Mitt Romney said this on May 15 in an Iowa speech:
When the men and women who settled the Iowa prairie saw a fire in the distance, they didn’t look around for someone else to save them or go back to sleep hoping the wind might blow another direction. They knew that their survival was up to them.
A prairie fire of debt is sweeping across Iowa and our nation and every day we fail to act that fire gets closer to the homes and children we love.
It’s a wonder how Mitt Romney can continue using incorrect, Obama’s-coming-to-get-you-and-your-chillens rhetoric like this and not be considered utterly disreputable when it comes to talking about government spending. One of the more curious things about the political world and its media is the manner in which boldfaced lies that can be disproved with a Google or Nexis search become not only accepted truths, but becomes known as “conventional wisdom.”
The Barack Obama is a Big Spender™ thing, for example, is pure rubbish, and has been proven as such ad nauseum — yet continues to be a valid point of conversation in our political dialogue. The latest salvo has been fired, and it is a doozy.
Rex Nutting of The Wall Street Journal‘s MarketWatch site put up a post yesterday entitled, “Obama spending binge never happened,” and goes on to show — using the graph at right and other facts — why folks (especially Republicans) have the wrong idea. Better yet, he shines a light on how silly it was that anyone would ever believing that was true:









