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Is Obama Over ?

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  • Is Obama Over ?

    I think he probably is. (I never thought much of him to begin with.)
    And WE are over, too - unless we get rid of the RepubliCrats.

    This article pretty well describes my feelings about "Barry" - and "W" also.


    Is Obama Over?


    Barack Obama

    Critics say Obama's message becoming 'incoherent' ... President Obama (left) is under fire for what some are calling mixed messages on plans to build an Islamic center near ground zero. ... Some observers say Obama's comments show messaging problems for president ... "The danger here is an incoherent presidency," said David Morey, vice chairman of the Core Strategy Group, who provided communications advice to Obama's 2008 campaign. "Simpler is better, and rising above these issues and leading by controlling the dialogue is what the presidency is all about. So I think that's the job they have to do more effectively as they have in the past [in the campaign]." ... "There is no question they are having messaging problems at the White House," Morey said. "They've lost control of the dialogue, and they've gotten pulled down by the extremes on the left and right. They've just not had a coherent set of themes." – CNN

    Dominant Social Theme: President Barack Obama better focus!

    Free-Market Analysis: It took Bill Clinton nearly eight years to kill the credibility of his presidency. It took George Bush about five years. It has taken Barack Obama about two. Anybody see a pattern? We do. The Internet itself, like a vast echo chamber, reminds people endlessly (over time) of the rhetorical and policy failures of US presidents. These failures are not necessarily personal peccadilloes either. What the Internet has done, in our view, has been to lift the veil on the irrationality of the system and of regulatory democracy generally. The cycle moves faster and faster as well.

    During the Clinton years, the mainstream media was still able to provide a level of "cover" for the presidency. Newsweek magazine (which just changed hands for the proverbial dollar) sat on the story about Clinton's philandering for weeks if not months, while the President lied under oath and otherwise prevaricated. The DrudgeReport.com published the story and made its reputation as a result. That was really the beginning of the end not just for Newsweek but for the mainstream press' credibility generally.

    George Bush, as we have pointed out before, did even less well than Clinton. We have asked many people about the turning point of the Bush presidency and startlingly they usually mention the very scenario that we ourselves have identified – the evening he shakily appeared on TV, not far into his second term, to announce (in New Orleans) that he was carving out US$200 billion from a non-existent federal cash surplus to send to Hurricane Katrina victims.

    Of course no such amount of money was ever-forthcoming. The main result of that terrible speech was to kill Bush's presidency, however. People who had been waiting for the "real" George Bush to emerge from the political realist who had over-spent and over-regulated in his first term suddenly realized that Bush's compassionate conservatism was actually a coded phrase for "big-spending social conservative." In other words, Bush actually represented most of what America DIDN'T want – a moral and social busybody who was also a Leviathan-sized, statist spendthrift.

    The media, as we have written, didn't get the point at all. They missed the nation-wide epiphany. Bush dissolved his base of support in one night – more effectively than he had with all his warmongering and ignorance about governance – but the mainstream media nattered on nonetheless. It was a perennial source of amazement for an additional three years that Bush's ratings continually drifted downwards no matter what he did. The back of his head as he gazed into the night sky out an airplane window – supposedly at New Orleans so far below – was a further indelible, photographic image that many of his supporters carried away in their collective mind's eye. It didn't help that the photograph was amply available on the Internet.

    And now comes Barack Obama. What many remember about Obama we venture to guess (in hindsight anyway) were some of the incredibly fatuous backdrops he utilized during his campaign in 2008, the Romanesque stages designed to provide him with a sense of history – and destiny. In those heady days Time magazine repeatedly compared him to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and this was a theme that carried forth even into his presidency. The elite that from our perspective had organized his presidency and made it possible also arranged for him to win the Nobel Peace Prize, even though it was pointed out at the time that he had done nothing yet to deserve it.

    But everything is speeded up during the Internet news cycle. ...

    http://www.thedailybell.com/printerVersion.asp?nid=1302

  • #2
    Re: Is Obama Over ?

    best take todate:

    Barack Obama: the American Empire's Dead Cat Bounce

    (classic ending to a bullmarket run, straight up before the fall)


    July 2008- Obama in Berlin

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Is Obama Over ?

      I think he probably is.
      Putting on my conspiracy hat, it seems that a concerted effort is being made (for at least several years now) to disabuse the American populace of any respect for their national leaders politicians. We're being setup to take the short end of a long shaft in a panic of desperate change, and the other guy is holding the stick and mostly calling the shots. This might not end well.
      Most folks are good; a few aren't.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Is Obama Over ?

        Haven't read the whole article yet, but it appears there will be great damage on the road to the end attempting to buy votes, assuming this passes.

        Link here: http://www.heritage.org/Research/Com...rganized-labor

        SW
        If necessity is the mother of invention, desperation is the father...

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Is Obama Over ?

          Originally posted by Sidewinder View Post
          +1
          Most folks are good; a few aren't.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Is Obama Over ?

            Then there's the alternatives, aka as the Throw the Bums Out mantra....

            Rich Man, Bad Yacht

            By GAIL COLLINS

            MIAMI

            “I started with absolutely nothing and I have lived the American dream,” Jeff Greene, a Senate candidate and billionaire, told a small crowd in one of Miami’s poorest and most crime-ridden neighborhoods this week.

            It was not entirely clear how the cheering audience found this information.

            But Greene kept repeating it. Like almost all the really, really rich people running for office this year, he regards his story as the core of his campaign. His policy message (jobs, jobs, jobs) and his prescriptions for the American economy (education, infrastructure repair, home weatherization) are pretty much what the Democrats have been pushing in Washington for the last two years.

            But Barack Obama doesn’t have a $24 million house and a 145-foot yacht.

            “I’m a regular middle-class kid who achieved the American dream,” Greene reminded his listeners.

            Greene popped up out of nowhere earlier this year, prepared to “spend what it takes” to grab the Democratic nomination in the U.S. Senate race in Florida to go to Washington and do for America what he has done for his bank account.

            Once again, voters are being asked to decide whether the cure for their problems lies in a person who is long on money and short on listening skills. After Greene talked about jobs, jobs, jobs, an unemployed landscaper came up and asked what he would do about the horrific crime rate in the neighborhood.

            “Crime is directly related to jobs,” said Greene.

            A woman with respiratory problems wanted to know about housing.

            “Jobs, housing — these are basic needs.”

            Being the rich candidate is not without its burdens. For one, there’s the matter of that yacht, the Summerwind. Greene might see himself as an upstanding family man, but his yacht is bad, bad, bad. It’s an embarrassing, headline-making connection — the Levi Johnston of boats.

            The government of Belize says Summerwind tore up a part of a national coral reef with its anchor, but Greene denies knowing anything about it. The yacht went to Cuba, apparently breaking the American embargo. Greene says that was just for emergency repairs, and, anyway, he spent the downtime visiting Cuban synagogues.

            Former employees keep telling reporters about wild parties. There are claims that one involved “naked drunken people everywhere.” Greene says these are fantasies cooked up by disgruntled former workers, or reporters trying to blame him for the lifestyle of some of the yacht’s “colorful guests.”

            Clearly, the Summerwind has a life of its own, cruising around the globe, burning 50 gallons of fuel an hour, throwing orgies for B-list celebrities while Greene is home reading. It played host to Lindsay Lohan, who Greene claims he’s barely met. It took Mike Tyson on a Black Sea cruise that culminated in a drug-and-sex romp in Amsterdam, but Greene was only around for the part where they visited an 11th-century monastery in Ukraine.

            Florida’s primary is Tuesday, and Greene is engaged in mortal combat with Kendrick Meek, a four-term congressman. Greene (white, wealthy) insists Meek (black, yachtless) is the insider in the race, and he does have a point. Meek’s House seat was basically deeded to him by his mother, former Representative Carrie Meek. At a rally in Miami this week, Carrie reminded the audience that her son had been a highway patrolman — “out there on the dangerous streets” — without mentioning that he had spent the bulk of his time in uniform working for the governor’s security detail.

            Meek seems to be getting by with a lot of help from his friends. Bill Clinton was the star attraction at his rally, and the former president assured the crowd that they would never be disappointed in Kendrick “because he’ll grow every day.” (Clinton specializes in this kind of mini-compliment. On the subject of Barack Obama, Clinton said: “This is my professional opinion. I believe he has done a much better job than he gets credit for.”)

            So Meek’s candidacy is all about connections, while Greene’s is all about money. Their policies are pretty similar, so the whole fight has devolved into character assassination. This week when Greene held a “block party” in Meek’s Liberty City district, he referred to the congressman dismissively as “a perfectly nice fellow.” This was quite a step up from his most recent TV ads. (“Kendrick Meek:
            Corrupt.”)

            Greene has promised that if he wins, he’ll give his Senate salary to Florida charities, and many of the most ardent supporters at the event seemed to be hoping to get on that list. Others were lured in with a barbecue, a face painter for the kids and some bands. The theme was to collect canned goods for the hungry, but Greene bought all the cans.

            He learns his fate on Tuesday. For Summerwind, I’m thinking the future involves a trip to rehab. Then maybe a reality show for Yachts Gone Wild.

            http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/19/op...=1&ref=opinion



            the Summerwind, in repose

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Is Obama Over ?

              t is not that Obama is incoherent but thanks in large part to the truth-telling of the Internet, the electorate understands him all-too-well.
              Wish this was true. Much of the electorate "loves to not know" paraphrasing Chris Rock.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Is Obama Over ?

                Originally posted by swgprop View Post
                Wish this was true. Much of the electorate "loves to not know" paraphrasing Chris Rock.
                My experience with "the electorate" is they hold fast, for the most part, either blindingly (if now half-heartily) embracing Obama or hating him, more or less from day one.

                A brilliant choice of Goldman's, brand trumping substance.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Is Obama Over ?

                  Good essay. I was a big supporter of Obama two years ago. The one thing that I have noticed about Obama is that fact that he doesn't seem to be "there". His presence is vague and detached. He has addressed the Nation once from the Oval Office. When is the last time he gave a real press conference? Either the world is going through monumental change or the emergent narrative in the mass media and internet has got it wrong. In either case Obama is the person who should be leading the choice. Instead, he acts like a man who knows too much about all that is too wrong about a situation that is too far gone.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Is Obama Over ?

                    After completing a round of deliveries, I had an interesting conversation with one of the employees in the break room of a Home Depot store near Boston the other day.

                    It ended with the other guy, black, mid-20s, saying "see, this is why I (usually) don't vote."

                    That sort of sentiment doesn't bold well for chances at a second term.
                    Last edited by Slimprofits; August 19, 2010, 02:49 PM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Is Obama Over ?

                      Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
                      Good essay. I was a big supporter of Obama two years ago. The one thing that I have noticed about Obama is that fact that he doesn't seem to be "there". His presence is vague and detached. He has addressed the Nation once from the Oval Office. When is the last time he gave a real press conference? Either the world is going through monumental change or the emergent narrative in the mass media and internet has got it wrong. In either case Obama is the person who should be leading the choice. Instead, he acts like a man who knows too much about all that is too wrong about a situation that is too far gone.
                      He's a hologram.
                      Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Is Obama Over ?

                        Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
                        He's a hologram.
                        Bad news for actors...worse than animation.

                        Comment

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