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kpete

(71,986 posts)
Sat Jul 28, 2012, 12:30 PM Jul 2012

Mitt’s insults, mistakes & blunders abroad aren’t gaffes-They actually represent his true worldview.

Romney’s World
Mitt’s insults, mistakes, and blunders abroad aren’t gaffes. They actually represent his true worldview.


The thing that Krauthammer doesn’t get is that Romney is not the sort of businessman—that his brand of capitalism is not the sort of enterprise—that requires even the most elementary understanding of diplomacy, courtesy, or sensitivity to other people’s values, lives, or perceptions.

The American capitalists-turned-statesmen of an earlier generation—Douglas Dillon, Averell Harriman, Robert Lovett, John McCloy, Dean Acheson, Paul Nitze—took risks, built institutions, helped rebuild postwar Europe, befriended their foreign counterparts: in short, they cultivated an internationalist sensibility at their core. Whatever you think of their politics or Cold War policies generally (and there is much to criticize), financiers formed an American political elite in that era because finance (through the Marshall Plan, the World Bank, the IMF, and so forth) was so often the vehicle of American expansionism.

By contrast, private-equity firms, such as Bain Capital, where Romney made his fortune, tend to view their client companies as cash cows, susceptible to cookie-cutter formulas from which the firms’ partners reap lavish fees, almost regardless of the outcome. Their ends and means breed an insularity, a sense of entitlement, a disposition to view all the world’s entities through a single prism and to appraise them along a single scale.

How Romney should have behaved in London may have been obvious to Charles Krauthammer, who studies politics; it would have been obvious to politically ambitious businessmen from more traditional lines of work or from an earlier era. But as we have been graced to see this week, it is not necessarily obvious to Romney himself.

more:
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/war_stories/2012/07/mitt_romney_s_insults_and_mistakes_while_at_the_london_olympics_aren_t_gaffes_as_much_as_a_fair_representation_of_his_worldview_.single.html

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Mitt’s insults, mistakes & blunders abroad aren’t gaffes-They actually represent his true worldview. (Original Post) kpete Jul 2012 OP
Yep, he is doing, saying things he believes... Spazito Jul 2012 #1
I'm wondering if he has some early dementia. grasswire Jul 2012 #2

Spazito

(50,327 posts)
1. Yep, he is doing, saying things he believes...
Sat Jul 28, 2012, 12:34 PM
Jul 2012

and has probably done and said essentially the same things before, the difference is he is now out of his bubble, out of his 1%er element. I suspect he is totally befuddled as to why there is a negative reaction to what comes naturally to him and has been accepted and even applauded by those who inhabit his bubble with him.

grasswire

(50,130 posts)
2. I'm wondering if he has some early dementia.
Sat Jul 28, 2012, 12:40 PM
Jul 2012

Reagan was befuddled a lot of the time too.

Mitt is 65 years old.

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