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Speaking without knowing.Parasites like Romney build nothing, give nothing, and do nothing but export jobs and cannibalize companies that other people helped to build. This worship of wall street and all the lowlifes who manipulate money is sickening and obscene.
Since inception, Bain has invested in or acquired hundreds of companies including AMC Entertainment, Aspen Education Group, Brookstone, Burger King, Burlington Coat Factory, Clear Channel Communications, Domino's Pizza, DoubleClick, Dunkin' Donuts, D&M Holdings, Guitar Center, Hospital Corporation of America (HCA), Sealy, The Sports Authority, Staples, Toys "R" Us, Warner Music Group and The Weather Channel.
Can't find a single one of those that has engaged in cannibalization of assets or been sold overseas, other than AMC and that wasn't Bain that thought it was a wise idea for AMC to sell itself to a Japanese firm. The idiots here in Kansas City that own AMC thought that was a good idea.
Having said that, I came across this op-ed piece which explains why people should be upset about Obama's stupidity, but the libs and socialists on here will never get it.
The dream devalued | The Columbus Dispatch
In just a few sentences, Obama managed to devalue the core American values of hard work and entrepreneurship, not to mention the incredible sacrifices of time and money by thousands of Americans who each year launch new businesses, bearing all the risks and losses themselves.
No one who has been paying attention to Obama and his positions should be surprised at these latest statements. After running on hope and change in 2008, he has governed as a partisan class warrior. It’s a cynical divide-and-conquer strategy from a president who knows he can’t run for re-election on his abysmal record of mounting debt and unending unemployment.
Clearly, government has a role in helping to support the private sector: Using our tax money, government oversees the building of infrastructure, enforces the rule of law and, ideally, stays out of the way after laying the basic groundwork so that the private sector may flourish unimpeded by onerous regulations.
Obama simply doesn’t understand that government is not the source of American prosperity; it is simply a supporting player. The driver is the individual with a dream and a passion, such as Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, who revolutionized personal computing by building the first Apple computer in a garage.
If anything, the failure of this administration’s economic policies — including massive stimulus spending, disastrous government investments, such as its loan guarantee to Solyndra, and other interventions into the private sector — proves the wrongheadedness of Obama’s big-government, Keynesian approach.
President Ronald Reagan 26 years ago called the American Dream “the heart and soul of America; it’s the promise that keeps our nation forever good and generous, a model and hope to the world."
It’s unfortunate to see a president today discount that ideal, which necessarily involves risk and reward for individual effort.
No one who has been paying attention to Obama and his positions should be surprised at these latest statements. After running on hope and change in 2008, he has governed as a partisan class warrior. It’s a cynical divide-and-conquer strategy from a president who knows he can’t run for re-election on his abysmal record of mounting debt and unending unemployment.
Clearly, government has a role in helping to support the private sector: Using our tax money, government oversees the building of infrastructure, enforces the rule of law and, ideally, stays out of the way after laying the basic groundwork so that the private sector may flourish unimpeded by onerous regulations.
Obama simply doesn’t understand that government is not the source of American prosperity; it is simply a supporting player. The driver is the individual with a dream and a passion, such as Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, who revolutionized personal computing by building the first Apple computer in a garage.
If anything, the failure of this administration’s economic policies — including massive stimulus spending, disastrous government investments, such as its loan guarantee to Solyndra, and other interventions into the private sector — proves the wrongheadedness of Obama’s big-government, Keynesian approach.
President Ronald Reagan 26 years ago called the American Dream “the heart and soul of America; it’s the promise that keeps our nation forever good and generous, a model and hope to the world."
It’s unfortunate to see a president today discount that ideal, which necessarily involves risk and reward for individual effort.
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