Category Archives: Mitt Romney

Answer 9 Questions to determine your GOP presidential candidate

Unsure who to vote for in the 2012 GOP Primary Election?

Find Your True Love!

A quiz to match you to your perfect sweetheart GOP presidential candidate

http://reason.com/quiz/GOP2011/match

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Gary Johnson, Herman Cain, Jon Huntsman, Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Politics, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul

Top Presidential Campaign Donors through the Third Quarter 2011

A comparison of top Presidential Campaign donors is very revealing.

Actually, many may not be surprised to see Obama receiving large contributions from academia, and Rick Perry getting donations from energy companies.  But what about Mitt Romney and his Wall Street connections?

But the most revealing, is perhaps the top 3 donors for Ron Paul.  Congressman Paul wants an end to the wars, but yet he gets more money from the armed services than any other candidate!  That’s a pretty clear message.

As they say, “follow the money”.

Source: OpenSecrets.org

Top Five Presidential Campaign Donors by Candidate

Barack
Obama
Mitt
Romney
Microsoft Corp $170,323 Goldman Sachs $354,700
Comcast Corp $116,155 Credit Suisse Group $195,250
Harvard University $94,225 Morgan Stanley $185,800
Google Inc $90,166 HIG Capital $176,500
University of California $83,679 Barclays $155,250
Rick
Perry
Ron
Paul
Ryan LLC $197,800 US Air Force $23,437
Murray Energy $66,803 US Army $23,053
USAA $51,500 US Navy $16,973
Contran Corp $50,000 Mason Capital Management $14,000
Ernst & Young $45,300 Microsoft Corp $13,398
Michele
Bachmann
Herman
Cain
Carbun Concepts $15,600 Wausau Homes $9,800
College Loan Corp $12,400 Wells Fargo $8,300
Hubbard Broadcasting $10,750 Houston Texans $7,400
Fagen Inc $10,000 Cold Spring Granite $6,000
Empire Office Inc $10,000 Cinco Natural Gas $5,200
Jon
Huntsman
Newt
Gingrich
Fertitta Entertainment $32,000 Rock-Tenn Co $25,000
Ultimate Fighting Championship $26,500 Poet LLC $17,000
Station Casinos $26,000 First Fiscal Fund $15,000
Crow Holdings $20,000 American Fruits &
Flavors
$10,000
Fresenius Medical Care $17,400 State Mutual Insurance $10,000
Rick
Santorum
Gary
Johnson
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of South Carolina $15,500 Tower Energy Group $10,000
Universal Health Services $14,750 Ryan LLC $5,000
Kimber Manufacturing $12,300 Corriente Advisors $5,000
Achristavest $10,000 Welcom Products $5,000
El
Dorado Holdings
$10,000 Zyvex Corp $2,500

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Barack Obama, Herman Cain, Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul

Which GOP Candidate do you trust with our economy?

The U.S. economy is in shambles.  The 2012 Presidential election may be the most important in our lifetime.  The GOP primary election cycle will be even more important.

Mitt Romney has the financial institutions on his side.  Wall Street and the big banks hold much of the blame for our dire economic situation, a result of their malinvestment, and influence on Congress and government agencies.  Their influence in a Romney administration would be a continuation of the status quo, driving our economy to an eventual complete collapse.

Herman Cain served on the board of the Kansas City Federal Reserve and does not think that a full audit of the Fed is necessary.  He was clueless about the housing bubble and the financial meltdown.  His proposed 999 plan would establish another avenue of federal taxation by adding a federal consumption tax on top of the income tax.  He says the rates would be lower, but when has the government ever been able to keep its hands off of potential additional funding?  We can’t gamble our futures on whether this man can choose wise advisors, and Congress to hold down the tax rates. Herman Cain needs to be able to understand that the Federal Reserve has devalued the dollar, and that this has been happening since it’s inception, and will continue until it is ended.

Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry, and Michele Bachmann have all recognized the problems the Federal Reserve has caused.  None, however; spoke openly against the policies of the Federal Reserve until long after Ron Paul began his crusade to obtain a full audit of the private banking cartel.

Ron Paul serves on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Joint Economic Committee, and the House Committee on Financial Services, and is Chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology, where he has been an outspoken critic of current American foreign and monetary policy.

Congressman Ron Paul is not a slick talking career politician.  He is a medical doctor by trade who became outraged in the 1970’s when President Nixon took the dollar off of the gold standard.  This action motivated him to run for Congress to affect change.  He is a man of vision, he has impeccable family values, he supports the Constitution, and is a man of peace.

Recent polls show that Ron Paul is competitive in a head-to-head matchup with President Obama.  He can win.  He must win, if America is to prosper.

Read about Ron Paul and his stances on the issues of the economy, the Federal Reserve, taxes, and more at his campaign web site.

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The Issue with Romney is the Issues

By Max Pappas (citations in original article from FreedomWorks)

After keeping his distance from the tea party movement since its inception, the ever calculating Mitt Romney has realized he needs the tea party if he is to win his bid to be president of the United States.  So he is going to speak at his first tea party event soon.

Reminder to Mitt Romney: The tea party movement is not only a reaction to the big government policies of President Obama and the Democrats who ran Congress from 2006-2008.  It is also a reaction to the disappointment and frustration with big government Republicans like you, who ran the country too much like the Democrats for too many years.

To put it another way, we support free markets, constitutionally limited government, and fiscal responsibility and we oppose politicians from both parties who do not.

Romney does not, so we oppose him.

A few of highlights from Romney’s record showing just how unfriendly he has been over the years to the ideas the tea party holds dear (links and details further below):

  • Romney distanced himself from Reagan and Reagan’s policies
  • Romney didn’t like the Contract with America
  • Romney led the fight for and implemented health care reform almost identical to ObamaCare
  • Romney called his beta version of ObamaCare “a model for the nation”
  • Romney defended the individual mandate, saying,

 “I like mandates. The mandates work.”

  • Romney supports cap-and-trade “on a global basis”
  • Romney worked to regulate “greenhouse gas emissions” in Massachusetts
  • Romney got Massachusetts involved in a regional climate change pact
  • Romney supports ethanol subsidies
  • Romney wants to increase spending “substantially” on energy research
  • Romney opposes the Flat Tax
  • Romney refused to support the 2003 Bush tax cuts
  • Romney’s claim to not have raised taxes is called “mostly myth” by Cato Institute
  • Romney thought Obama’s stimulus would “accelerate the timing of the start of the recovery”
  • Romney supports TARP
  • Romney says there’s nothing wrong with companies asking for bailouts
  • Romney supports No Child Left Behind
  • Romney supports reappointing Ben Bernanke to chairman of the Federal Reserve

Health Care

  • In 2006, Mitt Romney imposed a health care law on Massachusetts that served as a blueprint for ObamaCare.  NPR states that ObamaCare

was based, almost line for line, on the Massachusetts model.”

  • Obama thanked Romney for RomneyCare, saying at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser in Boston,

“Yes, we passed health care with an assist from a former Massachusetts Governor… Great idea.”

  • RomneyCare, like ObamaCare, is based on an individual mandate, which Romney continues to defend. A presidential debate in 2008 featured the following exchange:

GIBSON: But Gov. Romney’s system has mandates in Massachusetts — although you backed away from mandates on a national basis.

ROMNEY: No, no, I like mandates. The mandates work.

  • Romney encouraged a broader use of government forcing individuals to make government mandated purchases, saying,

“Everybody in our state has to have health insurance and that’s a model which I think has some merit more generally.”

  • Romney’s plan, like ObamaCare, fines those who don’t purchase insurance that is officially approved and heavily regulated through an “exchange” and subsidizes with taxpayer dollars such purchases.
  • Romney said of his plan, with its individual mandate, “exchange,” and heavy subsidies:

“If Massachusetts succeeds in implementing it, then that will be a model for the nation.”

Obama and the Democrats agreed and did so.

  • The far-left was so excited about RomneyCare that Sen. Ted Kennedy made a trip to be at the bill signing and was all smiles as he stood center stage.
  • Despite his previous suggestion that RomneyCare is a “model for the nation”, he is now trying to use the excuse that it was OK because it’s a state plan and states experiment. But it’s wrong for government at any level to violate our basic right to liberty by forcing citizens to buy a product as the individual mandate does.
  • RomneyCare has failed, increasing health care costs dramatically. Between 2006 and 2009, cumulative costs increased by $8,569,000,000, emergency room visits are up 7.2 percent, and premiums rose 6 percent, according to the Beacon Hill Institute.
  • In the wake of RomneyCare, the Wall Street Journal says Massachusetts

“is now moving to impose price controls on all hospitals, doctors and other providers.”

We can expect that nationally, too, if ObamaCare isn’t repealed.

  • The Wall Street Journal offers more on RomneyCare, which they call a “fatal flaw” for this candidate, here.

Cap-and-Trade

  • Romney supports a global cap-and-trade scheme and involved Massachusetts in a regional cap-and-trade pact.  Romney was caught on video in New Hampshire in 2008 having this exchange with a potential voter:

Potential Voter: Do you support cap-and-trade?

Romney: I support it on a global basis

  • Romney won praise from global warming profiteer Al Gore for saying, “I think it’s important for us to reduce our emissions of pollutants and greenhouse gases that may well be significant contributors to the climate change and global warming that you’re seeing.”
  • In 2008, Romney told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that “there’s nothing wrong with dealing with global warming.”
  • In 2004, as Governor of Massachusetts, Romney introduced the Massachusetts Climate Protection Plan to reduce greenhouse gases. The Heartland Institute finds,

“Though mostly voluntary, some provisions of the plan are mandatory and will impose economic hardship on Massachusetts citizens.”

  • Romney’s plan, much like the widely rejected Kyoto Protocol states its goals as
    • SHORT-TERM: Reduce GHG emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2010.
    • MEDIUM-TERM: Reduce GHG emissions 10% below 1990 levels by the year 2020.
    • LONG-TERM: Reduce GHG emissions sufficiently to eliminate any dangerous threat to the climate; current science suggests this will require reductions as much as 75-85% below current levels.
  • Having pushed carbon regulations Obama could only dream of, Romney uttered this line, which sounds eerily like what Obama would say,

“These carbon emission limits will provide real and immediate progress in the battle to improve our environment… They help us accomplish our environmental goals while protecting jobs and the economy.”

  • According to Sandy Liddy Bourne of the American Legislative Exchange Council,

“The Massachusetts Climate Protection Plan can be compared to a slick advertisement with no price tag. It is packaged with the same doom and gloom rhetoric of the environmental activists and commits the state government to long-term contracts for renewable energy without the benefits of a free market check-and-balance system.”

Ethanol

  • Romney makes no bones about it, he supports ethanol subsidies. “I support the subsidy of ethanol,” he told an Iowa voter. “I believe ethanol is an important part of our energy solution for this country.”
  • Romney goes so far as to support trade barriers on ethanol.
  • Romney also supports energy subsidies in general, unequivocally stating in his 2008 campaign platform a need for a “dramatic” increase in “federal spending on research, development, and demonstration projects that hold promise for diversifying our energy supply.”

Taxes

  • Romney refused to support the Bush tax cuts in 2003.
  • Romney strongly opposes the pro-growth Flat Tax. So much so that he, as a “concerned citizen” ran a newspaper ad opposing it. He said, “I’m probably not going to be recommending throwing out the code and starting over” and says the flat tax is “unfair.”
  • In 2002, while Romney was running for governor, limited government activists in Massachusetts were supporting Ballot Question 1 to eliminate he state income tax. Forty five percent of the voters supported eliminating the tax, Romney opposed eliminating it.
  • When Romney ran for governor in 2002, he refused to sign a no-tax pledge.

“I’m not intending to, at this stage, sign a document which would prevent me from being able to look specifically at the revenue needs of the Commonwealth.”

  • Romney enacted $432 million in fee hikes and $300 million in higher taxes as governor of Massachusetts.
  • In a recent “Fiscal Policy Report Card” on governors, The Cato Institute, gave him a “C.” As far as the image Romney cultivates as “a governor who stood by a no-new-taxes pledge,” Cato called it “mostly a myth.” As evidence, they cited the hefty fee increases and business tax hikes achieved through the closing of loopholes.
  • Romney proposed a tax shift that would have increased taxes on SUVs.
  • Romney instituted a 2-cent-per-gallon increase on a special gasoline fee that takes in $60 million per year.

Spending

  • As Governor, Romney proposed a budget in 2007 that was an outrageous 8.5 percent higher than the one he proposed the year before.
  • Romney, despite calls from many fiscal conservatives to keep everything on the table when looking for spending cuts, recently stated that “I’m not going to cut the defense spending.”
  • Romney parroted discredited Keynesian economic thinking when he wrote in No Apology,

“The ‘all-Democrat’ stimulus that was passed in early 2009 will accelerate the timing of the start of the recovery.”

  • Romney sounds a lot like Obama when he says in an op-ed to what was surely a fawning New York Times audience,

I believe the federal government should invest substantially more in basic research — on new energy sources, fuel-economy technology, materials science and the like — that will ultimately benefit the automotive industry, along with many others. I believe Washington should raise energy research spending to $20 billion a year, from the $4 billion that is spent today.

The Wall Street Bailout

  • Romney supports the Wall Street Bailout/TARP program.  In his book No Apology he says:

Secretary [Hank] Paulson’s TARP prevented a systemic collapse of the national financial system.

It was intended to prevent a run on virtually every bank and financial institution in the country.

Had we not taken action, you could have seen a real devastation.

  • Romney reaffirmed this position in 2009 saying, “I believe that it was necessary to prevent a cascade of bank collapses.”

More Mitt, More Problems

  • Romney supports federal involvement in education, long held by constitutional conservatives as a state prerogative, offering his support for the Bush-Kennedy No Child Left Behind law. In a 2008 debate, Romney stated, “I supported No Child Left Behind, still do.”
  • Romney ran on raising the minimum wage and putting in place automatic increases by indexing it to inflation.
  • Romney signed in to law a smoking ban.
  • Romney thinks it’s OK for companies to ask for bailouts, stating in a New York Times op-ed about the auto bailout, “It is not wrong to ask for government help, but the automakers should come up with a win-win proposition”
  • In April 2009, Romney told The Hill newspaper that:

“We as Republicans misspeak when we say we don’t like regulation. We like modern, up-to-date dynamic regulation that is regularly reviewed, streamlined, modernized and effective.”

  • On Neal Cavuto on January 28 2010, Romney supported the reappointment of Ben Bernanke to chairman of the Federal Reserve.

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Ron Paul Versus the Enemies of Reason

Written by Jack Kerwick, Ph.D.

Nationally syndicated radio talk-show host Mark Levin is an outspoken critic of Congressman Ron Paul.  Levin labors tirelessly to convince the members of his audience that Paul suffers from a condition of poverty that has ravaged his intellect no less than his moral character.  Paul is no kind of conservative, “the Great One” informs us: besides advocating a foreign policy that is supposedly as idiotic in conception as it promises to be ruinous in effect, Ron Paul is an “anti-Semite.”

Readers of this column know that this isn’t the first time that I have addressed the Paul Derangement Syndrome that has overtaken the good doctor’s Republican critics.  It also isn’t the first time that I have singled out Levin as a textbook case of this disorder.

There is a reason for this.

That both the substance of Paul’s thought as well as — especially! — the manner in which he tends to articulate it should elicit objections from his fellow partisans is an unremarkable phenomenon.  Quite recently, I wrote an article in which I showed the respects in which my own political philosophical orientation — conservatism — is fundamentally at odds with that of Paul.  The difference, though, between, say, Jack Kerwick and Mark Levin, is that Levin can’t resist the impulse to couch his criticisms of Paul within a pile of abusive names that he reserves for the man; I, on the other hand, feel no such compulsion.

In other words, Levin is emblematic of the phenomenon to which I refer as the Paul Derangement Syndrome, a craze that renders otherwise reasonably sane (even if frequently misguided) Republicans into embodiments of raw, undifferentiated irrationality at the very mention of Ron Paul’s name.

It is this phenomenon that succeeds in arresting so much of my attention as of late.

When the 18th-century philosopher Immanuel Kant alluded to “misology,” it was the hatred of reason to which he referred.  Well, if misology is the hatred of reason, then “the misologist” is the person who despises reason.  Levin, I contend, represents a sizable number of self-proclaimed “conservatives” who are pathological misologists when it comes to Ron Paul.

Levin and company insist that they favor “limited government.” Levin in particular (to his credit) never misses a moment to show that our current federal government is light years away from the government envisioned and ratified by our country’s founders.  This is the same person, mind you, who authored an immensely successful book, Liberty versus Tyranny, a work within which he conveys an impassioned defense of the constitutional republic bequeathed to us from our forbearers while launching an unrelenting attack against all “statists” — i.e. the advocates of “Big government.”  Any remotely reasonable person can only scratch his head and wonder why an “anti-Statist” like Levin would become as enraged as he does with, of all people, someone like Ron Paul, a person who is even more vehemently “anti-Statist” than Levin himself.

It is obvious to anyone who knows anything at all about Levin and the neoconservative-dominated Republican Party with which he identifies that above and beyond anything else, it is Paul’s resolute disavowal of America’s foreign policy that so upsets them.  Long before the war in Iraq became as wildly unpopular with the country as it eventually did, Paul was sounding the alarm against what he and many others call “interventionism,” a doctrine that, presupposing as it does “the exceptional” character of America, calls for it to assert itself militarily into societies around the world for the sake of transforming them into “democracies.”  Paul argues that not only is this project of exporting “Democracy” financially unsustainable, it is as well immoral and unconstitutional.

This alone is sufficient to make Paul persona non grata among establishment Republicans like Levin. But when Paul then failed to treat the prospect of a nuclear armed Iran with a degree of concern that Levin and others think is insufficient, he may as well have painted a target on his back for them.

Still, even if one disagrees with Ron Paul on these matters, even if one thinks that he is as wrong headed as anyone can be, the reaction of the Levins of the world to his position can only be judged unreasonable.

Although many champions of “limited government” seem to forget this, the military — the Army, the Navy, the Marines, and the Air Force — is a feature of the federal government.  All military personnel, that is, are government employees.  Moreover, the military is as much an object of government spending as Social Security and Medicare, and together these three government programs consume the vast majority of our federal expenditures. So, that Ron Paul and others of his ilk should talk about utilizing our military in a more cost-efficient way — even if this requires cuts in “defense spending”—is what we should expect from anyone who values a strong, but more limited, government.

To hear Levin, one could be forgiven for thinking that Ron Paul favored abolishing the military. But Paul has never suggested any such thing. Rather, it is precisely because of his belief in a strong national defense that he staunchly rejects the nation-building enterprise upon which Republicans have embarked the nation. This enterprise is an exercise in “social engineering” writ large. As such, in addition to being economically infeasible, morally dubious, and inconsistent with the U.S. Constitution, it is as well a profound affront to the sensibilities of the conservative imagination as it has known itself over the last couple of centuries.

How, we can only wonder, can a self-described conservative like Levin not affirm or even recognize the spirit of liberty that fundamentally informs Paul’s protestations against, not the military itself, but the questionable — indeed, the utopian — purposes that the military has been enlisted to serve? Even one who loathes Ron Paul as fiercely as does Levin must know that my account of Paul’s perspective here is correct.

If Paul was the pacifist or anarchist that Levin and his ilk have made him out to be, if he really didn’t believe that America had any use for a military, if he thought that America had no enemies in the world that posed a real threat to her, or if (as President) he would leave America more vulnerable to external attacks than other presidential contenders and former Presidents, then he would not have supported the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. And that he supported the invasion of Afghanistan and not the perpetual engagement to remake it into a “democracy” proves that  it has never been the use of military force against America’s enemies to which he objects, but the use of military force for the revolutionary (i.e. anti-conservative) end of nation-building. 

How can Levin and his fellow champions of “limited government” not grasp this?

There are other considerations that reinforce my verdict that Levin and his ilk instantly turn against reason as soon as Ron Paul becomes the subject of discussion.

First, if they really think that the federal government should confine itself to the minimal set of functions specified by the U.S. Constitution, then, since Ron Paul is arguing for nothing more or less than just that, we must ask: From whence comes the venomous rage that they routinely unleash upon him? It is understandable and perhaps unavoidable that there should be quarrels over interpretative issues, but when such disputes transpire between those who allegedly share the same desires regarding the general size and scope of government, differences of opinion should never be as radical, and even total, as the response of Paul’s detractors would lead us to believe they are.

What is it about Paul’s vision of America, a vision in which “limited government” figures centrally, that so frightens Levin and his fellow neoconservative Republicans?

Second, it was during George W. Bush’s tenure as President that Iran began pursuing a nuclear weapon. We knew this then. Bush is widely heralded by Levin and neoconservatives generally as a great “wartime” president. But if this commander-in-chief extraordinaire did nothing to impede Iran’s engagements, if his invasions of two Middle Eastern countries not only did nothing to deter this, but perhaps even facilitated Iran’s determination to arm itself, then why is Paul’s position so unacceptable? How is it any worse, practically speaking, than that of Bush’s? Furthermore, so far, in spite of some Republican rhetoric of the unacceptability of a nuclear armed Iran, I don’t recall anyone stating specifically the course of action that they would like to take to stop Iran’s pursuits. What, then, we are compelled to ask Levin, would a President Perry or a President Romney or even a President Santorum do vis-à-vis Iran that a President Paul would not?

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Filed under 2012 GOP Primary, 2012 Presidential Election, Mitt Romney, Politics, Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Ron Paul