Four Little Words: Why the Obama campaign is suddenly so worried.

RockX

Banned
What's the difference between a calm and cool Barack Obama, and a rattled and worried Barack Obama? Four words, it turns out. "You didn't build that" is swelling to such heights that it has the president somewhere unprecedented: on defense. Mr. Obama has felt compelled—for the first time in this campaign—to cut an ad in which he directly responds to the criticisms of his now-infamous speech, complaining his opponents took his words "out of context."


That ad follows two separate ones from his campaign attempting damage control. His campaign appearances are now about backpedaling and proclaiming his love for small business. And the Democratic National Committee produced its own panicked memo, which vowed to "turn the page" on Mr. Romney's "out of context . . . BS"—thereby acknowledging that Chicago has lost control of the message.


The Obama campaign has elevated poll-testing and focus-grouping to near-clinical heights, and the results drive the president's every action: his policies, his campaign venues, his targeted demographics, his messaging. That Mr. Obama felt required—teeth-gritted—to address the "you didn't build that" meme means his vaunted focus groups are sounding alarms.


The obsession with tested messages is precisely why the president's rare moments of candor—on free enterprise, on those who "cling to their guns and religion," on the need to "spread the wealth around"—are so revealing. They are a look at the real man. It turns out Mr. Obama's dismissive words toward free enterprise closely mirror a speech that liberal Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren gave last August.


Ms. Warren's argument—that government is the real source of all business success—went viral and made a profound impression among the liberal elite, who have been pushing for its wider adoption. Mr. Obama chose to road-test it on the national stage, presumably thinking it would underline his argument for why the wealthy should pay more. It was a big political misstep, and now has the Obama team seriously worried.

It's why Mr. Obama's "out of context" complaints aren't getting traction. The Republican National Committee's response to that gripe was to run an ad that shows a full minute of Mr. Obama's rant at the Roanoke, Va., campaign event on July 13. In addition to "you didn't build that," the president also put down those who think they are "smarter" or "work harder" than others. Witness the first president to demean the bedrock American beliefs in industriousness and exceptionalism. The "context" only makes it worse.

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LOL

Obama's chickens are coming home to roost!
 
Those 4 little words as taken out of context and misrepresented in that ad do have an effect on the populace. Those that would never vote for President Barack Hussein Obama should take heed to the context as mittens did almost the same day and laud them as truly the American dream. But they won't and they don't matter in the grand scheme of things anyway. Let them piss down their legs and giggle like school children after just hearing someone say out loud "doo-doo". They are as irrelevant as they are ignorant.

If you're hanging your hopes on those four little words or any other gaffes the prez may or may not have made you're losing already. You're laughable at best.
 
Mitt is a forign affairs FLOP, he failed deplomacy 101 in London yesterady. The more I see from his campaign, the more I think he is more embarrassing to the Republicans than Sara Baracuda Palin.
 
Context usually takes a holiday during Presidential campaigns.

If "clinging to guns" didn't sink him in '08, this won't for this campaign. I think he's probably much more worried about the enimic economic growth.
 
To be fair, both campaigns are extremely desperate.

I think the last campaign I saw that I didn't think was quite that desperate was Dole's.

There seems to be a particular palitable desperation in the Romney campaign, when they take a very short part of a sentence out of context and try to pretend the President was saying something he was not.
 
There seems to be a particular palitable desperation in the Romney campaign, when they take a very short part of a sentence out of context and try to pretend the President was saying something he was not.

Honestly, that sounds like every campaign I have ever seen in my lifetime. Even the races for local Mayor.
 
Those four little words are better than Mitt's four little words.

GIVE ME YOUR MONEY!

and far superior to Mitt's two little words.

YOU'RE FIRED!

The difference between the two campaigns is that the Obama doesn't have to lie to prove a point.
 
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