Everything he bakes.
Coming down to the wire, here. A little more than two weeks to the general election and it's going to be a nail biter. Thing is, it shouldn't even be close, but it very likely will be. And that's not good news for the 47%. Or the 99%. Because we all stand to be screwed big time if it goes the wrong way.
Right now, Mitt Romney is running around the country like the freaking Candyman, promising everyone everything they want with zero cost. We'll cut your taxes twenty percent and you'll get to keep all of your deductions! We'll make sure rich people pay the same percentage (key term) of taxes that they pay now! All of you middle class folks will be able to deduct 18%, no, 25%, no, 40% of your taxable income! Pick a number! We'll do all that, raise the military budget a trillion dollars, and reduce the deficit at the same time! I'll create 12 million jobs! No rain ever again ... unless, of course, you like rain!
It is often said that incumbency has its advantages, and it certainly does, but it has many drawbacks. One is that, as president, it's harder to go around saying what you are going to do because the first thing people wonder is, well, why aren't you doing it now? You are, in essence, applying for the job you already have. Your performance in that job is an actuality, not an abstraction. On the other hand, if you're the challenger, you can promise anything, make any wild claim, run against mathematics itself, and act as though you have a big vat of miracle sauce locked up in your car elevator, and that once you take the oath of office, you'll start ladling that stuff all over everything that's bad and make it good.
The president did much better in the second debate. Plenty for me to disagree with, to be sure, but a better performance. However, that first debate had an impact. It encouraged voters - particularly women, it seems - to feel more comfortable with the idea of a Romney presidency. I've said this before and I'll likely say it again before November 6 - there is no reason to feel comfortable with the notion of John Bolton running American foreign policy. If you're worried about the economy, think of what extremist austerity and another decade long war will do to it.
Let go of your childhood wishes. Or you may end up really eating those dishes. More on this later.
luv u,
jp
Right now, Mitt Romney is running around the country like the freaking Candyman, promising everyone everything they want with zero cost. We'll cut your taxes twenty percent and you'll get to keep all of your deductions! We'll make sure rich people pay the same percentage (key term) of taxes that they pay now! All of you middle class folks will be able to deduct 18%, no, 25%, no, 40% of your taxable income! Pick a number! We'll do all that, raise the military budget a trillion dollars, and reduce the deficit at the same time! I'll create 12 million jobs! No rain ever again ... unless, of course, you like rain!
It is often said that incumbency has its advantages, and it certainly does, but it has many drawbacks. One is that, as president, it's harder to go around saying what you are going to do because the first thing people wonder is, well, why aren't you doing it now? You are, in essence, applying for the job you already have. Your performance in that job is an actuality, not an abstraction. On the other hand, if you're the challenger, you can promise anything, make any wild claim, run against mathematics itself, and act as though you have a big vat of miracle sauce locked up in your car elevator, and that once you take the oath of office, you'll start ladling that stuff all over everything that's bad and make it good.
The president did much better in the second debate. Plenty for me to disagree with, to be sure, but a better performance. However, that first debate had an impact. It encouraged voters - particularly women, it seems - to feel more comfortable with the idea of a Romney presidency. I've said this before and I'll likely say it again before November 6 - there is no reason to feel comfortable with the notion of John Bolton running American foreign policy. If you're worried about the economy, think of what extremist austerity and another decade long war will do to it.
Let go of your childhood wishes. Or you may end up really eating those dishes. More on this later.
luv u,
jp
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