Monday night, Herman Cain visited our home to address about a hundred local political activists. What a privilege and pleasure it was to meet and hear this classy man who is outstanding in every conceivable way. Hearing his view of our nation’s troubles and his proposed solutions certainly makes him the best candidate for president of the United States. And when elected, he will be a great president. Thank you Mr. Cain for stopping by. We know it is a long uphill battle for you. We wish you the very best on that long journey. America needs you.
He calls himself “the dark-horse candidate.” Of course it is an uphill battle for him. But it shouldn’t be too long before the public wakes up to Mr. Cain being heads and shoulders above all the rest in presidential qualifications. Born in Tennessee, but raised just down the road in urban Atlanta, Mr. Cain graduated from the elite MorehouseCollegewith a major in Mathematics and Purdue University with a major in Computer Science.
His early career included doing complex ballistics calculations for the US Navy.
He then joined food giant Pillsbury and went on to a successful career converting troubled subsidiaries to profitability through his huge intelligence and hard work. He eventually bought out one of those successes, the Godfather Pizza Company, and was its president for many years.
Mr. Cain was later appointed to the Board of the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank and later it’s Chair. He is a husband, father, grandfather. He is an author of four books, radio host of his own national show, and frequent guest commentator on Fox News.
In other words, he is enormously intelligent, experienced, and successful: exactly the kind of person that should be president.
He is also good looking and blessed with a voice of gold and velvet and the speaking skills of a Baptist preacher which he also happens to be. He is by far the best public speaker of any of the candidates now in the race and perhaps the best speaker I have heard since meeting Martin Luther King in 1963 in the Greek Bowl at San Diego State. Contrary to the bumbling presentations from Teleprompters so characteristic of some, Mr. Cain can raise cain and move the hearts of his listeners simultaneously.
Mr. Cain believes in a sound business approach to government regulation and a “business-like” approach to evaluating government programs with an eye to eliminating those that overlap and are not working.
