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Covering the Front and Back Pages of the Newspaper
September 17, 2012
POLITICS: Mitt Romney, Friend in Need
The Obama campaign has spent months laboring to get this election to be about anything but the president's record and the candidates' policy proposals. As often happens in campaigns, this requires painting caricatures with no connection to the facts. The Obama camp has worked hard to make Mitt Romney out as a bad, unfeeling, cold-hearted rich guy who only cares about his own bottom line. Romney himself hasn't helped the matter by being such a stiff, tin-eared speaker who actually looks and sounds like a walking stereotype; political communication is not among his skills. But the reality is that Romney's biography shows him to be a real-life Good Samaritan who has walked the walk of caring for his fellow man not only with his own money but with his own time and his own hands. I've had my share of political complaints about Romney, but on this score, the critics should be ashamed of themselves: Romney is a genuine role model of what private citizens can do to assist those in need. Romney's roster of good deeds only starts with his donations to charity. Romney's substantial inheritance from his wealthy father was donated to charity; despite being born to money, his own wealth comes from his own business career. Romney's tax returns show that he donated over $7 million in 2010-2011 alone, over 16% of his income. Edwin Durgy at Forbes has more on the Romneys' charitable giving: Romney and his wife Ann also maintain a separate foundation, established in 1999...The couple have contributed approximately$13.6 million, including an initial gift of more than $3.6 million, to their Tyler Charitable Foundation, based in Boston, MA, in the past 13 years. This is admirable in itself. But for wealthy philanthropists, writing checks can be easy. Romney has gone the extra mile, giving of his own time. There are many examples: One cold December day in the early 1980s, Mitt Romney loaded up his Gran Torino with firewood and brought it to the home of a single mother whose heat had been shut off just days before Christmas. Reed Fisher tells one such story, from 2007: That story begins in the aftermath of the wildfires that engulfed San Diego in the fall of 2007, consuming dozens of homes in Reed Fisher's neighborhood and nearly his own. The Nixon family tells another: On April 4, 1995, four of Mark and Sheryl Nixon's six children were driving back from a youth group meeting outside Boston when the driver of the minivan they were in lost control of the vehicle, which side-swiped a utility pole, struck two trees and flipped over. Late one summer night in 1993, distraught over his descent into alcoholism and drug use, Mr. Clark, then a 19-year-old college student, decided to confess that he had strayed from his Mormon faith. So he drove through this well-heeled Boston suburb to Mr. Romney’s secluded seven-bedroom home. Another congregant was inspired by Romney's example of service: When Clayton Christensen, a Harvard business professor, and his wife, Christine, felt overwhelmed by church obligations, Mr. Romney showed up unexpectedly at the door. With three young children, Mr. Christensen was in charge of missionary work; his wife ran the relief society, ministering to Boston's poor. Not all of Romney's outreach efforts were as successful as the Washington Post's account of Romney's outreach to the Hatian community, the NY Times notes that "[w]hen young Southeast Asian converts began joining gangs, Mr. Romney set up small storefront churches in rough areas of town, with the hope of drawing them back," but to no avail. But other communities felt the touch of Romney's generosity and compassion, even if it meant bending the rules a little: In the back office of his Weston, Mass., headquarters a quarter-century ago, Mitt Romney, the chief Mormon authority in the Boston area, told the leader of his Spanish-speaking congregation that he would not directly pay for lawyers to help the growing number of illegal immigrants in his church. Then he carefully instructed his subordinate on how to circumvent the Mormon Church's new hard line against such assistance and subsidize their legal aide. Sometimes, Romney's generosity even came out of his propensity for gaffes: Ken Smith, the former director of the New England Center for Homeless Veterans, also came on Beck's show to discuss what Buzzfeed called "a cringe worthy moment in 1994." (You can see video of the testimonials from Smith and some of the others here) Romney is also the kind of many you could depend on to rise to the occasion in a crisis: When the daughter of Bob Gay, a Bain colleague who once sat with Romney on the church's high council, vanished, Romney shut down his Bain offices and arranged for a search party. After she was found shaken but safe in New Jersey, Romney boarded a bus to the airport with John Hoffmire, another Bain colleague who belonged to the church. Tears welled up in Romney's eyes as he talked about his journey through New York's rave clubs showing teenagers a picture of Gay's daughter. Snopes has more, including Gay being quoted at the time - while his daughter was recovering in detox after "a massive dose of ecstasy," saying "I'm not sure we would have gotten her back without" Romney. Romney could even ride to the rescue when more dramatic personal action was required: It's a story that's not often told. Mitt Romney at his family's summer home in Wolfeboro, N.H. on the shores of Lake Winnipesaukee whisking into the night on a Jet Ski with two of his sons to rescue a drowning family of four, their two friends, and their dog. Click the links above, all of which have much longer accounts of these and other stories of Romney's good works. You may choose to dislike Romney's politics, his policies, his ham-handed speeches. But what a better country we would have if half the people attacking him now could compile half of the list above. Compared to Barack Obama, who had half his house paid for by a slumlord convicted of bribing politicians, I'd rather depend on Mitt Romney if I really needed a friend when the chips were down. Comments
BC - Thanks much for compiling this list (which I just linked to). Posted by: Jim Miller at September 18, 2012 1:22 PMStill trying to figure out if you are just trying to invent reason for you to try to like Romney when it is most likely you can't stand him or if this is some weird, irony-laced version of the BC where you put up stuff that are little anecdotes about the worst POTUS candidate in god knows how long and it plays againt the corresponding video and words that actually are the reality of your guy (unfortunately and most likely not of your choosing). The humor of this less attended to site (understandably so) has been ratcheted up greatly with your passive attempts to back up Romney only to watch him instantly shoot them down. Keep it up. Posted by: jim at September 19, 2012 1:14 AMI've been clear since the opening of my very first anti-Romney post back in 2007 that I thought Romney was a remarkably decent, ethical and charitable man, the kind of guy you'd want as your son-in-law, your next-door neighbor or your business partner. I have not changed that view, and it's worth reiterating when people try to make him out as some sort of Scrooge. Posted by: Crank at September 19, 2012 1:42 AMI'm sure he's not a bad guy. Charitable might be stretching it. As has been pointed out here he is mandated to donate 10 percent. So when a multi-millionaire is at 6 percent after the tithing dial me not som impressed especially when his tax rate is so low that I have (and likely every person here) has a greater combination of tax and charitable payments by percentage. Even if he is as you say he is it hardly seems the basis for electing someone and, honestly, I'm not sure he even wants the job at this juncture. I'm not sure why he wanted it in the first place but it appears that if he had any balls he'd just cash it in now and go back to private life. Posted by: jim at September 19, 2012 8:31 AMLet's recall those halcyon days when the GOP meant message discipline and connecting to Bubba. Combine Romney's clueless communication model with the current GOP relentlessly negative scream machine and Republicans are really scratching their heads over an election they are giving away? Posted by: B Rex Lepley at September 19, 2012 11:55 AMOK. A wealthy man gives away substantial amounts of money because he can do so without compromising in any way his life style and does not abandon a drowning family. Terrific. By the way, your link regarding his donation of his inheritance makes no reference to timing. Romney being Romney, I would bet that he is just counting the amount of the inheritance in his total donations in the time since and claiming that he gave the money away. It changes nothing about the harsh and mean-spirited policies he currently pretends to favor. And, if Rezko and your characterization of his relationship with the President is the best you've got, well, enough said. Posted by: Magrooder at September 21, 2012 10:48 AMSome of your people with your comments are ridiculous. Like or not like Romney, he has made more than an average charitable donation, and spent time for charitable works. You attack him because he's rich, then attack him again for giving to charity, because well, he can afford it. Do you think every christian person out there follows the mandated 10% tithe? Disagree with his politics is fine, but go ahead and attack him for being rich, because success and working hard seems to be a bad thing in this country. Seriously, everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but the fact is that Mitt Romney and his family have been model citizens, giving a lot of their time and money to charity. You will note the people contorting themselves to dismiss Romney's charitable donations are completely ignoring the main point of the post, which is his donation of time. Magrooder, as you know, there is volumes more on Obama that I've been through many times. Posted by: Crank at September 21, 2012 4:17 PMThe examples above illustrate a clear example of Romney not being a douchebag. This should sum up the election in a nutshell: Romney is a non-douchebag with a decent plan. Obama is a Scoamf. Posted by: chaz at September 21, 2012 4:52 PMThe points being made about this post were in relation to Crank's half-hearted attempt to say something positive about The Romney. He cited his financial contributions and it was pointed out that roughly 63 percent of said contributions are, in effect, dues to CLDS. That leaves him at 6 percent according to Crank and that's not exactly whopping. It's not bad but it's not some super-philanthropic level either. Maybe it's a pain to get all that money out of offshore accounts and donate some of it. The time thing is fine, again at an individual level I'm sure he's a decent guy. Jimmy Carter no doubt did impressive amounts of charitable work in his first 50+ years of life prior to his presidency but you certainly wouldn't be touting that. Anyway, according to Romney he hasn't has an actual job in 13 years so he's had plenty of time on his hands. I heard a rumor he was governor of Massachusetts but no one from his campaign will confirm that. On that, just for a slight thread drift, don't you think when Romney did the health care thing in Massachusetts he was planning on that being a key piece of a POTUS run? Then the GOP turned into a Loonie Toons episode, He then had to denounce and deny all of it and back track on a zillion policies to get the nomination. I'd bet on that. Posted by: jim at September 22, 2012 2:26 PMCrank, And, if my comment had been, "of course he gives his time, he hasn't had a job for 10 years," you would have responded, "I knew you would miss the point about all the money he gives away." Posted by: Magrooder at September 25, 2012 3:22 PM
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