Who is smarter, Mitt Romney or Rick Perry?
Roger47
2012/07/10 20:52:42
Under the recent Supreme Court decision, states can opt out of the expansion of Medicaid. Medicaid is the federal program to provide medical care for those too poor to be able to afford medical insurance. Texas Governor Rick Perry has announced that his state will turn down federal tax money that will cover the state's costs of expanding the Medicaid program to cover uninsured Texans.
Right now, Texas has the highest rate of uninsured in the country, at 25%. In contrast, Massachusetts, with Romneycare, has a higher percent of its residents with insurance than any other state. Only 3% of Massachusetts residents lack medical coverage.
Which Governor is smarter?
http://lubbockonline.com/local-news/2011-09-13/texas-leads-na...
http://hopehealthcarereview.com/97-insured-under-massachusett...
Right now, Texas has the highest rate of uninsured in the country, at 25%. In contrast, Massachusetts, with Romneycare, has a higher percent of its residents with insurance than any other state. Only 3% of Massachusetts residents lack medical coverage.
Which Governor is smarter?
http://lubbockonline.com/local-news/2011-09-13/texas-leads-na...
http://hopehealthcarereview.com/97-insured-under-massachusett...
Read More: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-governor-rejects-two-p...

















His own party knows what a snake he is. The candidates were lining up and
Bachmann , Cain , and even Perry had supporters. Put them all together and you wouldn't get the IQ of a fruit fly. But the chant back then was, " Anybody but Romney" . What is amazing is that Romney couldn't even put those dimwits away until they started running out of money. But here he is... the GOP candidate and watching the Republicans trying to put on a happy face is great comedy.
He got a dual-degree from Harvard in Law and Business, got his law degree but chose a career in business.
"One of the most exclusive clubs in academe is a Harvard University dual-degree program allowing graduate students to attend its law and business schools simultaneously, cramming five years of education into four. On average, about 12 people per year have completed the program — the overachievers of the overachievers — including a striking number of big names in finance, industry, law and government.
The program is so small that it has drawn little attention outside rarefied circles, but that may change as its most famous graduate, Mitt Romney, campaigns for the White House, subjecting every phase of his life to scrutiny. "