Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
No. The post about Romney's family and welfare is relevant because welfare is an example of a program many conservatives hate. Romney's family is an example of a welfare success story.
That's absolutely the way that welfare should work. I applaud them for pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, and I applaud America for providing the bootstraps.
Obama's dad being a drunk is totally irrelevant, because having an abusive parent has no bearing on POLICY.
If it's true that Obama's dad was an abusive drunk, then I applaud Obama all the more for overcoming his difficult childhood. Thanks for sharing his inspiring story, OP!
Conservatives don't hate welfare. Nor do they wipe their asses with $100 bills. You are brainwashed from too much mainstream media.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
No. The post about Romney's family and welfare is relevant because welfare is an example of a program many conservatives hate. Romney's family is an example of a welfare success story.
That's absolutely the way that welfare should work. I applaud them for pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, and I applaud America for providing the bootstraps.
Obama's dad being a drunk is totally irrelevant, because having an abusive parent has no bearing on POLICY.
If it's true that Obama's dad was an abusive drunk, then I applaud Obama all the more for overcoming his difficult childhood. Thanks for sharing his inspiring story, OP!
Conservatives don't hate welfare. Nor do they wipe their asses with $100 bills. You are brainwashed from too much mainstream media.
Oh, really? Do you think progressives coined phrases like "entitlement mentality" and "welfare queens?" I've never met a true conservative who espouses genuine concern for the poor. Where do they congregate? I'd truly enjoy meeting some.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
Uh, the problem is not Romney's family. It's Romney turning his back on the social support system that his own family relied upon.
+1
No one is saying that Romney has to apologize for his family, either for having taken assistance or for having later prospered. It's the fact that he's completely forgotten where he came from and according to his own policies and statements can offer neither understanding of or sympathy for those who are poor and struggling. I don't think anyone can say that Obama has forgotten where he came from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
No. The post about Romney's family and welfare is relevant because welfare is an example of a program many conservatives hate. Romney's family is an example of a welfare success story.
That's absolutely the way that welfare should work. I applaud them for pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, and I applaud America for providing the bootstraps.
Obama's dad being a drunk is totally irrelevant, because having an abusive parent has no bearing on POLICY.
If it's true that Obama's dad was an abusive drunk, then I applaud Obama all the more for overcoming his difficult childhood. Thanks for sharing his inspiring story, OP!
Conservatives don't hate welfare. Nor do they wipe their asses with $100 bills. You are brainwashed from too much mainstream media.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
No. The post about Romney's family and welfare is relevant because welfare is an example of a program many conservatives hate. Romney's family is an example of a welfare success story.
That's absolutely the way that welfare should work. I applaud them for pulling themselves up by their bootstraps, and I applaud America for providing the bootstraps.
Obama's dad being a drunk is totally irrelevant, because having an abusive parent has no bearing on POLICY.
If it's true that Obama's dad was an abusive drunk, then I applaud Obama all the more for overcoming his difficult childhood. Thanks for sharing his inspiring story, OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He died drunk driving.
Not possible. Since he clearly faked his son's birth in Hawaii, he was in on the 50 year long conspiracy to create Africa's Manchurian President. So by that logic he was killed because he knew too much. The car crash was clearly the work of a shadow government of business elites who control world affairs via a secret cabal that meets secretly in Geneva.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
Uh, the problem is not Romney's family. It's Romney turning his back on the social support system that his own family relied upon.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not voting for Obama's father, I'm voting for Obama.
But I would much rather vote for Romney's father than for Mitt.
Anonymous wrote:He died drunk driving.
Anonymous wrote:He died drunk driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A general question: Are children responsible for the actions of their parents? If my father was a criminal, was that my fault? If my father was a hero, do I get credit for that? If the answer to both questions is "no", then your post is completely meaningless.
As meaningless as the post about Romney's family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:?
Obamas father went to harvard. He already had a wife and kids when he met Obamas mother. She was about 18 when she got pregnant. He could not marry her.
He was not deadbeat. Obamas mother chose to forget about him and not follow him to his home country Kenia where he had to go back to.
He was very brilliant, that is how he got his scholarship to go to harvard. It is unfortunate that he became disillusioned with the corruption that happens in a third world african country.
But such is life
Was he very brilliant or from a family that had enough money and connections to make it happen? Or was he the token guy?