Posts Tagged ‘Mitt Romney’


The Could’ve Would’ve Should’ve Society

Thursday, November 29th, 2012

I have come to the belief that we as a society have the “could’ve would’ve should’ve” mentality or the “it was better when” mentality.  This mentality doesn’t just apply to senior citizens sitting playing card games on their front porch.  People in their 20s are in this general malaise believing that society, the government, the economy, or any number of outside forces control what they are doing and their future.  The government and the media don’t help at all.  Discussing how this national debt is “risking the future of our children.” In turn saying to young people in America, that the reason you don’t have a job, or the world isn’t going the way you want it is because of some outside force.  The economy sucks, it feels like our civil liberties have been more and more encroached upon after 9-11 and more and more changes are happening to society that people want to look back at the “good life” of the 1960s and 1970s, but as somebody who has studied history would know the majority of people living in that time were looking back at an easier more moral time.  Every generation believes that the generation before had it easier because, they either survived it and look back at it with rose-tinted glasses, or you didn’t live through it and think that the movies were cool.  Every generation previous to this one has had to deal with sweeping economic and social changes that has caused a large moral backlash.  This one feels stronger because we are living through it.  I am not ranking any generation as better or worse, what I am saying is, look at the present and live.  There are opportunities everywhere, you just have to have the want to try and move outside your comfort zone.

ELECTION DAY!!!!!

Tuesday, November 6th, 2012

Yippy!  It’s election day in America.  That means the news can now spend the next few weeks analyzing why Ohio, Florida, and other states voted the way they did.  Your TV commercials can get back to their regular scheduled program of selling you stuff instead of people, and MAYBE politicians can get back to the difficult work of running a nation.  I know crazy idea, but still, the economy isn’t great, unemployment isn’t below 5%, the national debt is still climbing, and our nation’s healthcare debate I am sure still isn’t over.  I am happy that for at least a few months our politicians can get to work being leaders of the nation again instead of campaigning for themselves or their friends.  So no matter who you are, if you are American and vote please do so, and tell our politicians to get their butts back to work.

24 Hour New Cycle and the Election

Sunday, November 4th, 2012

I was thinking about this, sitting in my bed with a fever.  Do I feel more or less informed in this 24 hour news cycle world.  It is absolutely true there is more information for a person to have.  We know more about what is happening in government than ever before, and we know more lies and spin than ever before.  The one thing I learned at university is, there is no unbiased history, and there is no unbiased journalism.  While the facts may all be true, the facts you choose to tell and how you choose to present these facts color the opinion of the reader.  I feel as though journalists are modern historians in a way. In fifty or sixty years when historians and political scientists are trying to make sense of the early 2000′s they will look at all of this “news” and probably have trouble understanding it.  And that is the problem with all of this news, it is difficult to figure it all out.  I admit that I have a busy schedule, I only look at a few news sources.  I know there is a bias in all news sources so I try to look for common information and decipher what I read.  I know that I look for what is important to me, and I don’t always pay attention to other things.  I think it is nearly impossible to be fully informed on every issue, if you have a job, a social life, unless it is your job to be informed on every issue, such as the White House Press secretary.  So do I feel more or less informed.  I feel less informed because simply, I don’t know what is important anymore for our nation.  I only know what is important to me.  And while I am important to a lot of people, I am not the most important American.  Please vote tomorrow, it is the one-act of active participation in government that lazy people can do.  I don’t care who you vote for, just vote.

 

Why I Vote

Friday, November 2nd, 2012

As if you didn’t know, there is an election coming up.  And I am sure that people will say the same things over and over about voting, how it doesn’t matter and what is one vote, and about that Electoral College that they don’t understand.  I would like to tell you why I feel that voting is one of the greatest rights and privileges that I have as and American, and that any other American of voting age reading this should pay attention.  First of all voting is an active choice we make, it is the place where we as individuals have the ability to say I choose person X,Y, or Z to lead my country, be my sheriff, judge, or whatever other position that is up for grabs.  That is another thing, there are more positions that just President, and members of Congress up for grabs.  Local positions have a lot of effect over the lives of the people living in that city, state, or county.  The most important reason is this, our votes matter, or votes say we want or don’t want change.  Money and votes control public policy.  This is a fact we cannot deny.  While it seems as though the candidate with the most money ALWAYS wins, this isn’t the case, he/she has the most publicity.  But if a message is able to get big enough and strong enough a change can happen, normally it is on the local level first.  Not voting in elections leads to poor local officials, then to poor state officials, and inevitable to poor national figures.  We have the ability to choose who leads us, and we have to take that power into our hands and actively use that power.  I am not telling you who you should vote for, I just say vote.

 

Obama one Week Before the Election

Sunday, October 28th, 2012

I am living in China, and my family lives in the mid-west so I had heard vague ramblings about hurricane Sandy, but apparently it is expected to be big.  

This is President Obama’s message to the citizens of the Northeastern United States.  Basically trying to say that Katrina isn’t going to happen again.  As we all know this is a week before the US elections.  This is, quite frankly, a great time to look presidential, to show that he is a great leader in the time of crisis.  Basically this will be a make or break for Obama, because how Obama reacts to this will be the freshest thing on voter’s minds. I hope for the sake of people living in the North Eastern part of the US, that this storm isn’t as bad as it is projected to be.  My prayers are with you all.

 

John Green’s An Open Letter to Undecided American Voters

Monday, October 22nd, 2012

I wanted to share this and hear your opinions about this.  I saw this on John Green’s Tumblr

John Green An Open Letter to Undecided American Voters

MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2012

An Open Letter to Undecided American Voters

Somewhere around two percent of voters are ostensibly still undecided about who they’ll be voting for in the Presidential election. These people are often ridiculed, because it’s easy to make fun of a small minority, but many voters (including myself) are balancing competing interests and also trying to make conclusions about a candidate’s true intentions, which are always masked by a degree of political doublespeak.

In general, I’m disappointed by the tone of the political conversation this year, which is too rarely about policy and too often mean-spirited. Nobody running for President wants to destroy America. Nobody is evil.

The policy positions aren’t even that different: In the end, the purportedly “pro-rich” Romney wants the top marginal tax rate to be 28%; the purportedly “anti-rich” Obama wants it to be 39%. That may seem like a huge difference, but it really isn’t: In 1962, the top marginal income tax rate was 90%. In 1986, it was 50%.

I’m not going to give you a quiz that will tell you who to vote for; these already exist. Instead, I’m going to share what matters to me, and how I decided to vote to re-elect President Obama. This is a partisan attempt to convince you to vote for my guy, and I’m not going to pretend otherwise, but it comes from a true independent who has voted for many Republicans for state and national offices in the past (and will vote for a couple this year).

Here are the issues that matter to me:

1. The Economy: The Deficit. We can’t continue to take on debt without risking the long term financial health of the United States, but it’s really important to note that almost all of our current debt is extremely cheap, because interest rates are on T-Bills and the like are very low. So our current debt poses no risk to the American economy. But debt could become more expensive in the future, which could be a big problem. Both candidates for President have plans to reduce the deficit: Romney wants to cut spending and end some tax credits and deductions while also cutting overall income tax rates by 20%; Obama wants to cut spending and raise taxes, primarily by rolling back the Bush-era tax cuts on income over $250,000 a year. (Obama also wants to raise the capital gains tax modestly, from 15% to 20%, but this will never happen with a Republican congress.)

It’s not clear whose plan would cut the deficit more, because Romney hasn’t said which deductions he’d eliminate, and neither has really outlined what kind of spending they would cut, except for rhetorical stuff that isn’t very expensive (like federal funding for public broadcasting).

But to me, Obama’s plan is a lot more balanced and measured. It also incorporates a lot of Republican ideas, especially in restructuring Medicare costs to make them more sustainable, and if Obama is re-elected, the Grand Bargain that will need to be struck on deficit reduction will probably focus on spending cuts while also rolling back the Bush-era tax cuts on income over $250,000. I think Romney’s plan is just disingenuous; you don’t cut deficits by cutting taxes. You may spur economic growth (as we saw in the Reagan years), but you’ll never see surpluses that will allow us to better manage our debt (as we saw in the Clinton years). I think the current economic climate calls for a Clinton-esque response rather than a Reagan-esque response.

Some will say that President Obama shouldn’t be trusted with the deficit after growing it so much the past four years. But deficits are supposed to grow during recessions, and even during recoveries. (Indeed, that’s one of the reasons our debt is currently so cheap.) The deficit should shrink during times of economic expansion, which I expect the next four years will be no matter who is President.

2. The Economy: Jobs. Here’s my honest opinion: Presidents don’t create many private-sector jobs. It’s true that regulation stymies some growth that might lead to more employment, but it’s equally true that inadequate regulation can hurt the job market in the long run (as we saw with the banking collapse of 2008). I share a lot of Romney’s pro-business worldview, but most facilitating of private-sector job creation happens in local government, not on the federal side. (If Romney were running for governor of Indiana against Obama, I’d have a harder time making up my mind.)

3. The Supreme Court. The next presidential term will likely see one or two Supreme Court appointments, and while all the ink will be spilled about abortion rights and marriage (both very important issues), the biggest question facing the court to me is about the role that corporations play in our country and whether they should be treated as people under the law. Romney has implied he is likely to look to conservative justices who believe in corporate personhood; Obama has shown that he is likely to appoint judges (whom to me seem centrist but to conservatives seem liberal) who argue against corporate personhood. This is a defining issue of our time, and I don’t think corporations should have the same set of rights as individuals, so this is a big push toward Obama for me.

4. Foreign policy. This is pretty simple: Governor Romney wants to increase defense spending at a time when I don’t think it needs to be increased. I think the Afghan War has been poorly managed under Obama, but it was also poorly managed before. Vitally, he brought an end to the Iraq War (although again, we were put on that road by the Bush administration).

My biggest foreign policy concern is that Governor Romney has advocated for more intervention in Syria and Iran. I don’t think the US should act unilaterally anymore on the world stage. I also don’t want to see us return to the aggressive and hawkish rhetoric of the Bush era. We can’t afford it, and it doesn’t make us stronger.

5. Social issues. I believe in marriage equality and abortion rights, which line up with the President’s positions better than Governor Romney’s.

So that’s how I decided. A lot of people are going to choose differently, and that’s okay. I think President Obama is a better choice at this historical moment, but I don’t think Governor Romney is evil or even that he’d be a bad President. In short, I don’t blame you for being undecided. Thanks for reading.

 

Binders full or Women…

Wednesday, October 17th, 2012

Now before I get crap for this, especially since my previous post was about how I was frustrated with the internet memes and that this has become a great new internet meme, I think this is actually an issue.  Now many have seen the “war on women” that was really kicked off with the Sandra Fluke birth control issue as an internet firestorm, and especially Republican women didn’t really see it as affecting them.  This “binders full of women” comment shows otherwise.  To sum up the statement when asked about female rights and equal protection Romney stated that he was surprised he wasn’t given more nominees for his cabinet that were women, so he asked for names and was given a “binder full of women.”  Now there are two parts of this statement that is offensive, one that this never happened, and two that hiring women was an afterthought to him, and shows that he isn’t truly looking for real gender equality.  The  best person for any position could be a man or a woman, but no matter who it is he or she should get the same opportunity for the position and receive equal pay.  This comment has definitely made man women take a second look at the war on women and I hope make them realize that this does affect them.

Confusing the Issues

Tuesday, October 16th, 2012

I sometimes feel that these political debates easily allow us as voters to confuse the issues.  We forget that Romney was discussing cutting the deficit when all anyone can remember is that he wanted to cut the deficit, and PBS already is mostly funded by private donations anyway.  I think PBS can find a few hundred thousand dollars more from its wealthy backers, especially considering that under the current tax code it’s a huge write off.  I think that people confuse that fact that we are trying to figure out who should lead our nation, not who would make the better internet meme.  I think Mitt Romney wins that contest though.  I enjoy the internet thoroughly.  This race isn’t about memes and sound bites, it’s about what this country stands for.  Do we believe in a country that should provide the basic services for its people, and give these services with a higher tax burden, or do we believe in a country of self-reliance and individualism, where there is a low tax burden but very little government intervention.  I believe that Obama wants to represent the first category, and I am not sure where Romney lies in that spectrum, and that is why I wish these debates and this 24 hour news cycle would stick to the facts, but then again we all love a good, Mitt Romney wants to kill Big Bird internet meme.

Is Immigration Talk Only About Voters

Friday, July 20th, 2012

What’s the story with immigration reform?  It seems to me that immigration reform becomes an issue during election year, and then all we hear is local politicians speaking about a need for change during non election years.  Why is it this way.  Firstly most are considering Hispanics to be a swing voting group.  Not swing is in, they may vote for Romney, but swing as in they may or may not vote at all.  While immigration reform is something that needs to be discussed by the federal government, it only seems to be a topic of discussion during an election year.  Illegal immigration can drain a state bank account, because if you are not paying taxes you aren’t paying into the government, and you aren’t paying for the facilities that you are using.  While immigration reform is usually seen as a race issue, in reality it’s all about money, just like elections.

A Dirty Word in Educational Politics, Voucher

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

Vouchers, while a dirty word in politics, it’s exactly what Romney wants to do.  If it looks like a voucher and smells like a voucher, it’s a voucher, just like Chief Justice Roberts said the HealthCare Mandate is a tax.  Anyway, what is it exactly that Romney wants to do?  He wants to bring a more business-like model into education, giving parents to ability to “choose with their feet” where their child goes to school.  Honestly that doesn’t seem horrible, I have been in Bulgaria for the last two years, and parents have that right here, and it works.  Schools compete for the students, and want to hire the best teachers and have the best afterschool programs, at least in the area I worked in.  Are their problems with this model in America, yes, big ones.  In Bulgaria there are specialized schools, not all schools are ment for the same kind of student.  I could see problems with overcrowding, wich would lead to lower educational quality, and the fact is that this idea isn’t tested.  How do we know this would make education better?  Should we always blame the teacher?  Where is the student’s responsibility?  Let me know what you think.