Obama: Serial Failure

Liz Cheney on Hannity last night:

“It’s very, very tough to understand how this administration is defending American interests at this point. You’ve got a situation where the King of Jordan warned today, as example, where Al-Qaeda gets control potentially of these chemical weapons and the administration’s response is to pivot to Asia… You can see very clearly that the United States has lost credibility since he’s been in office.”

Obama would disagree:

“Four years ago, I made you a promise. I pledged to take the fight to our enemies and renew our leadership in the world. As president, that’s what I’ve done.”

“As you reflect on recent years, as we look ahead to the challenges we face as a nation and the leadership that’s required, you don’t just have my words, you have my deeds. You have my track record. You have the promises I’ve made and the promises that I’ve kept.”

And he delivers with a serious face. The Middle East is in flames. Iran ascendent. Iraq blowing up. Egypt and Libya spiraling toward doom. Look, Syria! Israel alone. Russia waits until after our pliant leader’s election for the spoils of his acquiescence. North Korea is off its meds. Did I mention Islam?

Obama’s idea of leadership is clearly the Lead from Behind variety and the world isn’t impressed. As Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr told Romney:

“America is just one budget deal away from ending all talk of America being in decline.”

Realize what Carr is saying in that one sentence:

  • The World recognizes that our government isn’t sincere in addressing its budget, and
  • The lack of a budget itself is responsible for international talk of America in decline.

This suggests that the economic and diplomatic impact of a successful budget would be a huge boon to Obama, America’s position in the world and his election chances, and so he should make it a priority for the Administration. Yet the President and the Senate ignore the issue completely. Obama’s last attempt at a budget didn’t receive a single “yea” vote in either house of Congress. It almost makes you think Obama knows what he’s doing, that his actions and policies will be damaging, and that’s the point.

The President has remarked on his budget priorities often, and did so again while speaking to the VFW:

“If the choice is between tax cuts that the wealthiest Americans don’t need and funding our troops that they definitely need to keep our country strong, I will stand with our troops every single time,” he said. “So let’s stop playing politics with our military. Let’s get serious and reduce our deficit and keep our military strong.”

Yet there is the complete absence of an obvious option: Decrease spending. The President himself frames the debate as a false choice between tax cuts for the rich or funding the military when that’s not the choice at all. He offers us more class warfare, deliberate misrepresentation, diversion, and division.

And simultaneously, the President, whose private sector experience is limited to community organizing, is attacking Romney suggesting he doesn’t have the business chops, even though Romney’s success at Bain isn’t in dispute and his tenure as head of the Salt Lake City Olympics were a success as well. In addition, the President, who has spent more time apologizing to foreign nations for American expansion, aggression, arrogance and more, has had a turnaround and now says, “we will never apologize.” These examples don’t just make the President appear disingenuous. They confirm his propensity to say anything necessary, regardless of veracity, including self-contradictory statements, to get elected.

But the world is watching. Americans are watching. Voters are watching. Business owners and taxpayers and families are watching. And we are all horrified as the President abdicates his global responsibility, attacks and vilifies honest Americans and ignores his most basic responsibilities to golf and campaign while lying about his opponent and avoiding discussion of his own failures.

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An American Perspective

I’m grateful to Karol for her post over at AlarmingNews. I’d like to think that I don’t take my freedoms for granted. However, I’m 3rd generation and have been insulated in my American cocoon my whole life. I read her history and perspective and may cognitively connect my good fortune to the underpinnings of American freedom. And I may be truly thankful. But I’ll never understand.

There’s a feeling in America today that there isn’t equality until any of us can walk into Bloomingdale’s and buy whatever we want. The two men standing there in 1977 weren’t thinking that it was unfair they couldn’t wear the same clothes as the beautiful people around them, they were just grateful for the opportunity to try. They had left a place where that opportunity simply didn’t exist. You were born poor and you would die poor–everyone would. You could gain influence in your life and that might get you small victories–instead of being assigned to practice your profession in Siberia you might get lucky and get sent to a capital city. Perhaps you, your wife, your child, your parents and other relatives could have your own apartment, one you wouldn’t have to share with another family. Those were your wins.

It’s hard for Americans, even the ones who see America’s greatness and love this country for it, to understand the lack of opportunity that my family left. As Communism retreats into the rear-view mirror of history it’s easy to gloss over the everyday ways that Communism is meant to crush the individual and make everyone equal–equally poor, equally scared, equally hopeless.

Please read the whole thing. Thanks, Karol!

H/T Gabriel Malor at Ace of Spades HQ

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July 24

7/24 isn’t exactly a huge day in history. But from among the events listed for today’s history, my discerning eye took note of the following notation:

1487 – Citizens of Leeuwarden, Netherlands strike against ban on foreign beer.

It’s not exactly Constitution / human rights material. But it only seems proper that a person would pull out the battle-axe and fight for a mug of the quality beer of his or her own choosing when the medieval nanny state interferes. Especially if the local ale sucks. I’m just sayin’.

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Tuesday Morning News and links

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Monday Morning News and Links

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My Root Problem With Gun Control

I’m dumbfounded by the gun control folks. The movie theater massacre hadn’t been in the news for five minutes before gun control advocacy was flying all around Twitter, facebook and the blogosphere. ABC News’ Brian Ross took it a step further and made a specious and incorrect connection between the shooter and the Tea Party on air on Good Morning America. I tweeted:

https://twitter.com/DarthChipmunk/status/226375584765321217

There were even articles written suggesting that it’s right to politicize the deaths of innocent people engaged in summertime leisure activities. Of course, it’s Mother Jones. See if you can even work your way through this:

Both the campaigns and some of their respective third-party allies have asked networks to pull negative advertisements from television in the state. No one wants to make a scene at a funeral.

There’s something quite political about that, though. After all, the reason the campaigns are behaving this way is not just because of decorum, but because a breach of decorum would exact a political cost. Politics are an inevitable part of a collective national trauma, which, for better or for worse, is how America treats incidents like this one.  It’s not only appropriate to ask how we got here—it would be irresponsible not to. We frequently treat politics as a team sport, but it isn’t one. Trying to avoid politics trivializes politics, which is the means by which we make collective decisions as a society. A discussion about policies that could prevent future tragedies like this couldn’t be more appropriate.

Seriously. “Politics are an inevitable part of a collective national trauma.” What the hell does that even mean?

And what exactly is wrong with showing a little class and mourning together before we jump into “the discussion” that we all know is going to happen? Ignoring the absence of class, yesterday the left played its hand and so must defend “the instant discussion that must happen”, because, well that’s what happened.

My problem with gun control is multi-layered. I value the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. I believe evil people exist. But most importantly, gun control will not achieve peace or lessen gun crime. To wit: The shooting was a crime perpetrated by a calculating, deliberate, craven, evil human who knew exactly what he was doing.

The theater was a micro experiment in gun control. The theater is a posted “No Gun Zone.” Any concealed weapon permit holder entering would be breaking the law to enter with their firearm. As a result, the law abiding went to the theater playing by the rules. Meanwhile, evil criminal walked into and violated the posted “No Gun Zone” well-armed and knowing he would meet no resistance. He gunned down innocent children, women and men, injured many dozens, including an infant in an instant that destroyed and irrevocably damaged hundreds of lives.

The theater’s anti-gun law was meaningless. As, apparently, are our society’s “anti-murder” laws. Murder has been illegal for… well, practically speaking, forever. Adding another law that takes freedoms away from law abiding citizens will do nothing to deter the evil people who are ignoring law in the first place. Criminals are criminal. This isn’t brain surgery.

Motor vehicles kill 90 people in the US every day. In 2010 the death toll was over 33,000 Americans. Why is no one pushing to outlaw cars? A ludicrous example, you say? Perhaps. But the point is that the anti-gun lobby isn’t interested in saving lives. This is a critical point because it begs the question, what do they want? What is the end game? I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but if they’re not interested in saving and protecting life, and we all agree that criminals are criminals, why would they feel so strongly that Americans shouldn’t have the right to defend themselves, their families, their property and their community?

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Doctor: Regulations Hinder Patient Care

The Daily Caller is reporting:

A doctor representing the American Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons told The Daily Caller on Thursday that “physicians have reached a tipping point” under current health care laws, as they cannot both care for their patients and comply with mandated regulations.

Dr. Louis McIntyre, from Westchester County, New York, testified with three other health care experts before part of the House Small Business Committee on Thursday to explain the increasing challenges Congress and insurance companies have put on doctors who work for small or solo practices.

Rising costs of malpractice insurance and regulatory paperwork, along with shrinking reimbursements paid to doctors on behalf of Medicare patients, have all but forced doctors to become hospital employees, McIntyre said. He believes patients will see the quality and accessibility of healthcare deteriorate as more and more doctors, struggling to eek out a profit, leave their private practices for hospitals.

“Doctors know that they cannot meet all the demands placed upon them in an environment of shrinking revenues and increasing costs, and take care of patients at the same time,” McIntyre said.

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