Growing voter confidence in economy lifts Obama

WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are growing more optimistic about the economy and President Barack Obama's leadership, creating a significant obstacle for Republican rival Mitt Romney five weeks to Election Day.
Even with unemployment above 8 percent for a 43rd straight month, polls find voters taking comfort in modest signs of economic progress, from a solid jump in consumer confidence this month to steady gains in home prices. Surveys show Obama opening up leads over Romney in several key states, thanks to voters such as Jim Young, 62, a retired engineer from eastern Iowa.
A political independent, Young says Obama's policies have eased the nation's pain as the recovery plods along. "The markets have been doing quite well," Young said. "So, personally, things are going well and we can't complain."
Interviews with voters in vital swing states and opinion polls suggest Romney inadvertently played into Democrats' long-running efforts to paint him as an out-of-touch plutocrat when a secretly recorded video showed him saying 47 percent of Americans consider themselves victims who depend on government care.
"Romney seems fake, especially after the 47 percent comment," said Kurtis Nash of Cincinnati. "I've always voted for Republicans," he said, but now he's leaning toward Obama.
"I think Obama understands the importance of a strong middle class and he wants to do more to build the middle class," said Nash, 33, a chef at a downtown restaurant. "Maybe he didn't at first, but I think he does now."
Whether the video played a big role or not, Obama is leading in polls in Ohio, Florida, Virginia and elsewhere. Romney's backers are struggling to change the momentum in a race shaped in large part by voters' perception of the economy and their overall view of who would do a better job for the middle class.
"Sometimes there is a tipping point in politics where the cumulative effect of several things — and one singular defining event — can flip voters in one direction," said Republican pollster Steve Lombardo. "I think that was what did happen with '47 percent.' It came after two bad weeks for Romney and crystallized voter perceptions, driven by negative ads, that he only cares about rich people."
Such happenings, Lombardo said, are "lethal in politics."
Obama aides are quick to note that the election is far from over, and any number of unforeseen events could shift the tide. The Romney team hopes Wednesday's presidential debate in Denver — the first of three in October — will enable the former Massachusetts governor to alter the campaign's dynamics.
Analysts in both parties point to several likely reasons for Obama's leap in the swing state polls, including:
— Rising economic optimism.
From the start, Romney said voters should fire Obama chiefly for his handling of the economy. But Americans are feeling somewhat better about the economy, and less inclined to see Romney as the needed fixer.
Associated Press-GfK polls conducted in May and June showed voters about evenly divided between Obama and Romney on the question "who do you trust to do a better job handling the economy." Romney held a narrow edge in August.
But a September survey showed Obama opening up a clear lead on the question, 50 percent to Romney's 43 percent. Among those voters most likely to turn out, who were first measured in September, the two candidates were about even.
The latest poll also showed more adults approving rather than disapproving of Obama's handling of the economy, for the first time in more than a year.
Meanwhile, consumer confidence rose to its highest level since February, the government reported. And the median price of homes sold last month increased by a record amount as mortgage rates remain at an all-time low. The once underwater housing market is showing signs of a modest recovery.
A Washington Post poll of Ohio and Florida voters found more confidence in an economic rebound under Obama than under Romney.
— Romney's struggle to connect with voters.
Romney, who made millions of dollars heading the private equity firm Bain Capital, has never had a breezy rapport with voters. But Democrats — and some GOP rivals during the primary — have worked to portray him as something worse: an unfeeling "vulture capitalist" who doesn't mind laying off workers to increase profits.
Romney's team hoped the Republican convention in August would present him as a caring and competent leader. Polls suggest it didn't help much.
A new Quinnipiac-CBS-New York Times poll found that substantial majorities of likely voters in Ohio and Florida think Obama "cares about your needs and problems," while solid majorities think Romney does not.
The Washington Post poll of registered voters in three battleground states found Obama far ahead of Romney on the question of "who better understands the economic problems" of Americans. Obama bested his Republican challenger by 53 percent to 39 percent in Florida, 54 percent to 37 percent in Virginia, and 57 percent to 34 percent in Ohio.
Strategists say Romney's "47 percent" remarks — secretly recorded at a May fundraiser and released this month — have wounded him at a crucial point in the campaign.
"In one moment there was this crystallization for a lot of people about how he viewed them," said Jim Margolis, a top ad-maker for Obama.
Numerous Democrats say Romney blundered by airing few TV ads during the two weeks of the parties' back-to-back nominating conventions, which bracketed Labor Day. It gave Obama's team free range to depict Romney as a tone-deaf mogul, just when many voters were starting to pay attention, these Democrats say.
Romney's latest efforts to show a more compassionate side are getting mixed reviews. He told NBC on Wednesday, "don't' forget, I got everyone in my state insured" when he overhauled Massachusetts' health care system. The comment seemed at odds with Romney's repeated vows to repeal "Obamacare," whose central feature is mandated health coverage for everyone.
— Election seen as a choice, not a referendum.
Starting last year, Obama's campaign did all it could to frame the election as a choice between two candidates with sharply different visions, and not as a referendum on the president's problematic economic record.
Romney's team took the opposite tack. It worked to couch the election as a verdict on high unemployment and economic anxiety on Obama's watch.
The theory that Obama would sink from his own weight now seems questionable, and Romney has adopted Obama's terminology.
"This election, in my opinion, comes down to a very dramatic choice between two different courses for America," Romney said Wednesday in Westerville, Ohio.
Matt Bennett, a veteran of Democratic campaigns, says Obama's recent rise in the polls "is the result of the race changing from a referendum on the incumbent to a real choice between two candidates."
"Now that voters are taking a harder look at their two choices," Bennett said, "they simply do not like what they see from Romney."
Interviews with voters in key states suggest that Romney still has time to gain ground, if he can convince Americans he will do a better job than Obama.
"I lost my home during his administration," said Thomas Lenner, a commercial real estate broker from Las Vegas who voted for Obama in 2008, and won't do so again. "Obviously, he's not the man for the job," said Lenner, 57. He said Obama could have done more to limit foreclosures.
Lenner adds, however, "I don't think Romney is the answer, to be honest with you. I don't think all the actions he's going to take are going to help all the American people."
Greg Sayabalian, 47, is another struggling Nevadan who has given up on Obama, but is not sold on Romney. He co-owns Hamdog's Restaurant in Gardnerville, a popular spot for construction workers until the 2008 recession hit.
"Overnight, they just stopped coming in," Sayabalian said. "My take-home pay is $595 every two weeks. My waitresses make more than I do."
Sayabalian said he's probably leaning toward Romney, but he hasn't ruled out Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson.
Some Republicans have urged Romney to woo such wavering voters by offering more details about how he would cut tax rates without reducing the government's revenue, and how he would start balancing the budget while hiking military spending. Obama has begun taunting Romney for the relative lack of details in his proposals.
"No matter how many times they try to tell you they're going to start talking specifics real soon, they don't do it," Obama told supporters last week in Kent, Ohio. "The reason is because the math doesn't work."
It was the jibe of a confident-sounding incumbent, buoyed by encouraging polls in nearly every toss-up state. Romney has five weeks, and three big debates, to try to knock the swagger out of Obama.
___
Associated Press writers Sandra Chereb and Ken Ritter in Nevada; Daniel Sewell, Amanda Lee Myers and Thomas J. Sheeran in Ohio, and Todd Richmond in Wisconsin contributed to this report. Beaumont reported from Iowa.
Even with unemployment above 8 percent for a 43rd straight month, polls find voters taking comfort in modest signs of economic progress, from a solid jump in consumer confidence this month to steady gains in home prices. Surveys show Obama opening up leads over Romney in several key states, thanks to voters such as Jim Young, 62, a retired engineer from eastern Iowa.
A political independent, Young says Obama's policies have eased the nation's pain as the recovery plods along. "The markets have been doing quite well," Young said. "So, personally, things are going well and we can't complain."
Interviews with voters in vital swing states and opinion polls suggest Romney inadvertently played into Democrats' long-running efforts to paint him as an out-of-touch plutocrat when a secretly recorded video showed him saying 47 percent of Americans consider themselves victims who depend on government care.
"Romney seems fake, especially after the 47 percent comment," said Kurtis Nash of Cincinnati. "I've always voted for Republicans," he said, but now he's leaning toward Obama.
"I think Obama understands the importance of a strong middle class and he wants to do more to build the middle class," said Nash, 33, a chef at a downtown restaurant. "Maybe he didn't at first, but I think he does now."
Whether the video played a big role or not, Obama is leading in polls in Ohio, Florida, Virginia and elsewhere. Romney's backers are struggling to change the momentum in a race shaped in large part by voters' perception of the economy and their overall view of who would do a better job for the middle class.
"Sometimes there is a tipping point in politics where the cumulative effect of several things — and one singular defining event — can flip voters in one direction," said Republican pollster Steve Lombardo. "I think that was what did happen with '47 percent.' It came after two bad weeks for Romney and crystallized voter perceptions, driven by negative ads, that he only cares about rich people."
Such happenings, Lombardo said, are "lethal in politics."
Obama aides are quick to note that the election is far from over, and any number of unforeseen events could shift the tide. The Romney team hopes Wednesday's presidential debate in Denver — the first of three in October — will enable the former Massachusetts governor to alter the campaign's dynamics.
Analysts in both parties point to several likely reasons for Obama's leap in the swing state polls, including:
— Rising economic optimism.
From the start, Romney said voters should fire Obama chiefly for his handling of the economy. But Americans are feeling somewhat better about the economy, and less inclined to see Romney as the needed fixer.
Associated Press-GfK polls conducted in May and June showed voters about evenly divided between Obama and Romney on the question "who do you trust to do a better job handling the economy." Romney held a narrow edge in August.
But a September survey showed Obama opening up a clear lead on the question, 50 percent to Romney's 43 percent. Among those voters most likely to turn out, who were first measured in September, the two candidates were about even.
The latest poll also showed more adults approving rather than disapproving of Obama's handling of the economy, for the first time in more than a year.
Meanwhile, consumer confidence rose to its highest level since February, the government reported. And the median price of homes sold last month increased by a record amount as mortgage rates remain at an all-time low. The once underwater housing market is showing signs of a modest recovery.
A Washington Post poll of Ohio and Florida voters found more confidence in an economic rebound under Obama than under Romney.
— Romney's struggle to connect with voters.
Romney, who made millions of dollars heading the private equity firm Bain Capital, has never had a breezy rapport with voters. But Democrats — and some GOP rivals during the primary — have worked to portray him as something worse: an unfeeling "vulture capitalist" who doesn't mind laying off workers to increase profits.
Romney's team hoped the Republican convention in August would present him as a caring and competent leader. Polls suggest it didn't help much.
A new Quinnipiac-CBS-New York Times poll found that substantial majorities of likely voters in Ohio and Florida think Obama "cares about your needs and problems," while solid majorities think Romney does not.
The Washington Post poll of registered voters in three battleground states found Obama far ahead of Romney on the question of "who better understands the economic problems" of Americans. Obama bested his Republican challenger by 53 percent to 39 percent in Florida, 54 percent to 37 percent in Virginia, and 57 percent to 34 percent in Ohio.
Strategists say Romney's "47 percent" remarks — secretly recorded at a May fundraiser and released this month — have wounded him at a crucial point in the campaign.
"In one moment there was this crystallization for a lot of people about how he viewed them," said Jim Margolis, a top ad-maker for Obama.
Numerous Democrats say Romney blundered by airing few TV ads during the two weeks of the parties' back-to-back nominating conventions, which bracketed Labor Day. It gave Obama's team free range to depict Romney as a tone-deaf mogul, just when many voters were starting to pay attention, these Democrats say.
Romney's latest efforts to show a more compassionate side are getting mixed reviews. He told NBC on Wednesday, "don't' forget, I got everyone in my state insured" when he overhauled Massachusetts' health care system. The comment seemed at odds with Romney's repeated vows to repeal "Obamacare," whose central feature is mandated health coverage for everyone.
— Election seen as a choice, not a referendum.
Starting last year, Obama's campaign did all it could to frame the election as a choice between two candidates with sharply different visions, and not as a referendum on the president's problematic economic record.
Romney's team took the opposite tack. It worked to couch the election as a verdict on high unemployment and economic anxiety on Obama's watch.
The theory that Obama would sink from his own weight now seems questionable, and Romney has adopted Obama's terminology.
"This election, in my opinion, comes down to a very dramatic choice between two different courses for America," Romney said Wednesday in Westerville, Ohio.
Matt Bennett, a veteran of Democratic campaigns, says Obama's recent rise in the polls "is the result of the race changing from a referendum on the incumbent to a real choice between two candidates."
"Now that voters are taking a harder look at their two choices," Bennett said, "they simply do not like what they see from Romney."
Interviews with voters in key states suggest that Romney still has time to gain ground, if he can convince Americans he will do a better job than Obama.
"I lost my home during his administration," said Thomas Lenner, a commercial real estate broker from Las Vegas who voted for Obama in 2008, and won't do so again. "Obviously, he's not the man for the job," said Lenner, 57. He said Obama could have done more to limit foreclosures.
Lenner adds, however, "I don't think Romney is the answer, to be honest with you. I don't think all the actions he's going to take are going to help all the American people."
Greg Sayabalian, 47, is another struggling Nevadan who has given up on Obama, but is not sold on Romney. He co-owns Hamdog's Restaurant in Gardnerville, a popular spot for construction workers until the 2008 recession hit.
"Overnight, they just stopped coming in," Sayabalian said. "My take-home pay is $595 every two weeks. My waitresses make more than I do."
Sayabalian said he's probably leaning toward Romney, but he hasn't ruled out Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson.
Some Republicans have urged Romney to woo such wavering voters by offering more details about how he would cut tax rates without reducing the government's revenue, and how he would start balancing the budget while hiking military spending. Obama has begun taunting Romney for the relative lack of details in his proposals.
"No matter how many times they try to tell you they're going to start talking specifics real soon, they don't do it," Obama told supporters last week in Kent, Ohio. "The reason is because the math doesn't work."
It was the jibe of a confident-sounding incumbent, buoyed by encouraging polls in nearly every toss-up state. Romney has five weeks, and three big debates, to try to knock the swagger out of Obama.
___
Associated Press writers Sandra Chereb and Ken Ritter in Nevada; Daniel Sewell, Amanda Lee Myers and Thomas J. Sheeran in Ohio, and Todd Richmond in Wisconsin contributed to this report. Beaumont reported from Iowa.
Let's see what happens tomorrow when Univision drops a bombshell on the incompetent in chief. How ironic and at the same time sad that it takes Univision to do real investigative reporting and bring the truth to the American people.
Â
http://hotair.com/archives/2012/09/29/video-univisions-bombshell-report-on-fast-furious/
 @ByeByeBarry Or maybe this scandal might be even bigger
Â
http://www.wnd.com/2012/09/this-scandal-could-dwarf-fast-and-furious/
 @ByeByeBarryÂ
Â
The Untold Story Behind The "Fast and Furious" Scandal
Â
http://abcnews.go.com/ABC_Univision/News/untold-story-fast-furious-scandal/story?id=17342034#.UGk6Y1FeuSp
Â
Univision will air special on Fast and Furious
Â
http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=es&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=noticias.univision.com%2Faqui-y-ahora%2Farticle%2F2012-09-26%2Fespecial-rapido-y-furioso-por-univision%3Fftloc%3Dhomepage1%3AwcmWidgetUimHomepageStage%26ftpos%3Dhomepage1%3AwcmWidgetUimHomepageStage%3A1%23axzz27z1jQwOVhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.univision.com%2F
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Worse Than Gunwalker? State Dept. Allegedly Sold Guns to Zetas
Â
http://pjmedia.com/blog/worse-than-gunwalker-state-dept-allegedly-sold-guns-to-zetas/
 @ByeByeBarry http://images4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb57887/wikiality/images/c/cb/Political-pictures-jon-stewart-journalist-appalled.jpg
A simple sampling of the comments below demostrates that the republicans still believe Obama is destroying the country and they WANT this to be true.
Â
These are the same republicans who complain about democrats causing run away spending while they themseves have been mathmatically shown to be the biggest spenders.
These are the same republicans who are complaining about election fraud while continually getting caught committing election fraud.
Â
These are the same republicans who complain about democrats "dividing" the country and engaging in "class warfare"Â while complaining about 47% of the nation being lazy democrats.Â
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If you ever want to know what the republicans are up to, just listen to what they are accusing the democrats of doing.Â
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The republicans might as well replace the elephant with a projector for their Logo.Â
@T H I S
Want it to be true? Kind of a big generalization there huh? How about the millions on the left that were betrayed by Obama's lies and the dem controlled congress? He had the majority, the mandate and the ability to restore everything the left has been ripped off for over the last 30 years. So whats he do? He hires 11 Goldman Sachs employees that were part of the reason capitalism failed and brings them into his administration. Then he gives the insurance industry 30 million new paying customers without one word of cost containment. Then he extends the bush tax cuts for the rich. Then he continues the wars that he promised he would end. He leaves Guantanamo open where the torture continues. Bails out the failed too big to fail financial sector making it even too bigger to fail. Bailout GM, cuts the wages of GM employees and forces the union to accept the same sub standard agreement on Chrysler and Ford which allows the Canadian employers to whipsaw their employees off of US workers for a sub standard agreement albeit better then the US agreement. He laughs in the face of 200 years of contract law while bailing out GM when the Senior Bond holders had the right to liquidate. Thats what they were betting on when they became senior bond holders. He has allowed the continued downward manipulation of US worker's wages by continuing to allow Chinese workers to compete with us. He has presided over the largest theft from the middleclass the world has ever seen and as of today, hasn't done anything anywhere to stop it from happening again. He has ignored Eric Holder over at the Justice dept letting firms like MF Global steal money from the personal accounts of its clients to the tune of 1.6 Billion dollars without even as much as an arrest after 11 months. He has Ben print 21 trillion dollars and sends it to Europe to give to European banks and business. I could go on but this is all recent history and you dont see it but, you bad mouth someone else for what they believe which BTW is their right? Not only did he extend the patriot act, he doubled down with the NDAA wherein he has become the accuser, the judge, the jury, the executioner, and does it all in secret. If you called bush a war criminal, you must call Obama one also or you are a hypocrit.
Â
I am a leftist, Obama is a right wing corporatist/fascist (Like you) as illustrated by his billion dollar campaign war chest. Where did you think he got his money?
 @T_BONE_WALKER  @T H I S "Kind of a big generalization there huh?"
Actually, they NEED it to be true.
They have been told that there is no hope, so they have none.They HAVE to have bad economic news - otherwise what would Romney have to draw his supporters from? They HAD to deny him even the smallest compromise in Congress, or they would not be able to even lie that he had done nothing.
The REALLY sad thing is, without Obama and the economy they would have even less hope. If the economy had come back, Romney would not have been able to make a shadow of a showing in the primaries, and they would have had someone like Rick Santorum, and maybe even Michele Bachmann - moderate GOP candidates would have been laughed off the stage. With the far right in control, there would be no Republican candidate that the vast majority of this nation - left and center - would have given the time of day.
Â
"I am a leftist, Obama is a right wing corporatist/fascist"
OK...and who would YOU have put up as your candidate?
Joe Lieberman?
"Growing voter confidence in economy"
Â
It is absolutely disgusting what the mainstream media is doing in order to see to it that Obama is re-elected. If in fact Obama does win a second term it will be because the press was able to secure for Obama the moron vote.
Â
@ByeByeBarry What? I thought especially you and your ilk would be voting for robmoney no matter what. No?
CHARLES BABINGTON and THOMAS BEAUMONT, Associated Press are not paying attention.
Â
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 @al_wa Maybe they are just not hoping for the destruction of America so they can win an election.
 @T H I S  @al_wa Dont look now but, America has been destroyed to profit the few.
You have got to be kidding me what are these people smoking!!! I really wish things were getting better but if you look at the numbers they really aren't. Â Who from the DNC wrot this piece?
 When there's bad news about the economy it's never his fault but any glimmer if good news and it's because of the wonderful job our President is doing. Who says you can't have your cake and eat it too?
 @Mej47 because the republicans do not do the EXACT opposite?
Â
Obama had nothing at all to do with the economy improving or the death of Bin Laden, but he personally put guns in the hands of drug smuggelers, and he personaly opened the door at the Consulate office in Lybia for the terrorists to come in.
Â
/What republicans actually believe.,
@THIS Not being a Republican; I don't really know what they believe but from you're posts I'd think you're so far to the left that you have even less idea what any rational human being believes.
@Mej47 And you're the dead end.
@Mej47 Funny. I am just trying to help you figure out who you really are. I believe the rest of us already have you figured out. I.e. see above.
@flyskiwindsurf Troll?
@OrcasThunder Looks like you found a bunch of dead ends. At least it gave you something to do for a while.
@Mej47 So you are now posting that you call yourself a scrotum bagger huh?
 @flyskiwindsurf  @Mej47 Which Mej47 are you asking?
http://www.match.com/profile/showprofile.aspx/?handle=MEJ47&tp=prtbk
or http://pinterest.com/mej47/ or http://www.flickr.com/photos/25879333@N02/2431201427/ or even http://wholesalefashionreplica.com/cheap-men-evisu-jeans-mej47-p-1736.html...?
I'm thinking http://mypage.thesims3.com/mypage/mej47...although http://multiply.com/cancelled/mej47 works as well...
@flyskiwindsurf  As an Independent I don't have buy into the BS from either party but I've got to figure that anyone who can't tell the difference between a tea bag and a scrotum doesn't really have much to add to the conversation.
@Mej47 Yeah not many want to admit that they are reps anymore, including even you it seems. âBut from you're (sic) posts I'd think you're so far to theâ right that you are even way beyond the tbagginâ nutbagginâ tbaggers. So hmmmâ¦..What the heck does that make you? A neo? Or worse?
If all other countries do not accept U.S. dollars,EUROs,Chinese $ Yuens or others only,we'll be doomed !
Seriously!?Â
Â
"Americans are growing more optimistic about the economy and President Barack Obama's leadership"
Either the media just likes to blow smoke up peoples as$es or Americans have become idiots!! Nuff said!
***SIGH***
 @Antistatism Or you have completely forgotten what it was like in 2008/2009 when a large part of the country was worried if they would still have a job in a year.Â
Â
Now the economy is not as strong as we would like, but it is a far cry from that period. Â
Â
What is interesting is that there is a part of our population who seems to fit into this catagory.
a) They will never vote for Obama.
b) They insist the country is falling apart and everything is horrible.
c) They keep complaining that the media is reporting on how the country is improving. Â
Â
These people live in an echo chamber where any information that does not fit their preformed narrative is dubious at best.  These people WANT to hear that the nation is crumbling. And they want to hear these bad things because they do not like who the president is. They will not listen to facts, they do not trust science, and they will all vote republican no matter who the candidate is.
@Antistatism No just you and your ilk tism. But then it seems that you and you ilk have always been that tism. Obviously. âNuff said! ***SIGH***â
@flyskiwindsurf What did you just say? I need a translation.
 @Gaikokujin  @flyskiwindsurf Glad to see that you agree, that's a start...
@Gaikokujin ooooooâ¦â¦ ohhhhhhhâ¦..wowwwwwâ¦â¦suchâ¦. well suchâ¦â¦. nothing you are gai.
@Gaikokujin bwahahahahaâ¦.. You have to be one just very funny looking boy gai.
 @OrcasThunder  @flyskiwindsurf LOL yea sure Orca, that hilarious coming from you.
 @flyskiwindsurf  @Gaikokujin Nope speaking of you and your posts. And based on your description of what you "very much dislike" it seems that you dislike yourself.
 @Gaikokujin  @flyskiwindsurf "seen your venomous posts in here against anyone of Faith"
And yet YOUR abject intolerance toward anyone of a differing POV regarding faith shines through like a rancid worm at the bottom of the tequila bottle...
 @flyskiwindsurf  @Gaikokujin And I second my "like"!
@Gaikokujin bwahahahaâ¦.. You must be thinking of someone else gai. Or as usual you are just continuing to lie, deflect, project, etc. gai. But I will admit that another type that I very much dislike, besides liars etc., are hypocrites gai. Would that be descriptive of anyone that you might personally know extremely well gai? Well I would actually believe that you donât even know yourself very well there gai.
Happy International Blasphemy day to you!Â
 @flyskiwindsurf  @Gaikokujin Yea yea yea, we have read and seen your venomous posts in here against anyone of Faith and about conservative America to know what you are about so please. We all know exactly what you are about.
@Gaikokujin bwahahahaâ¦.. As usual you just make a lot of stuff up, and even lie and continue to project there gai. You obviously donât even know anything about who I am or what I believe as you are obviously completely wrong on all counts gai. Obviously. You obviously believe that anyone who doesnât believe exactly as you believe is everything you say gai. Well you obviously are way the heck out there and even beyond the pale there gai. You obviously donât know anything about what you are posting about whether that is regarding me or regarding nearly anything else that you post there gai. E.g. I am closer to someone who does not want a plutocrat/oligarch, who is obviously only in the race for the benefit of him and his other oligarch buddies, to become president. I donât want a bunch of hypocritical born againers, hypocritical evangelicals, tbagginânutbagginâ tbaggers, neo-cons, neo-nazis, birchers, kkk, and worse, etc. anywhere near govt. However a lot of those loony tunes have already infiltrated/invaded the reps and have especially invaded the tbaggers. I.e. we have already had way too much of that from 1/20/01 through 1/20/09. Of course many of them were pretty much a lot of very dangerous clowns during that period. Much like the very dangerous clowns now running in and for the GOP.
@Mary bwahahahaâ¦.. Yeah I figured that people such as you would need a translation. So how about the following? Juxtapose the last portion of antiâs sentence that starts with Americans with my post.
 @Mary  @flyskiwindsurf You can't understand because you are not a hate filled atheist who believes that the U.S.A. is the root of all problems that needs to be torn apart & destroyed so that a socialist world can be created.
Oh brother. Magical yellow snow from Barry. It's all good. Total destruction of your future is still possible!
Â
Just vote for OBOZO. We can all be like old worn out Russians living is timber shacks, day to day. The glory of Marx, Stalin and Lenin can be yours! Barry will take us back to total peasants. Occupile that.
Â
This entire article is total garbage. AP is BS.
 @pbs7mm Yeah because Marx, Stalin and Lenin would support bailing out failed US corporations and those same corporations would love to provide Marx, Stalin and Lenin with the first billion dollar campaign war chest. Obama is and has created peasants by transferring the wealth of the working class up to the rich. Marx, Stalin and Lenin were not fascists like 50% of the people of the US and wouldn't allow this transfer. I believe the 50% embrace fascism because they think they will be rich someday. Fat chance.
Â
"Fascism is capitalism in decay.â --Vladimir Lenin
Â
"Fascism should rightly be called Corporatism, as it is the merger of corporate and government power.â --Benito Mussolini
Â
Are you really that far out of touch with reality or are you simply repeating something stupid someone said? How do you get from corporatism to Marx? Delusions?
@pbs7mm bwahahahaâ¦. You are really really losing it arenât you? Maybe you should just go ahead and get on it already and just ride it on down.
I can't seem to make it post a reply today, but for byebyebarry who seems to think these where not bi-partisan sequestration cuts I have a link to the vote results.
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/112-2012/h471
What confidence??? Where the hell is the data to back up this statement??? Please...we have so many polls in Ohio, they're coming out our ears - and the one thing the polls showing Obama in the lead have in common is this - their respondents are being disproportionately skewed to the left. Gosh, who woulda figured??? If you asked a room full of Democrats who's going to win the election, his lead would be HUGE! But, for the best results, you take a definitive, equivalent number of registered Democrats and Republicans, and then mix in a proportional number of TRULY INDEPENDENT voters. That's Statistics 101, boys and girls...on to the next lesson. Oh, by the way - I certainly don't expect Gov. Romney to win in Washington, but I truly expect the Obama campaign people to go to bed on November 6th mumbling "Ohio...what happened to us in Ohio...", right after the concession speech, of course.Â
@skydyvrOH It appears that pollsters are having a very difficult time finding many people who will actually admit that they are reps, GOP, TPs, or whatever the heck that they are all calling themselves these days. âThat's Statistics â102 OHâ¦â¦ âon to the next lessonâ. robmoneyâs concession speech, which he should already be writing.
It will be enjoyable to watch the neo-cons froth at the mouth and writhe on the floor when Obama is re-elected.... of course... they actually are already frothing at the mouth and writhing on the floor now. It's gonna happen folks. It's coming = )
 @TruthinAdverts lol sure, whatever keeps you warm and fuzzy at night.
 @Gaikokujin = )