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Obama Has Amassed Enormous Political Capital, But He Doesn't Know What to Do with It

By Robert Kuttner, Huffington Post. Posted April 28, 2009.


Public approval of a president is not like a stock of savings. Obama has yet to decide what to invest in.

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A severe economic crisis coupled with the election of a new progressive president is an opportunity for a dramatic break with the old order. But that process doesn't just happen spontaneously. It takes exceptional presidential resolve and leadership. And there are three huge obstacles to President Obama seizing the moment to produce fundamental change, two of them systemic and one self-inflicted.

The first systemic obstacle is the lingering political power of the old order. Practical failure doesn't diminish political influence. On the contrary, it leads to a defensive redoubling of political resolve. We see this every day in the relentless lobbying by the financial industry against new regulations. We see it in the ongoing power of the health insurance and pharmaceutical industries to block comprehensive health reform, and in the efforts of corporate America generally to resist sweeping changes in corporate governance and executive compensation. The economy has crashed, ordinary people are suffering, rightwing ideology has been disgraced--and the old order endures.

A second systemic obstacle, for now anyway, is the absence of a popular movement to put wind at a progressive president's back. Among the logical candidates, the labor movement is weakened by the same economic crisis, divided internally, and it sorely needs Obama's good will for everything from the Employee Free Choice Act to the auto rescue. The web of grassroots activists who came together to elect Obama is now a website of the Democratic National Committee. MoveOn.org is organizing around issues such as universal health care, but pushes on the president only gingerly. More than anything else, the stance of most progressives is still mainly gratitude.

We got a small taste of what a more radical break might feel like when Obama briefly signaled with the release of Bush's torture memos that he might be open to further investigation of the Bush's torture policy, but then backtracked and quickly asked the Democratic leadership to shut the idea down. Evidently, Obama's political self wrestled with his constitutional conscience, and won. Civil libertarians felt a huge letdown, but protest was surprisingly muted.

Thus the most important obstacle for seizing the moment to achieve enduring change: Barack Obama's conception of what it means to promote national unity. Obama repeatedly declared during the campaign that he would govern as a consensus builder. He wasn't lying. However, there are two ways of achieving consensus. One is to split the difference with your political enemies and the forces obstructing reform. The other is to use presidential leadership to transform the political center and alter the political dynamics. In his first hundred days, Obama has done a little of both, but he defaults to the politics of accommodation.

The enemies of reform are both partisan and corporate. They include the Republican opposition in Congress and the financial elite on Wall Street. Obama's early gestures on behalf of bipartisanship were rebuffed with defiant opposition. To cultivate some Republican support for the stimulus package, he agreed that more than one-third of it would be tax cuts rather than public investment. He was rewarded with not a single Republican House vote.

In their serial efforts to rescue the banking system, Obama's senior economic team has worked hand in glove with Wall Street. Weakening the financial industry's political power has not been part of the game plan. Obama has jawboned financial executives on such second-tier reform issues as credit card abuses. He is waging a good fight to put the government-subsidized private student loan industry out of business. But rare moments of indignant language have been saved for purely symbolic affronts such as the millions paid out in AIG bonuses, but not for the more systemic and large scale episodes of larceny such as the use of AIG bailout funds as a pass-through to investment banks. AIG funneled millions in government funds as "retention bonuses" to its own executives--but tens of billions to houses such as Goldman Sachs that held contracts with AIG.

Obama's advisers clucked about the shame of the AIG bonuses, but had no harsh words for Goldman. The White House seems to view popular backlash against financial abuses as a dangerous force to be bottled up, rather than one to be mobilized to offset the concentrated power of elites.

On health reform, the White House is playing a curious game. On the one hand, the administration has repeatedly suggested that it wants both a bipartisan bill and one that is developed constructively with the health insurance industry. On the other hand, this past week the administration and the Democratic Congressional leadership took the bold tactical step of putting health reform on a fast track by tentatively making it part of the budget resolution, the one form of legislation not susceptible to a Senate filibuster. But if this is to be bipartisan, why the dramatic end run around a filibuster? Conversely, if the White House needs only a simple majority of 50 votes rather than 60 for health reform, then it can legislate without having to kowtow to either Republicans or to their industry allies.


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See more stories tagged with: presidency, obama, 100 days

Robert Kuttner is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior fellow at Demos. He is author of "Obama's Challenge: America's Economic Crisis and the Power of a Transformative Presidency."

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View:
Obama: Stylish But Offering Nothing New
Posted by: DrBrian on Apr 28, 2009 12:57 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article's premise is that Obama is a visionary reformer frustrated by forces beyond his control, which begs the questions as to why he appointed the same old corrupt insiders who helped create the catastrophe and is lavishly rewarding the crooks who helped finance his campaign with hundreds of billions of dollars to carry on as usual. And where is his strict regulatory package to prevent a recurrence?

Obama campaigned as an outsider and reformer, but he's proven to be another insider and supporter of the status quo.

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» Another know-it-all Posted by: TruthBeTold
» RE: Another know-it-all Posted by: Spot
dipconsult@hotmail.com
Posted by: dipconsult on Apr 28, 2009 2:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was obviously going to be extremely difficult to change the course of USS mega-bulkcarrier before it hit the rocks young master Bush was heading for. Obama's victory was narrow - some 40% of Americans voted against him despite the way inder Bush the US was following sefl-destructive policies like Europe's double-suicide in two world wars. He should have had a landslide!

The reasons - racism of course, the immense power of the "ruling" monied/industrial/financial class, the popular persistance of the long outdated Reagan/Thatcher ideology of long laisser-faire capitalism, and - much underestimated - the "traditional"/family values especially in the "red" states where a great many voters will vote Republican against their financial interests.

"Political correctness", "progressive", "liberal", "gay rights/marriage", "choice" add up for many Americans to a total surender of "American" and family values. This unites more traditional Catholics and Protestants. These voting patterns are now available and can be studied.

Obama has to tackle all this on top of the global warming/epidems/nuclear proliferation existential threats, the disastrous efects of 10 years of Bush confrontation which led to the present two "Vietnams" in Iraq and Afghnaistan". And he is of course not some Superman as some starry eyed hopefuls pretended.

Give him a chance to tuck in a bit more to his overfull plate! He seems to be aware of all of this.

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» RE: dipconsult@hotmail.com Posted by: bonapartist
» RE: dipconsult@hotmail.com Posted by: Llama11
Skullduggery
Posted by: Perry Logan on Apr 28, 2009 2:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Obama's victory was narrow - some 40% of Americans voted against him."

Not really. Mark Crispin Miller estimates that half of Obama's victory was stolen by Republican skullduggery.

Since Obama is busily blowing his shot, we are virtually guaranteed a Republican Presidency in 2012.

Busload of Faith

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What About Healthcare?
Posted by: mishawaka on Apr 28, 2009 3:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You want some capital spent? Wait until the healthcare battle ensues.

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All this fake "bipartisan" baloney has to stop and so too does his "make me" misleadership.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Apr 28, 2009 4:47 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How many times does it have to be drummed into him and most Democrats the fact that most Republicans will not cooperate? I already know the numbers in the House and Senate of both parties but I don't want to hear about it. Even when the GOP were in the minority, they got everything they wanted. The Democrats could have a 100% majority in everything and still not pass anything right. Why else did LBJ have to beg Republicans to pass that civil rights bill? And before anyone tells us that we must "make Obama do it", let's get one thing straight. Leaders are supposed to lead, not look at some corporate written pol telling him or her what to do and follow it. Nixon, Raygun, Newty, Dubya, etc ... don't follow that kind of crap and people reelected these scoundrels. FDR did not rely exclusively on public pressure to make him do what he promised. He had some courage in him unlike Obama. Even on the simple issue of investigating and prosecuting Dubya and his criminal gang, why did the ACLU have to bug Obama to release the memos when they could have had the time to continue their job of defending people's civil rights?

Sure, we the people will work our butts out and pressure our House and Senate reps to get things like EFCA and HR676 (single payer healthcare) to the front burner but if President Obama cannot seem to get the nation's priorities straight, then what the hell is he doing there? Is it more important to pour in more troops into Afghanistan and Pakistan and cause more loss of lives of not only the troops but also the sweetheart civilians than it is to push for legislation such as single payer healthcare to repair our broken-hearted bankrupted system? He seems to be going where the monied wind is blowing rather than even trying to think independently. A 69% approval rating does not mean keeping the shitty status quo.

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» Translation of "prophitspeak". Posted by: GuitarBill
Take the high road Mr. Obama
Posted by: weathered on Apr 28, 2009 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Un do all things bush:Patriot Act/Homeland Security.....


Dismantle AIPAC

Appoint Eliot Spitzer as special prosecutor

Bust-up Goldman Sachs global reach w/our $$. They're dirty and everyone knows it.

Indict Silverstein

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Investigation
Posted by: FSadley on Apr 28, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Clintons were under investigation almost the entire time they were in the White House. And we all know how devestating their "crimes" were. Somehow the Republicans always get a free ride. They can take away our cival rights, they can torture prisoners, and we just look the other way. And this is done because we have "more important" problems to tackle and we need "bipartisanship". Republicans generally don't have a bipartiship bone in their bodies. No one is above the law, or so we are told. Criminals of this calliber do not deserve to be swept under the rug.

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I am weary...
Posted by: freelyb on Apr 28, 2009 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...having spent much time trying to influence things by getting out the vote, writing officials, blogging, etc. I don't think I can continue to fight the new administration's lack of commitment about doing what's right. As a working single parent, this ideological struggle is hard to maintain day in and day out in the face of little gained. I am extremely sad about Obama's capitulation to the corporate-elite. It seemed like our last best chance to save our economy, our planet, our health, and our dignity. And it's been blown.

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» RE: I am weary... Posted by: oregoncharles
Good will is good, but not being ready to be President is another.
Posted by: donnal on Apr 28, 2009 7:06 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Obama was not ready to be President, his good will and personal style work well for his community work and being a Senator... but the President should be more than spending and budgeting borrowed money of 4.29 trillion in his first 100 days.

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» You had your chance Posted by: TruthBeTold
» OJT Posted by: lorado
» RE: OJT Posted by: Spot
There is the slightest possibility he may spend it against us, rather than for us.
Posted by: Prophit on Apr 28, 2009 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And that possibility exists... Why do I say that??? Because he is going to spend that capital on those who provided him with the means to achieve the White House now isn't he? Here is what he did as a Senator.....and this was a good indication of what we could expect from him.

How he’s fronted for the most vicious firms on Wall Street

Here is an excerpt of this article:

"On February 10, 2005, Senator Obama voted in favor of the passage of the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005. Senators Biden, Boxer, Byrd, Clinton, Corzine, Durbin, Feingold, Kerry, Leahy, Reid and 16 other Democrats voted against it. It passed the Senate 72-26 and was signed into law on February 18, 2005.

This legislation, which dramatically im­paired labor rights, consumer rights and civil rights, involved five years of pres­sure from 100 corporations, 475 lobby­ists, tens of millions of corporate dollars buying influence in our government, and the active participation of the Wall Street firms now funding the Obama campaign. “The Civil Justice Reform Group, a busi­ness alliance comprising general counsels from Fortune 100 firms, was instrumen­tal in drafting the class-action bill”, says Public Citizen."

So, I wouldn't hold your breath waiting for him to do as Huffington posts suggests..... in fact, I am surprised they haven't done any research on his actions in the past that indicate who he will spend his capital for.

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4 years Won't untangle 60+ yrs of MIC Control and High Crimes
Posted by: Purple Girl on Apr 28, 2009 7:19 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd love to believe in Tooth Fairies with magic wands too. Having watched this clusterfuck gain stronger footing every passing decade since the '70's, I have lost such delusions.The situation we are now in is a historical first. Not even the Great Depression can be used as a true template, as a nation and as industries we are far more complicated- intertwined and interdependent on numerous other countries,whether we like it or not.it's taken the Corps and their Pocket politicans 40 yrs to totally fuck US up, it's going to take sometime to free US from their insideous clutches. So we have no choice but to play a little ball, so that the entire Global system does not collapse. There are no magic Wands or Bullets. What there Was, were Stop Gaps along the way which were removed- one by one.We should have been Screaming 'Stop' thoroughout the last 3 decades.Now we are far more than merely a 'Day late & a dollar short' Reinstituting them will take time with Pragmatic foresight,Thoughtful prudence and unshakeable patience.
My dear Cohorts of the Liberal left,Get your panties out of a twist.Some shits gonna suck- and some shits just gonna have to wait. Get over it.
Here's a Illumintion that Every American should heed. Ike Warned US about the Miltiary industrial complex (the real Targets on 9/11)- Therefore the System was already up and running when he was leaving office.So to even say we have merely Cheney/Rummy & Wolfie et als 40 yrs of Shit to sort through is inaccurate.But they are the last 'Godfathers' still breathing, thus able to be prosecuted.
This long standing, insideous system created and maintained by the MIC requires a well thought out and careful dismantling process- it will take about as long to deconstruct it as it did to erect it.
We are penning a new page in the Book of World History- I think we should not do so hastily.

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» Purple Girl, Posted by: TruthBeTold
» Nor will an election Posted by: improperly_sedated
» It's not just an epithet, folks! Posted by: improperly_sedated
Why are these authors so clueless?
Posted by: leafsong1 on Apr 28, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When does it occur to them to close their ears and pretend that Obama isn't saying anything and just look at what he is actually doing? It was forgiveable to place too much emphasis on his rhetoric when he was campaigning on a thin record, but now he is in the Oval Office. What has he actually done that is genuinely good? On the other hand, what has he actually done that stinks of crass corruption? Judginbg purely by his actions, what are the prospects that he will ever be more than just another crook? Why on Earth would anyone listen to a word Obama says? He is obviously a world-class liar.

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'SAVING FOR A RAINY DAY'
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Apr 28, 2009 8:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is the president not some guy at a black jack table who's up a few bucks. He'll need his political capital at some point but it's not something to be squandered. Sometimes It seems as though he's been the president for years. I'ts only been three months. He's very good at pacing himself and not making rash decisions. Political capital is good for getting things done and shouldn't be wasted on "being forgiven" for screwing up. He'll get to it. ANNA

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Kuttner is a Fraud.
Posted by: oregoncharles on Apr 28, 2009 9:05 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He seems to consider himself a progressive, and gets posted on places like Alternet; and he casually refers to Obama as a progressive.

Where's the beef? Where are the progressive policies? I see some bones thrown to the left, mostly environmental hot-buttons. But how does that compare to trillions thrown to Wall St., or to blocking consideration of single-payer health care or prosecution of torture?

Let me back up a moment, because there's a genuine puzzle here. We have a new President who is very new on the scene. He's experienced a meteoric rise, and his skin color alone makes him historic figure. We have to figure he would like to do well, get re-elected, go down in history as The Repairman, who saved the US after the Bushies wrecked it.

Not as another Herbert Hoover.

Yet, just to take the economic issue, he has chosen an approach to the financial collapse that has been PROVEN, by Japan, to fail (10 "lost years", in the Japanese case). And he has chosen top economic advisers, Geithner and Summers, with a similar record of proven failure. (To top it off, he is actively covering up for the Bush Administration's criminality.) According to the few economists with a good track record, the correct route is well-known; for one thing, it's the one FDR used.

Why is Obama choosing failure? There are really only two options: The first is that he isn't nearly as smart as he seems, and furthermore is utterly clueless about the economy. McCain at least had the grace to admit that. Given his own cluelessness, he then has chosen to follow the "accepted wisdom" dating from the Clinton years - the same "wisdom" that got us into this mess.

Personally, I think this is rather unlikely.

The other option: utter crookedness. He is, after all, handing trillions in our money to a band of criminals. AND refusing to prosecute the band of criminals formerly occupying the government.

I wasn't an Obama supporter; I supported Cynthia McKinney, a genuine, recklessly honest progressive. But even I hoped for better than this. I thought it was possible this attractive unknown would at least rise to the occasion, as FDR did. It's a scary situation we're in, so we have to hope.

At this point, we have less than 2 years till the next Congressional elections. That's about how long the Great Depression ran before FDR was elected. It's now a good question how much difference Congress can or will make; Bush made quite a point of being an executive dictator, and Obama seems to be protecting those usurped powers.

But it's the next chance we get, and 18 months isn't very long in politics. It takes that long to build a campaign. Time to start.

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» RE: Kuttner is a Fraud. Posted by: mmckinl
Dear Mr. President
Posted by: willymack on Apr 28, 2009 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Want higher approval numbers?
1. Get us the hell out of Iraq and Afghanistan, today. NOW. No bullshit about democracy, Al Queda, or bin Laden.
2. Prosecute the bushie bastards for multiple capital crimes, then....
3. Watch your numbers soar.
In case you forgot, this is what you were elected for, and what's EXPECTED of you.

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» Amen, brother, amen..... Posted by: Prophit
» RE: Dear Mr. President Posted by: credo
» RE: Dear Mr. President Posted by: Spot
Another know-it-all
Posted by: TruthBeTold on Apr 28, 2009 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in his own mind.

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» RE: Another know-it-all Posted by: Spot
Smile, You've Been Obama-Owned
Posted by: NoPCZone on Apr 28, 2009 9:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Welcome to another 4 years of Republican governance.
EFCA- crickets.
Universal Coverage- crickets.
Fundamental Economic & Banking Reform- crickets.
Getting Out of Iraq- crickets.
Protection of Civil Liberties- crickets.
Bring Bushies to Account for Criminal Activity- crickets.

Nice celebutard moderate Republican President with his Haaavaaad and University of Chicago economic policies. Way to go. Do you feel better for having voted in a Republican Trojan Horse? Erase some of your white guilt?

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» RE: Smile, You've Been Obama-Owned Posted by: MicroGlyphics
RSPCA.???
Posted by: flymulla on Apr 28, 2009 10:43 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have two stories that may go well with the RSPCA.
We have no money. Agreed. What are they doing? If they will not do anything, we will have dead dogs on the streets with cats in their mouth and rats in the cats? mouths.
Franklin Roosevelt came into office amidst a massive financial crisis. Unemployment was high. Banks weren't loaning money. America had a confidence problem. The one bright spot for Roosevelt was a Democratic Congress. (Sound a little familiar?) The new president went right to work. In just over 100 days, a first version of the New Deal was launched and Congress passed 15 major bills. In GOD, we Trust and LOVE your neighbour and cats? Are these true?
QUOTATION OF THE DAY -
"Like everything on Wall Street, they're starting to sin again. As you see a recovery, you'll see everybody's compensation beginning to rise."
- BRAD HINTZ, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, on Wall Street payrates.

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One Term Pres
Posted by: Marauder on Apr 28, 2009 11:01 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the life of me I can't understand reports of Obama's approval ratings soaring! Although I did vote for him, it took me just 100 days of this guys presidency to want this guy out! Many more should be screaming, "ONE TERM ONLY"!!!!!

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» RE: One Term Pres Posted by: Spot
Not a Progressive
Posted by: MicroGlyphics on Apr 28, 2009 11:05 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am sorry, but I disagree with the premise that Obama is a Progressive. Obama is more Progressive than his Conservative opponent might have been, but he is decidedly not Progressive. I still see Obama in bed with Corporate interests (especially in the financial sectors), which is why he has overseen such a large transfer of Public wealth into Corporate hands. When I see him sign Single-Payer Universal Health Care into law, perhaps then I'll believe that he's Progressive.

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» RE: Not a Progressive Posted by: SinglePayerActivist
What should Obama do? Close your eyes and pick almost anything.
Posted by: ergo3 on Apr 28, 2009 11:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is so much to do in the US that picking any target would be a good target to start. As a nation, we have fallen so far behind the rest of the world in just about every area of life that marshalling public support would seem easy even with a lack of focus. Obama is in the right place at the right time in history to move America forward. We are so far behind the rest of the developed world in just about everything that it would be difficult to miss finding a needed and worthy target. "We're #1" is a joke. Unless it's about the number of citizens we incarcerate or the number of foreign military installations we have.

What are we behind in compared to other OECD countries? Here's a partial list:
1. What country is the #1 manufacturer of cell phones? Finland.
2. What country is the #1 manufacturer of wind turbines? Denmark with China soon to be #1.
3. What country is near the bottom in high school graduates' performance rates? USA.
4. What country is near the bottom in infant mortality? USA.
5. What country is near the bottom in internet speeds? USA. And we invented the internet.
6. Our railroad system is 19th century, causing more trucks than necessary to clog the highways.
7. Health insurance, for those who have it, still causes personal bankruptcies while other countries provide health care to all its citizens with no co-pays and deductibles and no limits on what medical interventions are allowable. The USA is the only developed country where someone can go broke because of an illness or injury.
8. Most OECD countries make higher education free (or at very low cost) to all its citizens while American students go deeply into debt that many may never be able to repay. Too many Americans never go on to advanced training and education after high school simply because they can't afford it, wasting a ton of talent.
9. The national electrical grid is woefully unable to sustain a modern economy and bring on-line clean energy where energy is needed.
10. Our national roads and bridges are crumbling and much of it is simply dangerous.
11. Our water supply is dwindling. Sewage and water treatment facilities are crumbling, some in use since the 19th century.
12. Schools buildings are falling apart and older ones are toxic to children. School books on information technology still extol key punch card technology in poor schools.
13. Medical records technology is antiquated, expensive, fragmented and sometimes life-threatening.
14. We continue to bake the planet, foul the air we breathe, and watch fisheries die off.
15. Our national budgeting is antiquated. There is no Federal operating and capital budgets, unlike any business in the US. We expense capital acquisitions instead of amortizing them.
16. The Federal Tax Code is over 18,000 pages. Over 90% of taxpayers use little more than 200 pages to prepare their returns, yet we cannot seem to find ways to simply the code. And who are the rest of the 18,000 pages for? Not for thee and me.
17. Our food safety system is overwhelmed. Some food processing plants never see an inspector for years.
18. The financial markets? Oh, you already know about that!

The list can go on and on.

President Obama, our country needs a fixing. In just about everything. Close your eyes, throw some darts, and whatever issues it hits, just do it! We're behind you ...even if the special interests are not.

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» We're #18! Posted by: Spot
Just a thought--Still drinking the Kool-Aid
Posted by: JohnJlws on Apr 28, 2009 7:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I began volunteer work on the President's campaign after listening to him at the 2004 Democratic convention, reading his books and studying his record. And, of course, after the campaign started with some deliberate effort. We were about 40 points behind Hillary, had zero (none) organization and limited money.

We were called Kool-Aid drinkers, Obama zombies, zealots, followers of the empty suit, young people (thanks for that one) swayed only by soaring rhetoric.

We kept hearing from Barack (it was Barack at the time--probably still is) to work our plan, don't panic, keep our eye on the ball.

The gap ever so slowly narrowed. We won Iowa and that sort of set the tone not only for the campaign, but for the demise of others. We lost New Hampshire. The message stayed the same: calm, focused, working the plan.

Throughout the next months the pendulum would swing toward the frantic Clinton campaign. Reverend Wright came out. The right mobilized its sleaze machine. They nominated the old, Christian white guy as usual and even he led his campaign into the sewer.

Barack continued his calm march. We continued to drink the Kool-Aid. At every turn, many times during the nomination and after his victory, Barack offered an olive branch and a hand up. He talks to foe and friend alike, seemingly unafraid.

Perhaps he's not spending his enormous political capital because he knows he doesn't have to. He and his team are working their plan. In 100 days he's accomplished more than the last several presidents combined. Agree or disagree with what he's accomplished, but he's pushed through more spending than at any time in modern history. He's signed historic legislation. He's now met with more hostile world leaders than Bush could name (which granted is not a real big accomplishment, but this is more to do with Bush's limitations than with Obama's successes).

Maybe he's not spending his capital because he doesn't view it as fleeting. Perhaps he's not in a hurry because to become frantic and spastic isn't part of a well thought out plan, his hallmark.

Just a thought, and a scary one, but maybe he actually knows what he's doing and all of us who drank the Kool-Aid early and often had reason to. Perhaps, and this is just a thought, he's changed the way politics are to be played going forward into the foreseeable future.

With the implosion of the republican party, this theory would seem to be as plausible as the Palinistically simplistic thought that he doesn't know what to do with all this political capital and good will.

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» Dream on, Sunshine Posted by: leafsong1
Obama: Creature of a Corrupt Ruling Class Establishment & so is Kuttner
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Apr 28, 2009 9:21 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "enormous capital" was bought and paid for along with Barack Obama himself from the beginning to the White House follies. It is not Obama's to spend because he does not own it.

This MSM column, like so many others doesn't come anywhere near the bottom-line truth that Obama is a temp hireling for an utterly amoral ruling class system older than the Gilded Age.

Obama serves his well paid handlers out of a Rockefeller / Kissinger / front for their globalist corporate monopoly clients that effectively rig the "Federal Reserve" Corp along with Wall Street and therefore Washington and the MSM.

Democracy and "capitalism" that (by definition) require competition to exist are bloody killing jokes worldwide along with faux never-ending "war on terror" and unlimited "Wall Street Bailouts" all on the public nickel. This is government by Organized Corporate Crime, plain and simple. Obama is merely a passing enabler for it. Indeed, if he wasn't a Fascist enabler he would have shared the same fate as JFK, RFK and Martin Luther KIng.

Fascism is what this is about and all it was ever about. Anyone that hasn't realized that is still drinking the tinhorn campaign Kool-Aid.

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IF HE SPENDS IT ALL ON A GENUINE WORKING NATIONAL HEALTH SYSTEM THAT
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Apr 29, 2009 12:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
includes all and has an option for a government only cost free delivery system if the individual desires and timely relief from global warming, he will be seen by history as a success. If he is able to take the money out of politics he will be remembered as a hero.

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The LYING KING
Posted by: reelman on Apr 29, 2009 6:33 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This man lies so much even the biased AP is starting to fact check!

FACT CHECK: Obama disowns deficit he helped shape
Apr 29, 5:55 PM (ET)

By CALVIN WOODWARD
WASHINGTON (AP) - "That wasn't me," President Barack Obama said on his 100th day in office, disclaiming responsibility for the huge budget deficit waiting for him on Day One.

It actually was him - and the other Democrats controlling Congress the previous two years - who shaped a budget so out of balance.

And as a presidential candidate and president-elect, he backed the twilight Bush-era stimulus plan that made the deficit deeper, all before he took over.

WHAT A DUFUS! HE THINKS WE ARE ALL STUPID...

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OBAMA L.A.S.T. 100 DAYS
Posted by: reelman on May 2, 2009 7:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
L = lie (he broke Klinton's record that was thought unapproachable, just ignore what he says, watch what he does or has done)
A = apologize (he mixed it with bashing America, its the lib guilt thing that never goes away)
S = spend (he borrowed a trillion to buy votes then started hustlling us for a new budget that 3x OUR national debt, another lib thing they do)
T = tax (this phase will be the insidious sneaky one to hit by 2010, success must be punished and wealth redistributed to buy votes)

So there you go...surely you have heard..."the 1st shall be last"...right?

http://conservablogs.com/theconservativecrawfish

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BEST BHO SUMMARY
Posted by: reelman on May 4, 2009 4:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The President Who Hates His Country
Canada Free Press, by Joan Swirsky

Posted By:FLgator, 5/3/2009 8:27:35 AM
Reply 1 - Posted by: njdittos, 5/3/2009 8:53:22 AM (No. 5488723)

This post should be a MustRead, and check out Joan Swirsky's extensive Archives for some of the most detailed, insightful scrutiny of The One.

Among a wealth of clear-headed details, this one particularly caught my eye:

"If Obama is proven to be the fraud and interloper many suspect, every one of his edicts, bills, laws, dictates, Supreme Court selections, et al, will be overturned , leaving America to cope with serious problems – under the leadership of the incomprehensible Joe Biden – but nothing approaching this hate-America president’s far-left socialist domestic programs and appease-our-enemies foreign policy."

Reply 2 - Posted by: bugboy, 5/3/2009 9:09:55 AM (No. 5488752)

But are we sure that this is 'his country'? How can one be proud of something they never embraced?
Obama was nothing more then a visitor. He spent 20 years listening to a preacher who hates this country and was raised by a marxist mother and dubious fathers.

His outward distain for mid America is apparent. He continues to call people who are not big city liberals red-necks. He does not understand nor tolerate Bible believers or Americans who wish to protect this country from being over run by people who have no use for coming here legally. Basically he thumbs his nose at those of use who believe in strict construction of the Constitution. Who believe that the Bill of Rights guarantee individual rights and that we would fight and die for this country.

Yes, he hates this country because he's anything but an American.

Reply 3 - Posted by: StormCnter, 5/3/2009 9:15:10 AM (No. 5488762)

FTA: "..a stunningly ignorant man who has evidently never spoken to a concentration camp survivor, a Cuban refugee, a boat person from Vietnam, a Soviet dissident, or a survivor of Mao’s purges."
--
lucianne.com May 3, 2009

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