- Mar 28, 2005
- 7,153
- 0
- 0
I heard about this on the radio this morning, then found it on youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_evS-T-c35M&feature=player_embedded
For those who can't get youtube, here is the summary:
Romney is attacked for being a "greedy" "corporate raider." For taking over companies and liquidating/downsizing them, firing employees. Former employees are interviewed, saying Romney isn't on the side of the little guy or the small business.
What strikes me as remarkable is not the content of the ad, but the fact that it comes from a GOP candidate. The ad is pure, unadulterated "class warfare," at least according to the definition of that phrase that is employed on the right.
Is "class warfare" OK when it comes from the right but not OK when it comes from the left?
- wolf
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_evS-T-c35M&feature=player_embedded
For those who can't get youtube, here is the summary:
Romney is attacked for being a "greedy" "corporate raider." For taking over companies and liquidating/downsizing them, firing employees. Former employees are interviewed, saying Romney isn't on the side of the little guy or the small business.
What strikes me as remarkable is not the content of the ad, but the fact that it comes from a GOP candidate. The ad is pure, unadulterated "class warfare," at least according to the definition of that phrase that is employed on the right.
Is "class warfare" OK when it comes from the right but not OK when it comes from the left?
- wolf
