Vermont – $20,625
Kansas – $20,506
Indiana – $20,397
North Carolina – $20,307
Arizona – $20,275
Missouri – $19,936
Iowa – $19,674
Texas – $19,617
Nebraska – $19,613
Maine – $19,367
Tennessee – $19,393
Wyoming – $19,134
South Carolina – $18,795
Alabama – $18,189
Utah – $18,185
Kentucky – $18,093
Idaho – $17,841
North Dakota – $17,769
Oklahoma – $17,646
South Dakota – $17,562
New Mexico – $17,261
Montana – $17,151
Louisiana – $16,912
Arkansas – $16,904
West Virginia – $16,477
Mississippi – $15,853

Almost all the red states are at the bottom by both metrics.
 

ElJefe

Pelican
I just watched the whole 50 minute segment

It's really not that bad if you watch it end-to-end. He's not some demon come to persecute as all, nor does he really strike me as the epitome of hypocrisy...

Obama fires off plenty of stuff that is just as bad, and that can be, when taken out of context, equally reprehensible. [/u]
 
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