I try to be nice to you every once in a while  :-)
 
Billy
 
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In a message dated 6/9/2010 9:52:54 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

No arguments here. Not that you expected  any....

David

   
 
If  you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the 
newspaper  you are misinformed.--Mark  Twain  



On 6/9/2010 1:55 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
BR comments follow article :
--------------------------------------
 
Real Clear Politics
 
June 9, 2010  
Is Obama at a Tipping Point?
By _David Paul Kuhn_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/?author=David+Paul+Kuhn&id=14532) 

Hurricane Katrina. Hostage crisis. Tet Offensive. 
Is Barack Obama's presidency at a similar tipping point?

 
The relevance of the question exemplifies the gravity of Obama's crisis.  
Obama is learning the lesson of presidents before him. ''Poor Ike," Harry  
Truman said of the incoming president, "it won't be a bit like the Army.  
He'll sit here and he'll say, 'Do this, do that,' and nothing will  happen.'' 
Presidents are hostage to events, goes the old political axiom. But  that's 
a half-truth. Presidencies rise and fall far more by their response  to 
great events than to the event itself. 
"Presidents are ultimately judged by how they handle the unexpected,"  
presidential historian Richard Norton Smith wrote in an email exchange. "JFK  
may have blown the Bay of Pigs but more than recovered a year later in _Cuba_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/cuba/?utm_source=rcw&utm_me
dium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink) . ... Just as he moved away from his 
cautious  approach to civil rights as newspaper pictures and TV reports from  
Birmingham -- the equivalent of today's unstopped pipe at the bottom of the  
Gulf -- made him realize that the presidency is, indeed, ultimately a place 
 of moral leadership." 
This issue comes down to presidential leadership. The British Petroleum  
crisis clearly _placed Obama's presidency in crisis a couple weeks  back_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/05/28/obamas_oil_stain_gulf_briti
sh_petroleum_105771.html) . Yet the status quo endured. The media pile on 
ensued. Impressions  solidified. This is what happens when the president does 
not meet the  moment. 
History tells us how it happens. Perceptions contrast with promises. The  
measure of the president appears smaller than the problems before him.  
Presidencies, subtly and at similar junctures, turn south for a long  winter. 
"The good presidents are able to basically survive these kinds of events,  
rarely are they able control of them. They find strong political and  
strategic responses," said Princeton political historian Julian Zelizer.  "The 
bad 
presidents make the crisis seem greater than the presidency." 
This turning point is often gradual. Not made by one event. And like all  
crossroads, clearest in the rear view mirror. But when the perception goes  
from good to bad on great events, the entire presidency goes bad. 
Obama's leadership problem did not begin with BP. There was the coolness  
to Wall Street malfeasance. The sure victory of financial reform sidelined.  
The new New Deal that never was. The healthcare bill that came instead and  
in time, took hold of his presidency. The president seemingly aligned with  
all the big boogiemen of the day -- big business and big government. 
The change agent personified the establishment. The post-partisan went to  
the mat for a hyper-partisan issue. The candidate who _won his majority with 
the recession_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/01/democrats_year_less_change_tha.html)
 , focused his  mandate elsewhere. The man who 
promised new politics partook in the ugly old  politics, from healthcare's 
Cornhusker kickback to the Joe Sestak incident.  And now, the competent 
candidate haunted by perceptions of incompetent  presidential leadership. 
Somewhere, along the way, was Obama's Bert Lance affair. Jimmy Carter's  
budget director was legally exonerated from a financial scandal. But the  
issue was ethics. Critical weeks passed. Amid Watergate's shadow, the  
candidate 
who ran on good ethics was now a president tainted by bad  ethics. 
The hostage crisis cemented what began with Lance. But it's also how the  
hostage crisis bled on. Like George H.W. Bush's recession. And like too many  
of Obama's crises. Healthcare bleeds for a year. The jobs crisis still  
bleeds. Now this oil crisis, bleeding past day 50. 
And like the Lance affair, critical weeks have indeed passed. Political  
triage might be too late. The time with the victims too little. The  
president's emotive distance from the tragedy too great. The aloofness too  
constant. 
The expressions of anger and empathy too contrived. The crisis too  far 
along. 
FDR most famously took command of like times. His response to the crisis  
won the public -- and historic gains in the midterm elections -- despite the  
Great Depression languishing on. It was not the solution but the response.  
In Roosevelt, as Zelizer put it, "Americans saw someone from the White 
House  doing as much as anyone could see possible. That's in contrast to the  
current administration on the oil spill and, many would say, on jobs." 
Obama's effort to highlight his command has only underlined his failures.  
This week he told NBC that he talks to his experts "so I know whose ass to  
kick." It was like hearing Spock swear. 
It was also reminiscent of Bill Clinton in 1995. "The president is still  
relevant here," Clinton said. But these things are true, of course, when  
they need not be said. 
Obama is flailing. The feckless image haunts him. Meanwhile, from the  
Korean peninsula to _Iran_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/iran/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
  to fragile 
world markets, myriad potential  crises loom. 
Obama famously rode an historic wave to the White House. That wave turned  
on him long ago. But he never seemingly got off. Never succeeded against the 
 tide. Never came close to turning the tide. This is when discipline 
appears  timid, when stability appears stolid and cool appears cold. 
Nothing is written. But it's not getting better. No end to the BP crisis  
is in sight. 
And as Zelizer warned, "The public watches a president like they watch a  
TV-show character. Those perceptions set in and they are incredibly hard to  
change. That's why the oil spill is significant and the longer it goes on,  
the more feelings harden." 
At some point, the bad show also goes on too long. Negative perceptions  of 
the character are formed. That's the tipping point. And it's possible,  but 
not necessarily probable, that Obama's point has already come to  pass. 
 
David Paul Kuhn is the Chief Political Correspondent for  RealClearPolitics 
and the author of _The Neglected Voter: White Men and the Democratic  
Dilemma_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Neglected-Voter-White-Democratic-Dilemma/dp/023060806X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1242670981&sr=8-1)
 .  
==================================================== 
Lessons of History 
Sometimes history is very useful. Actually, history could be useful most  
of the time, but that is asking too much. Sometimes is about the best we can  
hope for. 
What the 2008 election most brings to mind is 1912, the victory of  
progressive Woodrow Wilson, a university intellectual who, in the end,  turned 
out 
to be ineffectual and unpopular. Which is not a disparagement of  
intellectuals. Teddy Roosevelt was an intellectual himself. But a very  
different kind 
of intellectual, someone with real world experience, indeed,  who had once 
been a cowboy in Dakota, a rancher and outdoorsman, not to  mention a hero 
of the Spanish -American War. Wilson was strictly an ivory  tower type, a 
pure idealist. And he bungled the job of president badly,  
Wilson was also an anti-war president, re-elected in 1916 on the strength  
of the slogan, "he kept us out of war." Of course,one year later a million  
US troops was on its way to Europe  Hopefully you can start to see the  
similarities to Barack Hussein Obama. 
The parallels are anything but exact, of course, especially since Wilson  
was racially bigoted and did much to end civil rights gains of  
African-Americans, and institutionalize Jim Crow for the next generation and  
more. Yet 
there is a pattern here, especially the upsurge in enthusiasm for  Wilson 
that brought him into the White House. He was seen by his acolytes as  someone 
incapable of wrong, above the fray, a politically pure soul who  would 
surely usher in a millennium. And Europeans and others also regarded  Wilson as 
an American messiah. 
Such expectations are folly. They were then, they were in 2008. Which  some 
people saw as the likely outcome while the 2008 campaign was unfolding,  
even though it did no good to be prescient. The start of the serious  
recession ended any hope for a McCain victory, not to mention the Arizonan's  
poorly 
run campaign, his unwillingness to be critical of Obama's Muslim  
connections, etc,  and lack of a knowledge base in any areas except  insider DC 
politics. At any rate, the parable of Cassandra is worth  remembering, the 
prophetess who accurately foresaw the future. Just one  problem, the gods had 
decreed that no-one should believe her. So it was in  2008 concerning everyone 
who looked at BHO and could see the real danger of  malfeasance in office if 
he was elected. 
After all, no president in US history has been so poorly prepared. All  
comparisons to JFK were bogus since Kennedy had two full terms in the House,  
and 8 years service in the Senate prior to his run for the White House.  
Obama was an utter novice, and worse, was schooled in what is often referred  
to 
as Chicago "machine politics." Then, in the US Senate, he was present to  
act like a senator only about half the 2 years he was in office,  otherwise 
he was already campaigning for the presidency. 
Objectively this was ridiculous. But the contagion was what it was, a  
fever spreading over the land like the approach of a weather system which  
cannot be stopped. Now we have to live with the aftermath of the equivalent  of 
major storm damage, tornados, and rivers flooding all over the map.  This was 
a storm system that the electorate voted for. 
And so it came to pass that Obama stood the imperatives of practical  
politics on its head and spent a full year and more seeking to pass a health  
care reform bill that, far from being bipartisan, was strictly a matter of  
Left-wing priorities even if there was some compromise with the Right, most  
notably in abandonment of a single-payer option. 
But the point is that , objectively, the Number One Priority had to be  the 
economy. Here it is, mid 2010 and the economy still isn't fixed, with  the 
possibility  of a double dip recession very real. For all his  stupidity and 
cupidity, at least Clinton understood the importance of  getting the 
economy right before all else. This basic, Politics 101 lesson,  simply did not 
penetrate into Obama's consciousness. From every indication,  it still has not 
done so. 
There is another point. Why was health care so crucial for Obama ? The  
answer seems clear. His professional background included years as a social  
worker. Understandably, he wanted the poor and the unfortunate to have  access 
to hospitals and medical treatment. Which is a noble sentiment. But  any 
practical political leader would reflexively put righting the economy  first as 
an absolute necessity. People need an income, it is vital to  everything 
else in their lives. With an income, basic medical needs can be  paid for even 
before any health care system might be in place, plus , an  income is what 
sustains families and such things as paying for clothing,  school fees for 
kids, gasoline for the car, and much else. 
But, no, Obama had etched in his inner mind the plight of the poor as  even 
more important. So, now we have more poor than ever before, but they  have 
( at least the promise of ) health care insurance starting as soon as  2014 
or thereabouts. Speaking personally, it is hard to imagine anything so  
stupid. And yet, this is what actually happened this past year and a  half. 
Maybe there still is time for an Obama epiphany, a "Damascus road"  
experience that turns everything around, including  an end to his  love affair 
with 
Islam , and his sickening true belief in homosexual causes  of every 
imaginable variety, but this seems to be as unlikely as anything  gets. Obama's 
mismanagement of the White House is clear to just about  everyone now. Yet 
little or nothing changes as we get still more law  professor lectures, day in 
and day out, at the same time as no-one gets news  conferences at which the 
president is asked questions he needs to answer  from smart people who are 
well able to ask good questions. This man is a  disappointment across the 
board. 
Needless to say, Obama's approval ratings are down among just about ALL  
demographics, even Jews who voted at a 78% rate for him in 2008 now rating  
him at a 57% level, a loss of 21%. Obama's support among Hispanics has also  
slid, even if not as far, but declined nonetheless. Yet there is one group  
of voters among whom there has not been as much as a 1% decline. From  
January of 2009 to June of 2010 Obama's approval rating among  
African-Americans 
has remained at exactly 91 % 
This reminds me of nothing so much as African-American attitudes toward  OJ 
Simpson, obviously a murderer, which was the Civil Court viewpoint, and  at 
the least a sonovabitch who has since gone on to commit felony aggravated  
robbery. Yet, through it all, black sentiment remains supportive. 
What the hell is this ? 
More to the point, in thinking about the Obama administration, "what the  
hell is this ?" also. 
My opinion as of June 2010 
Billy 




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