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Romney’s Latest Lie, His Former Lies, and Why We Must Not Put Liars in the White House
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Over the weekend, Romney debuted an ad in Ohio showing
cars being crushed as a narrator says Obama “sold Chrysler to Italians
who are going to build Jeeps in China. Mitt Romney will fight for every
American job.”
In fact, Chrysler is retaining and expanding
its Jeep production in North America, including in Ohio. Its profits
have enabled it to separately consider expanding into China, the world’s
largest auto market.
Responding to the ad, Chrysler emphasized in a
blog post that it has “no intention of shifting production of its Jeep
models out of North America to China.”
“They are inviting a false inference,” says
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center
at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert on political
advertising.
This is only the most recent in a stream of
lies from Romney. Remember his contention that the President planned to
“rob” Medicare of $716 billion when in fact the money would come from
reduced payments to providers who were overcharging — thereby extending
the life of Medicare? (Ryan’s plan includes the same $716 billion of
savings but gets it from turning Medicare into a voucher and shifting
rising health-care costs on to seniors.)
Remember Romney’s claim that Obama
removed the work requirement from the welfare law, when in fact Obama
merely allowed governors to fashion harder or broader work
requirements?
Recall Romney’s assertion that he is not
planning to give the rich a tax cut of almost $5 trillion, when in fact
that’s exactly what his budget plan does? Or that his budget will reduce
the long-term budget deficit, when in fact his numbers don’t add up?
And so on. “We’re not going to let our campaign be dictated by fact-checkers,” says Neil Newhouse, a Romney pollster. It is not even being dictated by facts.
There are two lessons here. First, lies
financed by deep pockets are hard to refute, but they must be refuted.
Otherwise, there is no accountability in our democracy. So far, the
American media have not adequately refuted Romney’s lies. They seem to
believe that dissembling is permissible, or that pointing out this
extraordinary lying machine is itself an act of partisanship.
Second, anyone who tells or countenances such
lies cannot be trusted to hold the highest office in our land, because
he has no compunctions about feeding false information to the public. In
recent memory we’ve had a president who told us there were “weapons of
mass destruction” in Iraq, when in fact there were none. We dare not
risk another George W. Bush.
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