Check out Nite Fite, a new series from the creators of Veracifier!

TPMtv: Fact Check: Romney vs. Obama

Comments

  • Yonis wrote on August 16, 3:34 pm

    Why isn't Romney hosting Jeopardy or Price is Right? Why won't anyone mention his 10,000 dollars worth of capped teeth; not to mention the dyed hair. Talk about a phoney....

  • Robin Morris wrote on August 17, 8:55 am

    Toay it comes out he is worth as much as a quarter billion dollars, more than all the other candidates combined, much of it in undisclosed investments he has transferred to a shell corporation run by his sons. He could buy better intelligence, certainly better campaign strategists who could keep him abreast of the news-maybe he's too busy torturing beloved dogs to read the news. A rich, rich joke...on us if he is "elected".then we will all be "Mitt's mutts!"!

  • John Cotter wrote on August 17, 11:09 pm

    Dude...
    If you curtail all of the childish editorial remarks about the stories you feature, you would move ahead in credibility and seem much less pompus when reporting...especially since you seldom pay any homage to the opposite viewpoint. Talk about not confusing you with the facts... Harrumph!

  • ddandivine wrote on August 26, 10:11 pm

    It's time we had a sensible administration that doesn't just provide lip service to visiting dignitaries and Presidents. If Bush is sincere about truly helping the Afgans and Karzi he'd be pulling our troops out of Iraq!

About This Video

Fact Check: Romney vs. Obama

Mitt Romney recently attacked Barack Obama over his comments regarding the war in Afghanistan and the need for more troops on the ground, so as to reduce the reliance on air raids that have often resulted in Afghan civilian casualties. Romney called Obama's comments "outrageous" and "a suggestion that somehow our troops are not noble and dignified." But even a quick glance at the realities of the situation in Afghanistan shows that Romney has remarkably little understanding of the facts.

Tags : barack obama, Mitt Romney, Afghanistan, President Bush, civilian casualties, President Karzai, Ambassador Jawad