True, but it was a surprise to see anything at all  in print from the  W 
Post
that is critical of Obama. There have been a few very mild pieces  which
have not been happy with the admin, but this is close to an actual  
criticism.
 
Billy
 
=================================================
 
 
message dated 8/10/2011 10:33:35 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.  

David

  _   
 
"There is no virtue in  compulsory government charity, and there is no 
virtue in advocating it. A  politician who portrays himself as "caring" and 
"sensitive" because he wants  to expand the government's charitable programs is 
merely saying that he's  willing to try to do good with other people's 
money. Well, who isn't? And a  voter who takes pride in supporting such 
programs 
is telling us that he'll do  good with his own money -- if a gun is held to 
his head."--P. J.  O'Rourke


On 8/10/2011 3:14 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  




 
 
Why the center-left is fed up with Obama
By _Matt Miller_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/matt-miller/2011/02/24/ABBcOYN_page.html) , 
Wednesday, August 10, 8:39 AM
Here’s the thing. I know Tea Party Republicans were behind the  
debt-ceiling standoff that wreaked needless damage on confidence in the  United 
States. 
I _wrote_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/post/who-does-sandp-think-it-is/2011/07/21/gIQA9g6lSI_blog.html)
  weeks ago of Standard & 
Poor’s  outrageous nerve in threatening a downgrade when America’s ability 
to pay  its debts can’t possibly be in doubt. In short, I know who the real 
villains  are at this volatile moment. 
So why am I so mad at Barack Obama? 
I know I’m not alone. In conversations with folks across the center-left  
in recent days, everyone’s basically had it with the president. I’ve had  
policy frustrations before: Obama’s never aimed high enough on school reform  
and he’s failed miserably to advance a real jobs agenda, to name just two.  I
’ve said repeatedly that we need _a third party_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/10/AR2010111003489.html)
  to shake 
things up. But at the same  time a part of me has always cut the president some 
slack — after all, look  at the mess the man walked into! Yet somehow the 
debt-ceiling fiasco and the  downgrade, punctuated by these _horrific jobs 
numbers_ (http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/employers-hire
-117000-in-july-jobless-rate-slips-to-91percent/2011/08/05/gIQATuQDwI_story.html)
  
and _stock market gyrations_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/worst-day-for-world-markets-since-08/2011/08/08/gIQACKtQ3I_story.html)
 , has 
made something in me  (and, I suspect, millions of others) snap.  
It’s the sound of confidence in Obama’s leadership breaking. 
Yes, other forces may be “responsible” for the bad news. But in the end a  
president has the most power to shape the debate. How could Obama have let  
the entirely foreseeable debt-ceiling standoff turn into a hostage drama?  
Why didn’t he have the spine to say “send me a clean debt limit increase or 
 I’ll raise it myself and see you in court”? How could he leave us in a  
position where every future debt-limit hike now becomes an occasion for  
blackmail? And where Chinese officials can blithely say that “the U.S.  
government has to come to terms with the painful fact that the good old days  
when 
it could just borrow its way out of messes of its own making are  finally gone
”?  
Events keep screaming that the president is weak, weak, weak. That this  
can happen so soon after his gutsy call to take down Osama Bin Laden is  
striking. First the president gets rolled on the debt limit. Then S&P  lowers 
the 
boom. Then China piles on. Then the White House rushes out word  that _Tim 
Geithner is staying put_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/geithner-tells-obama-he-will-remain-as-treasury-secretary/2011/08/07/gIQAj9kt0I_
story.html) . Can anyone explain  exactly who that news was meant to 
reassure? It can’t be that we’ll all now  breathe easier because 
Geithner-crafted 
policy has been such a smashing  success. So is this move a function of 
Obama’s fear of not being able to get  a new Treasury nominee confirmed — or 
his inability to attract someone of  stature for what could be an unpleasant 
one-year stint? Either way, it  smells weak.  
Then there’s the president’s measurably ineffective pep talk as the  
market plunged on Monday. And the cynically inadequate “pivot” to jobs.  
Coupled 
with what will surely be a more-than-ample pivot to character  
assassination, with news that Team Obama’s plan for 2012 is to _metaphorically 
“kill” 
Mitt Romney_ (http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0811/60921.html) .  
Now, I’m happy to stipulate that Romney is a craven flip-flopper and _maybe 
even a mistreater of dogs_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1638065,00.html) . But when 25  
million Americans can’t find full-time work, 
hearing macho strategists speak  with glee of this coming assault seems 
truly off key.  
Does the president sense what the moment requires? It helps to think like  
Mitch McConnell. Once you do, you’ll see there’s no way Republicans will  
partner with Obama to do anything that matters, because they have the  
president right where they want him, with “full ownership” of a lousy  economy. 
That’s why the super-committee is doomed to fail, because  McConnell’s only 
goals will be a bipartisan Medicare reform that takes the  issue off the 
table, plus a deal with no tax hikes.  
This means that, for all the attention it will consume, there is no way  
the super-committee can deliver. (And the awful cuts that are supposed to  
ensue if it fails will never happen; they’ll be “triggered” yet scrapped or  
put off after the election.)  
Once Obama sees that this struggle for power ensures no substantive  
progress in the next 15 months, he has two alternatives. He can campaign  small 
— 
via Mediscare and fresh taxes on millionaires and billionaires,  while 
demonizing the GOP candidate as “worse” — and hope to squeak across  the finish 
line.  
Or he can go big — with mega-plans for jobs, education, infrastructure,  
and research and development, while calling out GOP nihilism as the  obstacle. 
But “big” means pairing this with bolder (and much more candid)  long-term 
deficit-cutting plans that kick in once unemployment comes back  down— 
including higher taxes on the best-off, yes, but also sensible steps  to slow 
the growth of Medicare and Social Security, bigger defense cuts, and  modestly 
higher taxes for everyone on consumption, dirty energy and  financial 
transactions.  
Will Obama go big? I think not, because no honest agenda for American  
renewal can avoid trims and taxes that impose costs on the middle class (as  
part of a long-term plan to save it). Yes, the president will sound “big,”  
and so will his opponent. But it’ll be phony. Instead, we’re in for another  
season of charades as both parties fight for 51 percent with symbolic  “ideas
” unequal to the size of our challenges.  
If this is how it plays out, people like me won’t just be mad at Obama.  We’
ll be mad at ourselves for believing he was going to be different.  





-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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