According to this we all  should buy more and eat less and all  will be 
right with the world.
Hmmmm. Why didn't I think of this before ?
 
 
 
message dated 9/3/2011 9:11:54 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Reason Hit and Run blog 
_http://reason.com/archives/2011/09/02/state-of-the-union/singlepage_ 
(http://reason.com/archives/2011/09/02/state-of-the-union/singlepage) 


    *   _reason.org_ (http://reason.org/)   
    *   _reason.com_ (http://reason.com/)  


_State of the  Union_ 
(http://reason.com/archives/2011/09/02/state-of-the-union) 
Obama's approval of the American public slips to an all-time low.
_A. Barton  Hinkle_ (http://reason.com/people/a-barton-hinkle)  | September 
2, 2011 
 
President Obama's approval rating of the American public has fallen to an  
all-time low, according to a new Gallup survey of White House residents and  
employees. 
Fewer than one in 10 Americans earned the president's favor, according to  
the president. That is down sharply from six in 10—the percentage of 
Americans  Obama approved of shortly after his election in November 2008, and 
the 
lowest  level yet for his administration. 
"They're not doing a very good job, frankly," said the president. "Most of  
them, I mean. Some are. But not many."
Obama's job approval for how  Americans are performing has fallen in every 
category, from the economy to  health care and the environment. 
Americans get their highest marks for their handling of national security  
and emergency preparedness. The killing of Osama bin Laden marked a rare  
bright spot for the public, and their support for the conflicts in Iraq,  
Afghanistan, and Libya showed most people have a strong grasp of foreign  
policy, the survey of Oval Officeholders showed. 
Americans also have handled the recent earthquake on the East Coast and  
Hurricane Irene well, with more than two-thirds of them taking the disasters  
in stride, according to officials inside the White House. 
But otherwise, the government feels the public is falling down on the job.  
The administration strongly approves of only 9 percent of Americans, while 
47  percent are strongly disapproved of. Another 28 percent are somewhat  
disapproved of, and the White House somewhat approves of the remaining 16  
percent. 
"What these numbers show, I think, is that the president has become  
increasingly disillusioned with the American public," said Trevor Gopnik, a  
professor of political science at Georgetown University. 
"He's completely disgusted," said White House press secretary Jay Carney.  
"Which shouldn't be all that surprising, given the state of the economy, the 
 high unemployment rate, and the fact that most Americans are, let's face 
it,  fat lazy slobs. Go to a mall and look around if you don't believe me," 
said  Carney. 
The summer's debt-ceiling stalemate has contributed to the president's sour 
 mood, observers say, as did the decision to cut short his vacation a day 
early  even though many Americans are still enjoying theirs. 
The survey of the West Wing also found: 
    *   Officials are still deeply concerned about high levels of household 
 debt. While delinquency and foreclosure rates have fallen in recent 
months,  per-capita debt load remains too high, holding back the recovery and 
stoking  fears of a double-dip recession that would be blamed on Obama. 
    *   Americans eat too much and don't get enough exercise, says First 
Lady  Michelle Obama — a view echoed by her husband's administration. "Today, 
we  outline a vision for the nation that requires parents, neighborhoods, 
the  medical community, employers, schools and individuals to take a 
coordinated  and comprehensive approach to combating overweight and obesity," 
said 
Health  and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius last year. 
    *   The public doesn't pay enough taxes. There are "things we need to 
pay  for as a country," the president stressed. 
    *   Americans also are lousy consumers, according a cross-tabulation of 
 responses by Energy Secretary Steven Chu, who said recent regulation of  
light bulbs was a good thing because "we are taking away a choice that  
continues to let people waste their own money." 
Other results from the poll indicate that Americans are incapable of  
providing for their own medical care, insist on buying cars that are safe and  
comfortable instead of cars that get the highest gasoline mileage, smoke too  
much, harbor too many of the wrong attitudes, fail to volunteer at 
sufficient  rates, are too greedy, do not separate their recyclables enough, 
and 
continue  to cling to guns and religion despite being lectured to by their 
betters about  the importance of doing otherwise. 
Some analysts tried to find a silver lining in all those clouds. 
Republican pollster Mark Nofziger noted that the U.S. is still 14 months  
away from the next presidential election. The critical period for the 
American  people will not begin until after Labor Day, he said, when 
politicians 
begin  competing in earnest to determine who will oversee them. 
But Lyman Worrel, a historian of American politics at Harvard's Kennedy  
School of Government, warned against too much optimism. "There's always a  
honeymoon period after any election," he cautioned. "But honeymoons don't last  
forever. I expect that the next president—whoever he or she is—will be  
disappointed by the American people, just like Obama has." 
A. Barton Hinkle is a columnist at the Richmond Times-Dispatch. This  
article _originally  appeared_ 
(http://www2.timesdispatch.com/news/rtd-opinion/2011/sep/02/tdopin02-hinkle-presidents-approval-of-the-america-ar-1279976/)
  
at the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

-- 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
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Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
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Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
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