THIS is the President Obama that will defeat mitt robme romney on November 6th. Here are his remarks at a Denver, Colorado campaign stop today. For a bit more information on just how the real mitt might govern if elected check out this earlier post Mitt Romney's Role as Mormon Bishop Shows His Extremist Religious Beliefs 15SEP12
http://bucknacktssordidtawdryblog.blogspot.com/2012/09/mitt-romneys-role-as-mormon-bishop.html
This is not just about romney's religious beliefs, it is about the romney he presented to the Massachusetts voters before the election and the romney who was governor. As the President said today in Denver, that was not the real mitt romney at last night's debate. Here are his comments from today....
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Colorado! (Applause.) It is good to be back
in Denver! (Applause.) Can everybody please give Lily a big round of
applause for the great introduction. (Applause.) We’ve got so many
dignitaries I can’t name them all. But we’ve got your outstanding
senators in the house. (Applause.) Your terrific members of Congress
are here. (Applause.) Got our campaign co-chairs. Got Will.I.Am.
(Applause.) Most importantly, we’ve got all of you. (Applause.) Even
though you had to get the winter coats out a little quicker than you
expected. (Laughter.)
AUDIENCE MEMBER: We love you, Obama!
THE PRESIDENT: (Laughter.) I love you back. (Applause.)
Now, the reason I was in Denver, obviously, is to see all of you, and
it’s always pretty. (Laughter.) But we also had our first debate last
night. (Applause.) And when I got onto the stage, I met this very
spirited fellow who claimed to be Mitt Romney. (Laughter.) But it
couldn’t have been Mitt Romney -- because the real Mitt Romney has been
running around the country for the last year promising $5 trillion in
tax cuts that favor the wealthy. The fellow on stage last night said he
didn’t know anything about that. (Laughter.)
The real Mitt Romney said we don’t need any more teachers in our classrooms.
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: Don’t boo -- vote. (Laughter and applause.)
But the fellow on stage last night, he loves teachers -- can’t get
enough of them. (Laughter.) The Mitt Romney we all know invested in
companies that were called “pioneers” of outsourcing jobs to other
countries. But the guy on stage last night, he said that he doesn’t
even know that there are such laws that encourage outsourcing -- he’s
never heard of them. Never heard of them. Never heard of tax breaks
for companies that ship jobs overseas. He said that if it’s true, he
must need a new accountant. (Laughter.)
Now, we know for sure it was not the real Mitt Romney, because he
seems to be doing just fine with his current accountant. (Laughter.)
So you see, the man on stage last night, he does not want to be held
accountable for the real Mitt Romney’s decisions and what he’s been
saying for the last year. And that’s because he knows full well that we
don’t want what he’s been selling for the last year. (Applause.) So
Governor Romney may dance around his positions, but if you want to be
President, you owe the American people the truth. (Applause.)
So here’s the truth: Governor Romney cannot pay for his $5 trillion
tax plan without blowing up the deficit or sticking it to the middle
class. That’s the math. We can’t afford to go down that road again.
We can’t afford another round of budget-busting tax cuts for the
wealthy. We can’t afford to gut our investments in education or clean
energy or research and technology. We can’t afford to roll back
regulations on Wall Street, or on big oil companies or insurance
companies. We cannot afford to double down on the same top-down
economic policies that got us into this mess. That is not a plan to
create jobs. That is not a plan to grow the economy. That is not
change -- that is a relapse. (Applause.) We don’t want to go back
there. We’ve tried it, it didn't work. And we are not going back, we
are going forward. (Applause.)
Now, I’ve got a different view about how we create jobs and
prosperity. This country doesn’t succeed when we only see the rich
getting richer. We succeed when the middle class gets bigger. We grow
our economy not from the top down, but from the middle out.
We don’t believe that anybody is entitled to success in this country,
but we do believe in something called opportunity. We believe in a
country where hard work pays off and where responsibility is rewarded,
and everybody is getting a fair shot, and everybody is doing their fair
share, and everybody plays by the same rules. (Applause.) That's the
country we believe in. That’s what I’m fighting for. That’s why I’m
running for a second term for President of the United States, and that's
why I want your vote. (Applause.)
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: What I talked about last night was a new economic
patriotism -- a patriotism that's rooted in the belief that growing our
economy begins with a strong, thriving middle class.
That means we export more jobs and we outsource -- export more
products and we outsource fewer jobs. Over the last three years, we
came together to reinvent a dying auto industry that’s back on top of
the world. (Applause.) We’ve created more than half a million new
manufacturing jobs.
And so now you’ve got a choice. We can keeping giving tax breaks to
corporations that ship jobs overseas, or we can start rewarding
companies that are opening new plants and training new workers, and
creating new jobs right here in the United States of America. That's
what we’re looking for. (Applause.)
We can help big factories and small businesses double their exports,
and create a million new manufacturing jobs over the next four years.
You can make that happen.
I want to control more of our own energy. After 30 years of
inaction, we raised fuel standards so that by the middle of the next
decade, your cars and trucks will be going twice as far on a gallon of
gas. (Applause.)
We’ve doubled the amount of renewable energy we generate from sources
like wind and solar. And thousands of Americans have jobs today
building wind turbines and long-lasting batteries. (Applause.) The
United States of America today is less dependent on foreign oil than any
time in nearly two decades. (Applause.)
So now you’ve got a choice between a plan that reverses this
progress, or one that builds on it. Last night, my opponent says he
refuses to close the loophole that gives big oil companies $4 billion in
taxpayer subsidies every year. Now, we’ve got a better plan -- where
we keep investing in wind and solar and clean coal, and the good jobs
that come with them; where farmers and scientists harness new biofuels
to power our cars and our trucks; where construction workers are
retrofitting homes and factories so they waste less energy; and we can
develop a 100-year supply of natural gas that creates hundreds of
thousands of jobs -- and, by the way, we can cut our oil imports in half
by 2020. That will be good for our economy. That will be good for our
environment. That will be good for Colorado. That will be good for
America. That's what we’re fighting for. That's why I am running for a
second term as President of the United States. (Applause.)
I want to give more Americans the chance to learn the skills they
need to compete. I talked last night about how education was the
gateway of opportunity for me and Michelle, for so many of you. It’s
the gateway for a middle-class life. And today, millions of students
are paying less for college because we took on a system that was wasting
billions of taxpayer dollars on bankers and lenders. (Applause.)
And so now you’ve got a choice: We can gut education to pay for more
tax breaks for the wealthy, or we can decide that in the United States
of America, no child should have her dream deferred because of an
overcrowded classroom. (Applause.) No family should have to set aside a
college acceptance letter because they don’t have the money. No
company should have to look for workers in China because they couldn’t
find any with the right skills here in the United States.
So we’re going to recruit 100,000 new math and science teachers, and
we’re going to improve early childhood education, and we’re going to
create 2 million more slots in community colleges so that workers can
get trained for the jobs that are out there right now. (Applause.) And
we are going to continue to do everything we need to do to cut the
growth of tuition costs, because every young person in America should
have the opportunity to go to college without being loaded up with
hundreds -- with tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of debt. That's
part of what it means for us to be able to build an economy that lasts.
And finally, I’ve got a balanced plan that independent experts say
will cut the deficit by $4 trillion through a mix of spending cuts and
higher taxes on wealthiest Americans. Now, I’ve already worked with
Republicans in Congress to cut a trillion dollars in spending, and I’m
willing to do more. I want to reform the tax code so that it’s simple
and it’s fair, but also so incomes over $250,000 -- we go back to the
same rate we had when Bill Clinton was President, we created 23 million
new jobs, the biggest surplus in history, a lot of millionaires to
boot. (Applause.)
Now, last night, Governor Romney ruled out raising a dime of taxes on
anybody ever, no matter how much money they make. He ruled out closing
the loophole that gives oil companies $4 billion in corporate welfare.
He refused to even acknowledge the loophole that gives tax breaks to
corporations that ship jobs overseas. And when he was asked what he’d
actually do to cut the deficit and reduce spending, he said he’d
eliminate funding for public television.
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: That was his answer. I mean, thank goodness somebody
is finally getting tough on Big Bird. (Laughter and applause.) It’s
about time. We didn't know that Big Bird was driving the federal
deficit. (Laughter.) But that's what we heard last night. How about
that?
AUDIENCE MEMBER: And Elmo!
THE PRESIDENT: Elmo, too? (Laughter.)
Look, the fact is Governor Romney’s math just doesn’t add up. And I
had to spend a lot of time last night trying to pin it down. The only
one way to pay for $5 trillion in new tax cuts and $2 trillion in new
defense spending that the military says it doesn’t need is by asking the
middle class to pay more. And I refuse to do that. (Applause.)
I refuse to ask middle-class families to give up their deductions for
owning a home or raising their kids just to pay for another
millionaire’s tax cut. I refuse to ask students to pay more for
college, or kick children out of Head Start programs, or eliminate
health insurance for millions of Americans who are poor, or elderly, or
disabled -- just to pay for more tax cuts that we cannot afford.
And I will never turn Medicare into a voucher. (Applause.) Governor
Romney doubled down on that proposal last night and he is wrong. No
American should have to spend their golden years at the mercy of
insurance companies. They should retire with the care and the dignity
that they have earned. (Applause.)
So, yes, we'll reform and strengthen Medicare for the long haul, but
we’ll do it by reducing the cost of health care -- not by asking seniors
to pay thousands of dollars more. And we will keep the promise of
Social Security by taking the responsible steps to strengthen it -- not
by turning it over to Wall Street.
Now, going forward we're going to have a chance to talk a little bit
about what's going on overseas, because our prosperity at home is linked
to what happens abroad. Four years ago, I promised to end the war in
Iraq, and I did. (Applause.) I said we’d wind down the war in
Afghanistan in a responsible way, and we are. (Applause.) While a new
tower is rising above the New York skyline, al Qaeda is on the path to
defeat and Osama bin Laden is dead. (Applause.)
But we still face serious threats around the world. We saw that just
a few weeks ago. And that’s why, so long as I’m Commander-in-Chief, we
will sustain the strongest military the world has ever known. And when
our troops take off their uniforms, we will serve them as well as
they’ve served us -- (applause) -- because nobody should have to fight
for a job when they come home, or a roof over their heads when they have
fought for their country. They have earned our respect and our honor.
(Applause.) That's a commitment I make.
Now, it will be interesting to see what the guy who was playing Mitt
Romney yesterday -- (laughter) -- will say about foreign policy when we
meet next, because he said it was "tragic" to end the war in Iraq. He
won’t tell us how he’ll end the war in Afghanistan. And I’ll use the
money we’re no longer spending on war to pay down our debt and to put
more people back to work rebuilding our roads and our bridges, and our
schools and our runways and broadband lines -- because after a decade of
war, it's time to do some nation-building here at home and put some
folks to work here at home. (Applause.)
So this is the choice we now face. This is what the election comes
down to. Over and over, we've been told by our opponents that since
government can’t do everything, it should do almost nothing. If you
can’t afford health insurance, hope you don’t get sick. If a company is
releasing toxic pollution into the air that your children breathe,
well, that’s the price of progress -- can't afford to regulate. If you
can’t afford to start a business or go to college, just borrow money
from your parents. (Laughter.)
As I described last night, that’s not who we are. That’s not what
this country is about. Here in America, we believe we’re all in this
together. (Applause.) We understand America is not about what can be
done for us -- it’s about what can be done by us, together, as one
nation, and as one people. (Applause.)
You understand that. You understand that, Denver. You are the
reason that there's a teacher in Pueblo who, with her husband, can buy
her first phone with -- first home with the help of new tax credits that
we helped pass. We couldn't have done it without you. You made that
happen. (Applause.)
You’re the reason that a woman outside Durango can get the treatment
she needs to beat cancer, now that there are affordable plans to cover
preexisting conditions. You did that. You made that happen.
(Applause.)
You’re the reason that thousands of students at CU Boulder, and
Colorado State, and University of Denver have more help paying for
college this year. That happened because of you. (Applause.)
You’re the reason a young immigrant who grew up here and went to
school here, and pledged allegiance to our flag will no longer be
deported from the only country she’s ever called home. (Applause.)
You're the reason why an outstanding soldier won’t be kicked out of
the military because of who he loves. (Applause.) You're the reason
why thousands of families have been able to say to the loved ones who
served us so bravely: “Welcome home." Welcome home. Welcome home.
(Applause.)
If you turn away now -- if you buy into the cynicism that somehow the
change we fought for isn’t possible, then of course, change won’t
happen. If you give up on the idea that your voice can make a
difference, then other folks fill the void -- lobbyists and special
interests, and the people who are writing the $10 million checks. And
all the spin will end up dominating the airwaves, and that’s how things
go, and ordinary folks get left out. All the folks who are trying to
make it harder for you to vote; the folks in Washington who think
somehow that they should control the health care choices that women
should be making for themselves.
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: Only you can make change happen. Only you have the power to move us forward. (Applause.)
From the day we began this campaign, I always said real change takes
time. It takes more than one term. It takes more even than one
President or one party. You certainly can’t do it if you’ve got a
President who writes off half the nation before he even takes office.
(Applause.)
In 2008, 47 percent of the country didn’t vote for me. But on the
night of the election, I said to all those Americans, I may not have won
your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your
President, too. (Applause.)
And so I want to say to Denver, I want to say to the entire great
state of Colorado: I don’t know how many of you will be with me this
time around -- (applause) -- but I’ll be with you no matter what.
Because I’m not fighting to create Democratic jobs or Republican jobs --
I’m fighting to create American jobs. (Applause.) I’m not fighting to
improve schools in the red states or blue states -- I’m fighting to
improve schools in the United States. (Applause.)
The values we care about don’t just belong to workers or businesses,
or the rich or the poor, or the 1 percent or the 99 percent -- they are
American values; they belong to all of us. And if we reclaim them now,
if we rally around a new sense of economic patriotism, a sense of how we
build an economy from the middle out and give ladders of opportunity
for everybody who is willing to work hard -- we will strengthen the
middle class, we’ll keep moving forward.
I still believe that our politics is not as divided as it seems
sometimes. I still believe in you. I’m asking you to keep on believing
in me. (Applause.) I’m asking for your vote. And if you’re willing
to stand with me and work with me, we’re going to win Denver again.
(Applause.) We’ll win Colorado again. We’ll finish what we started.
We will remind the world just why it is the United States of America is
the greatest nation on Earth.
Thank you, everybody. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/10/04/remarks-president-campaign-event-denver-co
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