Talking point #344: Obama has no moral core. He will say anything to win the moment.
Taken from the Right Sphere ( http://www.therightsphere.com/2012/02/superpacs-are-bad-mmkay/)
Taken from the Right Sphere ( http://www.therightsphere.com/2012/02/superpacs-are-bad-mmkay/)
We have these words out of the mouth of Obama. Remember, he made this very same change in the 2008 campaign.
Now, he is doing it again:
44 seconds. You have the time to listen.
This video takes us back to the days of the 2008 election. When he refers to "John," he is talking about John Edwards. You are looking at a 1.37 video, establishing once again, the blatant hypocrisy of this man.
Rasmussen Poll:
ReplyDeleteMajority of Americans view GOP congress as too extreme.
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/february_2012/52_say_gop_agenda_in_congress_is_extreme
Le't see, your side are the commies and One Worlders and my side are the . . . .. ah . . . . . radicals !!?? Moron !!
ReplyDeleteIn 2004 President George W. Bush promised - and failed - to halve the federal budget deficit by 2009. As it turns out, Bush broke his pledge even before the economic cataclysm of 2008 that triggered the TARP bank bailout, sent government revenues plummeting, and required President Obama's rescue programs that saved the U.S. from "Greet Depression 2.0."
ReplyDeleteAs he faced reelection in 2004, George W. Bush famously committed to cut the deficit in half by 2009. As it turned out, the budget Bush bequeathed to Barack Obama didn't even get close to that target. The FY 2009 budget Bush proposed in February 2008 called for a deficit of roughly $400 billion, almost identical to the result in 2004. But that January 2004 promise, as the Washington Post, CNN and The New York Times among others noted at the time, was premised upon two parallel frauds. As Perrspectives explained four years ago:
First, Bush's pompous prediction used as its baseline a wildly inflated White House deficit forecast of $521 billion, well above the CBO's estimate and the actual figure of $413 billion. More importantly, President Bush conveniently chose 2009 as his finish line, the year before his tax cuts were set to expire. Making them permanent (which he and all of the GOP presidential candidates endorse) would blow another $2.2 trillion hole in the federal budget by 2014.