And I laughed at a previous thread.
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/pol...nemp030314.php
It is a good thing he did not throw billions at shovel ready jobs that do not exist. He really would have looked like an ass.... Oh wait that is what our good ole present President did. Originally Posted by Wyldeman30Funny how we take different lessons from this, isn't it? For me, the lesson learned is that it's not a good time for anybody to be joking about unemployment. For W, the lesson is apparently that when your guy says something regrettable, you just ignore it and keep right on attacking the opponent.
It is a good thing he did not throw billions at shovel ready jobs that do not exist. He really would have looked like an ass.... Oh wait that is what our good ole present President did. Originally Posted by Wyldeman30
It is a good thing he did not throw billions at shovel ready jobs that do not exist. He really would have looked like an ass.... Oh wait that is what our good ole present President did. Originally Posted by Wyldeman30I guess it's homework time again eh Wyldeman? This week's assignment is to research and answer the following questions:
This douchebag NEEDS to STAY unemployed!
I don’t want to sound humorless about this, and I’m sure Romney was just trying to be charming. Indeed, comments like these may very well be a deliberate self-deprecating strategy because Romney strutted around New Hampshire on Tuesday as if he’d already won the presidency, and no one likes an overconfident jerk.
But when an extremely wealthy person jokes to people who are actually struggling about being “unemployed,” it rankles. Indeed, Mitt Romney became extremely wealthy in a way that seems relevant to this discussion.
“You see, Romney made a Mittload of cash using what’s known as a leveraged buyout. He’d buy a company with ‘money borrowed against their assets, groomed them to be sold off and in the interim collect huge management fees.’ Once Mitt had control of the company, he’d cut frivolous spending like jobs, workers, employees, and jobs. […]
“Because Mitt Romney knows just how to trim the fat. He rescued businesses like Dade Behring, Stage Stories, American Pad and Paper, and GS Industries, then his company sold them for a profit of $578 million after which all of those firms declared bankruptcy. Which sounds bad, but don’t worry, almost no one worked there anymore.
“Besides, a businessman can’t be weighed down with a bleeding heart. As one former Bain employee put it, ‘It was very clinical…. Like a doctor. When the patient is dead, you just move on to the next patient.’”
Does Mitt Romney really want to joke about being “unemployed”?
Not fair! You gave him the answers! LOL!I'll bet you $787 Billion that Romney has had his mittens on some of that stimulus cash at one time or another. I'm sure we'll hear all about his ability to borrow money at little or no interest due to the very stimulus plan he's campaigning against. I would even dare bet a portion of his campaign funds are a direct result of stimulus bill transactions he's made and taken advantage of.
In case you didn't click through to the link in the OP, here's a telling excerpt:This douchebag NEEDS to STAY unemployed! Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
I don’t want to sound humorless about this, and I’m sure Romney was just trying to be charming. Indeed, comments like these may very well be a deliberate self-deprecating strategy because Romney strutted around New Hampshire on Tuesday as if he’d already won the presidency, and no one likes an overconfident jerk.
But when an extremely wealthy person jokes to people who are actually struggling about being “unemployed,” it rankles. Indeed, Mitt Romney became extremely wealthy in a way that seems relevant to this discussion.
“You see, Romney made a Mittload of cash using what’s known as a leveraged buyout. He’d buy a company with ‘money borrowed against their assets, groomed them to be sold off and in the interim collect huge management fees.’ Once Mitt had control of the company, he’d cut frivolous spending like jobs, workers, employees, and jobs. […]
“Because Mitt Romney knows just how to trim the fat. He rescued businesses like Dade Behring, Stage Stories, American Pad and Paper, and GS Industries, then his company sold them for a profit of $578 million after which all of those firms declared bankruptcy. Which sounds bad, but don’t worry, almost no one worked there anymore.
“Besides, a businessman can’t be weighed down with a bleeding heart. As one former Bain employee put it, ‘It was very clinical…. Like a doctor. When the patient is dead, you just move on to the next patient.’”
Does Mitt Romney really want to joke about being “unemployed”?