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Romney Paints Bleak Picture Of Obama Second Term

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Going negative in Reno.

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney speaks at a campaign rally in Reno, Nevada October 24, 2012.

Image by Brian Snyder / Reuters

RENO, Nev. — Republican nominee Mitt Romney painted a harsh picture of life under President Barack Obama on Wednesday at a rally in Reno.

Before a crowd of 2,500, Romney laid out Obama's failings for different age brackets: for seniors, Obamacare; for middle-aged Americans, declining incomes; and for students, the national debt. The speech marked a shift in Romney's rhetoric toward the final 13 days of campaigning — reaffirming that Americans are still not over the recession and heightening the distinction between himself and the president.

As Romney laid it out, if Obama is reelected, older Americans on Medicare won't get treatment by the best specialists because Obama cuts the program to pay for Obamacare, Romney said. Those without jobs will stay that way, and those with jobs that don't provide enough economic security will be stuck with them. College graduates won't be able to get mortgages because of all the debt.

Telling the story of a man whose income dropped nearly two-thirds under Obama, Romney took a swing at Obama's campaign motto as the president embarks on a 48-hour non-stop "America Forward!" campaign tour of swing states.

"For that man I spoke with, he has to be puzzled by the president’s campaign slogan, because it doesn’t feel like forward to him," Romney told a crowd of 2,500 in a Reno convention hall. "It doesn’t feel like forward to 23 million Americans struggling to get a good job, it doesn’t feel like forward to the millions of people who don’t have as good a job as they had a few years ago. It doesn’t feel like forward, it feels like backward. We’re going to take back the white house and go get this country on the right track.'

The college student, burdened by her own debt, as well as the nation's, would be disqualified from a mortgage.

"The American dream she had been told about by you, her parents, that American dream is going to be out of reach," Romney said. "How could she get a mortgage when she’s paying back student debt, and paying back $50,000 in debt of the government."


5 Signs Politics Will Be Totally Insane For The Next Two Weeks

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The final weeks of the campaign have begun and the seventh seal has broken. Also, America's chickens are coming home to roost.

Donald Trump dropped a bombshell that wasn't.

Gloria Allred is back.

Gloria Allred is back.

Image by Gus Ruelas / Reuters

Celebrity lawyer Allred, who represented Herman Cain harassment victim Sharon Bialek, is back this week with the case of Maureen Stemberg, ex-wife of Staples founder Thomas Stemberg. The pair are trying to unseal court documents from the divorce proceedings that allegedly show that Mitt Romney knowingly underestimated the value of Staples in order to help protect Mr. Stemberg's assets during the divorce.

So is Ginger White.

So is Ginger White.

Source: a.abcnews.go.com


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Romney Campaign Slams Obama For Secret Immigration Comments

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“President Obama has taken the Hispanic community for granted for the past four years,” says Martinez.

Image by Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

ABOARD ROMNEY CAMPAIGN PLANE — Mitt Romney's presidential campaign accused President Barack Obama of taking the Hispanic community for granted after the president told the Des Moines Register that he thought Hispanic voters would carry him to victory.

The interview, originally off the record, was released by the campaign Wednesday amid criticism of the administration's commitment to transparency. Romney adviser Alberto Martinez took Obama to task for only commenting on immigration because it was off the record, noting he's only mentioned the term once since mid-September.

"It's a fascinating glimpse into how President Obama has taken the Hispanic community for granted for the past four years," Martinez said.

"The second thing I’m confident we’ll get done next year is immigration reform," Obama told the Iowa paper's publisher and editor in a promise he has not made publicly.

"And since this is off the record, I will just be very blunt," Obama continued. "Should I win a second term, a big reason I will win a second term is because the Republican nominee and the Republican Party have so alienated the fastest-growing demographic group in the country, the Latino community."

"He's caught making secret promises to an editorial board in Iowa, which also happens to be a promise he made in 2008, a promise he failed to keep, and a promise he doesn’t repeat publicly," Martinez added. "The whole episode underscores why millions of Hispanics are deeply disappointed with President Obama. Hispanics view President Obama as a weak leader who makes promises he can't keep and has pursued policies that have failed all Americans."

How Each Presidential Candidate Can Win, In Two Charts

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The Republican polling firm Public Opinion Strategies lays out the paths to victory. Romney has to run the table.

Obama Blasts Rape Comments From Senate Candidates On "The Tonight Show"

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“I don't know how these guys come up with these ideas…rape is rape. It is a crime.”

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President Barack Obama blasted Indiana Senate candidate Richard Mourdock late Wednesday while taping The Tonight Show over his comments about rape and abortion.

"I don't know how these guys come up with these ideas...rape is rape. It is a crime," Obama said. "These various distinctions about rape don't make too much sense to me, don't make any sense to me." According to the pool report he added that the remarks illustrate why it should not be left to only men to make decisions on women's issues.

Obama also ribbed Donald Trump over his $5 million bet to get Obama to release his college records, saying the beef traces back to when the two of them grew up together in Kenya.

"We had constant run-ins on the soccer field," Obama responded, noting he's never met Trump in real life. "He wasn't very good and resented it. When we finally moved to America I thought it would be over."

Mourdock said Tuesday night that he opposes abortion in cases of rape and incest.

“I struggled with it myself for a long time, and I realized that life is a gift from God, and I think even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something God intended to happen,” he said.

U.S. President Barack Obama makes an appearance on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno (R) in Los Angeles, California October 24, 2012. Obama is on a two-day, eight-state campaign swing.

Image by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

Military Group Picks Trans Woman As Leader

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A watershed moment in the LGBT rights movement. “The fight is not over,” says OutServe-SLDN's new chief, Allyson Robinson.

Image by John Gara/Buzzfeed

WASHINGTON — The new head of the country’s leading LGBT military organization is Allyson Robinson, a former commissioned officer in the Army who most recently worked at the Human Rights Campaign on workplace issues.

Robinson also is transgender — and her selection represents a huge breakthrough for a community that has received a level of respect in recent years but still faces overwhelming discrimination and high rates of violence, according to recent surveys by LGBT organizations. Following the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," however, she now faces the unusual challenge of persuading activist and donors that, in spite of that victory, the cause still needs their help.

"We disentangled America from this legalized discrimination against gay and lesbian servicemembers," Robinson said, acknowledging that the key aim of Servicemembers Legal Defense Network since its founding in 1993 was reached with the September 2011 repeal of the law.

The case she will make is the one that SLDN and OutServe, formed in 2010, have been making since the repeal: Troubling issues remain when it comes to LGBT military service. In addition to benefits issues for same-sex couples, open service for transgender people, whose own sense of their gender does not match the sex with which they were born, was not addressed in the repeal of the 1993 ban on open service and remains a reason to be discharged from the military today.

"We have not achieved full equality for LGBT servicemembers, and I think that’s something that Americans care about. I think they care about the way that our troops and their families are treated," she said.

Robinson will take the helm of both SLDN and OutServe, as the groups complete their merger as OutServe-SLDN this weekend at the combined group’s first board meeting in Florida.

A 1994 West Point graduate who was a commissioned Army officer and served overseas before resigning her commission to become a pastor-teacher to churches in the Portuguese Azores and central Texas, Robinson will be the first executive director of the combined organization. Robinson, who lives in Maryland with her wife and four children, most recently was the deputy director for employee programs with the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s Workplace Project, where she worked to establish the LGBT organization’s corporate training curriculum to promote LGBT equality in the workplace.

Robinson also appears to be the first out transgender leader of a national organization representing the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. Other prominent national organization leaders who are transgender, such as Mara Keisling of the National Center for Transgender Equality and Masen Davis at the Transgender Law Center, work for organizations whose primary focus is transgender equality.

Transgender people have made significant advancements in recent years, most notably when the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ruled six months ago that the Civil Rights Act’s prohibition of sex discrimination in employment includes discrimination against transgender people. Nonetheless, transgender issues often get less attention in public LGBT discussions, which have focused on marriage for same-sex couples and, as Robinson mentioned, ending the ban on gay, lesbian and bisexual service known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

But, now, Robinson will be leading OutServe-SLDN as it works to advance several goals to benefit lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. SLDN's executive director since 2007, Aubrey Sarvis, announced in January his intention to step down.

“This fight is not over,” Robinson told BuzzFeed in an extensive interview after 5 p.m. Oct. 22 at the offices of SLDN. Robinson and SLDN communications director Zeke Stokes talked with BuzzFeed for an hour, with Robinson already at ease discussing the groups' aims. “We’re in the middle of a fight, just as certainly as we were before ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ was ever repealed. There have been some, many perhaps, who have been under this notion, ‘What’s left to do?’ There is so much left to do.”

The five priorities that Robinson discussed for the organization are: same-sex partner benefits for servicemembers and veterans, both those that could be offered by the Pentagon now and those that would first require the repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act; out transgender service; inclusion of sexual orientation and, eventually, gender identity, in the military’s nondiscrimination policy; veterans’ equal treatment, including removing less-than-honorable discharge notations for those discharged under DADT; and growth of the organization as an association of LGBT servicemembers, which was OutServe’s primary purpose before the groups merged.

Noting her father’s service, her service academy days and her own service, Robinson added, “This is a fight that for me, is a very personal one. It’s an opportunity for me to give back to a family that gave me so much.”

Members of the military marching in the Gay Pride Parade in San Diego in July 16, 2011, after "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" repeal passed Congress but two months before the law actually was taken off the books in September 2011.

Image by Gregory Bull, File / AP

Robinson's appointment won immediate praise from other advocates. Sue Fulton, another West Point graduate and a leader in both OutServe and Knights Out, a group of West Point graduates who fought DADT, called Robinson “the perfect choice” for the job.

"I’ve been fortunate to know and work with Allyson for the last several years, as a fellow West Point grad working for LGBT military rights, and she is one of my personal heroes," Fulton, who will serve on the board of OutServe-SLDN, told BuzzFeed. "She is an inspiring and compassionate leader with military experience, movement credibility, and political savvy."

She also cited Robinson’s status as a transgender leader in the community.

"It's an important moment for the LGBT movement because it reinforces our value that qualifications and character are what matter: a core value we share with the United States Armed Forces."

Robinson, too, pressed that point when asked about her selection.

"I think it says a lot about these two organizations that are coming together now. I think it says that OutServe-SLDN is an organization that puts its money where its mouth is. That it believes in and that it practices full equality for the community," she said. "Honestly though, to me, I think it’s more than even that. I think it’s an acknowledgement that there’s a fight that still needs to be fought, and that what I bring to this organization, as a veteran and as a veteran of this movement, is something that the organization needs to help lead it forward.”

Just how hard to press transgender equality has divided the LGBT community in the past. Just five years ago, the community faced one of its most difficult internal struggles when congressional leaders, with the eventual support of the Human Rights Campaign, allowed a vote on a version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, the bill to ban private employers from discriminating, that only included sexual orientation — leaving out transgender protections based on gender identity. Although those who pushed the vote gave reasons, including that the vote was really a head-counting measure because then-President George W. Bush would have vetoed either version of the bill, the fallout from the vote created significant soul-searching within the leadership of the LGBT community on its approach to such issues moving forward.

Now, HRC’s new president, Chad Griffin, praised the selection of his former employee for the to job at OutServe-SLDN, telling BuzzFeed, "The LGBT rights movement is made stronger by the inspired appointment of Allyson Robinson as head of a critically important organization."

Robinson acknowledged the changed landscape.

"I think that what has changed is awareness and understanding. Awareness gives transgender people a seat at the table; understanding gives us a voice in the conversation. We need a whole lot more of both, but this movement is very different today from what it was five years ago. I’m proud of that," she said.

Of her selection, she said, "I’m proud of what that says about OutServe-SLDN, I’m proud of what it says about us as a movement. I’m grateful for the accomplishments, not just of trans people and allies of the past five years who have helped get us here, but for people for the 35 or 40 years before that who got us just to that point."

She added, "It’s amazing to be a part of a movement that is growing to embody its most deeply held values."


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Union Super PAC Brands Romney An "Economic Traitor"

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TV and web ad buy to slam Romney on Bain record. Hits Bain and Romney for asking firm to remove American flag while Chinese visitors toured a plant in Illinois.

Source: youtube.com

Workers' Voice, the AFL-CIO-affiliated super PAC is out with a harsh new ad campaign Thursday morning branding Mitt Romney an "economic traitor."

"Bain Capital is outsourcing jobs at Sensata Tech in Northern Illinois to China," the website economictraitor.com states. "When executives from the new plant in China came in to visit the factory, Bain Capital made Sensata staff take down the American flag until they left."

A television ad featuring the incident will air in the industrial swing state markets: Youngstown, OH; Pittsburgh PA (to hit western OH part of market); and Green Bay, WI, according to the group.

“Mitt Romney is an economic traitor who desecrated the flag while decimating jobs,” said Workers’ Voice Communications Director Eddie Vale. “It’s bad enough that Romney & Bain destroy American jobs and send them to China. But to make American workers take down our flag while training their Chinese replacements is something only an economic traitor would do.”

The web ad:

The web ad:

Colin Powell Endorses Obama

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“I voted for him in 2008, and I plan to stick with him in 2012,” the popular former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said this morning.

Source: youtube.com


Obama Goes To Krispy Kreme

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Three dozen donuts. Crucial nutrition after an overnight flight from Vegas to Tampa.

President Barack Obama delivers boxes of Krispy Kreme doughnuts to firefighters in Tampa, Florida, during an unannounced visit on Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012.

Image by Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

From the White House pool report, covered today by Agence France-Presse's Stephen Collinson:

The President landed in Tampa at 6.43 am and headed in the motorcade to a Krispy Kreme donut store about 10 minutes from the airport.

He walked into the store with the words "Good morning everybody, good to see you guys."

There were about eight patrons scattered around the store, and the president went to see them shaking hands, asking their names and offering lots of "good to see yous."

He then walked towards the counter and encountered another customer, who told the president he was a teacher. "I have been talking all about teachers, I hope you know that," Obama said.

Then he turned the teacher towards the pool and started talking

"Trent is a math teacher, he is buying donuts for his kids. That whole math and donut connection is the key to school reform because I know his kids are doing great."

Then the president started to talk to the crew of the Krispy Kreme shop, he met one woman called Michelle and said: "love Michelles."

He told he guy behind the counter that he had pre-ordered and fishing some cash out of his pocket, said "how much do I owe you guys,"

Aides said that the president had ordered three dozen assorted donuts and he ordered another box, saying that though reporters typically declined his offer of food, it was fine for the photographers to take some.

He then looked around the room and spoke to a man and two small kids who he saw when he entered the shop, and said "let the President buy you a jam donut."

The young boy told the president they would like two powdered cakes.

The pool was rushed out of the donut shop soon afterwards. The president then took a two minute drive to Fire Station 14 and dropped off the donuts at the station.

He said the firemen do "unbelievable work" "Thank you for everything you guys do every day"

The president then spoke to the firefighters, shook hands, much out of earshot of the pool. One firefighter mentioned that he was retiring. Another had a basketball in his hands and it sounded like he offered to shoot hoops with the president, who answered "after we're done."

Then the president said, "I don't want to embarrass you in front of the cameras."

Photos from the president's donut run and delivery:

Photos from the president's donut run and delivery:

Image by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

Image by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters


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New York Post's Romney Endorsement Cover: The Empty Chair Is Back

Obama: Romney's "A Bullshitter"

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Harsh words in Rolling Stone.

Image by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

It's no secret that there is no love lost between President Barack Obama and his Republican rival, and in an interview with Rolling Stone, the president made that even clearer.

Douglas Brinkley recounts an episode at the close of his interview with Obama, in which the president called Romney a "bullshitter"

As excerpted by Mike Allen:

"We arrived at the Oval Office for our 45-minute interview ... on the morning of October 11th. ... As we left the Oval Office, executive editor Eric Bates told Obama that he had asked his six-year-old if there was anything she wanted him to say to the president. ... [S]he said, 'Tell him: You can do it.' Obama grinned. ... 'You know, kids have good instincts,' Obama offered. 'They look at the other guy and say, "Well, that's a bullshitter, I can tell."'"

UPDATE: Romney campaign spokesman Kevin Madden responded to Obama's remarks: "President Obama is rattled and on the defensive. He's running on empty and has nothing left but attacks and insults. It's unfortunate he has to close the final days of the campaign this way."

Obama Tries To Get Back To Hope

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During the closing stretch of 2012, Obama promises a “brighter future,” 2008 style. “A big agenda,” promises a senior campaign official.

Image by Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

TAMPA, FL—One of the most persistent criticisms dogging President Barack Obama this election season was famously summed up in a question earlier this year from CBS’s Bob Schieffer: “Whatever happened to hope and change?”

The question, later used in a Romney attack ad, hit on the widespread belief that the Obama campaign was overly negative and lacking the kind of grand vision that had inspired an entire generation of new voters to go the polls four years ago.

But with only 12 days left until election day, Obama is on a sleepless, 48 hour, six state trip, laying out a vision for a second term that builds on optimism the campaign hit in 2008.

"The good news is, Americans, we’re always tougher, we always bounce back,” Obama told the approximately 8500 person crowd during an early morning speech in Tampa Thursday.

“We always come out on top because we pull together… We look forward to a future that is brighter. We look at the distant horizon and we say, 'that’s where we’re headed,'” he added.

Obama’s retooled stump speech echoes his closing arguments during Monday night’s debate, when the president clearly pivoted from the often grim and negative tone that had at times marked much of his rhetoric this year.

“You know, we’ve been through tough times, but we always bounce back because of our character, because we pull together,” he said on Monday in Boca Raton.

“And if I have the privilege of being your president for another four years, I promise you I will always listen to your voices, I will fight for your families and I will work every single day to make sure that America continues to be the greatest nation on earth.”

Aides acknowledged that Obama has begun to move back towards his more optimistic style that helped launch him to victory in 2008.

“I’m a little puzzled by the notion that the president’s not been laying out an agenda,” a senior campaign official told BuzzFeed. “Because it’s a big agenda, with very concrete ideas on how to get there.”

“In our speech we’re giving out here, we’re talking about ending wars, building an economy, reducing the deficit, dominating a green energy future,” senior White House advisor David Plouffe told reporters yesterday. “These are big things, basically as big as anything can be.”

Plouffe strongly rejected the idea that the campaign was being too negative by focusing on “Romnesia”—the popular stump line rolled out last week.

“On Romnesia this is about as big a thing you can have in a presidential election, it’s about trust,” Plouffe said. “You have never seen a major party nominee this close to an election trying to fudge what he’s going to do as president…This about the presidency of the United States of America. Talk about something big, this is as big as anything gets.”

Plouffe, who paid a rare visit to the campaign’s press charter bus yesterday, implored reporters who believed this year was more negative than 2008 to revisit what the president’s closing argument was last time around.

“Listen in 2008, go back and pull our speeches for the last week in 2008,” Plouffe said. “We contrasted ourselves with John McCain and the Bush years…Go back and read them, they weren’t just gauzy, they were hard hitting about the choices and differences.”

Mourdock's Rape Comments Dominate Indiana Press

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Two days after his comments about rape, the conservative Senate candidate stays above the fold on Indiana's major newspapers. “In a Firestorm.”


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Romney Avoids Benghazi, While Obama Pounds Him On Mourdock

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A tale of two side-issues.

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney takes the stage at a campaign rally in Reno, Nevada October 24, 2012.

Image by Brian Snyder / Reuters

CINCINNATI, Ohio — Aides to Mitt Romney are demanding that Benghazi take on a greater focus in the final 12 days of the campaign, even as their candidate remains silent on the fallout from the attacks.

On Wednesday, leaked emails sent during the September 11th attack again sparked criticism of the Obama administration for blaming the attack on a video, when early social media clues pointed to a terror attack. But publicly, Romney didn't talk about them — or Libya at all — in campaign events in Reno, Nev. and Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Indeed, in an unusual display of message discipline by the Romney campaign, he is focused solely on driving a message of economic contrast and avoiding discussion of the attack. The candidate himself is beginning to turn to his core closing argument — beginning with a speech in Ames, Iowa tomorrow — that is nearly entirely focused on the economy.

But behind the scenes, aides are bristling at the media, which has been pressing Romney on his endorsement of Senate candidate Richard Mourdock, who opposes abortion in the case of rape.

"Why are we talking something some Senate candidate said, when the President of the United States LIED to the American people and said it was about a video?" one Romney aide emailed to BuzzFeed late Wednesday.

"Why aren't you all writing about Benghazi?" asked another.

The difference between the coverage of the two issues — the new emails don't show that Obama "lied" but do add to the case that the Administration should have seen a terror link earlier — has very much to do with the campaigns' own choices. While Romney has personally stayed away from the Libya issues, Obama's has used his own words and tweets to focus on Mourdock.

Romney's aides say the decision to avoid Benghazi is two-fold — swing voters don't care about foreign policy; and they got burned on Libya last time.

Romney's bungled town hall debate performance and response in the immediate aftermath of the consulate attack have left him wary of reengaging on the subject. In the final debate, faced with the inevitable question on Libya, Romney broadened the subject to include the larger issues created by the Arab Spring, choosing to level modest criticism at Obama and none at all on the timeline of the response to the attack.

"We're going to keep talking about the issues that matter to voters — the economy, and job creation," said the first aide, when pressed on why, if Libya is so bad for Obama, is Romney not engaging him on it.

On Mourdock, meanwhile, Romney finds himself caught between undoing some of his gains among women and alienating a base intent on retaking the Senate. Aides believe the best way out is to hunker down on their economic message and wait for the news cycle to pass.

But the disparity — Romney on defense over comments by a near stranger in Indiana, while Obama has avoided some of the heat from the latest Benghazi leaks — mark a pair of bets about the shape of the presidential campaign, and the value of a big picture focus versus an opportunistic attack.

Gingrich SuperPAC Is Back With Apocalyptic Video Of Obama Second Term

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“World Chaos” with “Religion on the run” are consequences of another Obama term, the video from Winning Our Future states.

Source: youtube.com


Linda McMahon Ad Features Dozens Of Chris Murphy Clones

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So many Chris Murphys. The conservative Connecticut Senate candidate's new ad spot, “Marching,” is strange and amazing.

Via: youtu.be

Mitt Romney's Blunt Talk On Venture Capital

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Most don't succeed, he said under oath in testimony released today, portions of which were obtained by BuzzFeed. Most, he says, are “liquidated” or “harvested.”

Romney was examined by Joseph Walsh, the lawyer for Maureen Sullivan-Stemberg, in a suit against her ex-husband, Thomas G. Stemberg. The judge rules for Thomas Stemberg, the founder of Staples. The testimony was given in Norfolk, Mass. Probate Court on October 7, 1991.

Romney also suggested in another section of his testimony that he believed in the late 1980s that Staples had only a 25% chance of survival — a somewhat surprising comment given how central his investment in Staples has been to the narrative of his career as a master investor, and even to the video that introduced him at the Republican National Convention this year.


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Obama Says Ayn Rand Is For Teens

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The president tells Rolling Stone that Paul Ryan should have left Ayn Rand in high school.

In a new interview with historian Doulgas Brinkley and Rolling Stone executive editor Eric Bates — where Obama appears to suggest Romney is a "bullshitter" — the president also weighs in on Ayn Rand. His take? Something teenagers read when they are "feeling misunderstood" but should grow out of in adult hood.

Q: Have you ever read Ayn Rand?
Obama: Sure.

Q: What do you think Paul Ryan's obsession with her work would mean if he were vice president?

Obama: Well, you'd have to ask Paul Ryan what that means to him. Ayn Rand is one of those things that a lot of us, when we were 17 or 18 and feeling misunderstood, we'd pick up. Then, as we get older, we realize that a world in which we're only thinking about ourselves and not thinking about anybody else, in which we're considering the entire project of developing ourselves as more important than our relationships to other people and making sure that everybody else has opportunity – that that's a pretty narrow vision. It's not one that, I think, describes what's best in America. Unfortunately, it does seem as if sometimes that vision of a "you're on your own" society has consumed a big chunk of the Republican Party

The interview is available on newstands today.

Alex Jones Follower Viciously Trolls Polling Firm For Not Polling For Infowars

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Unskewed? Public Policy Polling a “biased, New World Order-friendly polling organization.”

A disgruntled follower of conspiracy theorist radio host Alex Jones left an memorable voicemail with Democratic-leaning polling firm Public Policy Polling today.

Sounding almost exactly like the comic book store clerk from The Simpsons, the anonymous Infowars fan accuses PPP of being a "a biased New World Order-friendly polling organization" and alleges: "The whole country is talking about how you wont do a survey about the TSA because you’re unhappy about Infowars.com!"

"Information for you: more people read Infowars than most mainstream media sites at this point."

Adopting a sarcastic tone, the man asks why PPP hasn't done a survey about the TSA ("because your globalist puppet-masters wouldn't like the results?").

The man ends on a defiant note. "Fuck you, fuck Obama, fuck Mitt Romney, fuck the NWO."

PPP tweeted out the voicemail, adding that Infowars had asked it to conduct polls before:

Romney Ran Half-Hour Spots During Finals Days Of 1994 Campaign

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The candidate ran a half-hour ad in 1994, and is looking to do the same this election.

Fox News reported, then retracted, on Tuesday that the Romney campaign was planning on running a 30-minute informercial in battleground states, to speak directly to voters in the days leading up to the election. The speculated spots could be similar to a half-hour infomercial Romney ran in the dwindling days of 1994 campaign -- that he spent $100,000 of his own money to run -- featuring a town hall meeting with voters.

"I want to make sure in the last days of the campaign we are talking about issues and not 30-second sound bites," Romney said on the ad in 1994.

Romney was trailing then-Senator Ted Kennedy by 57%-37% margin at the time of the ad.

"I believe I will win this race by concentrating voters' attention on issues, because the voters line up with me on issues they really care about," Romney added on why he was running the ad.

The ad ran on three local Boston stations according to the Boston Globe.

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