Extreme prejudice = electoral landslide
Yup. Will he win more or less states than
Reagan and which State will that be?
Less. But still I think this will be no Rove-engineered victory where one state makes the difference and the vote difference is razor thin. I think that Romney is going to beat him by several states.
O'Bongo is a menace and a dumbass. One of the many, many things that make him unelectable this time around is that he thinks that everyone else is a dumbass. Allow me to illustrate this point with a current event:
Exhibit A
Obama: If you've been successful you didn't get there on your own.Exhibit B
Obama: You know that speech where I said, "You didn't build that?" I didn't say that...you just thought I said that. No, really, I said something completely different and if you don't agree with me then you are dumber than Biden. And, hey, did I mention that my campaign website takes credit cards?Clearly this is a
pathetic attempt at damage control which comes off as an insult to the intelligence of anyone and everyone who heard and saw the original speech.
Team Dumbass is being forced to go this route because the polls and focus groups are indicating that the GOP is using O'Bongo's own words against him to devastating effect. Rasmussen
reports that a staggering 72% of
likely voters, the absolute best group to poll from, believe that the First Dumbass is wrong, dead wrong on this issue.
Most Americans believe entrepreneurs who start businesses do more to create jobs and economic growth than big businesses or government. They also believe overwhelmingly that small business owners work harder than other Americans and are primarily responsible for the success or failure of their businesses.
Seventy-two percent (72%) of Likely U.S. Voters believe that people who start small businesses are primarily responsible for their success or failure.
Arch conservative (seriously, he is) Pat Sajak said
this about President Zero's "you didn't build that" profundity:
It's as if President Obama climbed into a tank, put on his helmet, talked about how his foray into Cambodia was seared in his memory, looked at his watch, misspelled "potato" and pardoned Richard Nixon all in the same day. It's fun to imagine the hand-wringing that must be going on within the White House as staffers try to figure out how to undo the damage their boss has done with his anti-entrepenurial riff. Defining moments in politics are strange beasts. Sometimes they're only recognized in hindsight, while sometimes they throw the train off the tracks before a sentence has been completed. Sometimes their effect can be contained and minimized, while sometimes their effect on the political narrative mestastasizes. This one is very bad for the White House.
These defining moments take hold most devastatingly when they confirm what a large portion of the electorate already believes. Taken alone, it seems unfair that a single moment, an unguarded remark or a slip of the tongue can carry such weight. They're often dismissed as "gotcha" moments, but when voters are able to nod and say, "I knew it," these moments stick and do terrible damage. We have witnessed such a moment.
But the best part? O'Bongo still thinks he's a genius and the electorate is a bunch of morons and he will not make any attempt to hide that belief between now and election day. I predict that as things spiral further out of control he will become all the more resentful and visibly angry toward the voters. It's the narcissist way and O'Bongo knows no other.
Hey, I could be completely wrong and the voters could re-elect this idiot. I don't think so but it remains within the realm of possible outcomes. But here's what's cool for me: I feel incredibly confident that he's going to go down in flames and that allows me to relax and wait for election day virtually worry-free. I haven't had this sort of peace and tranquility about an election outcome since Reagan. It's liberating.
So, between now and the first Tuesday in November when the O'Bongo campaign finally augers into the ground at mach speed I will be treated to day after day and week after week of the ever increasing desperation and despair of Democrats and leftists.
Good times, good times.