toomuchtime_
Gold Member
- Dec 29, 2008
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On 9/11, President Bush learned of disaster while reading The Pet Goat to grade-school kids. On Tuesday, President Obama escaped from disaster by reading The Moon Over Star to grade-school kids.
We were just tired of being in the White House, the two-week-old president, with Michelle at his side, explained to students at a public charter school near the White House.
Even as he told the children his favorite superheroes were Batman and Spider-Man, his own dream of being the superhero who swoops in to swiftly save America was going SPLAT!
It just aint that easy.
Unlike W. and Dick Cheney, who heroically resisted acknowledging their historically boneheaded mistakes, President Obama summoned a conga line of Anderson, Katie, Brian, Chris and Charlie to the Oval Office to do penance, over and over.
I think I messed up. I screwed up, he confessed to Couric.
He told the anchors that the man who helped make him president, Tom Daschle, had made a serious mistake by not paying taxes on a car and driver. (It should have been a harbinger of doom when Daschle began sporting those determined-to-be-hip round red glasses.)
Mr. Obama admitted that ultimately its important for this administration to send a message that there arent two sets of rules. You know, one for prominent people and one for ordinary folks who have to pay their taxes.
It took Daschles resignation to shake the president out of his arrogant attitude that his charmed circle doesnt have to abide by the lofty standards he lectured the rest of us about for two years.
Before he recanted, his hand forced by a cascade of appointees who forgot to pay taxes, his reasoning was creeping perilously close to that of the outgoing leaders he denounced in his Inaugural Address: that elitist mentality of we know best, we know were doing the right thing for the country, so we can twist the rules.
Mr. Obamas errors on the helter-skelter stimulus package were also self-induced. He should put down those Lincoln books and order Dave from Netflix.
When Kevin Kline becomes an accidental president, he summons his personal accountant, Murray Blum, to the White House to cut millions in silly programs out of the federal budget so he can give money to the homeless.
Who does these books? Blum says with disgust, red-penciling an ad campaign to boost consumers confidence in cars theyd already bought. If I ran my office this way, Id be out of business.
Mr. Obama should have taken a red pencil to the $819 billion stimulus bill and slashed all the provisions that looked like caricatures of Democratic drunken-sailor spending.
As Senator Kit Bond, a Republican, put it, there were so many good targets that he felt like a mosquito in a nudist colony. He was especially worried about the provision requiring the steel and iron for infrastructure construction to be American-made, and by the time the chastened president talked to Chris Wallace on Fox Tuesday, he agreed that we cant send a protectionist message.
Mr. Obama protested to Brian Williams that the programs denounced as wasteful by Republicans amount to less than 1 percent of the entire package. All the more reason to cut them and create a lean, clean bill tailored to creating jobs.
The Democratic president has been spending so much time trying and failing to win over Republicans that he may not have noticed the disillusionment in his own ranks.
Betrayed by their bankers and leaders, Americans were desperate to trust someone when they made Barack Obama president. His debut has left them skeptical about his willingness to smack down those who would flout his high standards or waste our money.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/04/opinion/04dowd.html?_r=1&ref=opinion
We were just tired of being in the White House, the two-week-old president, with Michelle at his side, explained to students at a public charter school near the White House.
Even as he told the children his favorite superheroes were Batman and Spider-Man, his own dream of being the superhero who swoops in to swiftly save America was going SPLAT!
It just aint that easy.
Unlike W. and Dick Cheney, who heroically resisted acknowledging their historically boneheaded mistakes, President Obama summoned a conga line of Anderson, Katie, Brian, Chris and Charlie to the Oval Office to do penance, over and over.
I think I messed up. I screwed up, he confessed to Couric.
He told the anchors that the man who helped make him president, Tom Daschle, had made a serious mistake by not paying taxes on a car and driver. (It should have been a harbinger of doom when Daschle began sporting those determined-to-be-hip round red glasses.)
Mr. Obama admitted that ultimately its important for this administration to send a message that there arent two sets of rules. You know, one for prominent people and one for ordinary folks who have to pay their taxes.
It took Daschles resignation to shake the president out of his arrogant attitude that his charmed circle doesnt have to abide by the lofty standards he lectured the rest of us about for two years.
Before he recanted, his hand forced by a cascade of appointees who forgot to pay taxes, his reasoning was creeping perilously close to that of the outgoing leaders he denounced in his Inaugural Address: that elitist mentality of we know best, we know were doing the right thing for the country, so we can twist the rules.
Mr. Obamas errors on the helter-skelter stimulus package were also self-induced. He should put down those Lincoln books and order Dave from Netflix.
When Kevin Kline becomes an accidental president, he summons his personal accountant, Murray Blum, to the White House to cut millions in silly programs out of the federal budget so he can give money to the homeless.
Who does these books? Blum says with disgust, red-penciling an ad campaign to boost consumers confidence in cars theyd already bought. If I ran my office this way, Id be out of business.
Mr. Obama should have taken a red pencil to the $819 billion stimulus bill and slashed all the provisions that looked like caricatures of Democratic drunken-sailor spending.
As Senator Kit Bond, a Republican, put it, there were so many good targets that he felt like a mosquito in a nudist colony. He was especially worried about the provision requiring the steel and iron for infrastructure construction to be American-made, and by the time the chastened president talked to Chris Wallace on Fox Tuesday, he agreed that we cant send a protectionist message.
Mr. Obama protested to Brian Williams that the programs denounced as wasteful by Republicans amount to less than 1 percent of the entire package. All the more reason to cut them and create a lean, clean bill tailored to creating jobs.
The Democratic president has been spending so much time trying and failing to win over Republicans that he may not have noticed the disillusionment in his own ranks.
Betrayed by their bankers and leaders, Americans were desperate to trust someone when they made Barack Obama president. His debut has left them skeptical about his willingness to smack down those who would flout his high standards or waste our money.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/04/opinion/04dowd.html?_r=1&ref=opinion