EDIT: Looking around the internet, a LOT of newspapers and other organizations have been slapping around Ryan for being a liar. Well done, media!

Faux News did the same thing, and they should know lies when they write hear them.Ian wrote:The Washington Post today called out Ryan for "telling flat-out lies". Rather harsh from a major newspaper, but also totally accurate. After his speech, I'm convinced that the man has not a shred of integrity.
Today's GOP is so fundamentally disconnected from reality on so many topics, I'm finding it increasingly difficult to even consider voting for anyone associated with that party (I typically vote a split ticket). GOP Platforms from several states include things like:Ian wrote:The Washington Post today called out Ryan for "telling flat-out lies". Rather harsh from a major newspaper, but also totally accurate. After his speech, I'm convinced that the man has not a shred of integrity.
Sounds like a plan to me!Ian wrote:Gerald - I have a theory which contends that the 2012 election is the mirror image of 1972 - for a variety of reasons, but mostly having to do with the party no longer in the White House becoming dominated by its more radical elements over the past few years. If there's any truth to it, then after a big Obama win in 2012 the saner Republicans will start to take back control of their party and put the Tea Party (and dare I hope evangelical) types in their place over the next few years, and they'll end up nominating a much more moderate ticket in 2016.
There are some personal traits that physical appearance can't compensate for! And, while he looks decent with no shirt, I don't find his face attractive.Coito ergo sum wrote:C'mon, Kristie! Isn't Ryan dreamier than Obama?
He wants your vote, Kristie. He wants it bad!
Since Reagan, the GOP has settled on a sort of "big three" positions. They are:Gerald McGrew wrote:Today's GOP is so fundamentally disconnected from reality on so many topics, I'm finding it increasingly difficult to even consider voting for anyone associated with that party (I typically vote a split ticket). GOP Platforms from several states include things like:Ian wrote:The Washington Post today called out Ryan for "telling flat-out lies". Rather harsh from a major newspaper, but also totally accurate. After his speech, I'm convinced that the man has not a shred of integrity.
1) Global warming denial (coupled with conspiracy theories);
2) Evolution denial (coupled with advocacy of creationism);
3) Calls for schools to no longer teach critical thinking;
4) U.N. conspiracy theories (i.e. Agenda 21);
5) Tax cuts for billionaires = economic growth;
6) Environmental deregulation (including eliminating the EPA);
7) Support for institutionalized bigotry against gays...
...and a host of other nutty, hateful positions that I simply cannot be a part of. Maybe one day the tea baggin' crazies will once again be marginalized or purged from the GOP (as the John Birch Society was previously) and the party will return to a more sane, responsible state. Until then however....
I figured that might happen...but then the GOP nominated Romney.Ian wrote:Gerald - I have a theory which contends that the 2012 election is the mirror image of 1972 - for a variety of reasons, but mostly having to do with the party no longer in the White House becoming dominated by its more radical elements over the past few years. If there's any truth to it, then after a big Obama win in 2012 the saner Republicans will start to take back control of their party and put the Tea Party (and dare I hope evangelical) types in their place over the next few years, and they'll end up nominating a much more moderate ticket in 2016.
I've noticed parallels too, though the main parallel I've noticed is how both presidents in question seemed willing to ignore the law and the constitution and do and say anything in order to stay in power.Ian wrote:Gerald - I have a theory which contends that the 2012 election is the mirror image of 1972 - for a variety of reasons, but mostly having to do with the party no longer in the White House becoming dominated by its more radical elements over the past few years.
http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorial ... rc=HPLNewsThe Media's 'Fact Check' Smokescreen
Posted 08/30/2012 06:58 PM ET
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Journalism: If media "fact checkers" are just impartial guardians of the truth, how come they got their own facts wrong about Paul Ryan's speech, and did so in a way that helped President Obama's re-election effort?
Case in point was the rush of "fact check" stories claiming Ryan misled when he talked about a shuttered auto plant in his home state.
Washington Post fact-checker Glenn Kessler posted a piece — "Ryan misleads on GM plant closing in hometown" — saying Ryan "appeared to suggest" that Obama was responsible for the closure of a GM plant in Janesville, Wis.
"That's not true," Kessler said. "The plant was closed in December 2008, before Obama was sworn in."
What's not true are Kessler's "facts." Ryan didn't suggest Obama was responsible for shuttering the plant. Instead, he correctly noted that Obama promised during the campaign that the troubled plant "will be here for another hundred years" if his policies were enacted.
Also, the plant didn't close in December 2008. It was still producing cars until April 2009.
An AP "fact check" also claimed that "the plant halted production in December 2008" even though the AP itself reported in April 2009 that the plant was only then "closing for good."
CNN's John King made the same claim about that plant closure. But when CNN looked more carefully at the evidence, it — to its credit — concluded that what Ryan said was "true."
Media fact-checkers also complained about Ryan's charge that Obama is cutting $716 billion from Medicare to fund ObamaCare. Not true, they said. Medicare's growth is just being slowed.
But Obama achieves that slower growth by making real cuts in provider payments. And in any case, the media always and everywhere call a reduction in the rate of federal spending growth a "cut." So why suddenly charge Ryan with being misleading for using that same term?
In any case, Obama himself admitted that he's doing what Ryan says. In a November 2009 interview with ABC News, reporter Jake Tapper said to Obama that "one-third of the funding comes from cuts to Medicare," to which Obama's response was: "Right."
The rest of Ryan's alleged factual errors aren't errors at all; it's just that the media didn't like how he said it. But since when is it a fact-checker's job to decide how a politician should construct his arguments?
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