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Archive for July, 2005

Jul 30 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

The Holy Cow! Candidate - © Copyright 2005 The Atlantic Monthly

This article from the Atlantic Monthly I believe is very good. I know from reading that some people are uncomfortable about the temple garments question, but I believe that Mr. Romney took that question in stride, and moved on. For me as a member who has been through the temple, it really didn’t bother me all that much. It wasn’t asked in a disrespectful way. Besides that one controversial question, the rest really is good. It really shows him as Presidential.


Future President Romney in a Crowd of People!

Courtesy Cape Cod Times Photo/ARNOLD MILLER

Mitt Romney, the governor of Massachusetts, loves data, hates waste, and reveres Dwight Eisenhower. He’s also the Next Big Thing in the Republican Party. But can anyone so clean-cut, so pure of character, and (by gosh!) so square overcome the “two Ms”—Mormonism and Massachusetts—to be our next president?

by Sridhar Pappu

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Jul 28 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

The Templar Pundit: 2008 Profile: Mitt Romney

Filed under General, New Media

I found this searching the blogosphere. Nice profile!

Governor Willard Mitt Romney (R-MA)
Born March 12, 1947
Resides in Belmont, Massachusetts

Mitt Romney is one of the few Governors from either party actively testings the waters for a 2008 run. Romney managed to become the Republican Governor of Massachusetts thought opinion polls indicate the novelty is wearing off on the liberal electorate in that state. Romney has been extremely effective at fixing the budget and has amassed a self-made fortune in the private sector. Mitt is also a Mormon which has been the focus of most of the media attention on him.

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Jul 27 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

Why I vetoed contraception bill - Mitt Romney’s Piece in The Boston Globe!

Filed under General, News Articles, Culture

I don’t believe that I need to add to what the Governor did. He explains himself well enough in this OP-ED piece in The Boston Globe!

Mitt Romney The Next President of The United States of America!

Photo Courtesy of Siglo21

By Mitt Romney | July 26, 2005

YESTERDAY I vetoed a bill that the Legislature forwarded to my desk. Though described by its sponsors as a measure relating to contraception, there is more to it than that. The bill does not involve only the prevention of conception: The drug it authorizes would also terminate life after conception.

Signing such a measure into law would violate the promise I made to the citizens of Massachusetts when I ran for governor. I pledged that I would not change our abortion laws either to restrict abortion or to facilitate it. What’s more, this particular bill does not require parental consent even for young teenagers. It disregards not only the seriousness of abortion but the importance of parental involvement and so would weaken a protection I am committed to uphold.

I have spoken with medical professionals to determine whether the drug contemplated under the bill would simply prevent conception or whether it would also terminate a living embryo after conception. Once it became clear that the latter was the case, my decision was straightforward. I will honor the commitment I made during my campaign: While I do not favor abortion, I will not change the state’s abortion laws.

I understand that my views on laws governing abortion set me in the minority in our Commonwealth. I am prolife. I believe that abortion is the wrong choice except in cases of incest, rape, and to save the life of the mother. I wish the people of America agreed, and that the laws of our nation could reflect that view. But while the nation remains so divided over abortion, I believe that the states, through the democratic process, should determine their own abortion laws and not have them dictated by judicial mandate.

Because Massachusetts is decidedly prochoice, I have respected the state’s democratically held view. I have not attempted to impose my own views on the prochoice majority.

For all the conflicting views on this issue, it speaks well of our country that we recognize abortion as a problem. The law may call it a right, but no one ever called it a good, and, in the quiet of conscience people of both political parties know that more than a million abortions a year cannot be squared with the good heart of America.

You can’t be a prolife governor in a prochoice state without understanding that there are heartfelt and thoughtful arguments on both sides of the question. Many women considering abortions face terrible pressures, hurts, and fears; we should come to their aid with all the resourcefulness and empathy we can offer. At the same time, the starting point should be the innocence and vulnerability of the child waiting to be born.

In some respects, these convictions have evolved and deepened during my time as governor. In considering the issue of embryo cloning and embryo farming, I saw where the harsh logic of abortion can lead — to the view of innocent new life as nothing more than research material or a commodity to be exploited.

I have also observed the bitterness and fierce anger that still linger 32 years after Roe v. Wade. The majority in the US Supreme Court’s Casey opinion assured us this would pass away as Americans learned to live with abortion on demand. But this has proved a false hope.

There is much in the abortion controversy that America’s founders would not recognize. Above all, those who wrote our Constitution would wonder why the federal courts had peremptorily removed the matter from the authority of the elected branches of government. The federal system left to us by the Constitution allows people of different states to make their own choices on matters of controversy, thus avoiding the bitter battles engendered by ”one size fits all” judicial pronouncements. A federalist approach would allow such disputes to be settled by the citizens and elected representatives of each state, and appropriately defer to democratic governance.

Except on matters of the starkest clarity like the issue of banning partial-birth abortions, there is not now a decisive national consensus on abortion. Some parts of the country have prolife majorities, others have prochoice majorities. People of good faith on both sides of the issue should be able to make and advance their case in democratic forums — with civility, mutual respect, and confidence that democratic majorities will prevail. We will never have peace on the abortion issue, much less a consensus of conscience, until democracy is allowed to work its way.

Mitt Romney is governor of Massachusetts.
© Copyright 2005 Globe Newspaper Company.

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Jul 27 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

I’ve returned…

Filed under This Site

[Note from ParachuteGurl]
I am back from my grandfather’s funeral. It was a very nice visit to the place where I grew up, and haven’t been back to in over five years. I’m very exhausted though, having left late in the evening yesterday, and driving several hours through the night. I’ll be back up to speed later on this afternoon or evening, and get a few Romney stories up.

Hope you’re having a good day!

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Jul 24 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

Going Away

Filed under Uncategorized

[Note from ParachuteGurl]

I am going away for the next couple of days for the funeral of my grandfather. I will be back online Wednesday…

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Jul 23 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

2008 Straw Poll: “Just Right” Edition

Filed under New Media, Polls

[Note from ParachuteGurl]
I would ask that you PLEASE go here, and vote for Mitt!

Thanks a bunch…

3 responses so far

Jul 22 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

Romney touts state jobs gain as sign of improving economy

By MARK JEWELL
AP Business Writer

Massachusetts’ unemployment rate dipped slightly in June as the state gained 4,900 jobs for its 10th straight monthly gain, a result that Gov. Mitt Romney said Thursday is a sign that the state economy is “slowly but surely rebounding.”

Romney predicted the state economy will continue improving to the point that employers will increasingly have a hard time finding enough qualified workers.

Romney noted the state took in almost $17.1 billion in revenues for the fiscal year that ended last month, a 7.1 percent increase over the previous year.

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Jul 22 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

Are we ready for a Mormon president? Article about Romney, and My Views On The Subject!

Jeff Flake (AZ), John Doolittle (CA), Wally Herger (CA), Howard McKeon (CA), Ernest Istook (OK), Mike Simpson (ID), Rob Bishop (UT), Chris Cannon (UT), Orrin Hatch (UT), Bob Bennett (UT), Mike Crapo (ID), Gordon Smith (OR), and Harry Reid (NV).

Do any of these names mean anything to you? If not, I’ll tell you. The first eight are members of The US House of Representatives, and the last five are members of the US Senate. Why am I telling you about these individuals do you ask? The reason is, is because of the article mentioned in this message. I will quote some of the comments.

Another consultant with ties to the Democrats suggested that I address a more substantive question, raised by Harvard Business School dean Kim Clark’s recent decision to leave HBS for the presidency of Brigham Young University-Idaho. In May, Clark, who is Mormon, received a call from his church’s president asking him to leave Harvard and head for Idaho.

So would Romney likewise feel obliged to follow the dictates of the church’s president, whom Mormons believe to be a divinely inspired prophet? John F. Kennedy faced this same question concerning his loyalty to Catholicism during the 1960 election, and addressed it in a famous speech to Protestant ministers in Houston. ”I am not the Catholic candidate for president,” Kennedy said. ”I am the Democratic Party’s candidate for president who happens also to be a Catholic . . . I do not speak for my church on public matters; and the church does not speak for me.”

Romney’s spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom says the governor’s ”first obligation is to fulfill his duty of office, and that would take precedence over anything. If he were to get a Kim Clark-like call, he would not react in the same way. This is a governor who has signed a law permitting Sunday alcohol sales, and who has been open to an expansion of gaming. [Observant Mormons do not smoke, gamble, or drink spirits.] This is by no means someone who is marching in lockstep with his church.”

The thing that I don’t quite understand is that there have been several high profile LDS politicians over the years, and those politicians haven’t left their political positions for church callings. Orrin Hatch isn’t constantly being asked if he thinks he’s going to be called away from his Senate job. The Church is not going to call these people to high profile positions in the church due to the fact that by them having them right where they are, and by their manner of being they do a better service for the church in those capacities than being called to high ranking positions in The Church itself. One example is Steve Young for the San Francisco 49ers. He even played on Sundays. Sure, any person in public or private life could receive a call from The Church with an extension of a call to a church position. But, what better showcase for the church than to have the leader of the free world who also happens to be LDS? It would give The Church more exposure than it’s ever had, therefor I strongly doubt that Mr. Romney would be called away from it during his Presidency.

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8 responses so far

Jul 21 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

The sudden death of Romney’s dream - PARACHUTEGURL REBUTTAL!!!

[ParachuteGurl’s Analysis]
First, I will state that I am against the death penalty, and that is just one issue that Romney and I will have to disagree on. But, with that said. I think this article is WAY overblown. Come on, one issue that doesn’t get passed in a legislature FILLED with opposition leaders. There have been plenty of Presidential issues that had big ideas and didn’t come to fruition. Have we heard of Health Care in the Clinton Administration? This is just the opposition going after Romney, which isn’t too hard to find in an overwhelmingly Democratic state.

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Jul 20 2005

Profile Image of Ann Marie Curling
Ann Marie Curling

ROMNEY APPOINTS LATINO-AMERICAN ADVISORY COMMISSION

July 20 - Reaffirming his commitment to create a state government that reflects the entire Massachusetts community, Governor Mitt Romney today swore in 12 new members of the Latino-American Advisory Commission (LAAC).

“One of the hallmarks of good government is making sure that everyone has a seat at the table. In this administration, diversity’s not a slogan - it’s a fact,” said Romney.

[ParachuteGurl Comment]
I found this appropriate considering my thoughts on the Roberts nomination. I wonder what kind of nominee Romney would choose!

***Emphasis above is mine, not the Massachusetts Governors Office’s article…

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