It wasn't really written for the public, but for the donors. At some point the donors are going to wake up and quit giving him money and the shadow campaign/dark money is going to quit supporting him. He's trying to stave that off as long as possible, which is good for Dems as I'd rather see all that cash at the national level instead of having it flood the down-ballot races. Come on Romney, hang in there and keep fooling those stupid rich people for a few more weeks!
FACTS, how do they work? We’re going to be gifted with a healthcare plan that we’re forced to purchase and fined if we don’t, which purportedly covers at least 10 million more people without adding a single doctor The ratio Doctors/People does not change. It's not like if you don't have insurance you don't go to the doctor; you just don't go for routine medicine, preventative medicine or early detection and treatment. The uninsured just put off care until they have to have more expensive, doctor intensive care from overtaxed Emergency Rooms and Public Hospitals, that the taxpayer ends up paying for rather than the user.
2821 reviews and five stars. Hilarious. I hope he's doing good business down there. Lame that people would attack a small business owner like that and try to ruin his business simply because of who he's voting for. People have lost their damn minds.
Were you saying "keep it classy Democrats" when the mayor of Boston tried to bully a restaurant into not opening a franchise in his city because he disagreed with how the owners spend their money? Or is your issue with the specific content of the reviews, rather than just the fact that negative reviews are being written?
Gotta have a backup plan! AP Reports Ryan to run campaign ads to keep his congressional seat HUDSON, Wis. — Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan plans to begin airing ads in Wisconsin as he asks voters to elect him to an eighth House term that he hopes to never serve.
The mayor of Boston publicly released a letter to the president of Chick-fil-a, sent on official letterhead, saying there is "no place" for your company in the spot they had selected to open a franchise, and that "it would be an insult" to allow Chick-fil-a to open there. That sure sounds a lot to me like the Mayor letting Chick-fil-a know that he would do everything within his power to prevent them from opening in the spot. I would call that bullying. You probably would too, if it were the mayor of a conservative city writing the letter to a company with openly liberal politics.