The Barack Obama and Mitt Romney Debate was very boring and lacked fluff. Too much numbers that are unverifiable required some Aspirin
Romney was never clear about how he will replace Obamacare? What is the substitute? Nothing! He reverts to the infinite wisdom of the private sector and its wonders and laid the promise it will solve every thing.
His highness did not explain how it failed to ensure all Americans for 60 years and left 30 millions uninsured.
He thought solving Medicare is to have the states to shoulder the responsibility.
He spoke nonsense about Obamacare how it passed without cosulation of the Republicans. He lied all the approaches to let them join was pushed back.
Mitt Romney was fuzzy about the vouchercare humpty dumpty of the clown Paul Ryan.
Romney claimed he is opposed to too big to fail for financial institutions where nothing like that exists.
Barack Obama came many times and taunted him of the AARP and how they rejected his medicare ans social security proposals.
Romney went also into the budget deficit nonsense.
Romney went to the example of Spain to make a point and no body knew what he was talking about.
The debate was run by one moderator and is boring this way.
Only new technology plus is the real time approval indicator by both men and women separately of what been said.
Romney wore red tie an Obama blue tie.
Jim Lehrer the moderator.
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When you tune into tomorrow’s presidential debate, chances are that your attention span will begin to wane and your eyelids will roll down a few moments into the heavily scripted dialogue. There may be some catchy one-liners or a few gaffes; however, the formats for modern presidential debates are tailor-made for a salivating media and political campaign managers who only want a few one-second sound bites to destroy the other candidate. Election 2012 will see three presidential debates and one vice-presidential debate. Each one will follow a variation of the same beaten format and will surely cure your insomnia.
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DENVER — Somewhere in the wonky blizzard of facts, statistics and studies thrown out on stage here on Wednesday night was a fundamental philosophical choice about the future of America, quite possibly the starkest in nearly three decades.
“Governor Romney has a perspective that says if we cut taxes skewed towards the wealthy and roll back regulations, that we’ll be better off,” Mr. Obama said. He asked: “Are we going to double down on the top-down economic policies that helped to get us into this mess or do we embrace a new economic patriotism that says America does best when the middle class does best?”
The debate, the first of three between the presidential candidates, focused entirely on domestic issues – the economy, health care and the role of government.
President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney squared off in their first face-to-face presidential debate Wednesday, battling for more than an hour over the future of the economy, the federal budget, tax cuts, education, health care and even the future of Big Bird.
Faced with several recent polls showing Romney falling behind, the GOP candidate may have bought himself some added time after Wednesday's debate, where he appeared on the offensive against Obama. Romney's answers to questions from the moderator, Jim Lehrer of PBS Newshour, who played a subdued role over the course of the evening, were crisp and appeared well-rehearsed. His responses included as many specifics as the limited time would allow, and Romney seemed to hit his marks in a way Obama was not able to.
The "zingers" promised for the debate were scarce, and both instead used their time to carefully outline ideas for how they would govern. Romney and Obama used personal examples to supplement their points.
In perhaps the most anticipated moment of the debate, Romney survived the session on health care reform, which could have been a major liability for the Republican nominee. As governor of Massachusetts, Romney championed a state health care law that later became the partial blueprint for Obama's national health care overhaul that Romney now says he wants to repeal. During the debate, Romney worked to show the difference between the two laws, while Obama aimed to tie them together. Obama scored points in noting that many of the ideas that made it into the final health care law originated with with Republicans, but Romney escaped the exchange with only minor wounds.
Links
http://www.examiner.com/article/presidential-debate-format-all-wrong?cid=rss
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/04/us/politics/debate-a-clash-over-governments-role-news-analysis.html?ref=politics&_r=0
http://www.voanews.com/media/photogallery/1520066.html
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/romney-goes-offense-against-subdued-obama-first-debate-030217430--election.html
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2012/10/201210421654839632.html
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