"A wise and frugal government which shall restrain men
from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government."
(Thomas Jefferson)


Friday, September 21, 2012

Paul Ryan Booed Throughout AARP Speech; Obama Received Friendlier Reception

Have to give credit to former Senator Santorum who thinks that if you are smart, you won't be a conservative.  After Ryan's speech at the AARP and Romney 47% comments for starters, I have to agree with that statement.  Also, how many common sense people get a fake spray tan like Romney to speak to Univision?  Heard of pandering but that was so far over the top, it was laughable.  Every time he turned his head you can see where the spray tan only went so far.

Waited to post this until the Obama speech was up on You Tube where he took questions and laid out how Romney/Ryan were lying about Obama taking money from Medicare when he was getting savings due to more efficient system and catching the Medicare fraud.  Right now there is a partial video.

Cannot believe what Ryan had to say at the AARP that drew the boos.  Did he do it on purpose like Romney did at the VFW so he could shore up the base who opposes AARP?  Most divisive duo ever to run for President/Vice President IMHO!  Their lack of caring about ordinary Americans has been duly noted by the American Middle Class.
TPM2012 
Paul Ryan Booed Throughout AARP Speech (VIDEO) 
Paul Ryan’s speech to AARP’s national conference in New Orleans did not go over too well with the audience. 
The Republican vice presidential nominee, who has led his party in proposing a privatization plan for Medicare, drew repeated jeers and catcalls as he made the case for Mitt Romney’s platform on entitlements. 
Easily the worst moments came as Ryan discussed repealing the Affordable Care Act, which increased prescription drug and preventive service benefits for seniors. 
“The first step to a stronger Medicare is to repeal ‘Obamacare,’” Ryan said, prompting a chorus of boos. After the outcry, he said: “I had a feeling there would be mixed reaction, so let me get into it.” 
He drew a second wave of disapproval for saying the president’s law “turned Medicare into a piggy bank for ‘Obamacare.’” Ryan was referring to $716 billion in Medicare savings enacted by the ACA — savings he himself has included in two budgets — that largely came out of payments to insurance providers. 
Another tough response from the crowd came as Ryan attacked Obama as a cynical failure for not negotiating changes to Social Security cuts with Republicans. 
“Time and again the president has ducked the tough issues,” Ryan said. “He put his own job security over your retirement security. Of course he said he would be willing to work with Republicans, but he has not moved an inch closer to common ground. When it comes to bipartisanship, it’s easy to talk the talk but there is only one man running for president this year who has actually walked the walk: that man is Mitt Romney.” 
This is the partial video/audio from You Tube of President Obama's speech this morning. Full speech will be updated when available:


Additional Comments from TPM article:
President Obama drew a friendlier audience earlier in the day when he spoke to the group via satellite. Appearing to reference Romney’s “47 percent” video, in which the Republican condemned Americans as “victims” who were “dependent” on government health care, food and housing, Obama defended entitlements for seniors. 
“Given the conversations that have been out there in the political arena lately, I want to emphasize: Medicare and Social Security are not handouts,” Obama said. “You’ve paid into these programs your whole lives. You’ve earned them.” 
While Ryan’s reception was overwhelmingly negative, he had a few bright spots that earned applause, for example when he discussed how his Medicare plan would provide more generous subsidies for lower-income seniors to buy private insurance plans. He also got some cheers — after attacking Obama for most of his speech — for pledging bipartisan compromise if he and Romney are elected. 
“Our plan is to win this election, be magnanimous and work with those Democrats who want to work with us to save this critical program,” he said, adding that Republicans should not “demagogue” the other side. 

1 comment:

SJ Reidhead said...

Please, pardon me for snickering and uttering what is soon to be my favorite phrase: I TOLD YOU SO!!!!!

SJR
The Pink Flamingo