Democrats: GOP's Romney just 'doesn't get it'

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Democrats ridiculed Republican Mitt Romney as a millionaire candidate for president who "quite simply doesn't get it" and worse on Tuesday, opening night of a national convention aimed at propelling Barack Obama to re-election despite high unemployment and national economic distress.
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix the sputtering economy, said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the convention keynote speaker, sharing the prime-time spotlight with first lady Michelle Obama.
After the deep recession, Castro said in excerpts released in advance of his speech, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition." He said 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office.
Obama was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia earlier in the day. He said he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. And during the day there was ample evidence of an underperforming economy, from a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month to the Treasury's announcement that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place - except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
"He said he'd take out bin Laden, and with our great SEAL team, he did," added Tim Kaine, former national party chairman and Virginia governor, now running for the Senate.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy - and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
A few hours later and hundreds of miles distant, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, the Democratic party chairwoman, opened the three-day convention to the cheers of delegates.
The Time Warner Cable Arena's conversion to the Democrats' made-for-television convention hall was complete. The lectern rested on a blue-carpeted stage, inside a circle of white stars suggestive of the presidential seal.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
To laughter from his Virginia audience, Obama explained why he was ceding the opening-night spotlight to his wife.
"A political convention is "just like a relay, and you start off with the fastest person," he said.
"So I'm going to be at home and I'm going to be watching it with our girls. And I'm going to try not to let them see their daddy cry, because when Michelle starts talking I start getting all misty."
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night - or for any other. Polls show the first lady is more popular than her husband.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday night, the same night that former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
Officials said Republicans were stockpiling cash for the fall campaign. Romney raised more than $100 million for the third month in a row in August, officials said.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
9/4/2012 5:06:16 PM (GMT -7:00)
Obama "knows better than anyone there's more hard work to do" to fix the sputtering economy, said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the convention keynote speaker, sharing the prime-time spotlight with first lady Michelle Obama.
After the deep recession, Castro said in excerpts released in advance of his speech, the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition." He said 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office.
Obama was back home in the White House after a campaign appearance in Virginia earlier in the day. He said he'd be watching on television when his wife spoke.
Polls made the race for the White House a tight one, almost certain to be decided in a string of eight or 10 battleground states where neither the president nor Romney holds a clear advantage. And during the day there was ample evidence of an underperforming economy, from a report that said manufacturing activity declined for a third straight month to the Treasury's announcement that the government's debt exceeded $16 trillion at the close of the business day.
Castro, the first Hispanic chosen to deliver a keynote address, was unsparing in criticizing Romney, suggesting the former Massachusetts governor might not even be the driving force on the Republican ticket this fall.
"First they called it 'trickle down, the supply side," he said of the economic proposals backed by Republicans. "Now it's Romney/Ryan. Or is it Ryan/Romney?"
"Either way, their theory has been tested. It failed. ...Mitt Romney just doesn't get it," Castro said. Romney's running mate is Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan.
The divide over taxes goes to the core of the campaign.
Romney and the Republicans favor extension of all of the existing Bush-era tax cuts due to expire on Dec. 31, and also want to cut tax rates 20 percent across the board.
Obama, too, wants to keep the existing tax cuts in place - except for people with earnings of $250,000 a year or more.
Delegates in the convention hall cheered whenever Obama's image showed on the huge screen behind the speaker's podium, and roared when the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was shown mocking Romney in their 1994 Senate race.
"On the issue of choice, I am pro-choice, my opponent is multiple choice," the late senator said as cheers grew louder.
Romney supported abortion rights while serving as governor; he opposes them now.
Democrats unspooled insult after insult as they took their turn the week after the Republicans had their convention in Tampa, Fla.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn said that Republicans had omitted mention of Romney's term as Massachusetts governor at their gathering.
"We already knew this extremely conservative man takes some pretty liberal deductions. Evidently that includes writing off all four years he served as governor," Quinn declared.
Said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, speaking of Romney: "Never in modern American history has a presidential candidate tried so hard to hide himself from the people he hopes to serve."
"When you look at the one tax return he has released, it's obvious why there's been only one. We learned that he pays a lower tax rate than middle-class families. We learned he chose Swiss bank accounts and Cayman Island tax shelters over American institutions."
Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation and for supporting abortion rights and gay marriage.
"He said he'd take out bin Laden, and with our great SEAL team, he did," added Tim Kaine, former national party chairman and Virginia governor, now running for the Senate.
In his campaign trip to Virginia earlier in the day, Obama told an audience at Norfolk State University that the economy will get worse if Romney wins the White House this fall and that Election Day apathy was his enemy - and theirs.
Republicans are "counting on you, maybe not to vote for Romney, but they're counting on you to feel discouraged," he said. "And they figure if you don't vote, then big oil will write our energy future, and insurance companies will write our health care plans, and politicians will dictate what a woman can or can't do when it comes to her own health."
On the final stop of a pre-convention campaign circuit of several battleground states, the president also dropped off a case of White House-brewed beer at a local fire station.
A few hours later and hundreds of miles distant, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, the Democratic party chairwoman, opened the three-day convention to the cheers of delegates.
The Time Warner Cable Arena's conversion to the Democrats' made-for-television convention hall was complete. The lectern rested on a blue-carpeted stage, inside a circle of white stars suggestive of the presidential seal.
The Republican challenger was in Vermont as the Democratic convention began, preparing for three fall debates with Obama almost certain to be critical to the outcome of the election.
To laughter from his Virginia audience, Obama explained why he was ceding the opening-night spotlight to his wife.
"A political convention is "just like a relay, and you start off with the fastest person," he said.
"So I'm going to be at home and I'm going to be watching it with our girls. And I'm going to try not to let them see their daddy cry, because when Michelle starts talking I start getting all misty."
There was no shortage of political calculation behind the program of the convention's first night - or for any other. Polls show the first lady is more popular than her husband.
Democratic delegates bestow their nomination on Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on Wednesday night, the same night that former President Bill Clinton delivers a prime-time speech aimed at voters disappointed with the results of the past four years yet undecided how to cast their ballots.
White men favor Romney over Obama in public and private polls, but a Gallup survey taken in July showed that 12 years after leaving office, Clinton was viewed favorably by 63 percent of the same group and unfavorably by only 32 percent.
Obama's acceptance speech caps the convention on Thursday night at the 74,000-seat Bank of America football stadium. Aides kept a wary eye on the weather in a city that has been hit in recent days with strong afternoon rains.
Republicans did their best to rain on Obama's convention, whatever the weather.
Vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan spoke in Westlake, Ohio, standing behind a lectern bearing a sign that read "Are you better off?"
Republicans released a web video that interspersed images of Obama and the economy's weak performance with slightly out-of-focus video clips of former President Jimmy Carter discussing the nation's economic woes when sat in the Oval Office more than 30 years ago.
Officials said Republicans were stockpiling cash for the fall campaign. Romney raised more than $100 million for the third month in a row in August, officials said.
___
Matthew Daly reported from Norfolk, Va. Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in Ohio, Kasie Hunt in Vermont, Jack Gillum in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and Ken Thomas and Matt Michaels in Charlotte contributed.
(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
9/4/2012 5:06:16 PM (GMT -7:00)
San Antonio Texas Mayor Julian Castro gave a rousing keynote address last night...only problem it was the same speech given by Marko Rubio at the Republican Convention last week, down to and including the line my mother worked/father worked that job so I could hold the mike/stand in front of the roomâ¦basically the only difference in the speeches, the usage of Nounsâ¦in Rubioâs it was his father, in Castro it was his mother. The demos must have like Rubioâs speech â A LOT. This isnât the first time they have pilfered a speech from the Reps, changed it slightly and used it as their own.
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@KHEB Do the repubs have one like ted kennedy where he says ""When does the greed stop with the republicans""
Thought not....
 @cptmac11  @KHEB ... forgot to add in response to your suggestion of the Rep party not having a Ted Kennedy I can only say "Thank God" we don't and never did.  Talk about destructive, Teddy will go down in history as the worst - that is every where but Mass I guess, they kept electing him - no one else would have.
 Oh poor you.  If you are in your early 20's I'll give you some slack and figure your education was sloppy...it's for sure, if you think Ted Kennedy is a role-model for you then I must say you have very poor and damaging taste....and of course on the dole because no one, and I mean no one should have respect for this Kennedy and the only people that do are the people with their hands out and milking the system for every dimeâ¦..
Â
This comment has been deleted
 @rem417 This is what you're going to go with? The cognitive dissonance is strong with this one. Â
Â
Let's break it down:
Â
"There mosdus operandi"
Â
I think you mean modus
Â
"are to continually spew non truths until it becomes the TRUTH!"
Â
You mean like how how wealth trickles down and we have to protect the job creators?
Â
"They can never directly address any issues with what the man has failed to achieve while driving us into the largest debt EVER! "
Â
How do you think we got into that debt?
Â
"They will always spin to how bad Romney's plan is"
Â
It is. Â It is ambiguous and based off of his business practice which was to fire people and gain personal wealth from it. Â
Â
"...........or how Ryan has lied..........."
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Which he did. Â Fox news even admitted it: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/08/30/paul-ryans-speech-in-three-words/
Â
"itâs not surprising at all"
Â
What's to surprise? Is it your birthday? Â Were you expecting cake?
Â
"...they just have nothing to show the positive effects and outcomes of the current administration."
Â
You mean like the Dow being up, unemployment, while still scary is stabilizing and we're not losing thousands of our sons in daughters in two useless wars? You can't find anything positive about that? Â Sucks to be you.
Â
"It's funny how they can support Bill (DA) Mahr on what he says"
Â
Please show me where the Democratic Party as a whole supports Bill Mahar. Â He's an entertainer, like Rush Limbaugh. Â He wants you to laugh with him at the ridiculousness of it all. Â
Â
"but if someone calls the man currently in the White House any names its .........Shame on him... or how dare he..."
Â
Why should you be calling anyone names? Are you five? Didn't your mother teach you that it wasn't nice?
Â
"it is laughable the HIPOCRACY that exists in the Dem party!"
Â
I would laugh but I'm not sure what a HIPOCRACY is. Â Perhaps you meant hypocrisy? If that's the case, then may I suggest you turn your eyes to the Republican party that questions anyone's love for America or patriotism if we don't fly Chinese-made flags on our car. Â Or denies rights to 50% of the nation's population in the name of "freedom". Â That's hypocrisy.Â
This woman is "hero" material for iromney and the republiCONs !
http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-richest-woman-20120830,0,3323996.story
 @sargerator Obama had the country in the palm of his hand but the obstructionist republican party that said Nothing this President supports will ever get past them....
@cptmac11 @sargerator So its kinda like what Harry Reid is doing right now??? or is this OK because he's a Demo??? Either way you need to find out exactly what your argument is!!!
No , it is nothing like what reid is doing, the republiCONs are willing to crash our economy in the name of "getting their man in the whitehouse" . Far different than reid trying to block bad legislation ! Name one bill he has blocked and I'll show you a bill that either hurts the middle class, disriminates a particular class of people or favors the wealthy !
Yep ! And what is the republiCON rant from the senate ? more jobs ? NO, stop off shoring jobs ? NO ! Return to the glass-steagall act ? HELL NO !
Â
IT's........
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âThe single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president,â Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell !!
Â
Thieving arses !! And these reichwingnuts on this board still think the republiCONs have their best interest at heart....mind boggling !
Â
As for proof ! Straight out of the man-turtle hybrid himself !
Â
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/07/10/mcconnell-stopping-obamas-re-election-still-single-most-important-goal/
Obama had the country in the palm of his hands when he was elected. He could have done great things. He came in as the great uniter. He said he'd have a transparent administration. Instead, he's divided us along socio-economic, racial, and even religious lines. He's a committed marxist and despises business people, who actually pay the taxes to run the country. He's probably taken us over the cliff already with his overspending. But if he hasn't yet, he will if he's re-elected. He'll consider that another mandate from the people to turn us into a welfare nanny state
 @jonsiesd2 How is he Marxist? What Marxist policies has he implemented? Has your personal property been seized and redistributed? Has your personal religion been eradicated and replaced with a state religion? Please, do tell, I'd love to hear.
"""""Â Obama, by contrast, was lauded for helping win approval of health care legislation"""""
Â
WTH,  winning approval??? what a joke  it was a partisan vote on something the majority of Americans ARE STILL AGAINST.
 @kramr I know I know facts have nothing to do with your story telling but still ...
@cptmac11 @kramr Story telling??? you???hhhhhaaahahahahahhahahahahhahahahahhahahahahhahahahahahahahhahahahahhahahahhahahaaaaaaaa. You need to write some more fiction!!
 @rem417  @cptmac11  @kramr I just pointed out the errors in your argument above. Â
 @kramr Umm actually 65% of America is fore the ACA
 @cptmac11 Where did you get that statistic? I just looked it up and found the last gallup poll from a month ago and the last Rassmussen poll from yesterday both indicate that most Americans are against it. I've asked you for links in other comments before so I could read and learn. Either you've ignored the request or you just repeat yourself over and over. You have strong beliefs and a passion for your convictions. I respect that. If you want to sway anyone to those beliefs then you need to be prepared to back up your comments. Here is what I found.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/gallup-americans-believe-obamcare-more-harmful-helpful_648149.html
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/health_care_law
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 @rem417  @Postmortem  @cptmac11 Don't make me copy, paste and rebut your entire "argument" again.  The repeated spelling and grammatical errors are migraine-inducing.
Its kind of disingenuous of the republicans to say Obama has done nothing for us in the last four years. What have you done for us in the last four years republicans? Vote 36 times to overturn health care reforms? At every turn, no matter what the dems or Obama tried to do in the last four years, the republican party has fought tooth and nail to do one thing and one thing only (by their own admission no less) and thats to make sure Obama is a one term president by undermining everything he tried to do. Its this kind of spin by the repubs that turn my stomach. Try working as hard for the country in the next four years as you did trying to make sure the president failed the last four years. Stop voting for things just because its the party line. Try doing things that actually help this country. You had 8 years of GW to mess things up. You spent 4 years doing nothing to help the country. Maybe spending the next 12 years not being partisan and actually doing your job would be the thing to do. Its what youre paid for.
I'm doing great.Promotion at work.I've moved out of my dump apartment into a nice two bedroom.Iv'e been able to put a pretty good chunk away and make some investments.Pay my credit cards off every month and can still afford to drive a newer model caddy.
@noneofyourbizzness Good for you. Not many of us can say that...not even close. Since you are doing so well, why don't you just give me some of your money instead of giving it to Uncle Sam to give to us since only the lucky few are working and doing as well as you say. Either that or you are living in a bubble.
Â
Personally I would love to have my three jobs/income back. The ones that the current market place strangled? It took three jobs/incomes to keep ahead. Independent contractors (small business) became ghosts. We, the ones who employed, and did not depend upon an employer, fell off the charts.
Â
We are not counted in the unemployment factors, and did not receive a dime in "unemployment monies", not financial aid from the White House. Current regulations and restrictions against small business will prevent many of us from ever getting past the regulations let alone actually be able to function, so we will be here to compete with your "job".
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I am so happy for your personal, "Â perfect life" that you will look past current reality. Keep it up and you may be joining a majority of us who know and live in the truth.
@erudite Perhaps you should pull yourself up by your bootstraps and make something of yourself eh? I don't have any worries because in a few years I'll be getting a fat inheritance.So yes,life is good for me.
Â
 observeer, i'l answer you point by point, from the heart.  am i better off? ya with bush I was waiting for my son to be called to serve maybe to die for the rich and their oil. Have jobs been created since he took ovffice ? Yes. am I better off then four years ago. yes my son got called back to a shipping job in a tech shop. have my standard of living increased? yes, i've retired with my saving intact. food stamps? look at the last 6 months of the bush regime. business? who supported you for that business? did you build the road to get there? who picks up your garbage/ who gave you the shipping support. who came in and actually bought something from you?  Â
cptmac11 is off his meds again.
 @theobserver And he will kick your azz thanks for your support
'Castro said the nation is making progress "despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition." He said 4.5 million jobs have been created since the president took office.'  Boy, the democraps are spreading the bu!!$h!t thick. Let me ask you this - are you better off now than you were 4 years ago? Has your standard of living increased or decreased? Why is the use of food stamps at an all time high?  How do you explain oblahblah's thinking when he said "you've got a business, you didn't build that."
oblahblah is in desperation mode. He is pandering to any group, any individual, anyone he can think of who has fell for his line of swill and will vote for him in November.
 @theobserver Why do you believe it necessary to use childish insults like "democraps" and "oblahblah"? Your point would be better made if done so with civility.
@theobserver "How do you explain you've a business, you didn't build that"? Simple- please provide an example of a business that never uses publicly funded roadways, airwaves, satellites, delivery services (that also eschew the aforementioned roads, airwaves, satellites), phone lines, electricity, banks, lending services, anything that didn't come from someone else or as the result of taxpayer uses.
 @GetOverYourself  @theobserver Where did the Government get the money to fund public roadways and other services? Phone lines, electricity, banks, lending services and many other things are billed to businesses and people.
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This is coming from and independent. Yes, many services from government benefit people and businesses, but don't forget that government needs to get their money from somewhere and if businesses don't succeed, government will soon run out of money. They better figure out really fast how to help businesses succeed, or they will have to keep cutting services to everyone.
@DJK @theobserver Yes, from other countries.
@theobserver I've answered this about three times already. The value of my suburban house is stable. Our vehicles are paid off. Our debt is minimal. We have rivate insurance and college funds set aside. We live very well on one income and that income puts us in an upper bracket. We have had no scares about losing jobs or our home. My husband receives regular raises, bonuses and a small royalty fom a side interest. Our schools are great. So, yeah- I'm better off than before.
When mitt takes office (if he does)
most famous quote.....""'NO SOUP FOR YOU"""
Because we will be reduced to soup lines..
And he will be the soup Nazi....
Along with all business deals.....
Â
 @cptmac11 Considering more than 15% of Americans are already on food stamps I think we're much closer to those soup lines than you think.
Â
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/03/number-of-americans-on-snap_n_1074344.html
Â
http://www.trivisonno.com/food-stamps-charts
Percent of the US population on welfare4.1 %
 @cptmac11 How many have been added since obama took office?
 @cptmac11 1 in 5 Americans Are Dependent on Government
Â
http://blog.heritage.org/2012/02/12/chart-of-the-week-1-in-5-americans-are-dependent-on-government/
 @TimBurr I know the Heritage Foundation if a Conservative organization. I don't like getting information from just one source, especially if it's too far right or left. So I did a little research from different sources. WOW! I didn't know. I don't like it, but at least I learned something. I'm not going to try to say what the solution is. I'll keep thinking on it and see what both candidates have to say then use that along with what is said on other issues to decide by election day. Â
Â
Tim, I apologize to you. I seriously doubted what you had posted. But one suggestion, try using links from both ends of the spectrum or right down the middle. Good job though. Here is what I found from varying sources:
Â
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/05/almost-half-of-all-americans-households-government-benefits_n_996990.html
Â
http://money.cnn.com/2012/02/07/news/economy/government_assistance/index.htm
Â
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2012/05/26/number-of-the-week-half-of-u-s-lives-in-household-getting-benefits/
Â
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/jun2012/soci-j07.shtml
Â
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@TimBurr @cptmac11 The Heritage Foundation is a GOTP propaganda outlet, just like FOX News. I'm sure they get their funding from the same bunch, Koch's, Ailes, etc. and their job is to distribute lies under the guise of a learned institute. It's B.S. and that's why their product/propaganda is full of baloney. The only "firepower" coming from them is what exits where the sun don't shine.
 @TimBurr Oh my god that's right the heritage foundation is the word of god him self what was I thinking....????????
Dude if they tell you to eat dirt don't do it...
Because to listen to them is to be as dumb as dirt ...K
You can't really be that stupid are you??
Â
 @TimBurr  @cptmac11 Sweetie, what you getting so upset about? You don't believe anything that doesn't come from your approved like-minded source that tells you things you like to hear, so why even trouble your mind? Just go to church and be told what to think, listen to your approved news source and be told what to think and raise your children to do the same. Idiocracy in action! Â
 @GetOverYourself  @cptmac11 Typical. Extremely typical.
 @TimBurr  @cptmac11 If you can quote Heritage as a legitimate news source, then I can quote the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
 @cptmac11 Typical liberal tactic - shoot the messenger.
 @TimBurr  @cptmac11 And the majority of them are in Red states, funded by those in Blue states.  You're welcome.
@GetOverYourself @TimBurr @cptmac11   """" Blue states more smart. Blue states have more jobs, pay more taxes. Red states not smart.""""
Â
so why are the deep blue states  like CA, NY, MI in the worst financial shape?? CA alone has a 60 BILION dollar deficit
 @TimBurr  @GetOverYourself So they are Your norities???
What a puppet can you feel me squeeze this?????Â
 @GetOverYourself  @cptmac11Red states have more minorities.
Â
http://reason.com/archives/2011/07/14/the-redblue-paradox
 @TimBurr  @cptmac11 This is what you're going to go with? Do tell.
 @TimBurr  @cptmac11 Let me say it again, using little words:  Blue states more smart. Blue states have more jobs, pay more taxes.  Red states not smart. Red states not go school.  Red states not have job. Red states not pay taxes. Red states take more money.
 @GetOverYourself  @cptmac11 The blue state "poor" vote their pocket book so any policies created and used by the red states originated in the blue.