Willard Mitt Romney, who accepted his nomination as the Republican candidate for President of the United States at the 2012 Republican National Convention, presented himself and his intents for our country with remarkable poise. Mitt Romney took the stand with confidence to present the United States with uplifting, spirited, optimistic goals for the future of America to achieve.
Romney’s role in Bain Capital, his involvement in Staples, his dedication to the continuation of the Olympics, and his role as governor of Massachusetts have often cast him as an overconfident person who is out of touch with the issues of ordinary Americans. Everything that was displayed at the Republican National Convention refuted this distorted perception.
Romney began by working for the Boston Consulting Group where he later was employed at Bain & Company in Boston, Massachusetts. There, he was able to support the dreams and ambitions of young entrepreneurs by leading the company out of a major financial deficit with his desire to see others capture the American dream. With his entrepreneurial zeal, he even co-founded Bain Capital that yielded substantial profit. But it wasn’t the profit he was concerned about; it was the thousands of jobs he created and the willingness for others to succeed beyond the imaginations of their ancestors. Romney was not ravenous for the money and the fame that he is accused of, but rather the desire to see others succeed.
In addition, Romney founded Staples 25 years ago. Starting with a young entrepreneur trying to sell a few office supplies, Romney immediately defended and supported this particular dream by financially making the business reasonable. Romney refused to overprice items and an article from FoxNews.com claims that “for Mitt, cutting costs and running things well has been a consistent animating