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Posts Tagged ‘Massachusetts’

Mitt Romney: Job Killer

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Elections 2012, Headlines, Mitt Romney, Progressives, unemployment at June 14th, 2011 - 10:42 am

The Progressive media is hyping Mitt Romney. They are claiming that jobs and the economy are his strength. This is not the case as therecords indicate. As head of Bain Capital, Mitt Romney specialized in buying out small and medium companies. He than would outsource the jobs and sell the company to a bigger one. The result is Bain Capital destroyed whole towns and many families. As Governor of Massachusetts, the state ranked 47th in job creation. Romney is a job killer, not creator.

You see, Romney made a Mittloadof cash using what’s known as a leveraged buyout. He’d buy a company with ‘money borrowed against their assets, groomed them to be sold off and in the interim collect huge management fees.’ Once Mitt had control of the company, he’d cut frivolous spending like jobs, workers, employees, and jobs. Just like America’s sweetheart, Gordon Gecko. […]

“Because Mitt Romney knows just how to trim the fat. He rescued businesses like Dade Behring, Stage Stories, American Pad and Paper, and GS Industries, then his company sold them for a profit of $578 million after which all of those firms declared bankruptcy. Which sounds bad, but don’t worry, almost no one worked there anymore

[….]

Complicating matters, during Romney’s only service in public office, his state’s record on job creation was “one of the worst in the country.” Adding insult to injury, “By the end of his four years in office, Massachusetts had squeezed out a net gain in payroll jobs of just 1 percent, compared with job growth of 5.3 percent for the nation as a whole.”

How bad is Romney’s record? During his tenure, Massachusetts ranked 47th out of 50 statesin jobs growth.

Nice track record there Mittens. If I know Romney’s true record, you don’t think Obama does?

Lazy Cake Brownie Banned

by Phantom Ace ( 51 Comments › )
Filed under Humor, Open thread at May 15th, 2011 - 8:00 pm

The Radio show will be back next week.

Here’s a weird story I came across. A a new product selling brownies that contain Melatonin, a hormone that helps one to sleep. Well authorities are now trying to ban these brownies.

BOSTON (CBS) – If you haven’t heard of Lazy Cakes, authorities in Fall River and New Bedford wish it would stay that way.

They want them banned from stores because they could be harmful to children.

So what is a Lazy Cake?

[….]

“These brownies are laced with melatonin,” he said at a news conference Thursday. “Melatonin is a sleep aid.”

Why the hell should this be banned? Melatonin is not an illegal substance. Maybe an age limit should be placed on these products. That’s up to debate, but to ban it? That’s ridiculous.

This is an Open thread and anything can be discussed.

Is This Romney’s ‘Come to Jesus’ Moment?

by Deplorable Macker ( 53 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2012, Healthcare, Mitt Romney, Republican Party at May 12th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

I’ve stated on several occasions here that my big beef versus former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney is that he signed into law the model for what is now Обамаcare:

Think about how powerful Romneycare has been. In 2008 — when Обама was running for president and Ted Kennedy was towering over the Senate — nearly 70 percent of Massachusetts voters supported the plan. A mere 22 percent of right-wing holdouts opposed it.
After all, this is Massachusetts, where “universal health care” is a political mantra, like “collective bargaining rights” or “indicted House member.”
But after five years of actually experiencing this new universe, even the Kennedy Democrats have had enough. A new Suffolk University poll showed that nearly half of Massachusetts voters say the law isn’t helping, while just 38 percent say it is. As Michael Cannon at the Cato Institute pointed out, Romneycare is almost as unpopular here as Обамаcare is across America.

So, has Romney finally realized that he made a mistake in signing this into law in the Bay State? In May 11’s edition of USA TODAY, he writes the following:

…Unfortunately, with the passage of ОбамаCare last year, the president and the Congress took a wrong turn. ОбамаCare will lead to more spending, greater federal involvement in health care and negative effects on U.S. economic activity. The president definitely forgot the admonition to “do no harm.”
My plan is to harness the power of markets to drive positive change in health insurance and health care. And we can do so with state flexibility (unlike ОбамаCare’s top-down federal approach), no new taxes (as opposed to hundreds of billions of dollars of new taxes under ОбамаCare), and better consumer choice (as opposed to bureaucratic, government choice under ОбамаCare). This change of direction offers our best hope of preserving both innovation and value.
If I am elected president, I will issue on my first day in office an executive order paving the way for waivers from ОбамаCare for all 50 states. Subsequently, I will call on Congress to fully repeal ОбамаCare.

Better yet, a Congress totally in Republican hands can have said legislation waiting for his inaugural podium…and he could sign it during his address!
That said, Romney continues:

The reforms that I propose, which are based on the same philosophical tenets as the reforms I offered during my last presidential campaign in 2008, return power to the states, improve access by slowing health care cost increases, and make health insurance portable and flexible for today’s economy.

The big difference between his proposals three years ago and today is that Обамаcare is now the law of the land, and we have all seen what is in store for the USA…even before the full effect hits.
Even so, we must remain vigilant with Romney, since for the moment, he’s still the darling of the Mainstream Media.,,and we all know what that means.

A revolt in Camelot

by Mojambo ( 44 Comments › )
Filed under Elections 2010, Politics at January 16th, 2010 - 11:00 am

The thing about Scott Brown that I admire is that he is not running as Democrat Lite (RINO).  However, I strongly suspect that if he wins that he will move to the center because he is still in Massachusetts and he wants to be reelected. The idea that a Northeastern Republican can sound like Duncan Hunter and hope to be either elected or reelected is a pipe dream for ideologues.  Nevertheless the fact that he is so competitive in the Bay State should send shivers down the spine of the Democratic Party (if they were ever capable of overcoming their preening arrogance). The key is as William Buckley once said “to elect the most electable conservative, not necessarily the most conservative candidate.”

By Jonah Goldberg

In August, Ted Kennedy, the Lion of the Senate, the last son of Camelot, the soul of the Democratic Party, friend of the people and scourge of robber barons, fat cats and special interests, departed this mortal coil.

Now, that’s not really my opinion of the man. But if you were inclined to imbue Tom Brokaw with pontifical authority or view the world through the prism of The New York Times, or its mini-me The Boston Globe, that’s how you’d see Teddy.

So it should be of more than passing interest that “Ted Kennedy’s seat” in the Senate may go to Republican Scott Brown next week. And not just any Republican, but an actual conservative, as opposed to some me-too Republican who promises to drive in the same direction as liberals.

Not long ago, Brown was down 30 points to Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley. Now it’s neck and neck, according to many polls. Brown is still the underdog, but the fact that it is even close is in itself hugely significant. It’s a bit like Tibet holding its own against China in a land war, or Abe Vigoda giving Tiger Woods a run for his money at Augusta (or, for that matter, at a Vegas nightclub).

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This is like a Democrat successfully running in Texas on tax hikes, gay marriage and funding the Pentagon solely through bake sales.

The Democratic Party is panicking like brothel patrons with cops at the door. They’re dropping shock troops of hacks, muckety-mucks, spinners and door-knockers into Boston like Rangers into Normandy.

Meanwhile, the liberal press establishment is in near-total denial. Yes, the race is getting a lot of attention, but Coakley’s problems are being chalked up to the fact that she is a bad campaigner and that this is a bad “climate” for the Democrats.

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The Democrats’ “bad climate” is a direct result of how they’ve governed. The populist backlash is fueled by a sense that Democrats are acting on their preferred agenda and by their own rules. From the shenanigans of the people who write our tax code and collect our taxes to special deals and secret arrangements for big businesses and legislators who play ball, the Democrats have abandoned transparency in favor of transparent arrogance.

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“The people of Massachusetts” are an abstraction whose role is to ratify her entitlement to the seat. As for the citizens of the state her campaign can’t be bothered to spell correctly in campaign ads? By all means, keep them at a safe distance.

When asked if her campaign style is too aloof, she snapped back: “As opposed to standing outside Fenway Park [the way Scott Brown does]? In the cold? Shaking hands?”

Heaven forfend the royal heir apparent descend from her carriage and actually touch the prols.

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Coakley may still win. But Democrats should be on notice: The fault for her sad performance lies not in the climate, but in themselves.

Read the rest.