Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Who Will Win?

This post is a little less timely than I would have liked, but I took a rest to visit with some friends during last night's debate and had to put my DVR to good use.  Fortunately, my wife has left some space on the DVR for just this purpose.  I also want to thank all the people who read my random rants that reminded me I was shirking my responsibilities to keep the verbal tirade coming.  Thank you for your thoughts and your comments.  Whether you agree with me or not, I appreciate your interest.
Clash Of The Titans

I read a few articles in the local paper and saw some of the post debate coverage in social media and on television, so I'm not going to rehash those things.  I'm not even going to select and expound upon which candidate I think came out the winner from last night's debate.  Instead, I would challenge you to think about the questions that were asked by the audience and decide which of them was of particular interest to you.

Of course there were some good topical areas covered including: the economy, tax policy, the national deficit, healthcare, equal pay for equal work, immigration policy, national security, assault weapons bans, education, and foreign trade.  I'm pretty passionate about all these things and I feel like many of these issues are close to me personally and professionally.  My wife is a law student who is interested in immigration and labor law.  I'm a government employee that serves an agency mission which focuses on worker training, workplace safety, and the security of the employed and the unemployed.

Despite all the public policy issues that were addressed last night and my or your position on those issues, the question I found most revealing about who will win this election was the last one asked.  The last audience member to address the candidates asked, and I'm paraphrasing, what the candidates' thought the biggest misconception that the public has of each of them.

Governor Romney answered first and responded that he cares about 100% of the American people, his passion comes from his belief in the same God we all believe in, and he wants to use his experience in the private sector to bring America back to prosperity.  President Obama responded that he doesn't believe that big government can solve all the problems that exist, he believes in the free enterprise model tempered by an equity standard and that Americans have a serious choice in this election to between two different perspectives on social issues.  The biggest difference in these answers is the level of integrity that each candidate has.

President Obama has a record of four years in the White House that Governor Romney has attempted to utilize to discredit the President and present himself as a better option for the Executive Office.  The reality is, Mr. Romney has a record too which he seems very adverse to being held accountable to.  We have policy statements made by Governor Romney throughout the Republican primary and campaign speeches made by the Romney-Ryan camp in the last several months.  This extant record presents a picture of a man who struggles with his own integrity when has been pressed to defend these positions.  Much of his debate rhetoric contradicts where he stood a few weeks ago.

The integrity issue is brought center stage by the comments of the candidate who when behind closed doors espouses a position of divisiveness the likes of which are simply un-presidential. Can Governor Romney really walk back the statements he made about the 47% of Americans who, as he so eloquently stated, "consider themselves victims, rely on government for their basic needs and who refuse to take personal responsibility for themselves."?  I think not.  A truer picture of the man was presented behind those doors than what we have seen in these debates so far.  His answer to that final question is either a blatant lie or an attempt to deceive the American public.

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