Tag Archives: politics

100Feed: Romney Defends Marriage and Faith in Liberty University Speech

13 May

Mitt Romney stood behind his position against same sex marriage, telling graduates at Liberty University Saturday that marriage between “one man and one woman” is an “enduring institution” that should be defended.

Just days after President Obama endorsed the right of gays and lesbians to marry, the comment earned Romney a standing ovation from the crowd of more than 30,000 people — the largest crowd Romney has ever addressed as a political candidate – but it was his only mention of the hot button social issue.

Instead, the presumptive Republican nominee used his commencement address at that evangelical university to emphasize the importance of faith and family—and take some slight digs at President Obama’s handling of the country, though he didn’t name his 2012 opponent.

“Lately, I’ve found myself thinking about life in four-year stretches. And let’s just say that not everybody has achieved as much in these last four years as you have,” Romney said. ” But that’s a theme for another day.”

Indeed, Romney touched only fleetingly on issues that could be potentially controversial. His visit to Liberty, a Christian university founded by the late televangelist Jerry Falwell, was an overt appeal to social conservatives who have been wary about his White House bid. But his appearance had generated protests by some Liberty students, where the curriculum has described Romney’s Mormon faith as a “cult.”

Romney did not use his Saturday address to specifically defend his Mormon faith. But he did speak at length about the importance of faith in his own life—a riff that was clearly an attempt to discourage suspicion about his personal beliefs. He argued that people, no matter what they believe, could agree on faith and moral service to the country.

“People of different faiths, like yours and mine, sometimes wonder where we can meet in common purpose, when there are so many differences in creed and theology.” Romney said. “Surely the answer is that we can meet in service, in shared moral convictions about our nation stemming from a common worldview.”

He argued that faith and belief in God was more important than “trivial things”—but acknowledged that he, like others, had occasionally lost sight of that. He urged the graduates to always turn back to faith.

“What we have, what we wish we had–ambitions fulfilled, ambitions disappointed; investments won, investments lost; elections won, elections lost–these things may occupy our attention, but they do not define us. And each of them is subject to the vagaries and serendipities of life,” Romney said. “Our relationship with our Maker, however, depends on none of this…The best advice I know is to give those worldly things your best but never your all, reserving the ultimate hope for the only one who can grant it.”

While Romney aides insisted the former governor’s remarks would not be a “policy” speech, he gave a shout out to his former rival Rick Santorum, saying that he agreed that America’s greatness was defined by its “culture” and “values.” And he also argued for the protection of “religious freedom,” saying it’s become a “matter of debate.”

“It strikes me as odd that the free exercise of religious faith is sometimes treated as a problem, something America is stuck with instead of blessed with,” Romney said. “Perhaps religious conscience upsets the designs of those who feel that the highest wisdom and authority comes from government. ”

Romney paid homage to Truett Cathy, the founder of the fast food chain Chick fil-A, who was given an honorary degree just moments before Romney took the podium.

“The Romney campaign comes to a sudden stop when we spot a Chick-fil-A,” the Republican candidate said. “Your chicken sandwiches were our comfort food through the primary season, and there were days that we needed a lot of comforting. “

100Feed: Highlights of Newt Gingrich’s 2012 Campaign

3 May

Student Janitors
Calling America’s child labour laws “truly stupid”, Gingrich uses a November speech at Harvard University to propose a Dickensian alternative. At first glance, this idea sounds ridiculous, but when you stop to think about it – nope, still ridiculous.

Bitten by Penguin
Gingrich loves zoo animals, but they don’t always love him back. Or maybe the penguin bite was done lovingly? We shall never know, but it doesn’t really matter, because this story generated the headline “Newt Gingrich Bitten by a Penguin”, thus making the world a measurably better place.

James Bond Style Plan for Tracking Down Illegal Immigrants
“We send a package to every person who is here illegally. When it’s delivered, we pull it up, we know exactly where they are, it’s on the computer.”

A Moon Colony
“By the end of my second term, we will have the first permanent base on the moon. And it will be American,” Gingrich notoriously explained in a speech in Florida, adding further random thoughts about how big the population of such a colony might have to be before its residents could petition to become a US state. The whole notion of a moon colony by the end of a second Gingrich term was absurd, though, noted a correspondent to the St Louis Times-Dispatch, on the grounds that:

“Newt Gingrich would never have a second term.”

Attacking John King
If there’s one thing truly shocking about Gingrich’s private life, it’s John King having the bravado to ask about it. In any case Gingrich’s non-monogamous approach to marriage simply demonstrates that he has a lot of “leftover love to share with the American people”.

Birthday Cake Theory
As Gingrich helpfully explained in Iowa last year:

“If you went to somebody who was a great cook and you said ‘do you think you can bake a birthday cake’ and they said ‘sure I can bake a birthday cake,’ the odds are pretty high they’ll be able to bake a birthday cake. Now it helps to have a recipe for birthday cakes and it helps to have baked one. President Obama’s biggest challenge is, that he has exactly the wrong ideas. He belongs to an ideology that believes the way you get hard eggs is you freeze them.”

And, like my favorite part of the movie “There Will Be Blood”, “If you have a milkshake and I have a milkshake, and I come over and drink up your milkshake, there is nothing you can do about it.” It looks like Mitt Romney has drank Newt Gingrich’s milkshake.

100Feed Special Report: Jon Huntsman Slams GOP by Samantha R. Selman

24 Apr

Image from whitehouse12.com

Jon Huntsman leveled harsh criticism at his party on Sunday evening, BuzzFeed’s Zeke Miller reported, comparing the Republican Party to communist China and questioning the strength of this year’s presidential field.

During an event at the 92nd Street Y in New York City, Huntsman spoke candidly about his party’s flaws, lamenting the Republican National Committee’s decision to rescind an invitation to a major fundraising event after Huntsman called for a third-party candidate to enter the race.
“This is what they do in China on party matters if you talk off script,” Huntsman said.
Huntsman, a former Utah governor who dropped out of the GOP primary in January, served as U.S. ambassador to China under President Barack Obama.

He also criticized the Republican candidates’ foreign policy stances, particularly in regard to China.
“I don’t know what world these people are living in,” Huntsman said.
Although Huntsman did not mention any specific candidates, he has criticized Mitt Romney in the past for his “wrong-headed” approach. Huntsman, who endorsed Romney after dropping out of the race, said in February that the former Massachusetts governor should take a more opportunity-minded view to relations with China.

Huntsman also spoke on Sunday about his presidential candidacy, revealing that he was less than impressed by his fellow candidates when he attended his first debate in August.
“Is this the best we could do?” Huntsman said he asked himself.
He also joked that his wife forbade him to pander to the party’s far-right contingent ahead of Iowa’s caucuses, which likely hurt him with conservative voters in the Hawkeye State.
“She said if you pandered, if you sign any of those damn pledges, I’ll leave you,”Huntsman said, “So I had to say I believe in science — and people on stage look at you quizzically as though you’re … an oddball.”

Huntsman, however, did not actively campaign in Iowa, telling CBS News in December that “they pick corn,” not presidents, in that early caucus state.

Since dropping out of the race, Huntsman has remained critical of his former opponents and has remained lukewarm in his backing of Romney.
“Gone are the days when the Republican Party used to put forward big, bold, visionary stuff,” Huntsman said during the February interview with MSNBC that got him disinvited from the RNC fundraiser. “I think we’re going to have problems politically until we get some sort of third-party movement or some alternative voice out there that can put forward new ideas.”

And unlike others in his party who have endorsed Romney, Huntsman has refrained from appearing at campaign events on behalf of his party’s likely nominee. According to his daughter, Abby Livingston, he won’t be joining Romney on the trail anytime soon.
“My dad is not a surrogate for Romney and will not be out stumping for him in the general,” she told ABC News earlier this month. “He is enjoying private life.”

100Feed Special Report: The Rebirth of Occupy Wall Street

21 Apr

Occupy Wall Street

In the spirit of spring rebirth, the Occupy movement is ramping up activities as warm weather blankets the country. But while the season is typified by a reawakening of life outdoors, demonstrators are using sleep to get their points across. They call it “sleepful protest.”

The sleeping bags started appearing on the corner of Wall and Broad streets across from the New York Stock Exchange on April 9. A civil rights attorney sympathetic to the Occupy movement provided the legal justification for the move in the form of a court ruling from 2000. A federal district court judge said people can sleep on sidewalks as a form of political expression as long as they take up no more than half of the sidewalk and don’t block any doors.

OWS organizers declared a month ago that the movement would be planning a comeback in the spring and summer. Some city and state governments, armed with new ordinances aimed at the Occupy movements, are ready to prevent demonstrators from re-establishing encampments.

For the past few nights, dozens of Occupy Wall Street protesters have slept on a patch of concrete a stone’s throw away from the traders and stock brokers who are the targets of their message. “The goal here is to not violate the law and not give the police a reason to move the group,” said Ted Schulman, who has taken part in Occupy demonstrations for several months.

Every morning, they talk about income inequality and the role of big money in politics as commuters pass by on their way to jobs in the Financial District. Most people who work in the area seem indifferent.
“They just don’t understand how things work,” said Wayne Kaufman, chief market analyst at John Thomas Financial. “They have fantasy ideas. But, they’re entitled to their opinions.”
While police have occasionally forced the protesters to move so the sidewalk could be cleaned, and a few have been arrested, however they are not deterred.
“We’re not afraid anymore. I mean, we’ve been through so much. All of us have been to jail,” said a 27-year-old protestor. “We know we’re doing the right thing.”

Sleepful protests have popped up elsewhere in the country with varying degrees of success. In Washington, police have been less accommodating, while in Los Angeles, protesters have taken to sleeping outside Bank of America branches, a frequent target of the Occupy movement. Similar sidewalk sleep-ins are taking place in Boston and Atlanta.

The protesters on Wall Street are unsure if their sleep-in to grow into an encampment like the one that became home to hundreds of people at nearby Zuccotti Park, yet they are hopeful, as they should be.

“I view this as the pre-campaign. I certainly doubt that this will still be here May 1st when the big rallies start,” Schulman said. “My guess is by that point, they’ll have taken control of this space again.”
Occupy organizers are calling for large-scale demonstrations across the country on May 1 in conjunction with the labor movement’s International Workers Day.

100Feed Special Report: Jeb Bush Would Consider Vice-Presidency

21 Apr

Jeb Bush

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush says he’d consider running as vice president with Mitt Romney, but doubts he’ll ever be asked.

Bush tells the conservative website Newsmax that Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is “probably the best” choice to share the ticket with Romney, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee. Bush said he hopes the freshman senator is offered the No. 2 slot and accepts it.

Rubio has said repeatedly that he isn’t interested in leaving the Senate.

Bush said he’d consider running if Romney were to ask him. But the former governor added that he’s not sure running for vice president is the right thing for him and said he’s doubtful he’d even receive the call.