http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0115/barnes012615.php3


What You Missed If You Didn't Watch: Five insights into Obama, none of them
flattering

[image: Fred Barnes]
By Fred Barnes

Published Jan. 26, 2015

image: http://media.cagle.com/44/2014/01/30/143744_600.jpg?ref=relatedBox

If you skipped President Obama's State of the Union address on TV last
week, you missed something. It was long (61 minutes) and uninspiring. Yet
as the Obama presidency enters its seventh year, the speech was revealing.
Here are a few things we learned about Obama's thinking.

*•* Words speak louder than actions. From what the president said, you
might have concluded Russia had retreated inside its borders, its tail
between its legs. "We are demonstrating the power of American strength and
diplomacy," he said. "We're upholding the principle that bigger nations
can't bully the small—by opposing Russian aggression, supporting Ukraine's
democracy, and reassuring our NATO allies." The result: Russia is now
"isolated, with its economy in tatters."

America led "not with bluster, but with persistent, steady resolve," Obama
said. But the nonbluster approach—words—hasn't impressed Russian president
Vladimir Putin. Russia's annexation of Crimea stands, as does its control
of much of eastern Ukraine and its ambition for further expansion. The
Russian economy is weakened, true, but it's because the price of oil has
plummeted, not because Obama has upheld a principle.

Meanwhile, Obama claimed America has "stopped" the Islamic terrorist group
ISIL in its tracks. Not in Syria, it hasn't. The next step, he said, is for
Congress "to show the world that we are united in this mission by passing a
resolution to authorize the use of force against ISIL." But a resolution
won't defeat ISIL. Only the actual use of more military force will.

*•* Republican ideas are solicited and dropped. "I commit to every
Republican here tonight that I will not only seek out your ideas, I will
seek to work with you to make this country stronger," Obama declared. Given
his record, eyes must have rolled across the House chamber. He's often
promised to consider GOP ideas and followed up by ignoring them.

Three days after his inauguration in January 2009, he met with
congressional leaders. Eric Cantor, then the House Republican whip, gave
Obama a list of modest proposals to help revive the economy. The president
responded by saying "elections have consequences" and "I won." There's no
evidence he gave the ideas a moment's consideration. A week or so later,
Obama spoke to House Republicans on Capitol Hill, soliciting their ideas
for a bill to stimulate the economy. It turned out the legislation had
already been drafted by Democrats, with no Republican input.

A year later, Obama spoke to a House Republican retreat in Baltimore and
took questions. The first came from Paul Ryan, a rising Republican star and
author of a "road map" on taxes and spending. Obama said he'd read it and
liked some of Ryan's ideas. Ryan took this as "an olive branch," he
recalled in his book The Way Forward. "Unfortunately, within 72 hours, his
budget director took that branch and hit me in the face with it," Ryan
wrote. That was followed by attacks from House Democrats in a conference
call and from Nancy Pelosi in a speech. "They apparently saw my budget plan
as a critical weapon in their 2010 midterm campaign strategy," he wrote.

*•* Forget compromise. The few compromises between Republicans and the
Obama White House were negotiated by Vice President Biden. The president
himself is a poor negotiator, according to Republicans. He lectures and is
petulant and reluctant to make concessions. Yet he now says he wants to
negotiate deals on tax reform, infrastructure, and trade.

After the State of the Union, scratch tax reform. Republicans envision it
based on the 1986 bipartisan model in which loopholes and special breaks
were killed, the tax base broadened, and tax rates lowered. We learned in
Obama's speech that his concept is from another world. Yes, he wants to
wipe out loopholes and preferences, but not to cut rates, at least for
individuals. He wants to spend the money that's saved, especially to fund
infrastructure. And he's also eager to exploit tax reform to raise taxes on
the rich and redistribute their wealth. "Let's close the loopholes that
lead to inequality by allowing the top one percent to avoid paying taxes on
their accumulated wealth," Obama said. His ideas aren't new. They're hardy
perennials of liberals. They've just never been part of tax reform. A
bipartisan deal on tax reform was always a long shot in Obama's final two
years. Now it's dead, thanks to the president.

*•* High-flown sentiments are empty. Let's stipulate that the political
class is no stranger to hypocrisy. But *Obama's hypocrisy is unique and
spectacular*. His calling card as a presidential candidate was that he
alone knew how to bring Washington together, to end polarization, cure
dysfunction, and produce a new era of bipartisanship. It was an appealing
pitch. *But once in the White House, he emerged as the Great Divider,
pulling Americans apart on class, race, gender, and political party. *

So when Obama wound up his speech last week by posing as the last, lonely
believer in America as "one nation," it was surprising. He must have been
aiming those remarks at the television audience, because everyone in the
hall knew his record. He called for "a better politics." It's "one where we
debate without demonizing each other," he said. Did he forget what his 2012
campaign did to Mitt Romney? "A better politics is one where we spend less
time drowning in dark money for ads that pull us into the gutter," he went
on. What about his own campaign?

*•* The driver of our national debt goes unmentioned. The phrase
"entitlement reform" didn't find its way into the speech. Earlier in his
presidency, he had emphasized the threat to the economy and to the solvency
of the federal government from uncontrolled entitlement spending. President
Clinton paid enormous attention to curbing entitlements until he was
sidetracked by impeachment. For now, Obama has left the issue to
Republicans. And it's not because the problem has lessened. It's because
the Democratic base opposes entitlement reform. Not very presidential on
his part, wouldn't you say?


Read more at
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0115/barnes012615.php3#4pLOXHes5TADpLOB.99




__._,_.___
 ------------------------------
Posted by: "beowulf" <[email protected]>
------------------------------


 Visit Your Group
<https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/grendelreport/info;_ylc=X3oDMTJmb2lxc2lsBF9TAzk3MzU5NzE0BGdycElkAzIwMTk0ODA2BGdycHNwSWQDMTcwNTMyMzY2NwRzZWMDdnRsBHNsawN2Z2hwBHN0aW1lAzE0MjIzMTYyOTU->


 [image: Yahoo! Groups]
<https://groups.yahoo.com/neo;_ylc=X3oDMTJlMGJyMnQ0BF9TAzk3NDc2NTkwBGdycElkAzIwMTk0ODA2BGdycHNwSWQDMTcwNTMyMzY2NwRzZWMDZnRyBHNsawNnZnAEc3RpbWUDMTQyMjMxNjI5NQ-->
• Privacy <https://info.yahoo.com/privacy/us/yahoo/groups/details.html> •
Unsubscribe <[email protected]?subject=Unsubscribe>
• Terms of Use <https://info.yahoo.com/legal/us/yahoo/utos/terms/>

__,_._,___

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to