Does Mitt Romney appear too perfect? The Los Angeles Times suggests the answer is yes:
Mitt Romney arrives at his campaign headquarters here 10 minutes early, a knife-blade crease in his khakis, winter tan, lots of hair, all of it in place. He skips the coffee and doughnuts in favor of skim milk and the home-baked granola sent along in a zip-lock baggie by his wife. That's Ann, his high school sweetheart -- the mother of his five handsome sons -- with whom he says he has never had a serious argument in 38 years of marriage.Romney's not perfect, but his storybook personal life could backfire on his presidential campaign. I hear many people refer to Romney's presidential appearance as "too slick." According to the Times, when Rudy Giuliani warned voters this week to beware "this pretense of perfection," he mentioned Democratic candidate Barack Obama's acknowledgment of past drug use, but he was really aiming at Romney's picture-perfect past.[. . .]
Romney's life looks like a photo album of the American dream: two homes, one in a posh Boston suburb and the other on a New Hampshire lakeside; four cars (he drives a red Mustang, Ann a Cadillac SUV); a friendly dog, big Christmases, church every Sunday, meaningful family discussions (Web viewers can watch as the Romneys gather on the sofa to ponder his run for president). If he has a vice, it's chocolate malts.
At the same time, his glide path was remarkably free of hardship, not the Horatio Alger story Americans sometimes warm to in a candidate. The son of Michigan governor and former American Motors Corp. Chairman George Romney, Willard Mitt Romney was born into privilege, raised in a devout Mormon home and educated at Harvard. He made a fortune in business and then entered politics, just like his dad. His first real tragedy was his wife's 1998 diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, which he calls the worst day of his life. (Her illness is in remission.)
Romney runs his campaign operation like the business executive he was: disciplined, on message and on time -- often early.
As Giuliani implies we don't need a paragon of virtue for president, but I like the fact that there are no Clintonesque scandals in Romneys past.

Steve repeated 3 times: "Does he really believe that people are going to buy this?" I buy it. I also believe in Noah and the ark, Jonah and the whale, and that Christ walked on water. Guess I'm gullible.
Posted by: bwb | Monday, November 26, 2007 at 01:00 AM
Because of Mitt Romney a young newlywed couple is DEAD. As a result of his decision making regarding who he appoints as judges.
What offends me almost as much as him appointing this liberal judge responsible for letting this monster out to murder this couple is the game he is now playing.
Calling for her to resign? He knows that isn't going to happen. It is just empty grandstanding. Does he really believe that people are going to buy this? Does he really think people aren't going to be offended by this gimmick? Does he really believe we are going to be fooled?
Well perhaps he does. After all, he believes that some ancient "white" American Indian angel came and talked to this guy in the 1800s. Someone who would believe that would believe just about anything.
Truth about Mormonism.
Forget terrorism. The most important issue in this Presidential Election is who will the next President appoint to the Federal Courts.
Well we have seen what kinds of people he appointed when governor. If we expect something different from him in the White House then we are just as gullible as those who followed ole Joe Smith.
Dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb dumb.
Posted by: Steve | Sunday, November 25, 2007 at 08:51 PM