Friday, August 10, 2012

Noonan: A Nation That Believes Nothing - WSJ.com

Peggy Noonan makes some very good points in this column where she touches on several aspects of the presidential campaign. This makes me think more that the campaign is Romney's to lose. It's up to him to run an effective campaign.

Here is a good suggestion that I will try to apply myself. Don't compare our economic problems to Europe. We don't have to look that far away. Just compare our economic problems, how to make them worse, and how to solve them to California. In Indiana we don't even have to go that far. We can just look at Illinois.

"But he (Romney) and his supporters should drop the argument that if we don't change our ways we'll wind up like Europe."

"What Americans are worried about, take as a warning sign, and are heavily invested in is California—that mythic place where Sutter struck gold, where the movies were invented, where the geniuses of the Internet age planted their flag, built their campuses, changed our world.


We care about California. We read every day of the bankruptcies, the reduced city services, the businesses fleeing. California is going down. How amazing is it that this is happening in the middle of a presidential campaign and our candidates aren't even talking about it?
Mitt Romney should speak about the states that work and the states that don't, why they work and why they don't, and how we have to take the ways that work and apply them nationally.
Barack Obama can't talk about these things. You can't question the blue-state model when your whole campaign promises more blue-state thinking.
But Mr. Romney can talk about it.
Both campaigns are afraid of being serious, of really grappling with the things Americans rightly fear. But there's no safety in not being serious. It only leaves voters wondering if you're even capable of seriousness. Letting them wonder that is a mistake."

Noonan: A Nation That Believes Nothing - WSJ.com