See the results from the $10 Million a Minute tour and the Ohio and Virginia Town Hall Events
Monday, October 8 2012
Click here to view a summary of the $10 Million a Minute Bus Tour, Highlights and Results.
The Comeback America Initiative (CAI) hosted two unprecedented Town Hall meetings to engage and empower a representative group of registered voters around the fiscal challenges facing the U.S. and potential solutions. These events were a part of CAI’s $10 Million a Minute Bus Tour that seeks to educate voters in swing states at a time when voters want candidates to focus on substance and solutions.
Below are the results of the two Town Hall meetings:



Neither of the two existing parties have any intention of enacting the changes that your town hall participants say are necessary to save the country from financial ruin. They are willing to drive America over the cliff as long as they can be the driver behind the wheel. They want to stay in power at all costs. As long as they and their cronies benefit right up to the implosion.
Ridiculous quest there. What occurred after? Good luck!
Where do these goof-ball Republicans get off holding the coutnry hostage and demanding cuts to Social Security Medicare? These pricks raised the retirement age and made us pay more into the system back in the 80 s to cover Reagan’s massive tax breaks and out of control spending. And what did they do, they took the surplus and spent it. Take a look at Ryan’s budget, we’ll have debt of 23+ trillion in 2021 10 years. Then the Repubs will look to rob us again. The Pentagon-Pig is the problem.
The last thing the Obama campaign wants to do is scare people away. Inside this, one of their myriad campaign offices throughout the state, scattered signs promoted “Early Voting in Person!” and a “Get Out the Vote Leadership Manual” sat on a desk under a handmade banner that read “Canvassing.” In the next room, a whiteboard reminded volunteers of “weeks to go” and kept track of their calls made, doors knocked, voters registered. On a recent evening, two college-age volunteers hovered over their laptops. The one wearing chunky hipster glasses did data entry. The one in torn skinny jeans cut labels reading “Not just for some of us.” They didn’t seem the ideal people to reach the “us” — white, blue-collar, swing voters — who will probably determine the election between Obama and Mitt Romney.