Perry doesn't back down from his Bain criticism

 

LEXINGTON, SC -- Despite an onslaught of criticism from conservative commentators who have rushed to Mitt Romney's defense, Texas Gov. Rick Perry is not backing down on his attacks on Bain Capital's "get-rich-quick" schemes.

"The idea that you come in and destroy people's lives, the idea that you come in just to make a quick profit tear these companies apart," Perry told an audience of about 50 at Lizard's Thicket restaurant outside Columbia. "I understand restructuring, I understand these kind of things. But the idea that we can't criticize someone with these get-rich-quick schemes is not appropriate in my perspective."

Commentators from Rush Limbaugh to Sean Hannity have ripped into Perry and Newt Gingrich for their slams of Bain Capital's restructuring plans, calling the attacks "anti-capitalist" and comparing them to the language of Occupy Wall Street.

But Perry repeated his newly-minted phrase "vulture capitalism" three times at his first event of five campaign events today -- the day after Romney thundered to victory in the New Hampshire primary.

The Texas governor, who did not even muster 1% of the vote in last night's Granite State contest, tweaked the early nominating races in his appeal to South Carolinians.

"Who's South Carolina going to put forward? Iowa is a fine state. New Hampshire is an, uh, interesting place," he said to giggles from the crowd.

"But the fact of the matter is they winnow the field down. South Carolina is who picks presidents."

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Governor Perry;

You are so important to this Republican race. Please keep up the campaign against Romney and those types. On to South Carolina and beyond. . . as far as your money takes you. And thank you for your service to this country. Obama 2012.

  • 29 votes
#1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:04 PM EST

Dang it, I live in Texas, I know Rick Perry well enough to detest the man-child, but now I'm thinking about donating to his campaign...

  • 16 votes
#1.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:13 PM EST

Speaking of "vultures" ....

Don't look up.

Sorry Rick ... time to go.

  • 7 votes
#1.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:20 PM EST

Please stay in Rick.

  • 10 votes
#1.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:30 PM EST

You go GIRL !

  • 8 votes
#1.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:18 PM EST

Even Rick Parry knows that if Willard knew that his actions were pushing the economy off the cliff but he was still making money, he'd do it and do it every day. This morning he was talking about how he hoped American auto makers continued to prosper, when he was one of those who would have been fine with letting the big three go into bankruptcy. Willard is one of those who created this crisis we are all struggling with, so why let the fox into the hen house?

Obama 2012!

  • 18 votes
#1.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:25 PM EST

Perry refused to fall in line. GOP need to know even when a bussiness is legal, you don't have to make money off it. Romney must really be out of his mind to think he'll get a pass on this.

Obama/Biden 2012

  • 9 votes
#1.6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:35 PM EST

Meanwhile, back in the real world...I'm reading an article in my local paper about a paper mill that the community needs for the jobs it provides, but that also continues to pollute the air, while politicians work to find money to upgrade it's equipment, and there is a reference to Koch Industry, smack dab in the middle, which had bought it and sold off some equipment at one point, and now a former paper mill lobbysist, appointed by our Teapublican governor has say so over whether to let it go on polluting, and on and on it goes....

http://bangordailynews.com/2012/01/11/politics/taxpayers-spending-millions-on-old-town-mill-that-keeps-on-polluting/

  • 10 votes
#1.7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:39 PM EST

Wayne - Ford did just fine on their own. The others (and maybe Chrysler would have been a stretch) would have also. GM's unions convinced the administration that they could do it but there was a possibility they may not. He saved his contributors. And didn't need to unless the people at the helm of GM were total incompetent fools. No supplier wants to see a customer go down in flames and much like Ford, GM's suppliers would NOT have been less than cooperative.

  • 1 vote
#1.8 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:05 PM EST

@ Talk to the hand- I agree that Ford would have been fine with the financing they had available due to real foresight on their part, but certainly Chrysler and probably GM, according to all that I have read would certainly have collapsed. Romney was fine with this. I don't see your statement as much of a defence. The fact is, plain and simple, that Romney was quoted as saying he was against the bailout for the American auto industry. So much for "Be American, buy American." Had Romney had his way, this country would have been in a recession, and Romney would have probably made even more money as he gleefully watched millions more of Americans get fired.

  • 8 votes
#1.9 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:21 PM EST

What were those three things Perry wanted to tell us?

:-)

    #1.10 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:24 PM EST

    Hey Talk to the Hand... it's great when you don't know what you are talking about. Ford's president at the time saw the problems coming and borrowed "zillions" of money by mortgaging Ford's assets including it's logo. That line of credit allowed them to go forward without government help. But they did go into debt.... learn the facts....

    • 3 votes
    #1.11 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:37 PM EST

    I know... here I go again... I just can't help myself. I can't stand Romney for a lot of the same reasons I can't stand Obama. Just for example... Romney would buy up companies, either sell them off in parts, lay off employees, restructure the operation... etc... which is pretty much what Obama did with GM and Chrysler. Obama fired people, layed people off, restructured the conpanies...

    In my minds eye, Romney and Obama are cut from the same mold. Perry and Newt are going after him.

      #1.12 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:59 PM EST

      Perry doesn't back down from his Bain criticism

      This man is so stupid, they kept him in college with id D average gpa because they knew they couldn't get rid of this dewsh.

      Face it Perry, you are an idiot with a low gpa and you still think you are college educated. Go back to college and learn something like

      "U R A REAL LOSER". If it weren't for your wealth, you would have been tossed right out of college asap.

      NH nor Iowa sees you as a winner, get the message, take a hint, learn your ABC's... but you have to face it Perry, you e a Texan loser like G.W. Bush is.

      • 3 votes
      #1.13 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 7:57 PM EST

      WAIT A minute , If you can pay your bills and go out of business , your just out of business BUT if you can not pay your creditors you file bankruptcy , Bain Capital / Mitt Romney invested 30 million in this company ,took out 180 million then the company filed Bankruptcy and went out of business , How many creditors got screwed ,how many of the work force had investments in the company ,they really got screwed , 600% profit and filed bankruptcy 150 million in profits and went out of business , I THINK THE WALL STREET JOURNAL IS CORRECT ,there is some Questions that need answered , AND AND it was the Wall street journal that brought this to the public attention at the beginning ,NOT Rick Perry or Newt Gingrich , I would have to say they are justified to want some answers from Mitt Romney As we all should ,

      • 3 votes
      #1.14 - Thu Jan 12, 2012 5:40 AM EST

      Hey Kevin, point is they worked as they saw what was coming. GM and Chrysler just threw their hands up and cried for help. And I do know what I am talking about. Any company that mis managed and out of touch with their condition is inept to say the least. Ford took the steps necessary to avert a catastrophe through insight. And they recovered quickly and no GovCo or union owned the majority of the business. If GM and Chrysler couldn't be that Creative and insightful, perhaps Romney is right. I too at the time of the announced bailout said "what". And yes Ford did go into debt. Filing bankruptcy does not mean you collapse. It means a regroup and debt forgiveness by you r suppliers in order to not lose what investment they had made. Thus working through, providing help as much as possible to keep them going and reaping the benefits when they did get back on their feet.

        #1.15 - Thu Jan 12, 2012 11:11 AM EST

        Romney thinks only about Romney. That's how he gotten his 200+ million dollars. It always surprises me when a CEO takes over, fires a whole bunch of people just to trim line the company, then gives themselves tens of millions in bonuses...

        OK, one person get millions while thousands of workers lose their job... I guess that sounds right if your a right wing nut-job...

          #1.16 - Thu Jan 12, 2012 11:58 AM EST
          Reply

          I think Perry is running so he can get a crack to lead the 3rd Agency he can't remember, so he can submit a $0 budet for the agency.

          On another note. If Romney compared what he did at Bain to the what he claims the "President" did with GM as the same thing...and if Rush and that whole crew claim that what Romney did represents free-markets and capitalism...don't we have a problem here?

          Also...so Romney's claim to fame is the alleged "creation" of 100,000 jobs during his entire time at Bain? What, a decade at the healm. Domino jobs and Sports Authority!?!?! Those are the "high-paying" jobs that America is in store for under a Romney Administration.

          Wow...wealth, here we come!

          • 22 votes
          #2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:16 PM EST

          Domino jobs and Sports Authority!?!?! Those are the "high-paying" jobs that America is in store for under a Romney Administration.

          What???????????

          Romney didn't turn the kiddos at Dominos into rocket scientist at NASA?

          Oh well .... at least he didn't turn rocket scientists at NASA into pizza delivery guys like Obama did.

          • 10 votes
          #2.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:29 PM EST

          Yeah Allen - if only Romeny had equipped Sport's Authority and Domino with employees with 'high paying' jobs.

          So Allen - how much should those employs have been paid?

          I know you would totally have go there to and bought $150 pizzas, and $500 basketballs;

          Oh and then of course we'd have even more high school grads unemployed.

          See Allan - those are supposed to be temporary jobs, not careers.

          I would think you'd grasp that, but maybe not. Of course they had a system similar to what you describe in the USSR. It didn't pan out too well.

          • 9 votes
          #2.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:35 PM EST

          From the standard talking points I hear, the Federal Government doesn't create jobs anyway....so by your own rhetoric those bureaucratic elitist at NASA have been living off of the Public milk for too long.

          Sounds like something you should be praising. If the private sector was all that, seems like there would should be plenty of jobs waiting for such smart people.

          • 14 votes
          #2.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:40 PM EST

          Hey Spanky, whatup? .... Where's your pal WCO ... buying GM stock?

          • 8 votes
          #2.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:44 PM EST

          Funny thing is bob - that is exactly what is happening here in the liberal progressive paradise that is Cali.

          See, we are flat broke. Brown can't sugar coat it any longer and is making huge cuts.

          And to your point Allen, so many highly paid public sector workers are now seeking private jobs.

          WCO and GM stock? No idea, how about you?

          So again I ask - why is the bluest state in the worst shape?

          • 6 votes
          #2.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:46 PM EST

          So Santorum wears a Sweater Vest

          Now, Perry would like to trade in his Hunting Vest for Gingrich's Suicide Vest.

          Good luck with that Ricky. But please do stick around you make thinks so much easier for my man Mitt.

          • 5 votes
          #2.6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:48 PM EST

          38,000 farmers suing Corzine over missing millions. I'm sure Holder will be announcing his indictment any day now, right?

          • 7 votes
          #2.7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:52 PM EST

          Sounds to me like your talking points are against Romney, not me Spanky.

          Romney's stump is that he will assist a private sector to create millions upon millions of "high paying" jobs and he uses his "experience" at Bain as an example of the leadership do that....where to your point, the only thing I see his experience as providing is a bunch of low-wage, no benefit, no upward mobility, non-career like jobs. What/where/who are his example of the 'people' who made high paying wages as a result of the work he did at Bain (and the example can't be the other Partners at Bain as the people who made money)?

          How is "knowing how the economy works" that Mitt claims he has going to translate directly into action in the Oval Office? Don't tell me to get you there so I can see what you can do, tell me what you can do now and w/o the help of the Congress since that worthless bunch of freaks are pretty much good for nothing.

          • 18 votes
          #2.9 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:54 PM EST

          Spanky the bluest state in the worst shape, probably because you had a governor who was not a natural citizen that was too busy diddling with the maid to pay attenton to anything else. new slogan for the republican party: You are so republican if you are married and engaged at the same time!

          • 20 votes
          #2.10 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:56 PM EST

          Oh boy - panic time over at the White House.....it's because I'm black. Get ready to hear that argument over and over....

          (AP) (AP/CBS News) WASHINGTON -- First lady Michelle Obama is challenging assertions she's forcefully imposed her will on White House aides and says people have inaccurately tried to portray her as "some kind of angry black woman."

          • 8 votes
          #2.11 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:56 PM EST

          @ Union How does that explain Illinois?

          • 3 votes
          #2.12 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:58 PM EST

          "some kind of angry black blah woman."

          Haven't you heard Raaab?

          BLAH is the new BLACK!

          Do try to keep up... sweetie!

          • 18 votes
          #2.13 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:59 PM EST

          Times are tough when you lose Harry Belafonte's support ---

          Day-o Day-o

          • 4 votes
          #2.14 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:59 PM EST

          Rob in ma-3189632

          Times are tough when you lose Harry Belafonte's support ---

          Day-o Day-o

          =====

          I wasn't aware it was Harry who put him over the top.

          • 6 votes
          #2.15 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:06 PM EST

          Sure Ahnold was a 'republican.'

          But really he is and always will be an actor. Actors are even more worthless than politicians, but never mind the overwhelming majorities held by the dems in the state legislature.

          Then again you do got Ill, NY and until recently NJ.

          Allen - Mitt is Mitt, but we have been clearly and effectively shown that Obama does not understand how the economy works. Or at least the 70% wrong track-ers have.

          • 8 votes
          #2.16 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:09 PM EST

          Allen - Omaha, well argued, well said and touche' on Belafonte!!!!

          • 10 votes
          #2.17 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:31 PM EST

          I finally agree with Spanky. You're right dude, Reagan was worthless as a politician.

          As for the presumptive Republican nominee, Mitt is a corporate raider. Bain Capital is nothing more than high-end chop-shop.

          Yipee!! for the one tenth of one percent.

          • 15 votes
          #2.18 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:35 PM EST

          Allen - Mitt is Mitt, but we have been clearly and effectively shown that Obama does not understand how the economy works. Or at least the 70% wrong track-ers have.

          ====

          This is the silliest talking point I think is out there. You submit nothing for Romney other than Mitt is Mitt and then go into your Obama bashing. WFT does the abstract statement of "does not understand how the economy works" mean? What has the Administration done in terms of policy that has taken the "economy" from shedding 700+ thousands jobs a month coming into office and turned into net positive job growth for 20+ months translate into he doesn't understand the economy?

          • 14 votes
          #2.19 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:39 PM EST

          For all those worried about the supposed lack of enthusiasm for Romney

          http://www.kennesaw.edu/pols/3380/pres/1980.html

          Like Yogi said, it's déjà vu all over again.

          Perry will quit the race after South Carolina. No point staying in after that. I was an early supporter, and still like his tax plan as well as his economic plan.

          I did not like his total lack of preparation for some of the debates. He had a couple of strong appearances, but only after he had blown a couple. Not acceptable. Not acceptable at all.

          I said early on that Gongrich made me angry, because I believe he could have made a great president, but he lacked the self discipline necessary to attain the office- or to serve well once elected. Sorry, Newt, but you're outta here.

          I have a great deal of admiration and empathy for Rick Santorum, but, enough, already, with the social issues. It's the economy, first, second, third, and last. So, for heaven's sake, (pun intended), get out, and hope for a spot in the administration. Like, maybe, HHS.

          There were more than a few republicans with a great deal of animosity toward Reagan, because they considered him the reason Ford lost to Carter. Whether they were right or wrong, they got behind the candidate, and Reagan won in a landslide.

          Get ready to salute President Romney. I guess you can all rename your imaginary bar the "alternate White House". It'll be great- kind of like having a fantasy team. At least you'll stop destroying my country while at your twenty four seven Obama worship services.

          • 6 votes
          #2.20 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:12 PM EST

          What has the Administration done in terms of policy that has taken the "economy" from shedding 700+ thousands jobs a month coming into office and turned into net positive job growth for 20+ months translate into he doesn't understand the economy?

          The argument is though what would have happened if the business cycle ran it's course? What is 800B of borrowed stimulus and 3T in new money causing today. Commodities (based on the dollar) are going through the roof. The recovery is very slow compared to prior recoveries that did not have a stimulus. You seem to be one of the advocates that accept the economic models which claim that a dollar spent will cause 1.6 dollars of growth. Unfortunately, the economists that produce these models have not backed their predictions with empirical evidence. For example why does Zandi's model differ from the CBO's? Why is there such a large range of jobs created and/or saved? What is the criteria for a job to be created and/or saved and what is the rational behind the definition.

          My basic beef with this Administration is that their philosophy is that the government can and should solve all problems. If there is a problem the solution should be government based and sponsored. My philosophy is that unless there is wealth being created there would be no government. it's not a chicken and egg question. Until we moved beyond subsistence existence then we had nothing extra to pay for a government. So to me the private sector should be the ones solving problems and the government should simply be facilitators.

          • 5 votes
          #2.21 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:26 PM EST

          Alan, Omaha, nothing Obama has done stopped the economy from shedding jobs- the economy hit the trough of the recession, firms had the fewest number of employees they could retain and remain in business, and that is what stopped the bleeding.

          What Obama, through his policies, has done is to inhibit the recovery, which is the weakest we've ever seen coming out of recession. Obamacare, an additional increase in regulations, (over 13%, and counting), and a skyrocketing debt have left people uneasy and unwilling to spend, expand, or otherwise stimulate the economy.

          The worst result of his policies is seen in the civilian labor participation rate- the lowest it's been since 1983. The reduction in the unemployment rate is almost solely due to the millions who have just quit the labor force- and, Alan, I really don't believe that all those people hit the lottery, or inherited money from their unknown relatives.

          As to Romney's economic plans, he announced them back in September
          http://mittromney.com/jobs

          So, to continue to claim that he has no plan is completely untruthful.

          Obama, himself, noted that he was one and done if he could not turn the economy in three years. He's failed, so now it's up to him to recognize the truth.

          Obama shelved in 2012.

          • 6 votes
          #2.22 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:29 PM EST

          Learn something every day! I had no idea that no jo owns the United States!

          • 9 votes
          #2.23 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:41 PM EST

          One of the main reasons California is hurting financially is something called Proposition 13. Passed in the 1980s to keep property taxes from skyrocketing the welll meaning law has deprived the state of vitally needed income. Expenses for everything go up but when we are still using 1980s level income how is the state to survive. I don't mean in luxury but in federal mandates and basic needs for unning the state. Brown cut education, and cities have had to cut vital services such as police and fire. With all the unemployment the state is paying out more instead of taking in via income tax. Gov. Brown has no choice but to cut and slash there is no more income. California is also a donor state that contributes more to the federal government than it gets in return. Without tax increases along with the cuts the state will soon be frozen and unable to do anything because there will be no money even for the basics.

          Fortunately a small recovery led by Silicon Valley companies, as usual, may help the state get back some lost revenue but that won't happen over night. One can only hope the state can hang in there long enough.

          • 1 vote
          #2.24 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:54 PM EST
          Reply

          It's an interesting take on 'loyalty.' romney criticized Huntsman for serving under a Democratic president and praising his leadership...while secretly planning a run for his boss' seat. So that's kind of crossing party line loyalty.

          But Perry and Gingrich are slashing and burning their own party!

          • 18 votes
          #3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:17 PM EST

          Yes...while simultaneously taking credit for serving a "conservative" Gov. in Mass as though he was the only Republican in the State.

          Under his own logic, he should be chastising himself for spending 4 good years in office in a "blue" State vs. spending that 4 years in a "red" state.

          • 8 votes
          #3.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:23 PM EST

          yes they are (slashing and burning).

          I wonder who is actually funding Perry. Could it be "vulture capitalists" or just your everyday wealthy capitalists?

          • 11 votes
          #3.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:23 PM EST

          Run,

          In what category do we put oil men?

          • 13 votes
          #3.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:25 PM EST

          Much better to have all of the political hacks [i.e. all politicians] funded with private capital.

          Unlike Obama, a venture socialist whose venture socialist buddies fund his campaign.

          So phinp - you want those greedy evil oilmen wasting their money, or Imhelt, Kaiser and Corzine wasting ours?

          By the way who has cause more peole to lose their jobs - Romney at Bain, or Obama's jobs czar and GE?

          And of course I'm taliking 'bout american jobs.

          • 8 votes
          #3.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:30 PM EST

          Spanky,

          No matter what I answer, you will have some kind of less than pleasant response. For myself, I see more jobs being created now than under the previous administration. I am more familiar with the types of companies like Bain that can and has decimated a community.

          Your extreme views and snark no longer play with me. I am very tired of it. If you want a civilized conversation, by all means, we can try. Otherwise, please keep me out of it.

          • 17 votes
          #3.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:43 PM EST

          Come on now phinep - have I ever been anything but pleasant to you?

          The simple question is - the 'oilmen' use their own $. GE, Kaiser and Corzine seems to be firmly attached to the gov. tit. Which do you prefer?

          But tell you what - I would love to hear your views as to why Bain is bad. Bain, like capitalism is not for the weak. Those companies were weak, hence they were taken over. It's mighty hard to take over a strong, vibrant company.

          And really,sad as it is, the weak die. That's just nature.

          • 9 votes
          #3.6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:56 PM EST

          Speaking of venture socialist buddies, Obama will be in Chicago tonight charging his fellow 1%ers $35,800 a plate to attend the Dollars for Donors program buy in event. Normally Obama serves a plate of peas and a bowl of Jello. Rumor has it that tonight he is just going to give them only the plate with his mug in the middle. On the outer ring it will read "Thank you for your blind devotion to me, your Messiah, Barrack Obama, who I consider to be the fourth best president Evah"

          • 4 votes
          #3.7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:00 PM EST

          Spanky

          In the old, more prosperous times, people with a heart and conscience used to take profits and reinvest them in their own companies and worked hard at keeping their work force in the community - and making their company a part of the community. Today, the profits are not reinvested, not shared, and the company no longer cares if it is part of a community.

          How much money is enough? When did profits mean more than people? When did the bottom line become more important than community? And this "new world order" is the one we want to leave to our children and grandchildren?

          • 19 votes
          #3.8 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:04 PM EST

          Spanks, looks like you lost a fan.

          What pp doesn't comprehend is that in a capitalist society change is constant. Companies are always reorganizing both their product and services as well as their workforce. Companies like Bain provide the service to invest and reorganize companies to be as productive and cost efficient as possible, which is a real confusing process for many on the Left to understand.

          The Left believes that when you have a job, it is for life, which is a methodology that is foreign to a capitalistic society. If companies are not allowed to innovate, to tailor their workforce to the needs of their customers, the company is destined to fail. Through this process, jobs are sometimes lost, only for be (re)created with new and modified companies in the community. That fact is lost on so-called "Progressives" that when they see real progress, they sit and wring their hands and worry that things won't remain the same.

          In that sense, Progressives loathe progress. They want jobs for life, and pay to match. Anything different, they have a problem with that.

          • 6 votes
          #3.9 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:04 PM EST

          jas1

          I have absolutely nothing against progress. I have a problem with putting money and profits before people. I see nothing wrong in my outlook.

          • 19 votes
          #3.10 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:11 PM EST

          JoJo, Spanky's fan is WCO and he has a frayed cord ... still waiting for a list of poets that either you or JoNo read.

          Seems that a quantity of people on the Right disagree with you about Bain.

          • 8 votes
          #3.11 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:11 PM EST

          Nope Phinep that never happened.

          Only difference now is everybody has more info. The world has always been run by the few. In fact, it always will be.

          See, phinep - you could confiscate all the wealth in the country and give it all to the bottom 50%. In 6 months to a year the rich would again be rich and the poor would again be poor.

          Your progressive beliefs are neat, but they do not trump nature. Life is hard, it is not fair, and although everybody is allowed to survive, only the strong succeed.

          Unless they go work for the government.

          • 10 votes
          #3.12 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:14 PM EST

          pp: How much money is enough? When did profits mean more than people?

          Excellent questions. Profits matter more than people when costs exceed the profits. Because without profits, a business, a company, a corporation will not be able to continue, and all the people working there will be pink slipped when the business fails.

          So pp, be a capitalist and own something like a coffee shop. Employ more people than you need, pay them more then your competitors, and sell your product at a cheaper price than the coffee shop down the street. Making less profits and employing more people is the compassionate thing to so, until you run out of money, can't pay your vendors, and can't pay your mortgage. The bank will be in contact with you shortly afterwards.

          • 5 votes
          #3.13 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:17 PM EST

          Spanky,

          It might not happen in our lifetime, but I can hope. I truly want a decent, caring world for my granddaughter. And I will do all I can to realize that dream. I am sorry that you find it amusing, but that's is how I feel.

          jas1,

          I feel sorry for you and Spanky. You both seem to prefer money to people. Now, I could be wrong, if so, I apologize in advance. We as a society need to start focusing on people - not profits.

          • 15 votes
          #3.14 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:20 PM EST

          @ Phine we all want that for our children but we also need to teach them personal responsibility, hard work and dedication has it rewards, choices and actions have consequences and life is not always fair. We have a generation of kids who thinks everyone gets a sticker regardless of their participation or contribution. I see it everyday in the younger employees I have working for me.

          • 5 votes
          #3.15 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:25 PM EST

          jas1: So pp, be a capitalist and own something like a coffee shop. Employ more people than you need, pay them more then your competitors, and sell your product at a cheaper price than the coffee shop down the street. Making less profits and employing more people is the compassionate thing to so, until you run out of money, . . .

          pp: It might not happen in our lifetime, but I can hope. I truly want a decent, caring world for my granddaughter.

          So what is this "decent, caring world" you envision? One with the compassion of companies "putting people before profits". Those companies seem to go out of business soon. Can you name one that does such a thing? Perhaps Apple? Maybe Google? Starbucks?

          So do politicians create this "decent, caring world" of yours. It doesn't seem to be he case with the ones we currently have.

          Can you name a time when America was this "decent, caring world" you envision? Maybe we can model today's modern world after this bygone era.

          So pp, maybe you can explain how this mythical place of yours functions. Or are you talking about Sweden?

          • 2 votes
          #3.16 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:29 PM EST

          JoAnnaSmith1 ... the argument being made by Phine is that the overwhelming shift of power and wealth to a few will inevitably lead to a revolution, war or collapse of empire. It has happened time and again throughout history. You may not agree but greed is blinding those who rely on thinking that profit is the only worthy goal.

          • 12 votes
          #3.17 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:31 PM EST

          Ideology,

          What is old canard "those who do not study and learn from history are doomed to repeat it"? Maybe some reading of the French and Russian revolutions are in order.

          • 9 votes
          #3.18 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:37 PM EST

          istv: JoAnnaSmith1 ... the argument being made by Phine is that the overwhelming shift of power and wealth to a few will inevitably lead to a revolution, war or collapse of empire.

          The only unrest seen lately is that of the Occupy loons. It doesn't look like they could conquer a Barnes and Noble, much less a country.

          So name your Utopian vision istv. Does such a place exist? Where might it be?

          Need a historical reference? The EU has been trying this "fair and balanced" approach, shorter work days, huge benefit packages, and early retirement, all compassionate things. Where has that gotten them?

          So go have your little revolution istv. When it's all done, we'll still be $15 trillion in debt.

          • 6 votes
          #3.19 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:43 PM EST

          Phine,

          The working class is always responsible for economic depressions. {%-)

          • 6 votes
          #3.20 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:46 PM EST

          Ideology,

          At least that is what some would have us believe! LOL

          • 5 votes
          #3.21 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:49 PM EST

          pp: jas1, I feel sorry for you and Spanky.

          You can save your pity party for yourself pp. You seem to have this unattainable soft and fluffy vision of the world. Some would call it delusional.

          • 4 votes
          #3.22 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:55 PM EST

          JoA..., I have returned from England recently and debt to GDP is 1000% and the villagers in my town of birth are still hoisting a pint at the local pub. My relatives in Greece are sopping up prime olive oil with bread that you would die for.

          The 'loons' may well turn into a mob, I would be fearful.

          My Utopian vision ... it is indeed Utopian ... the final revolution between those with imagination against those without.

          Still waiting for the list of poets.

          love and kisses.

          • 6 votes
          #3.23 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:56 PM EST

          Question for Phine and Ideal, do you have shares of stock in any major companies and do you expect to have positive return on your investments? I wholeheartedly agree corp execs in many cases are overpaid. Greed doesn't stop with company execs.

          • 1 vote
          #3.24 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:56 PM EST

          ksw ... no, but I do own a duplex in my fair city/province/country that has since 2007 risen in value close to 100% ... not bad for a 'socialist' country. How is your property if you have one doing. We try to not ignore the workers up here.

          • 6 votes
          #3.25 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:04 PM EST

          @ Idealogy Here in the midwest our property values are still around the same. Are you saying no Canadians are shareholders? (Not even Tim Horton's or Candadian Tire?)

          • 1 vote
          #3.26 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:08 PM EST

          ksw: Question for Phine and Ideal, do you have shares of stock in any major companies and do you expect to have positive return on your investments?

          More than likely not. Stocks are evil. Corporations are evil. Profits are evil. But government, hey, they're all for that. Especially when you got some 1%-er (as they call them) that says "I'm for the middle class, I'm for the little guy!!"

          Sure he is.

          Enjoy your $35,800 a plate dinner tonight at your fundraiser Mr. 1%-er, uh, President.

          istv: My relatives in Greece are sopping up prime olive oil with bread that you would die for.

          Taking a break from the riots are they?

          Any truth to the rumor the EU has put Greece up on eBay?

          • 7 votes
          #3.27 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:08 PM EST

          ksw ... you asked me if I was a stock holder ... the existence of the TSE should answer your broader question. Canadian Tire is a great retail company that would do booming business if it entered the US market.

          JoJo, More than likely not. Stocks are evil. Corporations are evil. Profits are evil. But government, hey, they're all for that. Especially when you got some 1%-er (as they call them) that says "I'm for the middle class, I'm for the little guy!!" ... you are starting to bore me, that is the dumbest statement you have ever made.

          The deeper issue with Greece is that it is not truly a European country. It may well leave the euro-zone of its own accord. Spain is a larger problem.

          Tell you what, don't diss my relatives and I won't diss yours.

          Now back to the poets .... waiting.

          • 5 votes
          #3.28 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:24 PM EST

          EE Cummings, Walt Whitman and Robert Frost

            #3.29 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:28 PM EST

            Phine, ideology is nice, but won't win over human nature.. With regards to the french and russian revolutions, they both created a dictatorship with a minority in power over the majority which then led to a government system where the minority still had the advantage over the majority..

            BTW- greed is neither left or right, rich or poor but rather an individual decision.

            • 4 votes
            #3.30 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:36 PM EST

            ksw, good choices although I can find Frost a little too Hallmark at times ... so let's have some e.e.

            in Just-
            spring when the world is mud-
            luscious the little
            lame balloonman

            whistles far and wee

            and eddieandbill come
            running from marbles and
            piracies and it's
            spring

            when the world is puddle-wonderful

            the queer
            old balloonman whistles
            far and wee
            and bettyandisbel come dancing

            from hop-scotch and jump-rope and

            it's
            spring
            and
            the

            goat-footed

            balloonMan whistles
            far
            and
            wee

            • 4 votes
            #3.31 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:39 PM EST

            You know what, pp? Do a little historical research- start with the Bible; particularly, Paul's letters.

            What you will find is that, in the early Christian communities, they tried your kinder, gentler world. Lived in communes, they did. The situation worked out so well that Paul sent out a letter decreeing, "if he does not work, neither shall he eat".

            Seems even the early, devout christians had a little problem with folks who deemed themselves above work, but not above sharing in the fruits of others labors.

            Moreover, the religious imperative toward charity cannot be exercised through government- it is meant to be an individual obligation. Therefore, paying taxes does not exempt you from charity- far from it.

            And, to he who believes himself an adept word warrior- I am no bully. I, therefore, never engage in a battle of wits with someone who is unarmed.

            • 4 votes
            #3.32 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:41 PM EST

            american, no one looks forward to a revolution, the intellectuals rooting for one are the first ones to be taken out back and shot.

            • 4 votes
            #3.33 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:42 PM EST

            Intersting post, American.

            Our own revolution was different from those you mentioned because it was instigated by the land owning, upper middle class. I'm pretty sure that if one were to do the research, they'd find that Washington, Jefferson, Revere, Adams, Adams, Hancock, and all the others, we're the "one per cent" of their day.

            Won't that just fry the liberals' talking points?

            • 3 votes
            #3.34 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:50 PM EST

            NoJo ... even anonymous deserves to be credited, most likely a woman. This is politics, and keep the bible out of it, it has much within it that is historically incorrect.

            • 4 votes
            #3.35 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:55 PM EST

            The deeper issue with Greece is that it is not truly a European country. It may well leave the euro-zone of its own accord. Spain is a larger problem.

            I'm sure the news that Greece is not really a European country is news to the Greeks. So say they leave the euro-zone, make their German and French bankers take a haircut and reintroduce the Drachma what then? Their government still spends more than it receives in revenue only this time who is going to lend to them to make up the difference? It was nice when they could borrow at German rates to maintain their social safety net but now the money is not there who will suffer? The 1% in Greece who have their money in Swiss Francs or the poorest Greeks who are probably the old and retired.

            This is the issue here. Do you want to help those who need it the most, or do you try and help everybody, the 99%, and go bankrupt in the process?

            This is what Joe Mancin asked, hardly a raving right-winger.

            • 4 votes
            #3.36 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:42 PM EST

            Alan, NJ: This is the issue here. Do you want to help those who need it the most, or do you try and help everybody, the 99%, and go bankrupt in the process?

            pp and her ilk talk of "compassion", "heart", and "people over profits".

            None of that happens unless there is some way to pay for it.

            As for the Greeks, all they may be able to afford may be their olive oil and bread. As a preview of what will happen elsewhere, the Greeks austerity is driven by the bondholders and and banks. "Cut, or we'll cut you off", is the message the Greeks are receiving from the ones bailing them out. The Greeks have no choice, they must comply.

            At least the Greeks have the opportunity of being bailed out. Who bails out the US?

            • 3 votes
            #3.37 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:56 PM EST

            A deeper understanding of Greece's issues can be found here=

            Georges Prévélakis
            Greece: The history behind the collapse

            sorry, as yet I cannot post links

            • 2 votes
            #3.38 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:30 PM EST

            JoJo-

            "At least the Greeks have the opportunity of being bailed out. Who bails out the US?"

            You do ... try what works up here

            1 invest heavily in infrastructure

            2 raise taxes especially on capital gains.

            3 give corporations a choice- either higher taxes on their CEO's if they continue to shift their capital offshore or lower corporate taxes if they bring the capital back. Safeguards the stock holders.

            • 4 votes
            #3.39 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:40 PM EST

            And isn't that just the rub phinpep?

            You want a good world left to your ganddaughter, yet here you are supporting policies that will leave her saddler with crushing debt, where huge portions of the GDP will have to be devoted to debt service.

            It's $15 trillion right now. Obama is calling for another $1.2. You owe it to your grand daughter to oppose that request.

            You owe it to her to demand that the bastards in congress cut spending and start to actually pay down the debt.

            You owe it to her to demand entitlement reform - we are literally stealing from our kids to pay off our seniors.

            Cause I'm afraid that if you don't do these things she is going to hold you [and all of us rightly so] accountable.

            by 2016 the debt will be at least $22 Trillion. By 2020 $30 Trillion.

            How old is she phinep? We she see 18 before the entire GDP has to go to debt payments/they print so much money we have to switch to the "New Dollar?'

            • 5 votes
            #3.40 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:40 PM EST

            I think this quote from Margaret Thatcher is quite fitting

            Margaret Thatcher, in a TV interview for Thames TV This Week [[1]]on Feb. 5, 1976, Prime Minister Thatcher said, "...and Socialist governments traditionally do make a financial mess. They [socialists] always run out of other people's money. It's quite a characteristic of them."

            • 2 votes
            #3.41 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:07 PM EST

            Spanks: You want a good world left to your ganddaughter, yet here you are supporting policies that will leave her saddler with crushing debt, where huge portions of the GDP will have to be devoted to debt service.

            pp has gone silent. The Progressives have an idea of what they perceive the problems to be, but they are vague when understanding the solutions to such things. pp wants a better world for her grand-daughter, a noble goal indeed. But yet pp is for the Progressive agenda, bigger government, more spending, more debt - all to be paid for by her grand-daughter (for one).

            istv: You do ... try what works up here

            So vague. The US spends more on "infrastructure" than any country in the world. The problem is, much of it is funded with deficit dollars. You see istv, the entitlements have consumed the entire US budget. Taxes account for around $2.2 trillion per year of federal income in the US, about what is required to service the debt and the entitlements. Discretionary spending accounts for nearly all of the deficit spending. So to your list, reform of the US entitlements is the path to prosperity in the US. Without doing so will result with what we have now, high unemployment, low GDP, poverty on the rise, debt spinning out of control, and a struggling economy. And neither major political party has a plan to correct any of it.

            • 3 votes
            #3.42 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:08 PM EST

            Infrastructure spending ... not really Josy, try

            Dina Spector +

            CHARTS: The Alarming Collapse Of US Infrastructure Spending

            • 1 vote
            #3.43 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:22 PM EST
            Reply

            One thing I will say about Rick Perry, he does pick a theme and sticks to it. Tenacious little son of a gun.

            • 12 votes
            Reply#4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:24 PM EST

            ...like a tick on a dog...

            I was going to try to answer your question to my other post, but I see you disturbed the nest.

            • 5 votes
            #4.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:12 PM EST

            Run,

            I have a tendency, through no part of my own, to disturb nests. :)

            • 2 votes
            #4.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:39 PM EST

            I see that phinephancy.

            Time to start packing the Raid...or maybe silver bullets.

              #4.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:03 PM EST
              Reply

              I'm hoping this field of Republicans all stay in for the long haul. It's fun to watch.

              • 9 votes
              Reply#5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:33 PM EST

              You folks don't get it. Perry and Gingrich are trying to save the Republican Party. When Romney crashes and burns going up against Obama, they have to be able to say it was because he was too moderate, inauthentic and the wrong man for the nomination, not that Republicanism has failed. Also, they want rights to "I told you so."

              • 12 votes
              #6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:33 PM EST

              Say Amy - I do so love your spirit on all things Obama, but was wondering if you could share what objective evidence you see that points to an Obama win?

              Is it the head to head polling between Romney and Obama?

              Is it Obama's own poll numbers? [As an aside I wonder if you have an explanation for Obama 4 point slide this week?]

              If not those things, then what? From what I can see it's looking like a real horse race. But that's just on the objective evidence out there right now.

              Subjectively I think it will be a landslide.

              • 6 votes
              #6.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:41 PM EST

              Do the polls elect a president or people? Do the polls of today reflect what the polls in late October will be? i have yet to see a poll elect anyone, and today's polls are always different from month to month.

              • 10 votes
              #6.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:46 PM EST

              Of course phinep - but AMy's assumption about Obama winning exists today.

              Hence my inquiry of her.

              • 5 votes
              #6.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:00 PM EST

              Spanky,

              You take great delight in trying to "score points" off some on these boards. I know I was the same. However, I got a little enlightenment from an 11 year old. Maybe you should, too.

              • 11 votes
              #6.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:06 PM EST

              Amy---I think you are on to something in that there appears to be a battle in the Republican party between the moderates and the conservatives. Conservatives like Perry, Gingrich and Santorum seem to be staying true to their core principles. I love the others in the party trying to shut them up from speaking the truth.

              The phrase "vulture capitalism" is what it is and, oddly, summarizes a Democratic principal. We are not against capitalism--as a small business owner and advisor to other small businesses, I'm all for capitalism---the kind that creates jobs right here in the USA, not the kind that outsources them.

              • 12 votes
              #6.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:07 PM EST

              A battle within the party? During a primary?

              No Way!

              Kinda like the battle between Obama and Hillary in '08. It worked itself out, just like this one.

              • 6 votes
              #6.6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:17 PM EST

              Wait until the public realizes that Romney is just another republicans who every thought is for the 1% and only the 1%.

              For the people he wants to end women's health care and contraception. To all the women he promised to protect a woman's right to choose, well he lied. Now he wants to overturn Roe v Wade.

              Desperately seeking Romney. Just because I lied before, what makes you think I am lying now?

              For the corporations who are people he wants more tax cuts for the rich.

              We are in deep doo-doo if the people are dumb enough to elect Romney. If you want another war for the poor to pay for and the rich to get more tax cuts then any republican will fill the bill including Rick Perry.

              I am hoping that republicans have more brains than that but people like Spanky make me doubt it.

              • 11 votes
              #6.7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:18 PM EST

              Kinda like the battle between Obama and Hillary in '08. It worked itself out, just like this one.

              There wasn't any significant IDEOLOGICAL difference between the 2 candidates in 2008, Spanky, no democratic version of Bill Kristol, or Erik Ericson, claiming Hillary wasn't REALLY a DEMOCRAT, was there?

              How do you think things are going to "work out" with Rep. Paul?

              This year's republican scenario isn't the democrats in 2008, it's the democrats in 1968...What say you?

              ( and...Put down the PEOPLE mag!)

              • 7 votes
              #6.8 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:30 PM EST

              Spanky, I've noticed you like to point to polls that show Romney besting Obama, though just by a few points, in a hypothetical match up. (And he is the only Republican that does so.)

              Looks like some gullible Republican voters saw those polls too and that's why they voted against their gut, in order to nominate someone they hope is electable. "Romney it is," they said, "the Independents will vote for him!"

              Oh, the joy for Democrats! For one thing, the only thing polls show right now is that American voters like to give challengers a chance, and of all the Republicans, Romney looks the most like a central casting President. Exit polls of NH voters, who have heard Romney in person, show only 31% of Republican leaning Independents chose him to go up against President Obama. Romney is a seriously flawed candidate, in so many ways, and if it's obvious to his fellow Republicans, who don't really like him, it's going to be obvious to the Independents.

              • 7 votes
              #6.9 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:39 PM EST

              Amy, you got it on the "I told you so". What I don't get is why they waited until Iowa to bring this subject up. They had 13 debates before the caucus but they barely laid a glove on Romney.

              I think that, as much as I disagree with Gingrich on many things, that he recognizes how destructive "vulture capitalism" is to the country's economy and people. However, pompous Gingrich is, I think he gets it; then throw in a personal grudge. As for Perry, he's following Gingrich's lead on this one.

              • 8 votes
              #6.10 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:48 PM EST

              Phinephancy, I am glad you had a good discussion with your grandaughter. Civilized discussions on the problems this country is facing should be important. I am very disappointed by the polarization in our country. We have more in common as Americans then the damn media wants us to believe.

              • 5 votes
              #6.11 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:21 PM EST

              Jody---you are giving Gingrich credit for caring about the 99%---I'm not sure it is that but, rather, his own ambition. Howard Fineman had a scathing view of Newt & his sense of self last night that makes me think this is all personal. I do think Newt probably wishes he'd thought of it sooner.

              • 7 votes
              #6.12 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:21 PM EST

              Phine, nice strawman argument in your post 20.4 by diversion.

              AmyB - And obama is without flaws? How droll...

              • 3 votes
              #6.13 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:49 PM EST

              Steeler:

              What is up with you liberals and the word "scathing"?

              Everytime someone writes/says just the opposite of the conservative view, you liberals hollar "that is a scathing report"....lol.....most of the time it turns out to just be an exageration.

              Would you call someone in here calling Obama's policies illigit, a scathing review?

              scathing [ˈskeɪðɪŋ]

              adj
              1. harshly critical; scornful a scathing remark

              2. damaging; painful
              scathingly adv

              Collins
              English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged
              © HarperCollins Publishers
              1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003

              • 4 votes
              #6.14 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:54 PM EST

              I posted this above

              http://www.kennesaw.edu/pols/3380/pres/1980.html

              There are other sources.

              Romney does not have the "helped defeat our candidate" baggage that Reagan had. Moreover, his enthusiasm level is well above the eleven percent Reagan garnered.

              I'm seeing a democratic talking point here.

              It ain't working, folks.

              Obama shelved in 2012.

              • 3 votes
              #6.15 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:56 PM EST

              As Romney soars, conservatives squirm

              Many of these activists see South Carolina's Jan. 21 primary as their last best hope of stopping Romney by consolidating in a united front, but many acknowledge they have yet to figure out which of his conservative rivals to rally behind and which should get out.

              The tension is exacerbated by deep divisions between two GOP wings: tea-party groups yearning for a pure, small-government conservative, and evangelicals who want a loyal social conservative.

              The Romney conundrum will be on the agenda Friday, when about 150 evangelical leaders huddle at a Texas ranch. Likewise, the subject of consolidating conservative opposition to the former Massachusetts governor is expected to be a major point of discussion among about 500 attendees at a tea-party convention this weekend in Myrtle Beach, S.C., where speakers will include Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum.

              Many social conservative leaders still seethe over the party's experience in 2008, when evangelical Mike Huckabee won in Iowa but the base didn't unify, and Sen. John McCain locked up the nomination early.

              "We made a terrible mistake in 2008," said Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission.

              http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2017206104_evangelistea11.html

              It's is possible that it IS too late, and that neither Newton nor Santorum are strong enough candidates to be a real threat to Mitt's nomination, but there is still a LOT ABR of money out there for SOMEONE, especially if Mitt doesn't show well in SC.

              Meanwhile, Jeb watches from his lay-z-boy and smiles and says hmmmm...

              And Yogi says "It ain't over till it's over..."

              • 4 votes
              #6.16 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:41 PM EST

              If Jeb Bush were going to run, he'd have declared already. Those waiting for that particular side show are going to be sorely disappointed.

              There are several good articles on Republican disdain for Reagan-I posted a link to a poli sci article, but there are plenty of others. That field was also quite large, and featured one candidate calling Reagan's economic policy vision "voodoo economics".

              I believe he went on to be Reagan's running mate.

              The DNC has done a yeoman's job as the Greek chorus bemoaning the lack of coherence on the GOP side. I am finding the crocodile tears hilarious.

              I've seen this movie before. I know how it ends- with a landslide for the GOP candidate.

              Obama shelved in 2012.

              • 3 votes
              #6.17 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 6:57 PM EST

              Raging Bull won the Best Picture Oscar in 1980...Great flick, De Niro Best Actor...but

              This isn't 1980

              There are no hostages being held in any embassy I know of.

              and (sorry NoJoe, but it just cries out to be my 3rd here)

              I knew Ronald Reagan and Mitt Romney is NO Ronald Reagan...;-)

              That aside, the dynamic is so different this time, It's like you're a Catholic in Germany in 1530 and telling me that everything is the same for the Church as it was in 1514...

              No one knows what will happen for the next almost 11 months, not even me, and like you i tend to be right all the time and know practically everything lol

              -------------------------------------------------------

              A Solid Win That Came at a Price

              By GERALD F. SEIB

              Which is the more important outcome, the fact that New Hampshire solidified his status as unquestioned front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination, or the fact that New Hampshire is where the Pandora's box of bitter attacks over his tenure running the Bain Capital private-equity firm was opened?

              So it is significant that New Hampshire became the place where the Bain narrative came under attack not by liberal Democrats but capitalism-loving conservative Republicans. It is hard to know whether Mr. Romney shrugged it off because the attacks don't really register with voters, or because he happens to have had such a solid core of support with New Hampshire's voters and such a long history of working the Granite State that they couldn't dent him there.

              http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203436904577152820194293782.html?mod=WSJ_WSJ_US_News_10_1

              The Battle of Bain Capital

              By Michael Walsh

              Kudos to Yuval for this trenchant observation about the great Bain battle, which I think gets at the heart of what makes some conservatives uneasy about Romney's record there:

              But it has revealed two problems that conservatives who have risen to Romney's defense and the Romney team itself will need to address. The former have too easily treated finance as the entirety of capitalism, and so have needlessly made both the defense of finance and the defense of capitalism more difficult. And the latter have too easily treated Romney's Bain experience as the entirety of the case for his election, and so have needlessly made both the case for Romney's Wall Street work and the case for his candidacy harder.

              http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/287707/battle-bain-capital-michael-walsh

              Newt Gingrich: 'Crony capitalism ... is not free enterprise'

              "Criticizing specific actions in specific places is not being anti-free enterprise," the former House Speaker told a crowd that packed a banquet hall here in upstate South Carolina on Wednesday, rejecting Romney's suggestion that questioning his record as chief executive of Bain Capital was tantamount to attacking free enterprise.

              "And crony capitalism, where people pay each other off at the expense of the rest of the country, is not free enterprise," Gingrich said. "And raising questions about that is not wrong."

              http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-pn-newt-gingrich-crony-capitalismis-not-free-enterprise-20120111,0,2756433.story

              Divide and Conquer

              The path to defeating conservative insurgents who seek the Republican presidential nomination.

              In 2000, Bush the younger beat a candidate to his left, John McCain. But he also left in the dust Forbes, Keyes, and Gary Bauer. Buchanan bolted the party and Dan Quayle didn't even make it to the Iowa caucuses. "I whupped Gary Bauer's ass in 2000," Bush would later recall to a surprised speechwriter drafting the president's remarks to the Conservative Political Action Conference. "So take out all this movement stuff. There is no movement."

              As arrogant as this may seem, the 43rd president may have a point if things continue along the current trajectory. Republicans keep nominating candidates who create vast unfunded entitlements and grow the federal government once in office. Many of them have little connection to conservative principle even before they receive the nod. Yet few qualified conservatives are in a position to challenge them, leaving the task to talk radio hosts, former members of Congress, and House backbenchers.This history seems likely to repeat itself after yesterday's New Hampshire primary.

              http://spectator.org/archives/2012/01/11/divide-and-conquer

              ------------------------------------------------------------

              And it's never too late at a BROKERED CONVENTION, is it?

              Jeb can wait for the call sitting in the laz-e-boy. I like Jeb, if one of the brothers was going to be President for 8 years, it should have been him. We all got screwed on that one.

                #6.18 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 7:56 PM EST

                Dangerfield, you're an entertaining guy.

                That said, you're part of the Greek chorus- quote as many "conservatives" as you like.

                I could find reams of them tearing out their hair in 1980.

                Are there hostages? No. Nor was the START Treaty in any way as dangerous as SALT II. Still, Reagan was called a war mongeri for opposing it- turns out most of the electorate agreed with Reagan,despite the hysterical ratings from the granola crunching, nuclear holocaust fear mongers.

                We won the Cold War. No bombs. No mushroom clouds. And no bloody SALT II treaty, either.

                This economy is far, far worse than the economy in 1980- but, if you read the link I sent you, you know Obama's script. He's going the Carter route- prescribing more government programs at a time when polls show the highest level of distrust in government since- well, ever.

                I will not equate Iran threatening an American citizen with death to the Embassy hostages, but one cannot escape their saber rattling. More ominous is the situation in North Korea- and Obama cannot keep peace in his own White House.

                Obama won the last election because he made himself, by his own words, a blank screen. He was all things to all people- its Plouffe's modes operandi for winning elections. Worked so well for Obama, he tried it as an export for Britain's Labour Party.

                It will work as well for Obama as it did for Gordon Brown. He has a record- not to put too fine a point on it, but it stinks.

                The parallels between this election and 1980 are unmistakeable. All that remains to be seen is whether the media gives a lot of attention to Johnson, (remember him? He's running in the Libertarian primary), or they succeed in getting someone else to play the role of John Anderson.

                Ask Jimmy Carter, GHW Bush, or John Corzine how well those third party candidates assist the relection efforts of the incumbent.

                I'm not going to change your mind, or your tactics. You will have exactly the same effect on me. That said and done, have you heard from Mixed Bag? I do miss his comments.

                  #6.19 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 9:44 PM EST
                  Reply

                  The hardest thing is to admit defeat before the race is over and pull out.

                  Going back to the last Presidential election, there have been a spate of Republican candidates (Rudy, Fred Thompson, now Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry) who have enjoyed their greatest popularity with the electorate PRIOR to their entry into the race..

                  Rick Perry is currently running a strong 5% in SC...This was his "firewall"...

                  • 7 votes
                  Reply#7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:41 PM EST

                  dangerfield,

                  The whole "firewall" or "line in the sand" scenario's never seem to play out well for those who employ them, does it?

                  • 6 votes
                  #7.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:51 PM EST
                  Reply

                  Messing around with past GOP presidents and who they would support ...

                  Eisenhower … Huntsman

                  Nixon … Huntsman

                  Ford … Huntsman or Romney

                  Reagan … Romney

                  Bush1 … Romney

                  Bush2 … Santorum or Perry

                  could be a trend in GOP dis-functional thinking or I need to get back to rereading Conrad.

                  • 8 votes
                  Reply#8 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:51 PM EST

                  Interesting. How sure are you on Bush 2?

                  • 3 votes
                  #8.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:53 PM EST

                  Phine, George would like their bomb first and ask questions later policies.

                  • 4 votes
                  #8.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:58 PM EST

                  Ideology,

                  Ah, that explains Bush 2. Good choice(s)

                  • 5 votes
                  #8.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:08 PM EST

                  Bush 2 would ask Dick Cheney who to support.

                  • 11 votes
                  #8.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:10 PM EST

                  ideology, that's food for thought. Agree except I think Ford would support Huntsman who is a more realistic modern conservative. Bush 2, Romney all the way because they are two peas in a pod on taxes and trickle down. Although Bush 2 was a born-again Christian, I don't see him supporting the radical religious views of Santorum; he might think about Perry just because he's from Texas.

                  I just read your justification for the Bush 2 selection, good points; hadn't thought about bomb first, ask later.

                  Steeler, good one!

                  • 8 votes
                  #8.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:13 PM EST
                  Reply

                  I'm no fan of Rick Perry's but am glad to see him stick to his criticism of Romney and Bain Capital despite the whining from his own party. Perry and Gingrich are absolutely right to bring this to the attention of voters. Romney and other republicans try to spin Bain as free-market capitalism but there's a difference between capitalism and "vulture" capitalism. Anyone who wants to know the real truth about Bain Capital and what it did to many previously highly profitable companies to line their own pockets need only use Google. The facts and the truth are easily available.

                  • 8 votes
                  Reply#9 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:56 PM EST

                  If Rick Perry has any plans of running for re-election for Governor of Texas in 2014 he might consider stopping now before he does something to ruin his chances.

                  • 6 votes
                  Reply#10 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 12:58 PM EST

                  Da Noid,

                  I do believe the damage has already been done. He might consider looking for work in another field other than elected office.

                  • 5 votes
                  #10.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:09 PM EST

                  How many terms can the governor of Texas have?!

                  • 3 votes
                  #10.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:14 PM EST

                  Da Noid, too late for Perry. His debate performance and complete lack of knowledge has already been absorbed by Texas voters. He'll need to find another line of work after 26 years of living off the government he claims to dislike.

                  • 5 votes
                  #10.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:18 PM EST

                  Since Papa Bush endorsed Romney, Perry probably has an axe to grind against the Bush family. Rick will stay in, just to further aggravate those who did not endorse him.

                  These two families haven't liked each other for a long time.

                  • 5 votes
                  #10.4 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:22 PM EST

                  I think Perry should work in the fields, since that is where he created the most jobs. Live amongst them like they have to for a while, work with them for what they make an hour, how's that make you feel? Big accomplishment for a leader? The dark ages were tough, I don't think Perry can survive any longer in what he took Texas back to.

                  Perry needs to get in his best shots before he's gone. Might win him some of that 'redemption'.

                  • 3 votes
                  #10.5 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:35 PM EST

                  It is the hope and prayer of many of us Texans that our fellow voters have now been able to see Perry's shortcomings and true colors in this presidential run. We truly need some new blood in the governor's office after so many years of Bush/Perry!

                  • 5 votes
                  #10.6 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:44 PM EST

                  Bethie---I was curious so I went online to look and saw that Texas is one of a few states that has NO term limits on its governor---would explain support that Perry got from inside his own state!

                  • 3 votes
                  #10.7 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:09 PM EST

                  Perry could get one of those "high paying" jobs at McDonalds or perhaps as a greeter at WalMart. It's a job. It doesn't matter if you can't support a family on what they pay. Just shut up and get to work.

                  • 2 votes
                  #10.8 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:38 PM EST
                  Reply

                  It seems only fair and fitting that Romney suffer attacks from an opponent's Super-PAC since his Super-PAC really took it to Gingrich in Iowa.

                  I'm glad about Perry's criticism because it is the right thing to point out about Mitt Romney's slash and burn capitalistic road to wealth.

                  • 5 votes
                  Reply#11 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:12 PM EST

                  If someone were out there telling lies about Romney, I could see the rest of the Republicans trying to shut him or her up. But it seems to me that Perry and Gingrich are pointing out the truth about Romney's record at Bain, the record he has said is a reason to vote for him. Do they think if they ignore this it will go away?

                  • 3 votes
                  #11.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:33 PM EST
                  Reply

                  Millionare Romney, born with a platinum bar in his mouth, used his family fortune to invest in companies that ate up and spit out other companies throwing middle class workers out on their a$$es...and he thinks the middle class in this country are too dumb to realize he's only running for president so he can ensure his millionare friends keep their gravy train fed by middle class taxpayer's money? Uh uh!

                  • 6 votes
                  Reply#12 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:28 PM EST

                  Pat, is that what he did really? Your such a dumba$$ you'll probably vote for the Candy Man again next go around. Gotta keep those welfare checks and foodstamps coming your way.

                  • 3 votes
                  #12.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:44 PM EST

                  JFK###s, yep that's exactly what he did, and if you don't see it then YOU are the double dumba$$!

                  • 2 votes
                  #12.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:44 PM EST

                  Ever see the movie Pretty Woman?

                  Mitt Romney = Edward Lewis

                  The goal of Bain Capital was not to create jobs. The goal was to make money. Any jobs created were a by-product of the goal of making money.

                  Think of the equation from the other end...

                  How many new businesses did Bain Capital create?

                  The answer is none...they just bought other people's ideas.

                  • 2 votes
                  #12.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 7:28 PM EST
                  Reply

                  Go for it Perry! Rip Mitt a new one! Hit him hard!!

                  Obama 2012

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#13 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:48 PM EST

                  RINO Romney Is the Least Electable By PETER FERRARA on 1.11.12

                  And his economic policies would be warmed-over Bush Sr. and Dole.

                  I just love this! Keep up the good work!!

                  • 2 votes
                  #13.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:08 PM EST

                  I love seeing the conservatives trying to eat eachother up. This can't be good for them. The GOP will be split between the moderates who will vote for Romney and the extremists who will vote for Paul. Obama will cruise to victory against the split GOP. The more they eat each other the more ammunition for the Democrats. They are listening and paying attention.

                  • 1 vote
                  #13.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:47 PM EST
                  Reply

                  Is it just me, or does speaking at a restaurant named "Lizard's Thicket" just not sound like the ideal photo op for a politician?

                  Great website, though - "Country cookin' makes you good lookin' " and "Macaroni and cheese IS a vegetable!"

                  • 8 votes
                  Reply#14 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:49 PM EST

                  Romney is the only candidate with real world experience and the lifelong politicians can't stand it. No wonder this country is is so much trouble.

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#15 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 1:53 PM EST

                  And Huntsman doesn't have "real world experience"? I'd say his experience abroad gives him an edge over Romney.

                  • 4 votes
                  #15.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 2:47 PM EST

                  Real world experience means real American experience. Watching Chinese grovel in the dirt doesn't apply.

                  • 1 vote
                  #15.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:16 PM EST

                  But hanging out in France, pretending to try to convert a Catholic Country to Mormonism (laughing as I write this) DOES equate to real world experience, right Joey?

                  • 7 votes
                  #15.3 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:28 PM EST
                  Reply

                  A properly managed company pays it's employees slightly above what the market will bear, taking into account the special skills acquired by the employees, their productivity, and the difficulty in replacing them.

                  The profits generated can be shared with these employees, as long as that doesn't hinder the overall growth and expansion of the company.

                  Year end bonuses come to mind.

                  Unless a company is run efficiently, it will not survive. That's a given.

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#16 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:15 PM EST

                  get this:

                  Rick is criticized by "Sean & Rush"....

                  Thats an honor for Rick.

                  I would be offended if I was complimented by two racist, capitalist who think they live in a north korea like country...

                  • 3 votes
                  Reply#17 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:18 PM EST

                  Warren Raises $5.7 Million for Senate Run

                  By Caitlin Huey-Burns - January 11, 2012

                  Wow!!

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#18 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:21 PM EST

                  So, Romney wants to eliminate the EPA? I must've missed the memo that all pollution has been stopped and eliminated, and that the environment is in pristine condition and in no danger of being decimmated by unregulated vulture capitalists like Romney!

                  • 4 votes
                  Reply#19 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:40 PM EST

                  You do know who formed the EPA right?

                  • 2 votes
                  #19.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:59 PM EST

                  The same Wacky Peacnick Lib who negotiated an end to the War in VietNam, who passed the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts, not to mention creating the Social Security Insurance (SSI) Program...;-)

                  What a LIBERAL!

                  • 4 votes
                  #19.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 4:18 PM EST
                  Reply

                  Why does Romney hate America so much, that he used his family fortune to kill middle class jobs and send them over seas?

                  • 4 votes
                  Reply#20 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:45 PM EST

                  While not a fan of RINO's, the fact that Romney and his firm, took many failing companies and through sometimes persision "fat trimming," made these companies successful again, sounds like just what's needed here in the USA.

                  • 4 votes
                  Reply#21 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 3:46 PM EST

                  It may be okay in the world of capitalism, but not what we need for a president. This background along with all other Romney's negative is exactly what Obama wants to run against.

                  • 1 vote
                  #21.1 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:03 PM EST

                  Yes Dahly,

                  There is a lot of fat to trim in Washington. Thick as whale blubber it is.

                  And President Romney is the one to do the trimming. I back him 100%.

                  Naturally some will have to suffer from this necessary process, but this is the wake up call to all true Americans.

                  • 1 vote
                  #21.2 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 6:28 PM EST
                  Reply

                  While I think that what Romney did at Bain is okay in the world of capitalism, etc. I don't think that it is a good background for a president. Republicans need to take a hard look at Romney and how he will match up against Obama as I think this will be a negative among many others of his (fat cat, wall street, class differences, no empathy and so on). Don't just assume what the liberal media says that Romney is going to be the nominee. Make a difference in So. Carolina and don't let the establishment win or it will be another election like Obama and McCain.

                    Reply#22 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:01 PM EST

                    What bothers me, is that Bain Capital took millions out of companies who failed.

                    Could these companies have survived, if they were not so burdened by "consultants"?

                    My grandfather Jim Margeson worked to save companies in the 1930s and 1940s, with great success. He had worked his way through Dartmouth, however, and agonized over laying anyone off (except for "The Family").

                    My grandfather, a lifelong Republican, would have NEVER posed for that picture of the "Bain Boys", with all that money.

                    When you come from money, however, I guess it is different.

                    • 3 votes
                    Reply#23 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:13 PM EST

                    The hardest thing former Gov. Romney ever did was try to persuade the French to give up wine, cigarettes & coffee.

                    Still easier than trying to persuade the Viet-Namese, to give up on their (brutal) independent reunification of their Country, which was his alternative.

                    • 2 votes
                    Reply#24 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:19 PM EST

                    President Romney for eight years. This is great. Can't wait for Obama's concession speech so I can pop open the Champagne.

                    What are you libs all going to do when you have no socialist messiah's leg to hump?? Might have to go get a job, huh??

                    • 3 votes
                    Reply#25 - Wed Jan 11, 2012 6:24 PM EST
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