"Does how a man treats his dog reveal his character?
More specifically, does it signal his ability to lead the free world as president of the United States?
Dogs Against Romney protested the GOP presidential hopeful ouside the Westminster dog show in New York on
Tuesday (Feb 14).
The group is angry about
Mitt Romney’s treatment of his dog during a 1983 road trip.
The group was created in 2007 when a story came out about Romney putting his Irish Setter,
Seamus,
in a crate strapped to the roof of his car

for a 12-hour trip from Boston to Romney’s vacation home in Ontario, Canada.
Politicker reported two of Mr. Romney’s sons had an off-record conversation with reporters where they revealed the dog
ran away when they reached their destination. Mitt's oldest son,
Tagg Romney, also noticed a
"brown liquid running down the rear window.”
Mitt pulled over at a gas station, hosed off Seamus and the car, returned the dog to his rooftop crate,

and got back on the road.

Tell us: Would you vote for a candidate who put his dog on the roof of a car for 12 hours?"
http://www.hollywood...ter-show-291402
(this could be posted under-"how greedy are these folks?" but I'm posting it here instead.)
"Rick Santorum likes to brag about how he helped a poor local company fight big, bad government
regulations on greenhouse gas emissions.
Consol Energy, the company for which Santorum was a "consultant," wasn't some bare-bones local outfit—
it's one of the largest coal mining companies in the United States, and its
largest shareholder is the German utility RWE.
And Santorum wasn't doing volunteer work: He was paid quite handsomely for his services, to the tune of $142,500 from 2010 to August 2011.
Consol donated more than $73,800 to Santorum during his time as a legislator while simultaneously spending more than $1 million lobbying Congress on pollution limits, mine reclamation, worker health benefits, and tax policy, according to lobbying disclosure forms filed with the US Senate Office of Public Records.
In the most recent congressional debate over a climate bill—the one for which Santorum "volunteered" his services—Consol spent $10.24 million on lobbying, a major increase over its lobbying expenditures in previous years. Much of that money was spent to
defeat legislation to cap greenhouse gas emissions.
Greenhouse gas regulation wasn't the only area where Santorum's legislative agenda mirrored Consol's top lobbying priorities. In 2006,
Santorum authored a provision for a tax bill that would have created a tax credit for "synfuel," which included
coal bed methane, as
Greenwire reported at the time. Synthfuel is made by drilling into coal seams to extract methane, a form of natural gas, and Consol is a
"leading producer" of the product.
"He certainly racked up one of the most anti-environmental records in Congress in his time there," says Navin Nayak."
http://motherjones.c...um-coal-buddies