Friday, November 5, 2010

The Two Obamas

There is the Obama who the voters are rejecting, who has worn out his welcome;


and


There is the Obama, his worshipfullness, who "is just too talented to do what ordinary people do".


Which Obama is your Obama ?


When Peggy Noonan’s On . . .

She is on. Here’s her comment on President Obama’s Wednesday press conference: “Viewers would have found it disappointing if there had been any viewers.” She continues: “The president is speaking, in effect, to an empty room. From my notes five minutes in: ‘This wet blanket, this occupier of the least interesting corner of the faculty lounge, this joy-free zone, this inert gas.’”

A related note: About three years ago, I heard President Bush make the argument for one or another of his policies, something foreign-policy-related, and his case on it seemed to me quite persuasive. A couple of days later, to my great disappointment, the poll results came in: the same lopsided rejection of the policy that existed before Bush spoke. Puzzled, I asked a prominent conservative intellectual of my acquaintance what could account for the American people’s failure to grasp what seemed to me so sensible. He answered: “It’s not so much that they are rejecting Bush’s argument, as that they’ve simply stopped listening to him.”

It took Bush six years to reach that point. Obama has worn out his welcome practically overnight.


O POTUS, Our POTUS

In “The ego factor: Can Obama change?Politico today runs a priceless quote from Valerie Jarrett that should be from The Onion but actually comes from David Remnick’s book on Obama:

I think Barack knew that he had God-given talents that were extraordinary. He knows exactly how smart he is. … He knows how perceptive he is. He knows what a good reader of people he is. And he knows that he has the ability — the extraordinary, uncanny ability — to take a thousand different perspectives, digest them and make sense out of them, and I think that he has never really been challenged intellectually. … So, what I sensed in him was not just a restless spirit but somebody with such extraordinary talents that had to be really taxed in order for him to be happy. … He’s been bored to death his whole life. He’s just too talented to do what ordinary people do.

Election Aftermath: Obama Does Not Get It

Many interesting articles contrasting the historic turnover in this election, vs. the tone deafness of Obama (and Pelosi for that matter). Could be a precursor for some huge battles over healthcare, spending, debt and other policies.

Michael Goodwin Asks: Will we now see an ideologue or a pragmatist?

He will be a pragmatist only to the extent it helps him push his ideology. If he gets a free hand again, it's off to the radical races.Ma

Any hope he is a chastened president, ready to work for the majority of Americans instead of against them, is another illusion.

He told us so himself. Asked if he still thinks the health-care takeover was the right policy, he said the process was an "ugly mess," but insisted firmly, "The outcome was a good one."

There you have it. The signature policy he produced is "good," despite being unpopular, despite driving up costs and taxes, despite hindering job growth, and despite forcing companies to drop coverage or seek exemptions. Any more "good" like that and the USA will be down for the count.


Here are some interesting articles on the subject:


Rich Lowry: The Shellacking That Hubris Brought

Michael Goodwin: Obama Gets It, He Just Rejects It

NY Post Editorial: A Prez in Denial

George Will: They Still Don't Get it

Dick Morris: Triangulation Is Not an Option

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Election Day After - Obama / Pelosi / Reid Repudiated

Republicans pick up around 60 House seats and reclaim majority.

In the Senate, results are not completely in, but it looks like a pickup to 47, 48 or even 49 seats.

A convincing repudiation of Obama's 2 years and the 4 years of Democratic control of Congress.

However, there were some lowlights, as some of the worst of the worst in Congress got re-elected, such as:

Harry Reid in NV (saved by unions, Harrah's and the national dems who pulled out all stops to defeat a weak Tea Party candidate).

Pelosi - re-elected but no longer speaker.

Rangel - re-elected by large margin - but loses his coveted Ways and Means chair and still faces ethics charges.

Barney Frank - as repulsive a figure as there is. What is wrong with MA voters ??
(and CA voters for that matter).

Here's a little vintage Barney, who doesn't get or doesn't care about the message delivered:

Want to See the Worst Victory Speech Ever?

From our friend Barney Frank. Having won by about 14 points, he spends ten minutes trashing Sean Bielat, the media, and everyone else. He’s outraged that he had to run a race at all. He calls the Bielat campaign “beneath the dignity of a democracy” or words to that effect. This from a guy who ran millions of dollars in attack ads, repeatedly insulted Bielat, and shouted down his own constituents.

If you want to know what’s really going through the mind of Democratic incumbents this morning, just listen to Barney Frank release his inner arrogant liberal.

Monday, November 1, 2010

No More Tingles for Chris Matthews ....

Even Chris Matthews (!) is out trashing Obama ... "elitist", etc. WOW !

This is a MUST WATCH

National Security in the aftermath of UPS ...

Obama's Foreign Policy & National Security Policies can best be described as Amateur Hour.


Time to Rethink Our National-Security Policies
November 1, 2010

By Victor Davis Hanson

If it is true that the State Department, in adolescent fashion, tweeted a birthday message to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on his 54th, and if it is true that the man believed to be responsible for the latest bomb plot, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, was behind or at least associated with the Christmas Day bomber, then some very real questions arise as to the sanity of our current policies. Evidently, the terrorists are getting a much different message than the one the Obama administration intended to send.

The list goes on and on: the al-Arabiya interview, the Cairo speech, the bowing, the euphemisms (“man-caused disasters,” “overseas contingency operations”), the president’s use of “enemies” for Americans rather than radical Islamists, the KSM trial gambit, the constant trashing of the Bush administration by John Brennan and others, Muslim outreach at NASA, the demonization of Guantanamo and the subsequent retreat from insistence on its closure, the criminalization of acts of war . . .

These actions have not deterred would-be terrorists intent on blowing up airplanes, Times Square, or U.S. service personnel. Moreover, they may be sending the message that we are less confident now that radical Islam is something that needs to be defeated and crushed. We surely didn’t get that sense of outrage last Christmas when the president characterized Abdulmuttalab’s foiled attempt with the legalistic adverb “allegedly.”

A leader who has promised to wipe out Israel — and is proceeding to find the means to do so — will not be flattered by a Twitter message. He can only have contempt for our frivolity and appeasement. Had Abdulmutallab immediately been arrested last Christmas as an enemy combatant (a phrase that has also been Trotskyized in the last 21 months) and promptly sent for interrogation at Guantanamo, would he have enlightened us about the nature of his bomb maker, and would that inquiry have led to some increased defense against Asiri’s handiwork? Would Asiri have gotten as far as he did in his latest terrorist attempt? This is not partisan inquiry, but legitimate questioning of the national-security policies that affect us all.
It is past time to cool the “reset button” rhetoric and get back to the serious business of protecting American lives against radical Islamic terrorists. As we have seen the last two years, they will step up their efforts to kill us until they accept that doing so is synonymous with their own destruction.


Amateur Hour at the State Department

November 1, 2010 12:56 P.M.
By Claire Berlinski
Denise recently asked whether Obama has put a “kick me” sign on our backs. I have a few thoughts about this.

I recently interviewed Turkey’s former ambassador to the United States, Faruk Loğoğlu. He is appalled — like many in Turkey — by the soft-headedness of the Obama administration’s diplomacy in this region. He finds Obama’s speeches about his personal warmth toward Islam ludicrous and inappropriate. “Obama can’t play the religious game,” he said. “He should be playing the security game. His policy toward Turkey is a bad imitation of the worst parts of Orientalism.”

It’s not merely the ideological color of the Obama administration’s diplomacy that worries me, but its incompetence. I’ve lately been examining in very close detail the events that led to Turkey’s “No” vote on the Iran sanctions package in the UN. I’ll be writing about this elsewhere, and the details are too complicated to summarize here. But one thing leaps out: our incompetence. How could there have been any ambiguity — and obviously there was — in our communication with Turkey about our negotiating position on the nuclear-fuel-swap deal? How is it possible that Turkey was receiving critically different messages from the White House and the State Department on an issue as significant as the Iranian nuclear program, for God’s sake? It’s inconceivable, but on looking closely at the evidence, it is clear that this is just what happened.

When the State Department spokesman sends a completely inappropriate birthday message to to Ahmadinejad via Twitter, it is, likewise, a symptom of utter amateurism. Apologists for this incident have suggested to me that this wasn’t such a big deal; it was sarcastic, they say, and it wasn’t a diplomatic note or official communiqué. I am guessing that had that Tweet said, “Tomorrow we bomb Iran into rubble,” the same people would have thought it quite a big deal indeed.

It is hugely significant when the tone coming out of the State Department is childish, inappropriate, and supine; it is fundamentally unserious to put such a message on Twitter; and it is beyond belief that anyone there would think “sarcasm” about this situation — we are talking about kidnapped U.S. citizens who are being held hostage in Iran — conveys American resolve. Signaling counts. Signaling that you are damned serious does not start wars, it prevents them.