Who said it hitler or santorum
The former Pennsylvania senator described Americans as a "hopeful people," easily susceptible to ignoring a growing problem. Yeah, he's a nice guy. I mean, it won't be near as bad as what we think.
This will be okay. I mean, yeah, maybe he's not the best guy after a while. After a while you find out some things about this guy over in Europe who's not so good of a guy after all, but ya know what, why do we need to be involved? We'll just take care of our own problems," he said. His comments came after an Ohio speech, in which he continued to sharpen his attacks against Obama over what he sees as the president's growing affront against religious liberties.
The former senator said the Obama administration no longer subscribes to principles of religious freedom, but instead uses the term "freedom to worship. The candidate has been hammering Obama in recent days while he rides the momentum of his newly-minted frontrunner status, catapulting slam after slam at the president for abusing standards surrounding the separation of church and state.
Along with the recent contraception coverage controversy, Santorum points to a U. Supreme Court decision, known as Hosanna Tabor, in which the court held that ministers cannot sue their churches for employment discrimination.
Santorum called the January ruling a victory against the Obama administration, whose solicitor general filed a briefing supporting the right to sue churches over discriminatory policies that fall in line with their institution's religious teachings.
Labeling the unanimous Supreme Court decision a "smack down" against the president, Santorum argued the case was just one example of Obama's outlook on government. Painting the president as a dictatorial leader has been a mounting theme in Santorum's stump speeches, especially when it comes to the president's social agenda. It is imposing his ideology on a group of people expressing their theology — their moral code — and saying government will force you to do what your faith says is gravely wrong," Santorum said.
The candidate also made headlines on Saturday when he said Obama had a "phony theology," leaving some to speculate whether Santorum was questioning the president's Christian faith. But the former senator on Sunday morning said he was referring to the president's position on what he called "radical" environmentalism and did not mean to imply religious tones when he used the word "theology.
If Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, loses the Michigan primary to Santorum on February 28, doubts within the party about his campaign will escalate. The Michigan and Ohio contests will be crucial in helping determine who wins the Republican nomination.
This is a brave new world that we do not want to go down. Santorum also blasted the president for maintaining "big-education bureaucracies" that are run by the federal government. He said the federal and state governments' running public schools is "anachronistic," having stemmed from the industrialization of America.
Santorum said the public school system has been a "failure" because it is designed to meet the needs of the state and the school, not the children. We need some really dramatic changes and we're not getting that. Santorum seemed to be comparing President Obama to Hitler, but he didn't say which historical figure he was referring to and his spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment. You may change your billing preferences at any time in the Customer Center or call Customer Service.
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