Thursday, October 11, 2007

Stop Hitting Yourself or How The Conservatives Learn To Stop Worrying And Love Mitt Romney


It's a contradiction of the anti-contradictory crowd.
America seems to loathe, with 100 percent of its being, politicians who change their minds over the years on the issues.
Does this ring a bell: "I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it."
That one sentence lost the 2004 presidential election for John Kerry, more so than the Swift Boat Veterans smear campaign or any other tool of rhetoric lobbed at the Senator from Massachusetts.
People just could not reconcile the fact that John Kerry took seemingly different stances on the same issue over time.
That's right, Mitt Romney, we're getting to you right now.
The former governor of Massachusetts (what is it about the Northeast, anyway?) and most recognizable Mormon in America beyond Warren Jeffs (albeit a fundamentalist cult leader) and Bill Paxton (who plays one on TV), Romney has taken aim at a group running a campaign ad he doesn't particularly care for?
The culprits: The Log Cabin Republicans, a grassroots organization of gay and lesbian rights supporters who also like small government, etc.
Their recent campaign ad, which I caught while stomaching the Fox News Channel this week, takes Romney's statements from the past ("youthful indiscretions," maybe?) before he cozied up to the far-right end of the political spectrum and uses them to paint the picture of Romney as a moderate -- the implication being Romney has flip-flopped on the issues now that he has found a home with the anti-choice, anti-gun control crowd.
See for yourself:

It just makes me wonder if a public that seems so fed-up with President George W. Bush (who has been deemed "dead certain" in his convictions by some) and his refusal to rethink the course of action in Iraq, that Mitt Romney's ability to re-evaluate the issues and take a stand against his former self would seem like a breath of fresh air.
When things go wrong, is the fear of having a "flip-flopper" in the Oval Office so great that we maintain the status quo? The people who are most fond of saying "9/11 changed everything" want no change at all, it seems.
You'd be hard-pressed to find a conservative GOP presidential candidate this year more in tune with the hard-right values permeating the country currently than Mitt Romney; Fred Thompson would rank up there if I could take him seriously.
Romney's in a bad situation as his campaign labels his own words as a personal negative attack against him... I feel they're too timid to be as unabashed as Kerry was about the change of heart.
It's a shame... the Log Cabin Romney sounded a lot better than most of the GOP presidential hopefuls I've listened to thus far.

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The once and future savage outpost for my semi-meaningful thoughts and monologues that are too long for Twitter and not good enough to be sprawled across the front page of every major metropolitan newspaper in America with 120-pt. headlines. Also, the occasional diversion via YouTube.

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Most of the great artists never live to see their work truly appreciated on a global scale... Vincent van Gogh. Johann Sebastian Bach. Keyboard Cat.

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