Saturday, October 15, 2011

Is the GOP Abel to raise Cain?

Herman Cain's attempt to position himself as an "outsider" is a key plank of his presidential campaign: unlike the rest of them, he wants you to know that he is not a professional polician, and that's part of why he should be elected.

Perhaps that's the entire problem. Maybe his inexperience is the reason for the abject stupidity of his ideas, and has nothing to do with him being a brainless twatwaffle.

On the other hand, maybe it's both.

One of Hermie's earliest ideas, that as president, he would never sign a bill longer than three pages, was widely derided by anyone who understood that there are, in fact, complex problems that might take a little longer merely to explain, much less fix.

Hermie's response? He explained that anybody who actually listened to him or took him at his word was stupid.
Some of these idiotic reporters thought I was serious. The joke’s on them. The message was short bills. Understandable bills. No it’s not literally going to be three pages. The executive summary will be three pages.
Of course, reporters aren't the only stupid people in Cain's tiny little world - basically anybody who questions him must automatically be stupid, right? In his latest book, This is Herman Cain, Hermie explained how Ron Paul's stupid followers were conducting a systematic conspiracy to make him look bad.
"I get the same stupid question at almost every one of these events," Cain writes. "I know it’s a deliberate strategy. How can a person randomly show up at a hundred events and ask the same stupid question to try to nail me on the Federal Reserve?"
(Apparently, Hermie isn't used to people with more than 5 followers.)

Actually, "stupid" is his favorite word. He loves to describe people that way: he gave a whole speech at CPAC around the theme that stupid people are ruining America. Which is odd. Because, despite having risen from a humble beginning to CEO of a crappy pizza chain, Herman Cain just doesn't come across as the brightest motherfucker on the planet.

Admittedly, his business model didn't take a genius to develop: pay people eight dollars an hour to deliver pizzas that cost less than a dollar to make, and charge twelve to eighteen dollars apiece for them. It's not like it's an original idea or anything. Hermie just put one interesting spin on the idea: if you use cheaper ingredients, they cost less. But then, instead of improving on the pizza, you give it an exciting, all-crime ad campaign. (As in, "I'm stealing from you by charging you money for this crappy pizza.")

Cain is more than willing to spew the most ignorant talking points with great authority, and totally without shame. It's not just that you're stupid if you disagree with him, you're lazy if you don't have a job. Oh, and by the way, this whole "Occupy Wall Street" movement? In Hermie's world, that's not just lazy people (OK, that's mostly what it is), that's lazy people being manipulated by the White House.

Because conspiracy theories go across real well with the modern Republican party.



Cain can't even get his birther talking points right:
"Barack Obama is more of an international," Cain said. "I think he’s out of the mainstream and always has been. Look, he was raised in Kenya..."
(Look, moron, Obama lived in Indonesia, and only for four years - ages six to ten. Were all your ideas set in stone when you were in second grade?)

He can't even spew the standard GOP rhetoric correctly. In the middle of accusing the left of being (once again) stupid, this time for not reading the Constitution, he tries to make his point by quoting... wait for it... the Declaration of Independence.
"...when you get to the part about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, don’t stop reading! Keep reading!"
Gonna be reading a long time there, big fella.



And his current big campaign promise is the 9-9-9 tax plan (9% income tax, 9% business tax, 9% sales tax). A plan which is basically hated by everybody, Democrat or Republican, except Herman Cain.
Bruce Bartlett, an adviser in the Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations, says that 9-9-9 is unfair to working taxpayers. "It's the most upside-down tax plan that’s been put forward to tax the poor and the middle class," he says...

Daniel Shaviro, a New York University law professor who specializes in taxation, calls the plan "not viable." For rich people—defined as those who work for themselves and don’t have to take a salary—it essentially becomes an 18 percent total tax on all money. But for poor people collecting a paycheck, Shaviro says, it amounts to a 27 percent tax.
This plan was developed, not by an economist, but an investment banker with ties to the Koch brothers (unless it was stolen from SimCity). And basically, the rich get taxed less, the poor and middle class get taxed more, and the government gets less money.

This is the kind of "leadership" we can expect from Herman Cain? It doesn't take a lot of logic to rip his ideas to shreds.

If he does, by some miracle, win the primaries, Herman Cain may actually make history, though. He will be the first black man to get another black man reelected.

6 comments:

  1. Yes, anybody except a "conservative" should be able to see through this guy -- I mean, really, a 9% national sales tax? Obviously that's the most regressive way to take in revenue, and the 27% figure sounds spot on regarding the effect on the poor. Not that anybody ever mentions the poor these days, of course.

    To me, Cain represents the worst kind of faith in the old Horatio Alger Myth. I'll give him credit for being a successful businessman, but whatever makes him think his personal experience is entirely generalizable into macroeconomic theory and social policy? So everybody's going to go out and become a pizza mogul?

    The only appeal of the ridiculous crap this man talks is that many right-wing-tending people are followers who wish they were leaders and go-getters -- it isn't hard to get them to identify with the go-getters and betray their own "average-person" interests savagely.

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  2. Barack Obama was savaged by right wingers a while ago for flying in his favorite pizza chef from Chicago for some White House event.

    Maybe, after Obama beats Cain by about 100 to 1, he could offer Cain the job of White House pizza chef.

    Nah, forget it. Cain made horrible pizzas.

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  3. Cain did, I think, sort of turn around the pizza chain, but so what? The government is not a pizza parlor although if one wants to turn around a government, one must also increase revenues and one must not simply cut costs until the pizza is cold and stale. Presumably the business was not saved by losing money on each pizza and trying to make it up on the volume either or any of the other mystical solutions espoused by the Idiot Party.

    So can we assume that Godfather Cain would refuse to sign the Constitution - with all those pages where you can't hardly tell an S from an F?

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  4. You know, you have a great point there, Captain. Republicans love so much talking about CEO presidents and running the country like a corporation, but the real task of a CEO is increasing the company's revenue. Maybe it's time that Obama takes them at their word and starts acting like a real CEO. A good first step would be tripling the tax rate in the highest bracket.

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  5. And of course the debt would soon be paid down depriving the T-diots of their best argument.

    Unfortunately, the President doesn't set tax rates. Can you imagine the furor if he could? I mean if he's a "tyrant" for suggesting things, there would be no hyperbole left if he really were one.

    Of course to the Idiot Party, he can be a tyrant and in ineffectual "empty suit" at the same time so it's as useless to talk about reality in America as to talk about real rodents in Disneyland.

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  6. Herman Cain - his campaign dough goes into half-baked pizza.

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