Posted on 03/13/2007 9:03:04 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
When a candidate for president blows into town, most reporters show up. Theres always a chance he or she will say something surprising or stupid, and there could even be a chance to ask a substantial question and get an answer with some teeth to it, but its not likely.
Thats just the way these things go.
But when the Idaho press showed up today for Republican candidate Mitt Romney, his people were still rehearsing badly - the drill of the classic obligatory campaign fly-through. They issued conflicting information about the place and time of the press conference, with most reporters never notified at all and nobody in charge who could straighten it all out. Attempts to reach the campaign by phone with follow-up questions went unanswered. Multiple cell phone and landline numbers were available, but nobody responded except to refer us to someone else who wasnt there. It was a disgraceful runaround. Its early, but when a field organization is THIS bad, its not encouraging.
Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, a nice man with good hair who was considered a superior governor by opinion leaders on both sides of the aisle, provided a possible reason for all that uncertainty: hes remarkably uninspiring. Anybody who has ever called Al Gore wooden has never seen Mitt Romney.
Its nothing to do with politics or party; it has everything to do with electability. Everyone wants their horse in the race to have what it takes to cross the finish line first, and today, Romney didnt have it.
I was eerily reminded of the novel and film of The Manchurian Candidate, a thriller in which a handsome war hero is controlled via a brain microchip and turned into the perfect presidential candidate, who is later directed by evil forces via the chip. His speeches are repetitive platitudes which seem to arrive in his mouth by computer. Romney is good-looking, fit, beautifully turned out with perfect white teeth, and unfortunately, he speaks that way, too.
Hes certainly not the first presidential candidate to employ banality in an attempt to say nothing which would commit him to any firm policy, but its still disappointing. The weariest old adages flowed from Romney like so much water. Look at my wife and me and our family if you want to know our values, he said.
Look at my heart, character and experience.
I see the internet age and the YouTube era as a great opportunity to take my message directly to the people. And that message would be ..?
Romney did name universal health insurance, on which he has an impressive record, as a top priority of his, but was equivocal about exactly how hed handle it as President. He said the Muslim jihad needed a solution, but offered none. He worked up a little enthusiasm about global competition especially with the Chinese but really only came alive when talking about his experience as President and CEO of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee for the 2002 winter Olympics. We took something in trouble and made it a success.
Which he did. An excellent Olympics, indeed.
Outstanding comic relief was provided by a protestor who, complete with rolled Rs and dramatic Shakespearean tones, boomed out, MISTAH RRROMNEY! WHY DO THE MORMONS SAY JESUS IS THE DEVILS BROTHAH?
Nobody answered that, or was much interested in Romneys Mormonism. That was good.
Asked about the Rocky Mountain West, Romney said he saw the spirit of innovation. The opportunity-seeking of the American West has long been the character of the American people. (I cant interpret that one.) He spoke of technology innovations which came from the West, but again, nothing about what that had to do with .anything.
Coal has a major role to play in our future energy policy, along with wind and solar power. No specifics.
Of the evangelical Christian groups which seem to dog Romney wherever he goes, he had this to say, I will do my best to establish my bona fides with that group.
On the internet, people can see me in speeches, get to know a candidate on a personal basis, in unguarded moments, and see the true character of a candidate.
Despite many years working in, and watching campaigns - enough to know the hard realities - I still say enough, enough, enough with the Family Values and the Spirit of America and the Heart and Character and Hope for the Future and ..holy MOTHER of mercy .STOP! For once, cant we please have a candidate who says, I believe this. I will do this. I will not do that. I dont care who gets mad; its the right thing to do. I dont care who gave me money, its the right thing to do.
I know. Incredibly naïve. Hopelessly idealistic. Never going to happen, and all that.
But isnt it, in our unguarded, raw heart of hearts, what all of us truly want from candidates? If you could wave a wand and turn them all into decisive, plain-speaking, committed people who said what they mean and mean what they say, wouldnt you?
Of course you would. But in the words of Governor Romney, If this is a place where I can come and raise money as well as strengthen my political base, Im going to do it. And at $1,000 a plate, 100 people showed up to have lunch with him.
MISTAH ROMNEY! YOULL BE BACK!
Do you perhaps know what the Mormon position on homosexuality is? ... I'll see your sheesh and raise you a wow.
Oh, come on - EV and I have been at loggerheads on things before, but what you posted above just isn't valid:
1. It's an analysis / opinion piece. Opinions are like rear-end body orifices: everybody's got one, and others usually think it stinks. You are free to publicly agree or disagree with it as you like.
2. The article goes out of its way to paint the guy yelling out that 'Mormons believe the Devil is the brother of Jesus' as a complete loon, and points out that (at least in that crowd of journalists, at that time) his religion is/was a non-issue.
For the record: I myself hold no strong opinion about Romney, other than I hope his pro-life turn gets shown in deeds, and not just in mighty-conveinently-timed words. With his gubernatorial background, he would be a fine candidate for POTUS if he showed more conservative bona-fides.
I want Hunter to do well, if for only one reason - to get debate going on the risks of "free trade" with countries like China who do not share our values, our workplace & environmental standards, and who even plot harm against us. If we could only get someone with the executive experience of Romney (not to mention money, heh...), but with the character and values of Hunter, we'd be sitting pretty.
What does "the Mormon position on homosexuality" have to do with anything? First of all, I could care less. I'm interested in his public policies, not his religion. And secondly, he has always been fond of saying that he doesn't believe in "imposing his personal beliefs" on anybody.
I watched the clips and I saw no such 'strident support', rather a measured attempt to take the issue off the table, making it clear he had personal views that he would not impose.
Romney said what he said yet was not breaking any promise when he later took this prolife action:
http://www.boston.com/yourlife/health/women/articles/2005/07/26/why_i_vetoed_contraception_bill/
"YESTERDAY I vetoed a bill that the Legislature forwarded to my desk. Though described by its sponsors as a measure relating to contraception, there is more to it than that. The bill does not involve only the prevention of conception: The drug it authorizes would also terminate life after conception.
I have spoken with medical professionals to determine whether the drug contemplated under the bill would simply prevent conception or whether it would also terminate a living embryo after conception. Once it became clear that the latter was the case, my decision was straightforward. I will honor the commitment I made during my campaign: While I do not favor abortion, I will not change the state's abortion laws."
He still supports destroying embryos.
There are folks who want to smear Romney based upon his religious affilitation. Okay, he's a Mormon. And Mormons don't condone homosexuality. Now, you've spent some effort to semar him because of being a Mormon. Well, here's a plus for his Mormon beliefs (as is the family empowerment a major plus), that he cannot embrace the degeneracy or agenda of homosexuality. He will not aim the weight of government to assault them, but he doesn't support them.
A solution - a Romney / Hunter ticket???
I hope both do well, and could support either in the general with gusto ... It will be depressing indeed if the only candidates that get attention are Rudy and McCain. (UGGGG!)
Utter BS.
You've made the claim, now back it up, bucko.
"He seems like a phony to me. "
He just seems that way because it has been a long time since our Presidential candidates can actually *articulate well*!!
Dont confuse his smooth, capable and articulate delivery with anything other than smarts and communication skill. It doesnt mean he's a phony if he's closer to Clinton / Reagan in communications skills instead of Dole or GHW Bush ... He is sincere, based on the background I've looked into...
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200509/pappu
I'd have to disagree.
EV has mercilessly smeared Romney and distorted his positions and his past actions, but I'll have to give him credit for this much: He has left Romney's Mormonism out of it. EV's lopsided attacks are on Romney's alleged "liberalism."
No Governor in America "embraced the degeneracy or agenda of homosexuality" more completely than Mitt Romney did as Governor of MA.
Still waiting for some proof of your claim, btw.
Instead of dissolving the Commission, Romney continued to fund it:
More recently Romney proposed allocating $250,000 for the Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth for fiscal year 2006, twice what he proposed for FY05. The Legislature ultimately funded the commission at $250,000 for FY05, so Romney's proposal for next year amounts to level funding, and the proposal is still a far cry from $1.6 million the commission received in the mid-'90s before the state budget crisis. Yet as commission co-chair Kathleen Henry said, Romney could just as easily have dissolved the program. "We serve completely at the will of the governor," said Henry.
- Bay Windows 3/3/2005
When Romney was criticized for Commission's funding, the homosexual activists came to his defense:
Kathleen Henry, chairwoman of the Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth, defended Romney. Henry said the governor's fiscal 2006 budget plan included $250,000 for the commission, twice as much as he proposed spending in 2005. ''The fact that he doubled last year's [proposed budget allocation] this year is huge to us. It's really huge. It says to us clearly that he gets the service for what it really is," said Henry.
- Boston Globe 7/1/2005
Twice after the Legislature approved funding for the Commission, Romney then appeased pro-family activists by vetoing it! However, since there are not enough Republicans to sustain vetoes, a veto is largely a charade, and the homosexual lobby was never seriously concerned when it happened. And Romney never put any effort into sustaining the vetoes. This enabled Romney to appear "pro-family," while the homosexuals still got their funding.
When Romney vetoed money for his Governor's Commission, here's what he told the Boston Globe his reasons were (still pandering to the homosexual activists):
Romney said his vetoes were motivated by fiscal prudence, not opposition to the programs or presidential politics. Even with his vetoes, the state would spend more than $1 million on teen pregnancy prevention and $250,000 on the programs for gay and lesbian youth. . . [Romney said,] ''The work that they're doing to prevent suicide and prevent violence is important work, and we support the work which they're doing . . . [but] we didn't see a need to raise their budget by 40 percent."
- Boston Globe, 7/1/2005
In May 2006, as he prepared his run for the presidency, MassResistance presented the Governor's office with shocking photographs of events and activities sponsored or organized by the Commission. A few days later, Romney announced his intention to dissolve the Commission. But within hours of that announcement, under pressure from the homosexual community, the Governor changed his mind. "We inundated him with outrage," one homosexual activist told the Boston Globe. So instead, the governor simply told the Commission members that it must focus on its "original mission" [which involves affirming homosexuality to children in the schools].
- Boston Globe, 5/12/2006
In June 2006, fearful that a future Governor might dissolve the Governor's Commission for Gay and Lesbian Youth, homosexual activists in the Legislature slipped an item into the 2007 budget creating a much more powerful "Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth" which is independent of control by the Governor. Under extreme pressure from pro-family activists Romney vetoed that line item, but he made no effort to sustain the veto (the effort to sustain it was led by a Democrat!) and the veto was overridden. At that point, Romney simply dissolved the old Governor's Commission because, he said, it was now "duplicative."
Romney's Commission organized public gay "Youth Pride Day" parades and "transgender proms" which promote unhealthy and risky behavior
The Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth had no restrictions on the mixing of unscreened adult homosexuals and children. The Commission sponsored a "Youth Pride Parade" each year which features boys - some wearing women's clothes -- and adult homosexual activists.
Youth Pride Day ends with a "GLBT Prom" at Boston City Hall Plaza where children as young as middle school age are allowed to mingle with cruising homosexual adults. Perhaps Romney should have proclaimed this day "Pedophile Heaven Day." The prom is promoted by the Governor's Commission and sponsored by the Boston Alliance of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Youth (BAGLY), a group that has promoted adult-child sex and has received funding from the Governor's Commission. (The executive director of BAGLY is a male-to-female transsexual.)
This shocking and sad spectacle of promoting the homosexual lifestyle to youth continued right through 2006. On March 27, 2006, Romney's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth issued a statement on Romney's Governor's Commission letterhead stating, "There's no place like Youth Pride
.In celebration of their lives and diversity, gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer (GLBTQ) youth and their supporters [mostly adult homosexuals] will gather by the thousands to kick off Massachusetts' 12th annual Youth Pride on Saturday, May 13th at noon on Boston Common."
It's already being owned by all the taxpayers--I can show up to the emergency room and still get service. This plan people pay for choices directly, not indirectly.
I've never liked Romney. I remember when he brazenly walked ahead of President Bush at the 2002 Olympics- showing no respect for the commander in chief. He is your classic Suit: empty platitudes, but he looks the part so he gets ahead. Having said all this, he may be the only candidate who can win the GOP primary and also beat Hillary.
Proves nothing, but interesting nonetheless:
"I remember Reagan telling us that in Hollywood he knew a lot of gays, and he never had any problem with them," says Martin Anderson, a high-level Reagan adviser since 1975, coeditor of Reagan: A Life in Letters, the latest collection of material that Ronald Reagan wrote in his own hand. "I think a number of people who were gay worked for the Reagans," Anderson told me. "We never kept track. But he never said anything even remotely like that comment in the movie. His basic attitude was 'Leave them alone.'"
Reagan publicly demonstrated this outlook when he opposed Proposition 6, a 1978 ballot measure that called for the dismissal of California teachers who "advocated" homosexuality, even outside of schools. Reagan used both a September 24, 1978, statement and a syndicated newspaper column to campaign against the initiative.
No, the solution IMHO is for Romney to FIRST show in deeds his now proclaimed values by leading pro-life projects.
Imagine if Mitt were to head up a massively bigger "Project Snowflake" so we clear out - the right way - the backlog of extra fertilized eggs FOR GOOD. Or if he were to fund hundreds of 4-D ultrasound trucks - and drive one around HIMSELF for a few months.
If he were to do these things, well:
Repeat after me: Deeds, not words. Deeds, not words. Deeds, not words. .....
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