African American history

Obama Irony

by Bill O'Connell on May 22, 2009

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“I stand here today as someone whose life was made possible by these documents.” — Barack Obama

Barack Obama said those words at the National Archives, as he stood before the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.  He was there to defend his position on the War on Terrorism, or should I say, the Overseas Contingency Operation.

The irony is that as the child of a single mother, he probably owes his life to the fact that he was born before a slim 5-4 majority of Supreme Court justices found a non-existent Constitutional right to abortion in those documents behind him, in the Roe v. Wade decision.

“This child’s future is a broken home. He will be abandoned by his father. His single mother will struggle to raise him. Despite the hardships he will endure this child will become the 1st African-American President.” — pro-life commercial profiling Barack Obama

The most pro-abortion President in history probably most owes his life to the fact that he wasn’t born after 1973.

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CBO – Deficit Will Be $3 Trillion Higher

by Bill O'Connell on March 20, 2009

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Obama called for bipartisanship during the campaign. Well here it is. The bipartisan Congressional Budget Office says President Obama’s budget plan is a disaster. But the bumbling, stumbling Obama administration puts their inexperience on full display. Press Secretary Gibbs dismissed the report comparing it to picking Final Four brackets six years out.

Perhaps, the President should forget Jay Leno and start reading Ronald Reagan’s writings.

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The Chinese Communists are moving in a more capitalist direction than the way President Obama is leading us.  If that doesn’t make you stop and think, I don’t know what will.  As the stock market drops like an elevator with a broken cable every time President Obama speaks, the Chinese Communists have no capital gains tax and no tax on daily stock market trades.  What is President Obama proposing?  Increasing the tax on capital gains.  Is it any wonder the stock market is shriveling along with most Americans savings?  It’s time to wake up from the Obama euphoria and start paying attention.

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Hope and Change = Tax and Spend. Oh, Well

by Bill O'Connell on February 23, 2009

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Goodbye Liberty

The cat is finally out of the bag.  President Obama, after passing a huge spending increase, proposed cutting the budget deficit in half by the end of his current term primarily by raising taxes and cutting defense spending.  This is the same old tired liberal policies that brought us the economic morass of Jimmy Carter, the unpreparedness to deal with al Qaeda under Clinton, and now in the midst of a deep recession, President Obama wants to spend more and tax more.

Just when we need to move more money into the private economy, President Obama wants to take out his Hoover vacuum cleaner and suck up whatever cash he can find and hoard it in Washington.

The real problem is government has gotten too big, too wasteful, too profligate, and too out of touch with the American people.  Instead of the original vision of the founding fathers of limited federal government, pretty soon your lives will be directed by four people:  your Congressman/Congresswoman, your two US Senators, and the President.  All local government will become irrelevant.  You can see the beginnings of it now.  We have the federal government paying for local roads, local schools, local police, local unemployment.  And you can also see the power plays:  you do the will of the federal government or you get no money.  The federal government takes your money in the form of taxes and will refuse to give it back unless you follow their liberal agenda.

Goodbye Liberty.

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The Inexperience Parade Goes On

by Bill O'Connell on February 13, 2009

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As I have said before experience matters.  President Obama’s lack of executive experience is compounded by the team he has assembled.  To quote the New York Times the Obama administration has a “West Wing filled with more alumni of the House and Senate than any recent administration.”  That pretty much tells the tale.  While lacking executive experience, Obama loaded up the administration with legislative alumni, rather than executives.

Perhaps his goal was to streamline the ability to get measures passed, but there is a reason the founders created separate branches of government with different responsibilities.  When we most need an experienced steady hand on the tiller, we are verging on chaos.  It’s not good.

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Man Up, Barack!

by Bill O'Connell on January 30, 2009

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President Barack Obama, took office with historically high approval ratings.  Congress ended its last session with historically low approval ratings.  So why is Barack Obama, the head of the Democratic Party, taking a back seat on the economic stimulus bill while Nancy Pelosi calls the shots?

President Obama campaigned on ending the divisiveness in Washington, as did George Bush, but bipartisanship is far more than dinner parties with conservative columnists, cocktails with leaders of Congress, welcoming ideas from Republicans that will eventually be ignored by Speaker Pelosi.  If bipartisanship was one of your themes, pay attention, there was bipartisanship on the stimulus vote, it was bipartisan opposition.

Taking family planning and some sod for the Washington Mall out of the package, does not magically turn this turkey into a stimulus.  It’s time for President Obama to do some arm twisting within his own party or his critical first 100 days will be a flameout.  Take a lesson from history, Presidents Carter and Clinton both took office with large Democratic majorities in Congress and tried to please them and neither could.  Clinton had a Republican Congress two years later and ended up with a pretty successful presidency.  Carter didn’t.

It’s your administration Mr. President, don’t let Nancy Pelosi snuff it out.

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Screaming Inexperience

by Bill O'Connell on January 23, 2009

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Guantanamo

In less than one week the lack of experience of Barack Obama, that the media chose to ignore, was on radiant display this week.  His two executive orders, one, to close Guantanamo Bay, and two, to only interrogate enemy combatants as per the Army Field Manual, began the process of compromising our safety.

Today’s New York Times carries a story about a Saudi, who was released by the U.S. from Guantanamo is now a deputy leader of al Qaeda’s Yemeni branch.  He was suspected of involvement in the deadly bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Yemen.  He was released to Saudi Arabia to go through a rehabilitation program in that country before being released.  He is back on the front lines, ready to kill Americans.

So what is the president’s plan?  He doesn’t have one. Over the course of the next year, he’ll get back to us with whatever plan a commission or a committee recommends.  Maybe it was a political bone that he felt he had to throw to the left to keep them at bay.  Speaking of hope….

Interrogation

After more than seven years where President Bush kept us safe, President Obama rushed to put us at risk.  He abolished the practice of aggressive interrogation.  Now the enemy with whom we are engaged has no qualms about decapitating a prisoner (Daniel Pearl), no concern about torturing people and hanging the remains from a bridge for all to see (Blackwater contractors), and has one objective, that is, to see us all dead.  How do you negotiate with someone whose only demand is that you die?

The techniques used in very rare circumstances, were thoroughly reviewed and legal opinions issued that permitted their use.  Information was obtained that saved lives.  But now, the CIA has a much harder job to keep us safe.  In the Clinton administration the FBI was prohibited from sharing information with the CIA and vice versa.  Over 3,000 Americans died when those two agencies could not share information and connect the dots.

It was encouraging to hear President Obama in his inaugural address say that this enemy will be defeated.  But to follow it up by closing Guantanamo and taking an important tool away from the CIA.  You can almost envision Osama bin Laden, sit up in his cave and smile and say, “Just like Clinton.  The paper tiger is back.  Now is the time to strike and the dog will run with its tail between its legs just like in Somalia.”

I hope not.  This is not the change we were waiting for.

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Obama Watch — Week 4

by Bill O'Connell on December 1, 2008

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Here’s where we are four weeks after the election:

  1. Appointments — With the Thanksgiving shortened week, it was mostly packaging of the previously announced appointments.  Monday was going to be the big day, with the formal announcement of Hillary and Holder.  They had to get Bill Clinton’s ducks in a row, and have him measured for a leash.
  2. Dow Jones Industrial AverageUp 675 points. Team Obama finally got a win.  One of the reasons is that Obama has stopped talking about eliminating the Bush tax cuts early, but letting them expire in 2010.  Also, he seems to be assembling an experienced economic team, well known to Wall Street, which doesn’t hurt.
  3. The New Leader – Obama has answered critics who say the team he is assembling looks a lot like the old Clinton White House, by saying that they are “Experienced, Yet Fresh.”  He is facing grumblings on his left, which brings into question how is he going to keep this team of wild horses under control?

The Challenge for Obama

Where is Obama’s base of support?  Where can he fall back on for strength?  He may well be pulling together a team of experienced hands for the various departments, but not all of them are cut from the same mold and there will be some tugging and pulling.  How does he keep them in check and how does he get them back in line?  In other words, where are his reinforcements?

In another post, I mention how past presidents, most of whom had executive experience as governors, brought some of their loyal people with them.  These were people who believed in their candidate and had been with him for a number of years.  That loyalty can be called in, like chits, when you need to win a battle.

It took Johnson a while, about two years, to get his people in the administration since he had inherited the Kennedy team when he ascended to the presidency, but he did have eleven years in the House and twelve years in the Senate, including six years as Senate Majority Leader.  So he had a lot of markers to call in if he needed them.

Kennedy was probably closest to Obama in lack of experience including no executive experience outside of the Navy, but he did have eight years in the Senate.  In addition, he had Papa Joe Kennedy, who had many strings of his own including being a former Ambassador to England; he had his own blood brother as Attorney General; and another brother Ted would be elected to the Senate two years later.  So while Jack Kennedy may not personally have had a lot of pull, his family had plenty.

Nixon was a former two term Vice President.  Ford had been House Minority Leader.  Carter had been governor and was able to bring some of his former team with him, as was  Reagan who had served two terms as governor of California, and Bill Clinton who was both Attorney General and Governor of Arkansas.  George Bush Senior was Vice President, and George W. was governor of Texas.  They all had many connections and a lot of political IOUs.

But what does Barack Obama do, after the glow of history is replaced by the hard work of governing?  It is more likely that Barack Obama wrote a lot of political IOUs rather than him holding them.  Many of his confidents uncovered during the campaign, turned out to be less than appealing to the nation as a whole.  When the going gets tough, who’s going to have Barack Obama’s back?  Who can he turn to and say, I need this one and because of thus and so, without having to say it, you owe me?  He has very little history with his team.  So when he needs a favor, he will have to deal almost from the get go.  Whose career has he made, such that he can ask for payback?

Experience Counts

Experience counts not just in knowing how to do a job, but it also counts in terms of who you know.  Rarely in our history has there been someone who has so little experience inside or outside the beltway.  This may well result in a very weak president.  For all of our sakes, I hope I am wrong.

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Obama Watch — Week 2

by Bill O'Connell on November 15, 2008

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It’s now two weeks since election day and we are starting to see how Barack Obama will lead take shape.    Here is what we observed in week 2:

  1. Appointments — The balancing act begins.  Running on the premise that he is a unifying force, Obama has a challenge on his hand to carry that through.  Many voters in the middle and on the right who pulled the lever for him, took him at his word on this point.  There have been a number of prognosticators who have made their picks of what Obama’s cabinet should look like.  A name that keeps coming up on many of the lists is that of Robert Gates, the current Secretary of Defense.  He is well respected in the job he is doing, and if Obama keeps him, he will go a long way toward demonstrating his ability to reach across the aisle.  He will also go an equally long way toward angering his supporters on the left, who basically want everyone from the Bush administration behind bars.  So who does he pick for the most prestigious cabinet post, Secretary of State.  Kerry was lobbying for the position, but this past week Hillary Clinton’s name hit the news.  She could well be the ideological counterbalance to Gates, but could start a firestorm among the Hispanic vote who were looking for Bill Richardson to get the nod.  If Obama appoints her he could also have a tiger by the tail, in that they were arch rivals in the primaries and having her in his administration could be problematic if she becomes a loose cannon.  From Hillary’s perspective, does she really want to work for her rival and do his bidding? This will continue to be interesting.
  2. Dow Jones Industrial Average — Down 648 points.  The Dow which is considered a leading indicator dropped another 5% this week.  Perhaps it’s time for Obama to try to stop the skid by dropping his talk of tax increases.  If he does, he had better put his hands over his ears, because the squeal from the left will be ear drum shattering.
  3. Where’s Joe Biden, the voice of foreign policy experience? – This week Barack Obama had a phone call with the president of Poland, Lech Kaczynski and as a result of that conversation Mr. Kaczynski said that missile defense programthat was agreed to with the Bush administration, would continue.  Obama’s team released a statement saying, not so fast.  First of all, Obama publicly contradicts another head of state and one of our staunchest allies.  Second, coming only days after Russian President Medvedev threatened to install missiles near Poland if the plan went through, it makes Obama look weak.  If they’re still hiden’ Biden, they better get him out of the closet or we won’t have to wait six months for a crisis.
  4. Remember William Ayers, the guy from the neighborhood?  Now that the election is over, Ayers is out on the circuit promoting a re-release of his book Fugitive Days.  In it he wrote a new afterword which said: “[W]e had served together on the board of a foundation, knew one another as neighbors and family friends, held an initial fund-raiser at my house, where I’d made a small donation to his earliest political campaign.”  Sounds a bit more than just some guy in the neighborhood and makes it an outright lie that his career wasn’t started in Ayers’ living room.  Unless, of course, it was held in the den.

Stay tuned…

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Obama Watch — Week 1

by Bill O'Connell on November 11, 2008

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Well it’s been a week since Barack Obama has been elected the next President of the United States, so a decent interval has passed for him and his family to enjoy the moment.  It’s time to resume the watch to observe in which direction he will lead us.  Here is what we observed in week 1:

  1. Appointment of Rahm Emanuel as Chief of Staff – Emanuel is known as a partisan with sharp elbows and a take-no-prisoners style. On the one hand it can be viewed as the first step in finishing off the opposition.  On the other hand, he may be spending more of his time protecting Obama from Congress and all the far left groups who are holding his IOUs.  So the jury is still out on this one.
  2. Dow Jones Industrial Average — Down 765 points.  The Dow which is considered a leading indicator is down about 8% in five days, not exactly a vote of confidence in the hope and change heading our way.
  3. Private meeting with President Bush today — After the meeting which was between Barack Obama and the President with no staff attending, it wasn’t long before the essence of what was discussed was in the newspapers.  Tradition has it that private presidential conversations are, well, private.  Bush was angry about the leaks.  Let’s see, private meeting, Bush and Obama, word leaks to the press, Bush is angry.  I’ll go out on a limb here and put my money on it was Obama who leaked the information.  Well that didn’t take long.  What else can he be trusted with?
  4. Obama pushes Bush to implement another stimulus package immediately and to help out GM and Chrysler.  Why would he do that?  Here’s a hypothesis, if Bush acts before Obama takes office, and it goes well, Obama can take credit for it by either saying that the recovery took place on his watch or that he prodded Bush to act.  If it goes south and the taxpayers are stuck holding the bag on yet another socialist grab, well Obama can do what he campaigned on, blaming Bush.  If nothing happens until he takes office, he will have to make the decision and bear the responsibility.  Remember what happened with the $700 billion bailout package, Obama stayed as far away as he could.
  5. Obama’s transition team is talking about rescinding some of Bush’s executive orders, including one that allowed more drilling for oil.  So with overwhelming support for “Drill here, Drill now”, Obama immediately wants to reverse course and drill less.  This should help drive the price of gasoline back up again.  But wait, this just in, his advisors are saying a decision hasn’t been reached yet.

Stay tuned…

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