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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

MY ADVICE TO OBAMA, STOP WHINING, NOBODY LIKES A WHINER...

Wasn't it just a very short time ago that we heard DNC chair, and proverbial dim bulb, Debbie Wizzerman Schultz shelling out some advice the Romney campaign, actually telling the Romney folks that it was time to put their big boy and big girl pants on? Well it would now seem that there maybe someone else in need of that very same advice. And that someone else is the guy on Debbie's team who just so happens to be running for re-election. I mean let's face it, whining is just so unbecoming, especially when you're the president. Anyway Barry's been whining pretty much nonstop ever since he made that little comment if his where he accused those who create businesses of not be able to take credit for doing so. And Barry, in what was described as being his most forceful response yet, has continued to charge rival Mitt Romney of “knowingly twisting” his comments about American business, claiming they were taken out of context.

While out there in the land of the fruits and the nuts at a campaign stop in Oakland, on Monday evening, Barry continued to whine about how that dishonest old Romney had misrepresented the remarks that he had made earlier this month when he said in his reference to American businesses: “If you've been successful, you didn't get there on your own.” You know, where Barry made his true feelings known by saying, “If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help. There was a great teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive. Somebody invested in roads and bridges. If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen.” Republicans have since jumped on the sound bite to prove their point that Barry is virulently anti-business. To Barry, those involved in business cannot be trusted.


“Earlier today Gov. Romney was at it again, knowingly twisting my words around to suggest that I don’t value small businesses,” he said, referring to his opponent's comments at a campaign event in Southern California that morning. Barry went on to say, “In politics we all tolerate a certain amount of spin. I understand these are the games that get played in political campaigns. But when folks omit entire sentences of what I said — they start splicing and dicing — you may have gone a little over the edge.” Spin? Ok, so let me see if I got this right. Barry can say anything he likes about Romney, even when refuted by the Washington Post as being completely false and having no basis in fact, but for Romney to use Barry's own words is called spin. That's just another example of the double standard that's in play here. Barry is to present complete fiction as fact, Romney presents facts and they're portrayed as being pure fiction.

Barry went on to actually make the claim, while lying through his big pearly whites, that he believed “with all my heart that it is the drive and the ingenuity of Americans who start businesses that lead to their success.” Arguing that, “I always have, and I always will.” Barry said success comes along with a well-educated workforce, research and development and a healthy middle class to consume goods. He said Romney's attacks show he's not able to turn the economy around. “For two centuries we’ve made these investments, not as Democrats or Republicans but as Americans who understand what it takes to give our people and our businesses the best possible chance at success. But my opponent disagrees. Mr. Romney’s plan is to gut these investments, just so that he can give more tax breaks to millionaires,” Barry said. “He is dead wrong.” The one dead wrong when it comes to our economy is Barry. For proof, look at the economy.


Barry has been scrambling to stave off the growing negative narrative the GOP has launched against him as out of touch with the average small business. But what he said just does not ring true. He tried to have it both ways and his actions speak very much louder than his well crafted words. The truth is that Barry is the most anti-business president that we have had, certainly, in my lifetime. The skewed, even perverted, way that he insisted upon looking at things, those who run businesses are viewed as being evil and as taking advantage of their employees as they are literally consumed with making a profit. To Barry 'profit' is nothing more than another dirty six letter word. Just how stupid does he think we are, anyway. Romney has only used exactly what Barry said and in exactly the manner in which he said it. Unlike Barry, there has been no spin, only the presenting of what was actually said, by him.

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