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Obama says GOP would 'cripple' America

WoodPeckr

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May 29, 2002
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Just telling it like it is and about time! To quote mindless Ronnie Reagan to our mindless friends on the right...."You ain't seen nothing yet!" It will be amusing to watch GOPers start squealing like stuck pigs....:Cry:

Obama says GOP would 'cripple' America

By ERICA WERNER - Associated Press | AP – 2 hrs 52 mins ago

ATHERTON, Calif. (AP) — President Barack Obama charged Sunday that the GOP vision of government would "fundamentally cripple America," as he tried out his newly combative message on the liberal West Coast.

Aiming to renew the ardor of Democratic loyalists who have grown increasingly disenchanted with him, the president mixed frontal attacks on Republicans with words of encouragement intended to buck up the faithful as the 2012 campaign revs up.

"From the moment I took office what we've seen is a constant ideological pushback against any kind of sensible reforms that would make our economy work better and give people more opportunity," the president said at an intimate brunch fundraiser at the Medina, Wash., home of former Microsoft executive Jon Shirley, where about 65 guests were paying $35,800 per couple to listen to Obama.

Similar messages followed at an event in Seattle and two more in California's Silicon Valley Sunday evening, as Obama pushed through a seven-stop fundraising swing that was taking him from Seattle to Hollywood to San Diego through Monday. The three-day West Coast swing, ending Tuesday in Denver, offered him the chance to re-engage with some of his most liberal and deep-pocketed supporters.

The trip comes as Obama has shifted from focusing on compromise with Republicans on Capitol Hill to calling out House Speaker John Boehner and others by name. The president has criticized them as obstructionists while demanding their help in passing his $447 billion jobs bill.

The revamped approach is a relief to Democratic activists fed up by what they viewed as the president's ceding of ground to the GOP on tax cuts and other issues while the economy has stalled and unemployment is stuck above 9 percent.

Obama said 2012 would be an especially tough election because people are discouraged and disillusioned with government, but he also said he was determined because so much is at stake.

The GOP alternative, Obama said, is "an approach to government that will fundamentally cripple America in meeting the challenges of the 21st century."

At an event in Woodside, Calif., Obama took a direct shot at one of his potential GOP opponents, Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Without mentioning him by name Obama mocked Perry as "a governor whose state is on fire, denying climate change."

Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan responded, "It's outrageous President Obama would use the burning of 1,500 homes, the worst fires in state history, as a political attack."

Obama also criticized the audience reactions at recent GOP presidential debates, including people booing a gay service member. Said the president, "That's not reflective of who we are."

Obama got a friendly welcome from invited guests. But he was also met by scattered demonstrations from liberal activists.

"We want to see Obama stand up as strongly as he can to fight for the people of this country who are working out there to make ends meet," said Kathy Cummings, communications director for the Washington State Labor Council. The council helped organize a demonstration outside Seattle's Paramount Theatre, the site of an Obama fundraiser with about 1,800 guests. An activist's sign urged Obama, "Tax the rich."

Obama and the Republican presidential candidates are working overtime to raise campaign cash ahead of an important Sept. 30 reporting deadline that will give a snapshot of their financial strength.

Obama's West Coast fundraisers brought in the Silicon Valley and Hollywood elite. The last event of the night Sunday was at the Atherton, Calif., home of Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg, and pop singer Lady Gaga was among the guests.

The expected haul from all seven events: $4 million or more.

In addition to the fundraising, Obama scheduled a town hall-style event Monday in Silicon Valley, hosted by social networking company LinkedIn. The trip ends Tuesday with a speech to supporters in Denver.

Obama was pushing throughout for his job proposal, which combines tax cuts, unemployment benefits and public works spending. The bill faces a hostile reception on Capitol Hill, particularly because Obama wants to pay for it with tax increases opposed by Republicans. If he can't persuade Congress to pass the bill, Obama has said he wants to make sure the public knows who's standing in the way.

Jobs are a major concern in California, where unemployment stands at 12.1 percent, highest of any state except Nevada.

Mark DiCamillo, director of California's Field Poll, said that's contributed to a softening of support for Obama among Democratic and independent voters. Obama's job approval rating dropped to 46 percent among Californians in a Field Poll this month. Among Democrats it was 69 percent, but that was down 10 percentage points from June.

"Californians voted for him by 24 points in 2008 and the Democrats and nonpartisans were the backbone of his support and he's losing some of that now," DiCamillo said. "They're looking for Obama to do something."

The summer's nasty debate over raising the government's borrowing limit turned off voters. Many liberals bemoaned the deal that cleared the way for a higher debt ceiling, with Obama agreeing to Republican demands for steep budget cuts without new taxes.

But Democratic supporters are heartened by the jobs plan and Obama's insistence that Congress must raise taxes to pay for it. Now they're hoping that the confrontational Obama they're seeing now is the same one they'll see through the 2012 campaign.

"We wish that his fighting spirit had been there a few months ago, but it's here now," said Rick Jacobs, head of the Courage Campaign, a progressive online organizing network in California.ERICA WERNER
 

onthebottom

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He's doing a pretty good job of showing us what a crippled nation looks like.....

OTB
 

papasmerf

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his attempts to meet Republicans 1/100 of the way was met with a no...............

So now he preaches hate, once again.

He is less then the sum of his parts.
 

red

you must be fk'n kid'g me
Nov 13, 2001
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the republicans just want to cripple the economy so they can deny it healthcoverage
 

danmand

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Nov 28, 2003
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Seems to me the7y did that already.
 

papasmerf

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the republicans just want to cripple the economy so they can deny it healthcoverage
if that were the case they would vote yes for everything Obama wants
 

K Douglas

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Jan 5, 2005
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The Republicans saw the economy break it's arms and legs. The Democrats have put the economy on life support. Therein lies the difference. Furthermore, the Republicans now realize that gov't policies of the past decade have contributed to the demise but the Democrats are still in denial. Many of their caucus don't even believe there's a debt problem.
 

Cobster

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Cobster

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WoodPeckr

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He's doing a pretty good job of showing us what a crippled nation looks like.....
Give credit to Johnny Boner and the cement-heads in the GOP Party of NO, for that!...:eyebrows:
 

blackrock13

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You can say that again!
As if the the Republican administration had nothing to do with the mess created over the last 30 years in th eUS. You really think if you repeat it's Obama's fault that intelligent people actually believe that? I mean even Pekkerhead knows that is not the case and he's an idiot.
 

onthebottom

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fuji

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The Republicans saw the economy break it's arms and legs. The Democrats have put the economy on life support. Therein lies the difference. Furthermore, the Republicans now realize that gov't policies of the past decade have contributed to the demise but the Democrats are still in denial. Many of their caucus don't even believe there's a debt problem.
The Republicans did not (and do not) believe there was a debt problem when it came to exorbitant military spending. The only difference between the two parties is that the Republicans ignore the debt when someone says "national defense" while the Democrats ignore it when someone says "social program". Both the Republicans and the Democrats lately realized that there was a problem and sat down to discuss it like adults, but one particular faction of the Republican party--the "tea party"--played chicken with the national economy over the issue.
 

WoodPeckr

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He's made every issue worse...
GOP OBSTRUCTION made everything worse!
You know bottie the GOP Plan for Failure, blubbering Boner carps on about!....:rolleyes:
 

Cobster

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blackrock13

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He's made every issue worse...

OTB
Considering the direction and speed that the US economy was going during the first three months of his administration, as a result of the earlier administration(s) efforts or lack of efforts, He's stopped the bleeding and the held the line fairly well. It will take admission by many on the right side and the business side what reeeeeally has to be done. Until then, it will a longer more drawn out recovery.

The Economist sees it this way; http://www.economist.com/node/18928600

The House of Representatives, under Republican control as a result of last November’s mid-term elections, has balked at passing the necessary bill. That is perfectly reasonable: until recently the Republicans had been exercising their clear electoral mandate to hold the government of Barack Obama to account, insisting that they will not permit a higher debt ceiling until agreement is reached on wrenching cuts to public spending. Until they started to play hardball in this way, Mr Obama had been deplorably insouciant about the medium-term picture, repeatedly failing in his budgets and his state-of-the-union speeches to offer any path to a sustainable deficit. Under heavy Republican pressure, he has been forced to rethink.
Now, however, the Republicans are pushing things too far. Talks with the administration ground to a halt last month, despite an offer from the Democrats to cut at least $2 trillion and possibly much more out of the budget over the next ten years. Assuming that the recovery continues, that would be enough to get the deficit back to a prudent level. As The Economist went to press, Mr Obama seemed set to restart the talks.
The sticking-point is not on the spending side. It is because the vast majority of Republicans, driven on by the wilder-eyed members of their party and the cacophony of conservative media, are clinging to the position that not a single cent of deficit reduction must come from a higher tax take. This is economically illiterate and disgracefully cynical.
A gamble where you bet your country’s good name
This newspaper has a strong dislike of big government; we have long argued that the main way to right America’s finances is through spending cuts. But you cannot get there without any tax rises. In Britain, for instance, the coalition government aims to tame its deficit with a 3:1 ratio of cuts to hikes. America’s tax take is at its lowest level for decades: even Ronald Reagan raised taxes when he needed to do so.
And the closer you look, the more unprincipled the Republicans look. Earlier this year House Republicans produced a report noting that an 85%-15% split between spending cuts and tax rises was the average for successful fiscal consolidations, according to historical evidence. The White House is offering an 83%-17% split (hardly a huge distance) and a promise that none of the revenue increase will come from higher marginal rates, only from eliminating loopholes. If the Republicans were real tax reformers, they would seize this offer.
 

onthebottom

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he has made every issue better...
You'd have a hard time looking at debt, deficit or unemployment and supporting that position.

OTB
 
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