Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Do you ever change your mind?

Before a recent speech in New Hampshire, some people who were identified as members of the "Tea Party" criticized Mitt Romney as a flip-flopper. Does anyone know what they are referring to? Reading his book No Apology, one gets the impression that he thoroughly examines and explores solutions to our nation's problems, then takes a stand in favor of the option that is best supported by data. What's wrong with that? Do you ever change your mind, when data proves you were wrong in earlier decisions? (By the way, after listening to his speech, the Tea Party folks gave him an appreciative applause at the end).

In his book Romney advocates developing nuclear power. That was before the Japanese earthquake. I wonder if he is such a staunch advocate of nuclear power now. The same with off-shore drilling in shallower waters close to land. He might not be such an advocate now after the BP oil spill in the Gulf. Overall, he advocates a proactive energy policy, emphasizing exploration and utilization of the latest techniques to extract natural gas, but not forgetting other sources of energy. If exploration and research open up new possibilities for the United States, you can be sure that he will advocate their development. What's wrong with that?

He is a man who pays attention to data. For example, in education, he claims that the data shows that the most important factor is the quality of the teachers, not how much we spend or how small the class sizes are. Health insurance? Once again he is first and foremost about quality. Business? Remove government obstacles to enable entrepreneurs to achieve high productivity, innovation, providing the best quality products for the lowest prices. Military? Give our soldiers the most up-to-date equipment in the world, build the strongest navy and air force, and recruit the best and brightest to wear the uniform of the United States. Entitlements? Review all research to reform Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid to ensure the best quality and solid financial footing. Climate change? Spend money helping people cope with any real changes that occur, rather than spending billions trying to stop it. Immigration? Encourage policies that enable the best and brightest to stay in America, not be forced to return to the countries from which they came to America to study.

I don't know. Perhaps in his eagerness to tackle issues, Romney may jump on proposed solutions a little too fast (global warming, ethanol), then realize unforeseen consequences later and change his mind.

4 comments:

innominatus said...

Romney's worst flip-flop has been on abortion. One might say he was "for it before he was against it."

To me, this isn't like immigration or tax policy or whatever, where circumstances can change and policy positions need to change with them. That I can understand. But killing babies isn't negotiable. The "I'm pro-life personally but govern as pro-choice" attitude is garbage. A person must have very flawed values to think abortion is OK. If a candidate thinks (or even used to think) that cutting up babies is acceptable, I have no use for him/her.

Bob's Blog said...

Innominatus,
Thanks for your comment. I did not know this about Romney. I appreciate your input.

Terri Wagner said...

I dunno Innominatus. I think there is some wiggle room in abortion in the first trimester and I imagine that was Romney's point. And Bob as long as you say hey with the new facts I've changed my mind and here's why...I'd consider you a reasonable and sensible person.

Bob's Blog said...

Terri and Innominatus,
I finally got to the point in the book where Romney discusses abortion. He unappologetically proclaims himself to be pro-life.