Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann has been making a total fool of herself to anyone who has any brains or common sense!
She has made the most stupid, idiotic, statements imaginable about all kinds of subject and topics, making intelligent people’s eyes roll!
But now she has REALLY accomplished her all time greatest blunder ever: a campaign pledge that when she is President, gasoline will be below $2 a gallon!
Michele Bachmann apparently thinks that she can control the world’s oil prices, the oil cartel and the oil companies! She has no understanding of basic economics, and yet she is going to produce miracles! This woman is a raving maniac, hallucinating to the extreme, in her belief apparently that her so called connection to God is going to bring back $2 gasoline, which will NEVER occur!
This is a greater pledge than Herbert Hoover promising in 1928 to end poverty in America, and that every American would have two chickens in every pot, two cars in every garage! It is greater than Ronald Reagan saying he would balance the budget by the end of his first term, 1984! It is greater than Richard Nixon promising a return of law and order and bring us together when he first won the Presidency in 1968!
There is more chance that we will land on Mars in the next decade than that we are going to have $2 gasoline return!
This woman, Michele Bachmann, has lost all credibility, and needs to be drummed out of the race as a fool and a danger, because she can only incite mindless people who have no clue to how government works, and she promotes division, not unity, in the midst of major economic crisis, when wisdom, not stupidity and hallucination, needs to be present to deal with our problems as a nation!
She is clearly out of touch with reality, and I am truly frightened that people will listen to her. I might also add, that if, by some miracle, $2 gasoline were to return during her (god-forbid) presidential tenure, it would also be disastrous. I know Perry and others don’t “believe” in global warming, but…. We’ve got to get used to less reliance on fossil fuels. The high cost of gasoline is not the fundamental problem with the economy.