Coburn backs Romney (user search)
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  Coburn backs Romney (search mode)
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Author Topic: Coburn backs Romney  (Read 1208 times)
BigSkyBob
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Posts: 2,531


« on: March 05, 2012, 12:29:45 AM »

Coburn supported the product of the deficit commission that he was on. He really worries about deficits. If you do worry, Mittens is a better choice than Rick in my opinion, and I suspect his. That is for starters. Beyond that, most GOP elected officials I suspect at this point, really want this primary to be over. It just  isn't helping their objectives at this point.

LOL if you really care about deficits, you support Obama.

Obama is the one running perpetual trillion dollar deficits. He has racked up more debt than every president of the 19th and 20th centuries combined. Give him four more years and he'll have racked up more debt than all presidents before him combined.
No, he hasn't. Bush has still racked up more in his 8 years than Obama has.

Umm, Bush II was a 21st Century President.
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BigSkyBob
Sr. Member
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Posts: 2,531


« Reply #1 on: March 05, 2012, 12:41:04 AM »

Mitt Romney is going to reform Washington in the vision of Adam Smith.

Laissez-fairism is fortunately dead.

It could make a dramatic comeback when bureaucrats cease drawing a salary. Post-war Germany and Japan were more "laissez-faire" than ever before, or after. The former Soviet Union moved towards a more market system when its economy stalled. Seems laissez faire is only tried if no option is feasible. Fortunately for Japan and Germany it worked.
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BigSkyBob
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 2,531


« Reply #2 on: March 05, 2012, 09:31:42 AM »

Mitt Romney is going to reform Washington in the vision of Adam Smith.

Laissez-fairism is fortunately dead.

It could make a dramatic comeback when bureaucrats cease drawing a salary. Post-war Germany and Japan were more "laissez-faire" than ever before, or after. The former Soviet Union moved towards a more market system when its economy stalled. Seems laissez faire is only tried if no option is feasible. Fortunately for Japan and Germany it worked.

Describing the postwar Japanese economic system as 'laissez-faire',.

I suggest you analyze the meaning of the words "more... than ever before, or after."
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