Saturday, November 3, 2012

Obama Barnstorms Ohio Emphasizing ‘Trust,’ ‘Real Change’


http://2012.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/11/obama-barnstorms-ohio-emphasizing-trust-real-change.php?ref=fpa

At multiple rallies across Ohio Friday, President Obama boiled the final choice of the campaign down to one of trust and reliability.
“After four years as President, you know me,” he said in Hilliard, OH. “You may notagree with every decision I’ve made. You may be frustrated sometimes at the pace of change. But you know what I believe, you know where I stand, you know I tell the truth, and you know that I’ll fight for you and your families every single day, as hard as I know how.”
Obama assailed Romney’s honesty, pointing to his campaign’s recent ads in the state that inaccurately suggest Chrysler and GM are planning on shipping Ohio jobs to China.
“Everybody knows it’s not true,” he said. “The car companies themselves have told Governor Romney to knock it off. You don’t scare hardworking Americans just to scare up some votes. That’s not what being president is all about.”
remember "death squads" and "he's a Muslim, not born in US?  the veritable cornucopia of intentional misleading like his plan nothing has or will change if he wins Nov. 7th amid the chest thumping business as usual just not any business of "we the people's". 
remember "i will appeal Obamacare day one" and screw you 30 million and 47%?  heart attack we'll pick you up in our ambulance and take you to the ER for care. habitual liars lie from habit, will you spend four years wondering if "was that true or not"?
The president emphasized his own consistency repeatedly as a mark of character, contrasting it with what he said was a deliberate attempt by Romney to evade responsibility for his actual positions.
"One of the things that's important about electing a president is trust," he said. "Is somebody going to say what they mean and mean what they say?
In a callback to the theme of "change" that animated his 2008 campaign, Obama did his best to undermine Romney's own closing argument that he represented a clean break not only from the policies of the last four years but from the unpopular Bush administration that preceded him.
"In this campaign he's tried as hard as he can to repackage these same policies and offer them up as change," he said. "But we know what change looks like, and what the governor is offering ain't it. Giving more power back to the biggest banks — that's not change. Another $5 trillion tax cut that favors the wealthy — that's not change. "
no it's not it's just one in many temporary positions taken by 'ol windsock Willard.