Hillarysworld

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info
TOPIC: "The President's Reality Problem" (by Rich Lowry, RCP 2/12/10)


Diamond

Status: Offline
Posts: 4567
Date:
"The President's Reality Problem" (by Rich Lowry, RCP 2/12/10)
Permalink  
 


logo-sub.gif
(Emphasis added)

"

The President's Reality Problem

By Rich Lowry

It might have been the most revelatory moment of the Obama presidency. In an interview with Time magazine, a chastened Pres. Barack Obama talked of his sputtering Middle East peace initiative. "This is just really hard," he explained. "This is as intractable a problem as you get."

As an observation, this is as banal as it gets. After all the wars and all the terror attacks against Israel and all the frustrated American diplomatic forays across the last two administrations, no one should be surprised at the intractability of the Israeli-Arab conflict. But Obama sounded as if it were painful new information that had forced an unwelcome adjustment in his worldview.

This speaks to either an astonishing historical ignorance (did he not know?) or a stupendous self-regard (did he not care because he thought he was so special?), or both.

There is already a debate over what went wrong with the Obama presidency. Is his team of advisers - nearly universally considered the best and the brightest until the day before yesterday - serving him poorly? Has he failed to communicate effectively, even though almost all his speeches have been critically acclaimed? Did he fail to "pivot to jobs" fast enough?

Actually, Obama has a more worrisome problem: a reality gap. During the campaign, Obama could throw rhetorical pixie dust over all the difficult choices inherent in governing and the contradictions of his own program, making them fade into a beguiling vision of a sunlit post-Bush America. This magical realism sustained him until November 2008, but couldn't withstand governing.

Consider Obama's most elemental appeal as a candidate: He excited the base of his own party while winning over the center with talk of "post-partisanship." On the stump, he could maintain this balance. In office, he had to choose either partisanship, in the form of his powerful Democratic allies on Capitol Hill, or post-partisanship, in the form of concessions to Republicans that would anger and disappoint his own side. He chose Nancy Pelosi, and watched independents flee from him.

On fiscal policy, Obama could promise massive new programs while at the same time, in one debate, asserting his approach would mean "a net spending cut." A laughable contradiction, it wasn't fully exposed until Obama had to write a budget. With $1 trillion deficits now stretching off into the horizon, his answer is appointing a commission to study the matter.

Obama is still the same illusionist from the campaign on his signature health-care initiative. The new $1 trillion entitlement will reduce the deficit. It will insure millions more people while bending the cost curve down. The hundreds of billions of dollars in Medicare cuts will be utterly painless. There's no trade-off or sacrifice in sight, and - not surprisingly - people don't believe it.

Obama came to office under fundamental misapprehensions that hamper him still. It's not true that all that was keeping the Israelis and Palestinians apart was the lack of U.S. engagement, or that the Iranians were amenable to getting talked out of their nuclear program, or that Guantanamo Bay was a pointless contrivance.

Nor is it true that government is a sustainable source of economic growth, or a more efficient allocator of capital than the market.

More . . .

"

===========================

Great article.

__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!


Diamond

Status: Offline
Posts: 521
Date:
Permalink  
 

I don't know if we'll ever recover. Optimists say there is nothing he can do, that we can't fix. Well, it's pretty damn hard to remove the entitlement programs he wants to initiate.

BHO's inexperience is present everyday and he continues to supply his base and America with foolish rhetoric. I think this was his plan all along.

__________________


Diamond

Status: Offline
Posts: 4567
Date:
Permalink  
 

I believe he feels he knows better and follows a path of ideology that he cannot motivate with his words and deeds for others to follow.

In a position of leadership, the latter determines how far you can propel your team to follow your ideology.  I think he failed (from his viewpoint) by not nudging both the House and the Senate to work on what is reasonably agreeable to each other on Health Care/Insurance Reform. Instead, he pushed the House to his extreme ideology, making it important for the Republicans to put in a poison pill into that version of the bill. 

In general, lack of leadership motivation capability will be the undoing of Pres.Obama - it is something one simply cannot overcome easily.

__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010
Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010

Madam Secretary Blog at ForeignPolicy.com
Project Vote Smart - Stay informed and engaged!
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard