Posted on 07/11/2012 9:01:18 AM PDT by Talkradio03
Mitt Romney was booed today at the NAACP conference in Houston after he promised to repeal president Obamas health care reform law.
Im going to eliminate every non-essential, expensive program I can find, that includes Obamacare, and Im going to work to reform and save Romney said before being interrupted by boos for about 10 seconds. (Video)
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
Whole lot of hiddeness (and sometimes not so well hidden) things on this thread.
Why do Republicans appear in front of the NAALCP? Why bother? I don’t see Libs speaking at the NRA or Heritage. So why do we need to pay them the lip service they don’t pay us?
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Because to do so demonstrates a higher standard. A good American should make the appeal to ALL the people with the hope of correctly informing and engendering more unity. Such a thing would never appeal to Obama, who, per Alinsky, continually seeks to divide.
I do give Romney credit for at least saying this in front of the audience he did. I have no faith that he’ll actually do it if elected, but he did stand up today.
WHY EVEN GO THERE?
STOP WITH THE POLITE BULL$H!T AND JUST WORK TO DEFEAT THEM
But he should have... the louder he gets booed at NAALCPO the better for us.. show the pubnlic them booing it
“Why do Republicans appear in front of the NAALCP? Why bother? I don’t see Libs speaking at the NRA or Heritage. So why do we need to pay them the lip service they don’t pay us?”
Totally agree. All it does is give the liberal MSM something to use to make the GOP look out of touch with the “folks”.
They vote for PANDERING/WEALTH-REDISTRIBUTORS to keep them on the Plantation (as they have learned for 4 generations; it PAYS to be black, when someone will buy your Vote with Whitey's Money).
SEE TAGLINE
Question: Does the majority of the NAACP members think? Or still, can they think?
Mitt Romneys speech played surprisingly well with todays audience, and may have helped him shed his unfortunate image as a panderer. It certainly raises an interesting question. Given Mitt Romneys courage to address an audience he could expect to be hostile to his message, when will President Barack Obama show similar courage and clearly explain and defend his policies before, say, a school choice coalition convention or the Conference of Catholic Bishops?Will Governor Romney get more Black votes than is generally anticipated? With the apparent unhappiness in sectors of the Black population -- even the more rabid sectors -- he well may; he certainly should.
Because we are unafraid to speak the truth — anytime, anywhere and to anyone.”
Heartily agree. It may very well be the first time some of them have ever heard or been in a position to hear something else other than the MSM and/or BO’s talking points. If Romney can’t stand the heat in this kitchen then he has no business running for any office.
MikEy_1962, I agree tribalism. It is a sickness. This does not end well.
At least he said it and did not pander to the racist organization..
Never.....none of us should hold our breath waiting for that to happen!
,,,,,, THAT’S RACIST !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No it's not.
Blacks make up ~12% of voters.
Let's say that Romney speech at the NAACP pursuaded 1% of these voters. Romney just gained 0.12% of the vote.
Let's say he pursuaded 5% - He just went up 0.6%.
Let's say he pursuaded an impossibly unlikely 10% of black voters to move away from Obama and to himself. He gains 1.2% of the total vote.
Meanwhile, if McCain in 2008 had improved his standing with white voters by a mere 5%, he would have handily defeated Obama. And doing that for a Republican would be grossly easier than appealing to large numbers of black voters, who by and large hold diametrically opposite positions (as Romney just found) on economic issues than Republicans.
No offence, but minority outreach is largely a waste of GOP dollars. Sure, if they want to pump a couple million into it just to keep up appearances, fine. But I wouldn't put a whole lot into that kitty, if I were them.
He got booed on that subject sure. He also got applause on comment alluding to several factors that keep blacks "on the plantation" (poverety, lousy education, lack of motivation to improve)
He got applause on his closing comments which were, interestingly very religious in nature.
All-in-all I thought it was a pretty good speech for him.
The NAACP is the antithesis of conservative thought. The louder this crowd boos the candidate the more inclined I am to vote for him. Not a bad idea for a RINO to speak before the NAACP and have them boo him to make inroads with skeptical conservatives.Perhaps Romney’s staff should have handed the crowd tomatoes before the speech.
Fair enough, and perhaps so.
Though, like Ace over at Ace of Spades HQ, I tend to think that undecideds aren't really undecided, but only think they are or say they are.
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