Words matter. What Romney really didn't like was the President of the United States acknowledging that the United States hasn't always acted perfectly. But he'd have looked like an asshole if he'd said that, so he mischaracterized what actually happened as an "apology tour" and then proceeded to knock down the straw man he'd erected.flockofseagulls104 wrote:When someone goes to another country and tells them we've dictated to them in the past, and we've "shown arrogance and been dismissive, even derisive" to them in the past, when he tells another country that with him as President, America will "be willing to acknowledge past errors where those errors have been made...", I would classify that as apologizing to those countries for the bad people who have run the country before we finally had the sense to elect him. Not only apologizing, but insulting to previous administrations.We're not talking about opinions. We're talking about facts. Either President Obama apologized or he didn't. Romney (and others) said he did. The transcript proves that he didn't.
But that is my opinion and that of many others. You may not agree with that opinion, and that is your right. But what you state is not proof, Bob, it is your differing opinion. Perhaps as a lawyer, you can try and understand the difference. For Politifact and CNN to decide unilaterally that someone's opinion is a lie is not only invalid, it brings their motives into question.
Saying we haven't always been perfect isn't an apology. And if what you want is a government that never acknowledges error, that's what you should say. --Bob