Tuesday, October 30, 2012

SANDY - Human's Relationship With Nature and God!



  From the dawn of human's time upon this planet we have had to deal with natural disasters. Whether it be tsunamis, volcanoes, earthquakes, twisters, tornadoes, hurricanes, typhoons, lightening storms, blizzards, Ice Ages, heat waves, droughts, or floods we've had to contend with the elements, the losses they dealt us, adapt, rebuild, and move on.



 
This image of Hurricane Sandy was acquired by the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi NPP satellite at 2:42 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time (06:42 Universal Time) on October 28, 2012. Suomi NPP was launched one year ago today on a mission to extend and enhance long-term records of key environmental data.
The storm was captured by a special “day-night band,” which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near-infrared and uses filtering techniques to observe dim signals such as auroras, airglow, gas flares, city lights, fires, and reflected moonlight. In this case, cloud tops were lit by the nearly full Moon (full occurs on October 29). Some city lights in Florida and Georgia are also visible through the clouds.
At the time of the image, the U.S. National Hurricane Center estimated Sandy’s location to be 31.5° North and 73.7° West, 275 miles (445 kilometers) south-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and moving northeast at 14 miles (22 kilometers) per hour. Maximum sustained winds were 75 miles (120 kilometers) per hour, and the minimum central barometric pressure was 960 millibars (28.35 inches).
Forecasters predicted that the storm would head north-northeast until the morning of October 29, and then take a turn to the northwest into the coastline of Delaware, New Jersey, or New York. The tropical cyclone is being blocked by an intense high-pressure system over the North Atlantic and is expected to merge with a winter weather system moving across North America. Sandy will likely become a post-tropical storm that could affect an area from the Carolinas to New England, and as far inland as the Great Lakes. The National Weather Service described the unusual merging (PDF) and what it might mean:
The primary difference between a tropical cyclone and a wintertime cyclone is the energy source. Tropical cyclones extract heat from the ocean and grow by releasing that heat in the atmosphere near the storm center. Wintertime cyclones (also called extratropical or frontal lows), get most of their energy from temperature contrasts in the atmosphere, and this energy usually gets distributed over larger areas. Because of these differences, tropical cyclones tend to have more compact wind fields, tend to be more symmetric, and have a well-defined inner core of strong winds. Wintertime lows have strong temperature contrasts or fronts attached to them, have a broader wind field, and more complex distributions of rain or snow.
For more views of the storm—including a time-lapse video of the storm from dawn to dusk on October 28—visit our Hurricane Sandy event page and the NASA Hurricane Resource Page. The National Hurricane Center, operated by NOAA, provides the official U.S. storm forecasts and regular updates on conditions on its home page.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon, using VIIRS Day-Night Band data from the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (Suomi NPP). Suomi NPP is the result of a partnership between NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the Department of Defense. Caption by Michael Carlowicz.

























Friday, October 26, 2012

COLIN POWELL’S FORMER CHIEF OF STAFF: ‘MY PARTY IS FULL OF RACISTS’

COLIN POWELL’S FORMER CHIEF OF STAFF:
 ‘MY PARTY IS FULL OF RACISTS’


Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell’s chief of staff during his time as secretary of state, decried John Sununu’s comment that Powell only endorsed Barack Obama because they are both black. “To say that Colin Powell would endorse President Obama because of his skin color is like saying Mother Teresa worked for profit,” Wilkerson told Ed Schultz.
Wilkerson said on The Ed Show that though he respects Sununu, a top Romney adviser and surrogate, “I don’t have any respect for the integrity of the position that he seemed to codify. Look at me, Ed, I’m white. I’m not black. Colin Powell picked me because of the content of my character and my competence.”
He added that he thinks Sununu’s remark was an “unfortunate slip of words,” but that it speaks to larger problem in the Republican party.
“My party, unfortunately, is the bastion of those people, not all of them, but most of them, who are still basing their decision on race,” Wilkerson said. “Let me just be candid: My party is full of racists. And the real reason a considerable portion of my party wants President Obama out of the White House  has nothing to do with the content of his character, nothing to do with his competence as commander-in-chief and president, and everything to do with the color of his skin. And that’s despicable.”
In an interview with radio host Michael Smerconish Friday, the president brushed off Sununu’s remarks, saying he will let Powell’s statement and support “speak for itself.”
“I don’t think that there are many people in America who would question Gen. Powell’s credibility, his patriotism, his willingness to tell it straight,” Obama said. “So any suggestion that Gen. Powell would make such a  profound statement in such an important election based on anything other than what he thought would be best for America doesn’t make much sense.”


Too good to check:

 Romney falsely claims Chrysler shipping jobs to China

Rebounding U.S. economy not part of Team Romney's playbook
(Photo: Mark Makela/Zuma)
Mitt Romney’s found a new false attack on President Obama, claiming inaccurately that a Chrysler plant is moving U.S. jobs to China. Meanwhile, as Bain Capital gets set to actually ship jobs to China, the GOP presidential nominee is staying silent.
“I saw a story today that one of the great manufacturers in this state, Jeep—now owned by the Italians — is thinking of moving all production to China,” Romney told a crowd in Ohio. “I will fight for every good job in America. I’m going to fight to make sure trade is fair, and if it’s fair America will win.”
Only problem with the charge? It’s not true. Romney appeared to be referring to a recentBloomberg news story, which reported that Chrysler is mulling building Jeeps in China for the Chinese market. Gualberto Ranieri, a Chrysler spokesman confirmed to the Detroit News that the company has no plan to move U.S. jobs to China. “U.S. Jeep assembly lines will continue to stay in operation,” he said.
Romney may have picked the story up from right-wing blogs, which appeared to misconstrue the Bloomberg report, with one calling the move a “slap in the face” for American taxpayers who bailed out Chrysler. To be fair, the Bloomberg story is confusing. It quotes a Chrysler spokesman saying the company is considering  “localizing the entire Jeep portfolio,” before clarifying that  he was referring only to adding production sites to China rather than shifting jobs from the U.S.
Meanwhile, Romney appears far less concerned about a batch of American jobs that actually do appear set to be shipped to China. As The Ed Show has been reporting, Bain Capital is set to close down the Sensata factory in Freeport, Illinois in favor of cheaper Chinese labor. Workers’ advocates have called on Romney to urge Bain to reconsider, so far without success.
Romney’s false Chrysler attack on Obama echoes one he made over the Benghazi attacks during the second presidential debate. Romney claimed Obama waited 14 days to call the attacks an act of terror, before being corrected by moderator Candy Crowley.
In both cases, Romney appears to have seized on what he saw as a way to score political points against Obama—this time by implicitly going after one of Obama’s greatest successes, his auto industry rescue—without making sure he got his facts right.





What Mitt Romney Doesn’t Know About Families


What Mitt Romney Doesn’t Know About Families



The biggest problem with Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s views on women isn't his unfortunate comment about keeping them in binders. It’s that his concept of the family is troublingly out of date.
In one of the most revealing moments of last week’s presidential debate, Romney said he understood that “if you’re going to have women in the workforce that sometimes you need to be more flexible.” He boasted that as governor of Massachusetts, he had allowed his female chief of staff to go home at 5 p.m. so she could fulfill what he apparently sees as a woman’s responsibility -- making dinner for the kids and “being with them when they get home from school.”

Romney’s statements suggest he believes parenthood is a condition that afflicts only women, requiring employers to make special arrangements for them. Moms and dads alike should be outraged. He’s ignoring decades of progress in gender roles and the challenges men face in balancing their work and home lives. His mistake echoes the worldview espoused by former State Department official Anne-Marie Slaughter in her article “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All.”
There’s a subtle generational divide between the two presidential candidates at play here. When Romney became a father in 1970, less than 40 percent of married women with children were in the labor force. Roughly half of those who did work provided less than a quarter of their family’s income. Their place was at home. Dads were largely absent.
Disruptive Opportunities
For Romney’s generation, women’s desire to work was disruptive. Families struggled as women tried to “have it all,” balancing their newfound opportunities with the expectations of motherhood with which they had been raised. As men’s roles failed to keep pace, divorce rates soared: Marriages made in the 1970s fared worse than those of any other generation. (Remember the 1979 film “Kramer vs. Kramer”?)
By contrast, when President Barack Obama became a dad almost 30 years later, roughly 2 in 3 married women with children were working, and they were earning more. At home, the idea of men taking an active role in their kids’ upbringing had firmly taken hold.
Today, there is no longer an “if” surrounding the question of women working. Nearly half of married women provide two- fifths or more of their family’s income, and they’re the primary breadwinner in 38 percent of couples in which the wife works. Men, for their part, are playing a more equal role at home. Research by the economists Garey Ramey and Valerie Ramey of the University of California, San Diego, shows that both men and women are spending more time today with their children than did in Romney’s generation.
The changing roles create new challenges. Balancing work and family is now an issue for all parents, regardless of gender. To slightly modify Romney’s words, if you are going to have parents in the workforce, sometimes you need to be more flexible.
But greater equality has also made families stronger. The divorce rate peaked in 1979 and is now as low as it has been in two generations.
The improvement has been particularly notable among college graduates. This is not, as libertarian political scientist Charles Murray has suggested, a matter of moral superiority. Rather, college-educated couples have most rapidly embraced partnerships of equality. Meanwhile, the changing nature of marriage has made it more attractive to women with a college degree, who over the past few decades have gone from being the least to the most likely to marry.
Economic Incentives
The model of marriage that prevailed in Romney’s day was in large part a function of economic incentives. Women specialized in domestic skills because these were valued in the marriage market, which -- thanks in large part to workplace discrimination -- represented their best path to prosperity. College education had little value in this market, and even revealed a lack of interest in it. Today, by contrast, changes in trade, technology, birth control and labor laws have sharply increased women’s earning potential in the marketplace and reduced the returns from becoming a household specialist.
Modern marriage allows couples to benefit from sharing their lives and goals, jointly raising their children and helping each other through tough times. It requires sacrifices from husbands and wives as they balance two careers and two peoples’ roles as parents. No one can have it all.
If Romney has managed to miss this transformation of one of society’s most fundamental institutions, one wonders what else he doesn’t know.
(Betsey Stevenson is an associate professor of public policy at the University of Michigan. Justin Wolfers is an associate professor of business and public policy at the University of Pennsylvania, and a non-resident senior fellow of the Brookings Institution. Both are Bloomberg View columnists. The opinions expressed are their own.)
Read more opinion online from Bloomberg View. Subscribe to receive a daily e-mail highlighting new View editorials, columns and op-ed articles.
Today’s highlights: the editors on Turkey’s aggressive crackdown on press freedom; William Pesek on what the U.S. can learn from Japan’s debt management; Ramesh Ponnuru on why Barack Obama doesn’t deserve another term; Michael Feroli on why the Fed should tie interest rates to the unemployment rate; Richard Vedder on five reasons college enrollments may be dropping.
To contact the writers of this article: Justin Wolfers at jwolfers@umich.edu Betsey Stevenson at betseys@umich.edu
To contact the editor responsible for this article: Mark Whitehouse at mwhitehouse1@bloomberg.net

Thursday, October 25, 2012

2012 voters: The deepest racial split since ’88


2012 voters: The deepest racial split since ’88

The 2012 election is shaping up to be more polarized along racial lines than any presidential contest since 1988, with President Obama lagging behind Republican Mitt Romney among white voters by 21 percentage points, a steep drop in support from four years ago.
As he did in 2008, Obama gets overwhelming support from non-whites, who made up a record high proportion of the overall electorate four years ago. In that contest, 80 percent of all non-whites supported Obama, including 95 percent of black voters, according to the exit poll. In the Washington Post-ABC News national tracking poll released Wednesday, Obama wins 79 percent of non-whites, and support for his reelection is nearly universal among African Americans.
But among whites, Obama is currently doing much worse than he did in 2008. At this stage four years ago, Obama trailed Republican John McCain by eight percentage points among white voters. Even in victory, Obama ended up losing white voters by 12 percentage points.
Obama’s current 21-percent-deficit — he trails Romney 59 to 38 percent — would be far harder to overcome, as this year may break a string of increasingly non-white electorates. In 2008, whites made up a record-low 74 percent of all voters; in the latest Post-ABC poll, they made up a similar 75 percent of likely 2012 voters.
In 2004, John Kerry lost white voters to George W. Bush by a similarly wide margin, 58 to 41 percent — and he also lost the election.
Compared with four years ago, white voter support for Obama is now lower among white men and white independents. (See the latest Post-ABC tracking poll on The Fix at 5 p.m. every day through Nov. 5.)
The clearest loss for the president is among white men. In 2008, Obama lost white men by 16 points, according to the exit poll. This year, Obama trails Romney double that margin — 33 points — larger than any deficit for a Democratic candidate since Ronald Reagan’s 1984 landslide win over Walter Mondale.
After splitting their votes 47 percent for Obama and 49 percent for McCain in 2008, whites who identify as political independents now favor Romney over Obama, 59 to 38 percent. Nearly half of all of those who supported Obama in 2008 but Romney in 2012 are white independents. (Overall, whites make up more than 90 percent of “switchers.”)
A key element of Romney’s advantage among all whites is that by 55 to 39 percent, more white voters say he, not Obama understands the economic problems people in this country are having. Among whites without college degrees, Romney is up 58 to 35 percent on this score, expanding what was a narrow gap just a few weeks ago. This advantage comes even as 48 percent of white voters say Romney, as president, would do more to favor the wealthy; 37 percent say he would do more to for the middle class.
Most non-college and college-educated whites alike see Obama as doing more to favor those in the middle, not the wealthy.

Colin Powell: Why Colin Powell’s Obama endorsement matters


HI
AKOCTOBER 25, 2012 6:16 PM

Why Colin Powell’s Obama endorsement matters

BY DAVID SWERDLICK
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Don’t worry, conservatives, I’m well aware that Gen. Colin Powell’s re-endorsement of President Obama probably won’t make much difference on Election Day.

But if you’re wondering why, then, Powell told CBS News this morning that he’s “signed on for a long patrol with President Obama,” the answer is actually simple:

Where else is he going to go?

Powell probably doesn’t see eye-to-eye with Obama on everything, but the general is still a leading indicator that the President is a better choice for centrists than “Old Moderate Mitt”— calling Romney’s foreign policy outlook “a moving target” and questioning Romney’s “plan” to cut taxes while also increasing defense spending.

And as a general, after Monday’s foreign policy debate in which Romney glommed onto Obama’s hawkish war policy while simultaneously serving up pageant-worthy platitudes like “we want a peaceful planet,” there really wasn’t much of a choice for Powell between Obama — who reintroduced the “speak softly and carry a big stick” doctrine — and Romney, whose war stance seems to be “speak one notch louder and carry a stick of as-yet-undetermined size.”

Saying that “I’m a Republican of a more moderate mold and that's something of a dying breed, I'm sorry to say,” today’s GOP is becoming unrecognizable to Powell. His brand of Republicanism fits with the “compassionate conservatism” of George H.W. Bush — the President under whom Powell served as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff — Mitt’s late father, Michigan Gov. George Romney and Massachusetts Sen. Ed Brooke, the GOP’s last African American to serve as governor or U.S. Senator.

Sticking with Obama is a recognition that Powell’s “Rockefeller” Republicanism — a nod to New York’s 49th governor and the nation’s 41st vice president — finds its analog in the centrist, low-boil approach of Obama far more than Romney the son.

Nothing’s been undertaken by Obama in these last four years that wouldn’t have been undertaken by any of the moderate Republican Presidents — now derided as “RINOs” or Republicans in Name Only — of the last century: Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Nixon, Ford and the aforementioned Bush.

And Powell, in public life for 30 years, knows it — whether or not anyone else does.

Colin Powell Endorses Obama For President


The Huffington Post  |  By    Posted:  Updated: 10/25/2012 12:27 pm EDT

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell endorsed President Barack Obama for a second term Thursday.

"You know, I voted for him in 2008 and I plan to stick with him in 2012, and I'll be voting for he and Vice President Joe Biden next month," he said on CBS' "This Morning."

Asked whether it was an endorsement, he said, "Yes."

Powell praised the president's handling of the economy and ending of the Iraq War.


"I think we ought to keep on the track we are on," he said.

Powell said he had the "utmost respect" for Mitt Romney, but criticized his tax plan.

He said Romney's foreign policy was a "moving target." "One day he has a certain strong view about staying in Afghanistan, but then on Monday night he agrees with the withdrawal. Same thing in Iraq. On every issue that was discussed on Monday night, Gov. Romney agreed with the president with some nuances. But this is quite a different set of foreign policy views than he had earlier in the campaign."

Powell, a Republican who served in President George W. Bush's first term, backed Obama in 2008. He was frequently mentioned as a potential Republican challenger against Bill Clinton in 1996, but decided against it.

UPDATE: 12:27 p.m. -- President Barack Obama called Powell on Thursday morning to thank him for the endorsement, according to Obama campaign traveling press secretary Jen Psaki. They did not discuss joint appearances. She said they were "very excited" about it and said they “think it sends a strong signal about why [Obama] should be sent back for another four years to be commander in chief.”

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) blasted Powell on Fox News Radio's "Kilmeade & Friends" Thursday morning.

"Well, I’m just saddened because, you know, I used to be a great admirer of Colin Powell. We were friends. I think one of the sad aspects of his career is going to the United Nations Security Council and telling them things about Iraq that were absolutely false," he said.

"Obviously, my view of the situation in Iraq is we’re losing," he continued. "We’re losing what we won thanks to the surge. Al Qaeda is doubled. There’s training camps in Western Iraq. In Afghanistan, all we do is say we’re leaving. Al Qaeda is on the comeback all over northern Africa. They’ve taken over parts of Mali. All I can say is that Gen. Powell, you disappoint us and you have harmed your legacy even further by defending what has clearly been the most feckless foreign policy in my lifetime."

Texas, international election monitors face off


Texas, international election monitors face off

1 hour ago

Texas, international election monitors face off


Washington (CNN) – The presence of international monitors observing next week's presidential and Congressional election has caused a firestorm among voter ID law supporters and, particularly, the Texas attorney general.
The reservations came after the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) announced it is sending dozens of monitors from around the world to monitor the upcoming presidential and Congressional elections.
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The OSCE, which sends monitoring teams to elections around the world, has been observing U.S. elections since 2002, when the Bush administration invited them after the hotly contested 2000 presidential election. They are expected to observe in 15 states on November 6th.
Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott Thursday wrote a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressing his displeasure with the OSCE's approach, stating that "an unnecessary political agenda may have infected OSCE's election monitoring." Texas law, he notes, does not allow "unauthorized individuals" within 100 feet of polling places. He asked Clinton to work with the OSCE to ensure the group abides by the state law or they will risk "legal consequences."
OSCE's team for the U.S. elections has 13 international experts based in Washington D.C. and 44 long-term observers to be deployed throughout the country. The OSCE called it "the largest Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe parliamentary delegation to ever observe a North American election."
"We are not coming to judge a result but to report about the process," said Joao Soares, a Portuguese member of parliament who is helping coordinate monitoring effort, in a statement on the group's website. "In a country so well-known for its diverse citizenry, we will observe how inclusive the election process is in line with the country's own laws and international election commitments."
The monitoring team issued an interim report last week warning "recent state-level legislative initiatives to limit early voting and introduce stricter voter identification have become highly polarized. Democrats are concerned that these would disenfranchise eligible voters, while Republicans believe they are necessary to protect the integrity of the vote."
This week a group of civil rights groups, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the League of Women Voters, sent a letter to Daan Evarts, head of the OSCE mission, urging him to send monitors to states where voter ID laws and early voting restrictions "voting have been most extensive-Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida, Texas and Wisconsin."
The letter also urged Everts to send monitors to Colorado, North Carolina and Virginia. Most of these are considered battleground states in the presidential election.
In a letter to Everts, Texas Attorney General Abbott noted the OSCE identified voter ID laws as a barrier to the right to vote and is being urged by voter ID opponents "to monitor states that have taken steps to protect ballot integrity by enacting voter ID laws."
"The OSCE may be entitled to its opinions about voter ID laws, but your opinion is legally irrelevant in the United States, where the Supreme Court has already determined that voter ID laws are constitutional," Abbott wrote. "Groups and individuals from outside the United States are not allowed to influence or interfere with the election process in Texas."
In addition to visiting polling stations on Election Day, the OSCE monitors have already met with federal, state and local officials and candidates since starting their work earlier this month, according to the Vienna-based agency.
But in his letter to Everts, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott warned OSCE representatives are not authorized by Texas law to enter a polling place and then stated they could face criminal prosecution for coming within 100 feet of a polling place.
State Department Spokesperson Victoria Nuland said Texas was the only state to her knowledge that came forward with reservations, but that the OSCE has since sent a letter, both to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and to Texas authorities reassuring them that "OSCE observers are committed to following all U.S. laws and regulations as they do in any country where they observe elections."
But Janez Lenarčič, the Director of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights which oversees election monitoring, also shared his concerns about Abbot's threats in his letter to Clinton.
"The threat of criminal sanctions against OSCE/ODIHR observers is unacceptable," Lenarčič said. "The United States, like all countries in the OSCE, has an obligation to invite ODIHR observers to observe its elections."
He called concerns that election observers would interfere with the election process "groundless" and stressed OSCE observers adhere to all national laws of the countries whose elections they are monitoring.
"Our observers are required to remain strictly impartial and not to intervene in the voting process in any way," Lenarčič said. "They are in the United States to observe these elections, not to interfere in them."

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

ELECTION 2012 VOTE!! VOTE!! VOTE!!!!





Let us join together in once again making history & driving back those whose are driven only by hate, those who lead with fear. They want us to fear change & forward motion.
It's time for us to plant our feet
, stand our ground, give nothing, do not back up nor retreat, MOVE FORWARD ONLY so that we can drive the liars, the fear mongers, the haters & racist back and win this once again.
The nerve of them to do nothing to help this country move forward just to bring down one man who did nothing to them but beat them fair and square. Think about this: Being that the Republican party (GOP) stood by (doing nothing) and tried to let this country fall apart so they could say "look, Obama failed" why should we vote for them. The proof is that this Congress has done the least work, passed the least bills, and has been rated as the worst ever. They need to go! VOTE!!
THE TRUTH DOESN"T CEASE TO EXIST SIMPLY BECAUSE WE IGNORE IT, LIE ABOUT IT, or HIDE IT!! VOTE!!!
https://my.barackobama.com/page/graph/atc/BAYLUSAVMAAnS2lwVC5GB1IAegV8aDdCBQ

https://vote.barackobama.com/


President of the U.S.
Party                                           Name
__________________________________________________________________
DEMOCRATIC                           Barack  Obama
REPUBLICAN                             Mitt  Romney
CONSERVATIVE                       Mitt  Romney
WORKING FAMILIES                Barack  Obama
GREEN                                          Jill  Stein
PSL-SOCIALISM AND LIB        Peta  Lindsay
LBT-LIBERTARIAN                   Gary  Johnson 
CST-CONSTITUTION                 Virgil  Goode


If you found out that someone lied to you would you trust them to lead you? Is there a difference between a broken promise (or a promise which the goal is not yet complete) and a lie? Yes! A lie is deliberate and meant to deceive. A lie is meant to fool you. A broken promise with effort behind it means that the work is in progress, but you were not lied to nor led astray. 
 Math is a pure science or better yet, Math is pure! When you attempt to add, subtract, multiply and divide the answers are exact. However, when you attempt to factor in unknowns and possibilities then you are no longer dealing with pure math. 
What Mitt Romney has promised is a lie. He is sounding like a expert on one hand but no expert on this planet agrees with his so called Tax plan which by the way he says will magically grow jobs and our country's economy. 
Republicans backing Mitt and Mitt himself claim that 5 or 6 studies back his plan up. When contacted the author of one of these studies said that Mitt Romney and the Republican party are misquoting him and his study. He never said in no way that Mitt's plan could or would work. They lied!
 What Romney does is claim that he will cut taxes and never raise them for the middle class, not bother the wealthy, get rid of loop holes and deductions. His promise to slash marginal tax rates by 20 percent and cut taxes on investment income without raising taxes on the middle class or increasing the deficit sounds good, but it not possible. The Tax Policy Center found in a recent analysis that accomplishing all of those promises at the same time would be mathematically impossible. He lied! He is just trying to convince people that he can do a better job than President Obama just to get votes. 

Tax Specialist Martin Sullivan: Romney Tax Plan Is 'Not Mathematically Possible'

The Huffington Post  |  By  Posted:  Updated: 10/25/2012 11:41 am EDT

Romney Tax Plan
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks during a campaign rally at the Reno Event Center on October 24, 2012 in Reno, Nevada. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Another economist has joined the chorus of analysts saying that Mitt Romney's tax plan doesn't add up.
"I like tax reform. I want to broaden the base. It's something I've devoted my life to,"Martin A. Sullivan, chief economist at Tax Analysts, told The New York Times. "I welcome Gov. Romney and the Republicans' strong push, but the plan doesn't work out. It's not mathematically possible."
Sullivan told the NYT that the Tax Policy Center, which found that Romney's tax plan is mathematically impossible, has it right. The article noted that it's not only Sullivan that's convinced by the Tax Policy Center paper. Economists from all sides of the political spectrum -- including from the conservative American Enterprise Institute -- find its claims to be trustworthy.
Other economists and pundits that say that Romney's plan is mathematically impossible include Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, and conservative writer David Frum.
Romney has promised to slash marginal tax rates by 20 percent and cut taxes on investment income without raising taxes on the middle class or increasing the deficit. Butthe Tax Policy Center found in a recent analysis that accomplishing all of those promises at the same time would be mathematically impossible. Romney suggested capping deductions at $25,000 per family during the second presidential debate, but the think tank found that even with this modification, Romney's tax plan still would blow a $3.7 trillion hole in the deficit over the next 10 years.
Romney also promised at the third presidential debate that he would balance the budget within eight to 10 years. In response, Harvard economist Larry Summers, a former top economic adviser to President Barack Obama, told The Huffington Post on Tuesday that Romney's budget plan is "alchemy."
"Lead cannot be turned into gold. Two plus two cannot equal five," Summers told HuffPost. "And 20 percent across-the-board tax cuts cannot be squared with balanced budgets without raising middle-class taxes or eviscerating government."

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Debate 3: Campaign 2012



Debate 3: Campaign 2012 

 11:14AM EDT October 23. 2012 - President Obama won Monday's foreign policy debate in a pair of instant polls, in one of them decisively.
In a survey by CBS News, 53% awarded the debate to Obama, to 23% for Republican Mitt Romney and 24% undecided.
An instant CNN poll found a closer contest as 48% favored Obama and 40% went with Romney. The remainder were undecided.
Both campaigns will look to other polls to see whether the debate moves actual votes. Election Day is two weeks away.
The CBS survey did include some good news for Romney, in that "both candidates enjoyed a bump regarding whom the voters trust to handle international crisis."
According to CBS:
"Before the debate, 46% said they would trust Romney, and 58% said they would trust the president. Those numbers spiked to 49% and 71%, respectively.
"Overwhelmingly, the same group of voters said President Obama would do a better job than Romney on terrorism and national security, 64% to 36%. But they were evenly split, 50-50, on which candidate would better handle China."
The CNN poll cited Obama's intense criticism of Romney throughout the debate:
"Obama's aggressive strategy led the debate audience to give him a narrow 51%-46% edge on leadership, but it may have come at the cost of likeability.
"'A majority of debate watchers said that President Obama seemed to be the stronger leader,' says CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. 'But on the question of likeability, the two candidates are essentially tied on a trait that has generally been an advantage for Obama. That's probably due to the fact that two-thirds of debate watchers felt that Obama spent more time than Mitt Romney on the attack.'
"But according to the poll, both candidates were seen by debate watchers as able to handle the responsibilities of commander in chief -- an important threshold for Romney since he is not the incumbent. But men and women see the commander in chief question very differently.
"Majorities of both genders saw Obama as capable of handling that role, but women were split roughly 50/50 on whether Romney had proven himself on that measure, while men responded well to Romney's performance. Women also saw Obama as the stronger leader; men saw Romney as having the edge on leadership. As a result, women saw Obama as the winner of the debate by 22 points, while a plurality of men saw Romney as the victor on Monday night." 
By Scott Wilson, Published: October 22

Republican Mitt Romney entered Monday night’s debate on foreign policy with the goal of presenting himself as a competent, plausible alternative to President Obama as commander in chief.

But Romney appeared to cede many positions to Obama, moving closer to the president on a range of issues and presenting them in a softer way.
His strategy was clear from the opening question, when he passed up a chance to criticize Obama for his response to the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya. He went on to praise Obama for overseeing the killing of Osama bin Laden and ruled out a U.S. military role in Syria’s civil war, as Obama has done.

“I’m glad that Governor Romney agrees with the steps that we’re taking,” Obama said at one point. “There have been times, Governor, frankly, during the course of this campaign, where it sounded like you thought that you’d do the same things we did, but you’d say them louder and somehow that would make a difference.”

Instead of offering a different view of the United States’ role in the world, Romney mostly sought to distinguish himself from the president by turning a foreign policy debate into one about domestic issues.

Not long into the 90-minute debate, Romney seized on an opening Obama gave him to talk about the American economy, a subject he returned to repeatedly throughout the debate, including in his closing statement.

That tack became evident after an early exchange on the Middle East that highlighted Obama’s command of the issue and Romney’s relative uncertainty when talking about international affairs.

Incumbent presidents often hold an edge on foreign policy questions, few more so than Obama, whose signature credential is approving the May 2011 mission that killed bin Laden. That success helped eliminate, at least until recently, the historical advantage Republicans have had over Democrats on issues of national security.

But recent polls have shown Obama’s advantage dwindling. The fact that foreign policy has become a potential vulnerability for Obama illustrates just how much ground Romney, who stumbled badly through his trip to Europe and Israel this summer, has gained since the first debate earlier this month.

A Washington Post-ABC News tracking poll released hours before Monday’s debate showed that Obama no longer holds a clear advantage on who likely voters believe would better manage international affairs. The eight-point advantage Obama held in September has shrunk to three points, according to the tracking poll.

The survey also showed that nearly as many likely voters believe Romney would be a better commander in chief than the president, the critical question the challenger had to answer for voters Monday night.

A CBS News instant poll after the debate found that 53 percent of respondents believed Obama won it, with 23 percent saying Romney did and the rest calling it a tie.

Nonetheless, each side will probably see positive elements in its candidate’s performance as the campaigns set off immediately for the half-dozen or so swing states that will decide the election.
A boost for Romney

Without any glaring missteps Monday by either candidate, the three presidential debates appeared to help Romney, injecting a vital burst of energy into his campaign after a lackluster summer for the challenger.
His aggressive performance in the first debate in Denver contrasted sharply with Obama’s listlessness, and Romney largely held his own nearly two weeks later in the town-hall-style forum in Hempstead, N.Y.

Obama on Monday was harsh, even condescending at times, toward Romney, a former governor of Massachusetts with no foreign policy record of his own.

Responding to Romney early in the debate, Obama noted that he understood his rival had “never executed foreign policy.”

He later explained, as if to a child, that the modern U.S. Navy has aircraft carriers “where planes land on them” and “ships that go underwater, nuclear submarines,” to rebut Romney’s criticism that federal spending cuts threaten to reduce U.S. naval power to levels not seen since early in the last century.

Romney used his last appearance with Obama to argue broadly that the president has left the nation weaker abroad than it was when he took office, in part by mishandling the economy and fiscal matters at home.

He accused Obama of unsettling traditional allies such as Israel, failing to effectively guide the Middle East uprisings known collectively as the Arab Spring, and leaving unchecked Iran’s nuclear program — one of several foreign policy problems the president inherited from the previous administration.

“We’re four years closer to a nuclear Iran,” Romney said, twice in a row.

Obama raised several pointed questions of his own about whether a Romney presidency would mean new wars — accompanied by swelling budget deficits — for a country tired of them after more than a decade of conflict.

“Part of American leadership is making sure that we’re doing nation-building here at home,” Obama said. “That will help us maintain the kind of American leadership that we need.”

Romney’s most recent criticism of Obama’s foreign policy record has focused on the administration’s confusing account of the Sept. 11 attack in Libya that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.

Heading into this debate, though, Romney had made ­several missteps in attacking Obama on the specifics of the Benghazi attack. First among them was his decision to issue a statement within hours of the assault suggesting that Obama is more interested in cultivating goodwill in the Middle East than in protecting U.S. diplomats.

Offered the chance Monday to criticize Obama again on the issue, Romney instead turned the question into one about the need to fight Islamist extremism in the Middle East.

“I’m glad that you recognize that al-Qaeda is a threat, because a few months ago when you were asked what’s the biggest geopolitical threat facing America, you said Russia, not al-Qaeda,” Obama said in a typically sharp response. “You said Russia. In the 1980s, they’re now calling to ask for their foreign policy back because, you know, the Cold War’s been over for 20 years.”
Common ground

Even in areas where there have been differences, the candidates largely coalesced Monday around policies that Obama is already pursuing.
Those included exchanges over how best to help Syrian rebels topple President Bashar al-Assad in a worsening civil war, to confront China over its trade policies, and to encourage Israel to more actively pursue peace with the Palestinians.

Obama has opposed arming Syria’s little-known rebel groups, worried that heavy weapons would exacerbate a conflict already spilling over the country’s borders. He has sent logistical and humanitarian aid instead.

“What we can’t do is suggest that giving heavy weapons to the Syrian opposition is a simple proposition that will make us safer in the long run,” Obama said.

Romney has advocated sending weapons, and on Monday he said affecting the outcome in Syria offers the United States a prime possibility to blunt Iran’s spreading influence in the Middle East.

But he also made clear that he does “not want our military involved in Syria,” ruling out participation in a no-fly zone over the country.

“We do need to make sure that the arms do not get in the wrong hands,” Romney said, adding that sending weapons to Syrian rebels must be coordinated with Israel.

Israel has also divided the campaigns, with Romney holding Obama’s difficulty with Middle East peacemaking as evidence that he has failed to support a prime U.S. ally in the region.

Obama took office with new ideas about how to more effectively broker an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. Those efforts foundered amid continuing Israeli settlement construction in the occupied territories and Palestinian resistance to joining direct peace talks until it was too late.

But Obama has increased military aid to Israel, collaborated on missile-defense projects and endorsed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s position that Iran must not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon.

“I will stand with Israel if they are attacked,” Obama said — and Romney, soon after, said he would, too.