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We do big things.

President Obama\'s nod to American exceptionalism

There are no caps in that title.  No exclamation point.  None was present in the president’s State of the Union speech as he delivered those lines last week.

President Obama is supposed to be The Great Orator, but lately he seems to be missing the mark.  Why in the name of William Jennings Bryan did he wind up his address with a reference to the heroic story of Brandon Fisher and his “small business,” Center Rock?

To remind you, Fisher and his company envisioned, designed, manufactured, delivered, and operated the equipment that rescued 33 miners trapped in Chile last year.

President Obama quoted a Center Rock employee,

…”We proved that Center Rock is a little company, but we do big things.”

We do big things.

We are a nation that says….

We do big things.

In doing so, he missed the irony of using that story to support his idea that the US Government “does big things.”  He didn’t specifically say that–he used the royal “We” to recognize the American people–but it was clear from what went before and by his use of “We are a nation…” that he meant “We, the government.

But Fisher’s is a story of personal enterprise and individual effort; it has nothing to do with government programs and if anything it illustrates what can be accomplished if government gets out of the way.  Had the incident been a different kind of emergency, one that required the effort of any industry that is highly regulated, perhaps the rescue would never have been completed.

Consider the Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill.  Rules and regulations did not prevent the accident but federal government regulation then prevented the states from protecting their own beaches, prevented European allies from helping mitigate the damage with their ships and sailors who were already experienced in and equipped for that kind of situation, and prevented American entrepreneurs just like Center Rock from applying their talents to speed the cleanup.  Instead of doing big things, the Obama administration did every nit-picking little thing it could do to prevent ingenuity from winning the battle.  To this day, it leaves in place a court-rejected moratorium on offshore drilling, or the threat of one, that keeps American oil companies from full recovery.

What “big things” lie ahead?

He asks Harvard to allow the return of ROTC to campus.

He has traveled around the world, and he’ll do so again to make more speeches, and to stand with “those who take responsibility.”  He’ll insist that Iran meets its responsibilities, and “that North Korea keeps its commitment to abandon nuclear weapons.”

He’ll reduce troop strength in Iraq.

He’s going to give us a “21st century government that’s open” and “a government that’s more competent and efficient.”  He seemed to say that he’d do something so that government could regulate salmon better, whether it’s in fresh water, salt water, or a nice fume.  But he wasn’t specific about just what that was.  And he says that “[v]eterans can now download their electronic medical records with a click of the mouse.”  Efficient!  His “administration will develop a proposal to merge, consolidate, and reorganize the federal government.” That is big, but hardly new.

And he’ll

pick projects based on what’s best for the economy, not politicians.

Within 25 years, our goal is to give 80% of Americans access to high-speed rail, which could allow you go places in half the time it takes to travel by car. For some trips, it will be faster than flying – without the pat-down. As we speak, routes in California and the Midwest are already underway.

Yes, he really had those two sentences back to back.

Enough, already.  Most of these are small-ball items, either essentially insignificant in a grand view of the world, or little white-lie gifts to the cockeyed optimists among us who still believe that a government the size of the combined moons of Jupiter can be made open, competent, and efficient, and that multi-billion-dollar projects can be paid for by eliminating the same waste, corruption and loopholes that paid for the last twenty unwanted government boondoggles.

“Big” in this context does not equal “expensive,” it equals “very important and good for America.”  And to be fair, he did have a few items that might qualify, but he didn’t seem to realize it.  He merely mentioned them and continued on, or qualified them to such an extent that it guarantees failure.  Examples:  fix Social Security, reduce spending, simplify the tax code, eliminate loopholes and tax preferences, and reduce tax rates.  It’s clear that he either didn’t really mean what he said, or that he intends to stay back and follow while somebody else leads the way, letting them take the arrows from HIS party while doing so.  He has no intention of leading us anywhere.

But he could, if he really wanted to “do big things.”  Some suggestions:

Cut spending.

“Big” would be to accept the Republican challenge to return to the 2008 budget and go them two better.  Propose the 2006 budget.

Bipartisan effort and openness.

Recognize that the individual mandate in Obamacare is unconstitutional, and that while it is indeed “big,” the law is NOT self-financing, and that a big part of our deficit problem is the result of the fact and the manner it was forced upon us, creating huge fear among businesses that their employee health benefits are no longer under their control.  Join with Republicans and call for its repeal, to be replaced with several smaller, manageable laws covering a lot less ground but hashed out in open session in Congress.  Smaller in size, but bigger in importance.

Cut the deficit and amend the tax code.

Refer to the true results of the Reagan tax cuts–Huge increases in tax revenues, exceeded by huge increases in spending.  Start with one of the deficit reduction commission’s income tax plans.  By following a lower-spending budget (2006) the deficit will quickly start to shrink.

Illegal immigration.

Don’t just talk about it.  Do it.  Work with both parties as he said in his speech.  But don’t insist that every foot of border fence come with concessions to the illegal immigrant lobby.

Social Security.

Lead.  Don’t follow.  And don’t lay down conditions that guarantee failure, because Social Security is a problem that CAN be solved.  With a split Congress, he could actually do something BIG!

I’m sure you can read the speech and come up with more suggestions that are far “bigger” than his.

We Do Big Things!

See.  It’s better in bold, with caps and the right punctuation.  He should have delivered it that way and backed it up with proposals that were BIG.  Instead, he followed it with clumsy aphorisms and glittering generalities.  He came darned close to saying “the future lies ahead of us.”

If President Obama were a truly great orator, that phrase would be household words by now.  It would have joined “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” because it would have been followed by important new ideas, and not preceded by everyday boilerplate.  Instead, it’s been forgotten, as his speech will be.

He might as well have closed with, “After all, tomorrow is another day.”

COMMENTS

  • len_kc

    ?If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there’d be a shortage of sand?

    • Flagstaff

      that nobody got more than his fair share. And that it was transported only in eco-friendly vehicles.

  • itrytobenice

    if BO was actually a leader. Unfortunately, he wasn’t ever even a very good community organizer, let alone the kind of person who could actually accomplish anything positive. All he’s going to do is turn over our country to the union thugs who don’t care if they destroy us or not, as long as their power is intact.

    • Flagstaff

      that he’d do any of this. It’s why Bill Clinton was ten times the president Obama is.

      My original idea was that while the press keeps telling us Obama is moving to the center, it’s obvious that he’s only talking about it. Then I read the speech more carefully.

      He’s doing even less than talking, because this is basically a very bad speech. It’s disorganized and illogical. As always he made it sound good, but as I noted, his examples show the error of his logic, not his brilliance. And much of it can be taken two ways, so that no matter what eventually happens, he can claim “that’s what I said.” For instance–

      “the stock market has come roaring back”

      Considering that it was down at least 45% in March of 2009 from where it was in August of 2008 when it started to look like he couldn’t be stopped, it is nice that it’s now almost back where it started. It has nothing to do with his policies, it has everything to do with something called “reversion to the mean,” with some hope that he’s a one-term president thrown in. Fundamentally, businesses have trimmed payrolls and cut costs, so they are profitable, and that’s what drives the stock market in times like this.

      I could go on, but I won’t.

      You’re right. Reagan was a leader. I knew Reagan, and he’s no Reagan.

    • http://westforwestwing2012.com heartlander

      If only more Americans knew what “community organizer” means!

      The term calls up images of those wonderful civic-minded people who organize neighborhood co-ops, community gardens, food banks, after-school programs, Boy Scouts, recycling centers, etc.

      In actuality, on the Left, “community organizer” has a very specific meaning. An Alinskyite “community organizer” actually “organizes” by fomenting chaos. He goes into a community, harangues the people about how bad-off they are, gets them all riled up and ready to kill somebody, then spearheads the angry mob as they go in to occupy bank lobbies and chase customers out, pipe fumes from human feces out through the air vents at a business convention, and just generally bully and harass their way to whatever they want. It’s called “mau-mauing.” Tom Wolfe wrote a little book about it.

      Alinsky’s “community organizers” are all about stirring up rage, fomenting class envy, and setting people against each other (especially black vs. white, so that they always have the race card to play, it’s their most effective weapon — we’ve seen how effective it is for ending discussion and shutting people up).

      I would say Obama is an incredibly good “community organizer.” But don’t just take my word for it. The Alinsky-founded Industrial Areas Foundation for whom Obama worked thought he was their BEST organizer in Chicago — and made him a trainer for other aspiring “community organizers.”

      Read David Horowitz’s Barack Obama’s Rules for Revolution: The Alinsky Model.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
    • Flagstaff
  • 6eorge Jetson

    • Flagstaff

      This is family website.

  • Flagstaff

    on the SOTU. A different perspective.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/27/AR2011012705928.html

    • itrytobenice

      By reading the comments on The Hammer’s post you can tell their readers are lefty nuts. I don’t know whether they gravitated toward that rag because they are kindred spirits or whether the WaPo just caters to them, but they certainly belong together.

      • Flagstaff

        got a lot more attaboys, though.