Saturday, August 25, 2012

Republican National Convention

Comment Up


Will convene on Monday but immediately shift to Tuesday afternoon.

8 comments:

Lynn Anderson said...

LOL--getting to you, huh? It's spelled OSBORNE. Can you get just ONE THING RIGHT?

Anonymous said...

Oh, and I forgot, how sure are you the added "u" was a mistake?

Anonymous said...

the comment on rape and how a women can controll her body says it all --between the gop issues on women and the ties between the church and legislation --we got a group that is living in a world they want to controll and women are just one group

Lynn Anderson said...

I believe in a woman's right to choose under legal parameters so if you take abortion out of politics (and it should NOT be there at all) and you take Romney's tax returns out of the debate, what is left for Obama to complain about? Let's focus on the economy, our out of control spending, lack of jobs and debt.

Anonymous said...

I don't go against A person for one or two ideas. I go for the overall character of the person. Romney is it.

Anonymous said...

Reading the Republican Party platform is sobering for anyone interested in economic and social progress. Jeb Bush on Meet The Press opined that the GOP needs to "soften" it's message in order to reach out to a broader audience. But it's hard to sell a party that is anti-women when 51% of the population is women... it's hard for the average American to support a party that will guarantee tax advantages for the top 1% while cutting deductions for a shrinking middle class. The GOP touts a health care "plan" that favors cutting benefits for the young, middle class and elderly, while guaranteeing profits to a few corporations. Meanwhile, America has become more culturally diverse and more tolerant of different lifestyles, less tolerant of polarizing political shenanigans. Thirty-plus years ago the idea of starving the beast was begun by a new type of conservative. Perversely, through three Republican administrations they grew government spending to unsustainable levels while looting the treasury for their corporate pals. Now they want to finish the job. Thankfully, at least a tad more than half of the voting population disagrees with that bleak future.

Anonymous said...

Saw an old Reagan speech from 1980 over the weekend.
Yapping about job creation, energy independence and a strong military.
Made me think of this:
Reagan 1980-1988
Bush 1 1988-1992
Clinton 1992-2000
Bush 2 2000-2008
Out of the last 30 years the GOP has held the White House for 22 of those years and this is where it's gotten the country.
It's clear the GOP policies do not work for the entire country only the top 5% (of which I am a member).
Paul Ryan voted for every fiscal policy in the past 10 years that resulted in the US economy's nosedive.
The GOP is more interested in Obama and the country failing than serving their country.

Anonymous said...

In the 111th Congress, Ryan sided with a majority of his party in 93 percent of House votes in which he has participated, and sided with the overall majority vote of all House votes 95 percent of the time.[60]

Ryan has a lifetime American Conservative Union rating of 91/100.[61] The 2011 National Journal Vote Ratings rated Paul Ryan 68.2 on the conservative scale, being more conservative than 68% of the full House, and ranked as the 150th most conservative member based on roll-call votes.[62]

According to the Washington Post, 22 percent of the bills co-sponsored by Ryan were sponsored by Democrats, and "by this measure, he is slightly more bipartisan than the average Republican, with a figure of 19 percent."