A CLOUD CENTRIC WORLD

the wave of the future...  http://tinyurl.com/8bzdsu9

...and a way to enslave us into giving control of all of our data to others in order to have  "freedom" from computers/servers/equipment on site. 

Sounds good in theory, but will be used to our own disadvantage some day.

Even the libs are backing away from Barry

Conversely to the article on Romney below is this one on Obama. VERY different.

Maureen Dowd / Obama trails off ... If he won't sell himself, no one else can

October 11, 2012 12:02 am

President Barack Obama likes to be alone.

When he speaks at rallies, he doesn't want the stage cluttered with other officeholders. When he rides in his limo, he isn't prone to give local pols a lift. He wants to feel that he doesn't owe his ascension to anyone else -- not a rich daddy, not a spouse or father who was president, not even those who helped at pivotal moments. He believes he could do any job in his White House or campaign, from speechwriter to policy director, better than those holding the jobs.

So Mr. Obama knows that he alone is responsible for his unfathomable retreat into his own head while nearly 70 million people watched. He hadn't been nailing it in debate prep either, taking a break to visit the Hoover Dam, and worried aides knew his head wasn't in it. When the president realized what a dud he was, he apologized to flummoxed and irritated advisers.

Once during the 2008 campaign, reading about all the cataclysms jolting the economy and the world, Mr. Obama joked to an adviser: "Maybe I should throw the game." This time, he actually threw the game. And shaved points right off his poll ratings.

The president is good at analyzing the psychology of other world leaders, and he wrote an acclaimed memoir about his long, lonely odyssey of self-discovery. But he doesn't always do a good job at analyzing his own psychology to avoid self-destructive patterns.

David Maraniss, who wrote biographies of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, said that both men had recurring themes. Mr. Clinton would plant "the seeds of his own undoing" and then "find a way to recover." Mr. Obama's personality, Mr. Maraniss said, was shaped by his desire to avoid traps created by his unusual family and geographical backgrounds, and the trap of race in America.

"It helped explain his caution, his tendency to hold back and survey life like a chessboard, looking for where he might get checkmated," Mr. Maraniss wrote in the book, "Barack Obama: The Story," adding that it also made Mr. Obama seek to transcend confrontation.

While Mitt Romney did a great job of conjuring a less off-putting and hard-right version of himself, Mr. Obama walked into a trap of his own devising. It was a perfect psychological storm for the president. He performs better when his back is against the wall; he has some subconscious need to put himself in challenging positions. That makes it hard for him to surf success and intensity; he just suddenly runs out of gas and stops fighting, leaving revved up supporters confused and deflated.

"That's just his rhythm," said one adviser.

Because Mr. Obama doesn't relish confrontation, he often fails to pin his opponents on the mat the first time he gets the chance; instead, perversely, he pulls back and allows foes to gain oxygen. It happened with Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire and Texas and with Republicans in the health care and debt-ceiling debates. Just as Mr. Obama let the Tea Party inflate in the summer of 2009, spreading a phony narrative about "death panels," now he has let Mr. Romney inflate and spread a phony narrative about moderation and tax math.

Even though Mr. Obama was urged not to show his pompous side, he arrived at the podium cloaked in layers of disdain: a disdain for debates, which he regards as shams; a venue, as Carter White House adviser Gerry Rafshoon puts it, where "people prefer a good liar to a bad performer."

Mr. Obama feels: Seriously? After all he did mopping up Republican chaos, does he really have to spend weeks practicing a canned zinger? Should the man who killed Osama bin Laden and personally reviews drone strikes have to put on a show of macho swagger?

Plus, he's filled with disdain for Mr. Romney, seeing him as the ultimate slick boardroom guy born on third base trying to peddle money-making deals. Surely everyone sees through this con man?

Just as Poppy Bush didn't try as hard as he should have because he assumed voters would reject Slick Willie, Mr. Obama lapsed into not trying because he assumed voters would reject Cayman Mitt.

The president averted his eyes as glittering opportunities passed, even when Mr. Romney sent a lob his way with a reference to his accountant.

Mr. Obama has been coddled by Valerie Jarrett, the adviser who sat next to Michelle at the debate, instead of the more politically strategic choice of local pols and their spouses. Ms. Jarrett believes that everyone must woo the prodigy who deigns to guide us, not the other way around.

At a fundraising concert in San Francisco Monday, the president mocked Mr. Romney's star turn, saying "what was being presented wasn't leadership; that's salesmanship."

It is that distaste for salesmanship that caused Mr. Obama not to sell or even explain his health care and economic policies; and it is that distaste that caused him not to sell himself and his policies at the debate. His latest fundraising plea is marked "URGENT." But in refusing to muster his will and energy and urgently sell his vision, he underscores his own lapses in leadership and undermines his arguments for four more years.

Maureen Dowd is a syndicated columnist for The New York Times.
First Published October 11, 2012 12:00 am


Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/opinion/perspectives/maureen-dowd-obama-trails-off-if-he-wont-sell-himself-no-one-else-can-656978/#ixzz28zxIuWbS

The Romney Park City (UT) House

To all the millionaire-hating liberals out there, don't judge a book by its cover!

This says a whole lot about what kind of a man Mitt Romney really is.
 
 
Read about what the real Mitt Romney is.  You can Google it, Snope it, Truth or Fiction it or whatever but it is authentic.  Whether you vote against him or for him, just take a few minutes to learn something about him.
 
As, you may know we own Mitt Romney's former Park City, Utah home.
 
Corinne and I have written a non-political-issue story that you very likely have not heard.  We did this because many Democratic, Republican and Independent voters strongly recommended and found it valuable.
 
Private details, how he acted out of public view and when not running for office.
 
We are messengers delivering facts not initially his supporters nor anti-Obama. Mitt Romney is very different from the man that many Americans have been led to believe.

Regardless of who any of us are supporting in the presidential election, we all are better served by knowing the truth as this does influence who we support.  It was not approved by Mitt Romney or his campaign.
 
 
You are welcome to email the PDF, page link, or forward this email to your friends.
 
Sorry, if you received this more than once.  Like to hear your thoughts ...
 
Ours is a factual story that provides a rare glimpse and insight into the real Mitt Romney. 
 
Does he really relate to the average American?
 
As President, would he impose his beliefs on others?
 
Is he really Christian?
 
When you buy a home and its contents from someone you really learn a lot about their true character, values and beliefs.  And rarely does anyone have the opportunity to learn how a politician acts out of the public's view and when they are not running for office.
 
Well, this actually happened.
 
When?
 
Only a few years ago, in spring of 2009 when we bought Mitt Romney's Park City, Utah, home.
 
His family lived in this home for about ten years. 
 
Because our deal included most of the contents, we gained a unique and unusual perspective of him and his family of which most Americans are completely unaware.  What we experienced was not what we expected -- not the stereotypical actions of a millionaire and more importantly not the image most Americans have of Mitt Romney.

When most of us buy a home, the real estate agent or seller hands over the keys at closing and then as buyers, we are on our own.
 
Not this time.
 
We met Mitt Romney by himself at the house.
 
He spent as much time as we needed showing us around, answering our questions and explaining how to use and service the home's equipment.  And when he was done, he gave us his direct contact information should we have problems.

To move, if we can afford the cost, most of us would hire movers with a team of workers.
 
To save money, many of us are the do-it-our-selves types.
 
Which did Mitt Romney do?
 
Like many of us, on his own he rented a six-wheel truck and moved himself.
 
He drove to the local Home Depot and purchased wood to build whatever he needed for the transport.  Mitt moved his family's clothes, his family's photos, his family's mementos, his grandchildren's toys.
 
With the help of a friend and family, they loaded the truck.
 
Then, after answering all our questions, Mitt Romney said his goodbyes, climbed into the truck, and began the long drive to his new home by himself.

The Romney Park City home, which they designed and built, and its contents had much to say.
 
Having raised a family of our own, we saw that the home was built with a focus on his family.
 
No swimming pool, tennis court or movie theater.
 
There are no maid, butler, or nanny quarters.
 
Clearly Ann and Mitt raised their kids.
 
No gold faucets, no fancy silverware.
 
The kitchen was simple and typical of an average three-bedroom home, very much like those in which we were raised.
 
We were struck by the discovery that most of the art, furniture, and all the curtains were made in America and many by local craftsmen.
 
Most of the linens were of good quality but not what is found at very high end, exclusive stores.
 
The master bedroom pillows had tags from the average American's most popular discount store.

In the most honored place in the master bedroom hung a painting of Jesus Christ.
 
Most Americans know little about Mormonism and we didn't either. 
 
Mitt Romney clearly had a home of faith and family just like the rest of us.

One of the most interesting questions many have asked is, "As president will he impose his beliefs on others?"
 
Many claim that a President Romney would take away rights and impose his beliefs on all Americans.
 
The Romney home contents gave us insight into this question.  One of the strongest Mormon beliefs is the prohibition against drinking alcohol.  We were surprised to find a small supply which we were told was available for guests, not for the family.
 
Mitt Romney had a respect for his guest's wishes.  By not imposing his beliefs on others even within his own home, then clearly a President Romney would not take away rights and impose his beliefs on all Americans.
 
Those making such accusations should stop.
 
The facts do not support their claims.

It is amazing what can be learned about someone from observing the smallest details.
 
In the Romney's family mud room where the boots and outdoor clothing were stored, we found the Governor's ski gloves.  One of his son's apologized for his dad's lack of concern about his appearance when Mitt went skiing because the gloves would surely be noticed.  They were worn out and had holes in the fingers.  Mitt had gone to the garage tool box and wrapped them with duct tape.
 
Thrifty?
 
Yes, and the repair provided an immediate practical solution rather than traveling to the store to buy a new pair.  His indifference to appearance demonstrated his confidence, true character and priorities.  Good qualities but easily misunderstood because they are quite different from those displayed by many famous people and certainly politicians, who highly protect and prize their appearance.

As you have read, our story is not about a wealthy man's nice home or its beautiful contents.
 
It is about the story they tell and how our experiences with him showed the real Mitt Romney.  How his family truly lived is a real indication of their values and beliefs.
 
There is more we could tell, but hope we have provided enough facts to answer some key questions on many voters' minds.  Mitt Romney is very different from the man that many of us have been led to believe.  Clearly he is more like most Americans than not.  We learned many things about Mitt Romney that contradicted what we have been told.
 
He is not aloof or out of touch.
 
He is a man of faith, family and American values.  A guy who is well-grounded.  It is not beneath him to roll up his shirt-sleeves and get the job done.  The fact that he has allowed this to be kept so very private is a true testament to his character and shows how different he is from many other politicians.

Who are we and why are we speaking out?
 
Growing up in Florida and Pennsylvania, we knew little to nothing of Utah, Mitt Romney, his family or values, beliefs, religion and his capabilities.
 
We were amazed by what we learned. We want nothing more than for our fellow citizens to know what we know.  We are not part of any campaign, not Mormon nor religious activists.  We have voted for Democrats and Republicans and were not Governor Romney supporters.  Hal is a farmer, race car driver and retired after creating a number of successful businesses.  Corinne is a retired government employee.  We do not come from wealthy families.  Our parents worked average jobs.  Our fathers were a mailman and an engineer.  Our mothers were a nurse and a housewife. We struggled, worked hard and are grateful for having been rewarded over the years.  We have never given up on achieving the American dream.  But the story we tell is not about us.

As Americans, we depend on our press to provide us with factual and unbiased information.
 
We hear politicians sometimes misspeak and others take their statements out of context.
 
Many times it is hard to tell what is fact and what is fiction.
 
Over the past few months, we have noticed how different from reality some of the public perceptions and media presentations of Governor Romney are.
 
Unfortunately, some political opponents spread false information and misconceptions.
 
This is wrong.

This injustice and the value of our story has led us to speak up and provide these facts.
 
No one can say with absolute certainty what kinds of decisions a president will make while still a candidate for that office.  To predict, we only have access to their words, history and if available the most useful facts of all, how they acted out of public view and when they are not running for office.  This is why our story is so important, valuable and must be told.  No doubt some will want to dismiss our story, argue that it is not newsworthy nor relevant and possibly subject us to an undesired spot light.
 
However, we hope the American people are given the opportunity to hear the truth, especially when the facts directly contradict what many people think to be true.
 
Corinne & Hal Prewitt
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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