Romney:Angry as Dukakis:Tank
So how does Mitt Romney follow up yesterday's meltdown, in which he accused the nation's first African-American President of "divisiveness based upon...ethnicity"? And said "The president seems to be running just to hang on to power"? And complained that the Obama campaign is "all about division and attack and hatred"?He follows it up with...a petition!
(At first glance I thought that said "Division of Anger and Hate", and wondered if that would be a cabinet-level post in Romney's White House.)
President Obama's campaign and his surrogates have made wild and reckless accusations that disgrace the office of the Presidency. Another outrageous charge came yesterday in Virginia. And the White House sinks a little bit lower.I have to give the Romney campaign their due: they have come up with, hands down, the least badass move by any campaign in any election anywhere ever. There are various tones that can be effective in a campaign (combative, optimistic, faux-reasonable, above-it-all) but plaintive isn't one of them. The guy who said there's no whining in politics is running a campaign that consists entirely of whining.
This is what an angry and desperate Presidency looks like.
President Obama knows better and promised better; and America deserves better.
Sign the petition1 if you agree President Obama should take his campaign of division and anger and hate back to Chicago2.
One might be tempted to ask: if he loses his shit at the kind of criticism he's getting now, how on earth could he cope with the endless and overwhelming barrage of attacks he would get as president?
But the thing is, that's who Mitt is. His overweening sense of entitlement (after all, it is his turn) renders him incapable of sustaining criticism from people he considers his inferiors. He can dish it out, of course (because they deserve it!), but good god can he ever not take it. He can't take it because, deep down, he believes he shouldn't have to.
Mitt's petulance may actually play well among the wingnuts since, hey, their anger comes from entitlement as well. Outside the wingnut base, though, I doubt that anyone would see that petition (a petition! Obama is quaking in his boots!) as anything other than an ineffectual little joke.
1I haven't decided what name to sign it in; it's down to either "Haywood Jablomi" or "Mitt Zaduchkanu".
2I'm told by reliable sources that Chicago has a sizable African-American population...which of course has nothing at all to do with the wording of the petition.
A PETITION!!!
ReplyDeleteZOMG - NOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!
I'm sure there's a shortage of smelling salts, silk fans, and linen pocket napkins in DC, because, instead of taking to the mattresses, the people at the White House have taken to the fainting couches.
Boy, I bet Putin, the leaders of China, and the Ayatollah's of Iran are hoping that as President, Mitt never starts a petition against them!
"He did what? NO 'E DIN'T! OH! THE HUMANITIES!!!"
What a pampered putz!
Oh yeah, how about signing it, "Luke Indameerer?"
ReplyDeleteHa! Yeah, that's a really good one.
ReplyDeleteIt's like when he stamped his feet a while ago and asked that certain topics be off-limits by the Obama team. That kind of stuff might work in risk-adverse white-collar environments, but Americans prefer a straight-up puncher to someone who whines and complains, "It's not fair!" when the tactics of the other side take their toll.
ReplyDeleteI've been informed that some dude named Heywood showed up.
ReplyDeleteEmail address stoplyingmitt@forcryingoutloud.com.
@Dark Avenger: yes, exactly.
ReplyDelete@myreadyroom: heh....
"Division of Anger and Hate" sounds like something Romney would have insourced during his tenure at Bain.
ReplyDeleteI'm told by reliable sources that Chicago has a sizable African-American population...which of course has nothing at all to do with the wording of the petition.
ReplyDeleteI'm told by reliable sources that Chicago had a reputation for ballot stuffing 50 years ago. So "Chicago" is dog-whistle for "cheater" and "illegitimate".
@ploeg: that too. It's sort of a multi-layered allusion, with a whole host of connotations including organized crime (Capone) and election fraud (the Daley machine).
ReplyDeleteBut ni-CLANG is definitely one of those connotations.