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Who says Obama can’t govern?

A response to Vassar Bushmills\' scurrilous attack on our duly-elected President

One thing we might all agree on:  He’s doing the best he can.

Now that we’ve dispensed with that–why are we in the mess we’re in today?  Doing the best he can at what? I think the answer lies somewhere along a continuum.

A. He’s incompetent and clueless.  That is, he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know, and even if he did, he wouldn’t know what to do about it.

B. He’s just incompetent.  He’s trying to solve all these problems, he knows something must be done, he just doesn’t know how to do it.

C. He is very competent, but events and the Republicans have conspired against him to make everything he does turn out wrong.  None of his mistakes are his fault–they aren’t really mistakes, they’re good ideas that just haven’t worked because he had to follow eight years of Bush’s failed policies, and he’s stuck with a Congress full of and directed by Democrats who don’t know their should-be-kicked-a**es from leaking oil wells in the Gulf and are no help whatsoever.  Even John McCain isn’t reaching across the aisle these days.  And there are so many disasters happening all at once.  Nobody could keep his attention on more than one at a time.  It’d be like asking a President to both walk and chew gum at the same time.

D. He’s not too concerned about these incidents and developments because he has bigger fish to fry.  He’d prefer that these things didn’t happen, but they’re not that important to him.  He is occupied with a desire to centralize our economy and nationalize key industries.  Or, as Maxine Waters said for him, “socializing” America.

E. He feels serendipity all around him.  Every one of these incidents gives him an opportunity to move the US closer to a centrally-directed economy, and he’s done so.

F. Not only are they serendipitous, he wants to make them last.  Again, he’s been very competent at doing so.  And he’s had help and direction from very powerful, very rich people.

Now, an ordinary optimist would wish that C were the right answer, or if not C, it’s A or B.  In all those cases, things can still be turned around in 2012, and mainly the voters are to blame.  A hard-core optimistic socialist would hope that the answer is D, E, or F, and those would also be the answers given by an average, ordinary pessimist.

But what of us, the great unwashed public, trying to make sense of him without letting our optimism or pessimism take over?

Although A looks like a strong contender, nobody could be that far out in left field, could he?  This is the choice for those who like Obama personally, but can’t stand any of his policies.  It’s actually a pity choice.

B is a possibility, but we must ask ourselves about the probabilities of his making the wrong decision (for the People) every time.  The odds against that must be astronomical.  But this seems to be the answer selected by Vassar Bushmills in his excellent column, Why can’t Barack Obama Govern? I don’t think Vassar considered the odds when he made his choice.  And his predictions later seem to indicate that he truly believed the answer is elsewhere.

C seems to be what Obama wants us to think.  It’s the least objectionable of all the choices, filled as it is with “politics as usual” and “ObamaCompetency.” And it’s the answer that the MSM keeps whispering to us, “Pick C, pick C, C is it,” liberal optimists that they are.

D, E, and F are just the spectrum of the darker side of the Obama presidency.  (THAT IS NOT A RAAAACIST COMMENT!)  People who think he’s a well-meaning socialist vote for D.  They know that what’s really important are the ends, not the means.

E is the “Rahm Emanuel answer.”  Obama is just making sure each crisis doesn’t go to waste.  Vassar’s prediction that in the wake of a Republican avalanche in November, “Obama will unilaterally attempt to seize control of as much of the government as he can, by executive order, and pass it over to the bureaucracy….” fits nicely here, or even with answer F.

F is the favorite of the conspiracy theorists.  They say, the only way anybody could be that cold would be on purpose, or if George Soros had his boxers in a vise, ready to apply the world’s biggest wedgie if Barack were to stumble.

In case you didn’t notice, A, B, and C are practically benign compared to the sinister implications of D, E, and F.  Unfortunately, the first three are the least likely answers, given the circumstances and the position involved. Could a clueless dunce be elected President?  Maybe, but highly unlikely unless an element of answer F were also involved.  Again, could anybody graduate from Harvard Law School and come out so pathetically incompetent?  Even if he could, wouldn’t happenstance cause him to choose at least a few good policies?  That’s the problem with B.  As noted, C is the Obama choice, but how likely is it that everybody is conspiring against him?  How likely is it that even our maverick Republican Congresscritters wouldn’t reach across the aisle to help him if they thought one of his policies were at least salvageable?  The appeal of the first three choices is that in all of them, the President is occupied with doing the Peoples’ business for their benefit.  He isn’t trying to advance his own agenda.

That leaves D, E, and F, and all three of them are pretty scary.  That scariness is why so few non-conservatives (and not even very many conservatives) are willing to commit themselves to these propositions.  They all imply that our President cares more about his own ideological agenda than he cares about being a President of all the people, more than he cares about taking care of the Peoples’ business.  That would make him a Congressionally enabled Dictator rather than a President.  Who wants to believe that?

So, you make the choice.  Will you believe your heart (choices A, B, or C) or your own lyin’ eyes (D, E, or F)?  Remember it in November.

COMMENTS

  • JadedByPolitics

    on the Idiot in Chief however I LOVE scurrilous because it is RIGHT…lol!

  • http://thesandsinstitute.org Vassar Bushmills

    M R 2 better answers.
    Your last line was the quote of the month, Flagstaff, and the logic impeccable, like Plato, leaving the student with a hatful of answers, instead of one, (Even I don’t believe the Chauncy Gardiner alibi…except by half…the crisis management half) and answers which one can only arrive at in his closet. Obama is Everyman.

  • Scope

    but I must choose D E and F. I don’t believe that the O has written the script, or has sent the soldiers marching in lock step in a certain direction. We are talking world stage, and there are alot of actors out there vying for the prize, and, they have been directors of much more than Chicago’s community. A B and C tempt me, because he is stupid enough to think he/they can pull it off. I think it was Vassar that said somewhere, he/they have all of us to deal with first. And, there are still too many accurate history books around, and too many from the generation that knows that no matter how much better you think you can do socialism, or any of the isms, it has never succeeded.

    I recently read that Cruella Pelousy answered the question “When are you going to stop blaming Bush?” with “When all of his problems go away.” Did you get that- “his problems.” In other words anything that can/will/has gone wrong, in the past/present/future.

    • redneck_hippie

      When all of “the” problems go away. Which is actually how they all think.

      • Scope

        I just seached for hits on “pelosi will stop blaming bush when his problems go away.” There are many conflicting articles, which include “his” and some that don’t. I looked at a site that had a video, and transcript of the Chuck Todd interview, and, she actually did say “when all the problems go away.” That’s even worse. Like I said somewhere they will continue to blame Bush for everything current/past/future. After all, Bush never defended himself while in office, why ever will he defend himself now. And, Rove admitting that he was somewhat at fault for that, just doesn’t cut it.

        Have you read the articles, accompanied by pictures, and credible people (as having been in Syria seeing the transfer) talking, that the WMD were in fact moved to Syria prior to the Iraq War? And still, GWB remains silent.

        • redneck_hippie
  • qixlqatl

    (from the comments HERE

    HOW TO START EACH DAY WITH A POSITIVE OUTLOOK
    .
    1. Open new file on your computer
    2. Name it Barrack Obama
    3. Send it to the Recycle Bin
    4. Empty the Recycle Bin
    5. Your PC will ask ?Do you really want to get rid of Barrack Obama.?
    6. Firmly click ?yes?
    7. Feel better?
    GOOD – Tomorrow we?ll do Nancy Pelosi & the day after, Harry Reid

    • eastbaylarry
    • Flagstaff

      I’ll have to try it.

      • qixlqatl
      • qixlqatl
  • redneck_hippie

    ABC would mean I couldn’t say I hope he fails. (He’s already failed because he isn’t even attempting to govern constitutionally.)

    • Flagstaff

      that “He’s going to fail if he follows his own project plan” rather than “I hope he fails.”

      However, the former would not have received the attention that the latter did.

      • Flagstaff

        “He is going to fail. Never doubt me.”

  • http://www.laborunionreport.combrand/brhttp://www.laborunionreport.blogspot.com LaborUnionReport

    He may not be the puppet master, but he is, with full knowledge, dancing the marionette’s tune.

  • Susannah

    By the way, your snark is awesome! Good job. :-)

    X0X0, Suzi

    • Flagstaff

      to bring up his “walk and chew gum” boast. That’s another campaign claim busted.

      And while I’m at it, my comparison of the oil spill to a human attack against us could as well have pointed out that he’s handling the Iran nuclear threat the same way he’s handling the oil slick–his approach to both is “wait and see.” Come to think of it, he believes he can talk anybody into anything, and talking to Iran is like talking to the oil slick.

      Apparently he lets everything go until the inevitable becomes unavoidable. (Parse that one–it’s like an M.C. Escher first sketch.)

  • romatrast

    Obie is trying to “govern” the way he learned it at university and in community organizing. Get everybody together and don’t do anything until you have consensus. That way no one is responsible when nothing gets done…. except for that old reliable ogre, Big Business, of course. Kick ‘em in the ass!

    Foreign Policy? Who knows? Obama’s is so incoherent that it might actually be successful. No one knows from one minute to the next what he’ll decide to do in any given situation, including POTUS himself.

    Let’s hope he is experiencing some “teachable moments.”

    • http://impudent.blognation.us/blog kyle8

      nt

    • cactusjack

      Regrettably 0 has sewed some really dangerous seeds in foreign policy & now economics his first 2 years and if Jimmy Carter is any lesson, we are going to pay bigtime come the next 2 years. I do not trust our many enemies to be gracious, or not take the opening given. Hang on.

      • Flagstaff

        from our enemies is their own ineptitude.

        He has destroyed our resiliency by the over-reach of ObamaCare. We don’t have a rainy day fund or manufacturing capacity or untapped taxable base or “waste and graft” savings to fall back on.

        Money that could be used to scoop up the oil? Allocated to ObamaCare. Money that can upgrade the military in case of another attack? Allocated to Porkulus. Money that could protect our southern border. Allocated to industry takeovers.

        Yet we have money to support Gaza?

  • Flagstaff

    most of the people there agreed that “E-F” is what’s happening.

  • melissatx

    with his acendancy to the position of UN Secretary General. He will probably leave his office in 2011 before Obamacare starts up and move to a more global environment so he can oppress the American people without having to mess with all you sill littly Constitutional types.

    • Flagstaff

      and Obama heading up the UN. What will Bill do? World Wildlife Fund?

  • David123

    When you rephrase the question like this, it makes your answers D E & F more likely.

  • Flagstaff

    My opinion of his abilities hasn’t changed, but he is an excellent example of why the MSM hasn’t recognized the danger that the Won’s ideas and policies represent.

    He, and they, simply can’t believe that Obama could have an agenda that differs from what he thinks it should be. For example, tonight he said to Dick Morris, after pontificating about how the people on the left have criticized Obama without suggesting a solution [to the oil gusher], how “all they do is snipe, snipe, snipe,” that

    these far-left kooks, these loons, can’t possibly think that Obama isn’t doing what he can do; they can’t possibly think that there’s some solution he’s hiding…
    [snip]
    So he was snookered by [BP].
    [snip]
    But if you tell me what [he could've done... to stop it] then I will believe with you.

    Morris, recognizing that not containing the existing spill is the key failure, proceeded to give him the example of turning down help from Holland when it was offered some time ago, as Sarah Palin had told him last night. And he hasn’t waived the Jones Act. So, O’Reilly asked, why is he making these mistakes? Is he not smart enough? Morris: “Obama has never learned to manage.”

    So O’Reilly is edging towards B with Morris’ guidance.

    Last night, however, Sarah Palin tried to point out that the Won doesn’t have stopping the gusher (she should have said containing the spill and protecting the coast while stopping the flow) as his highest priority.

    Watch the latest news video at video.foxnews.com

    At 3:10 of the interview, he asked her what her main point in the speech would have been. When O’Reilly interrupted her “Stop the gusher” answer to say that nobody knows how to stop it, Palin responded,

    Well, we haven’t had the assurance that president ? we haven’t had the assurance by the president that that has been his top priority. Instead, what his top priority is, Bill, is cap and tax. It is using this crisis, not letting it go to waste, but to use this crisis to increase the cost of energy.

    He then has a look of disbelief on his face as this exchange starts.

    O’REILLY: Are you telling me that you don’t think the president’s top priority is stopping that leak? Is that what you are telling me?

    PALIN: What I’m telling you is that is not what I am hearing and what the American public is hearing from the top official in our government. And that’s why those poll numbers show that, no, the public, we don’t know where to turn. If we can’t trust BP to be able to fix this leak, we know we can’t trust government because they’ve had eight weeks of overseeing, of regulating and kind of coaching this whole process, this whole issue of stopping the leak. And they haven’t succeeded in doing it.
    [snip]
    We have to know ? we have to know that President Obama’s No. 1 priority is to stop the leak.

    Bill appears to be recognizing that he’s made some unwarranted assumptions about Obama as he then says,

    O’REILLY: But I’m assuming that it is. And I am assuming that it is. But, look, the reason I’m pleased to have you on the program tonight is that there is not a governor in the United States who has more experience than you do dealing with the oil companies. You’ve already said you can’t believe them, that their word doesn’t mean much when you are debating issues as far as the oil company’s interest and the interest of the people. You can’t believe them. OK. Now, the oil company BP says we don’t know how to stop the leak. We’re going to try X. We’re going to dig another well. We’re going to do this. We don’t know. We don’t know. Obama obviously doesn’t know how to stop the leak. Do you know how to stop it?

    PALIN: Well, then what the federal government should have done was accept the assistance of foreign countries, of entrepreneurial Americans who have had solutions?

    O’REILLY: Who?

    PALIN: ?that they wanted presented.

    O’REILLY: Who?

    PALIN: They can’t even get a phone call returned, Bill. The Dutch. They are known in the Norwegian. They are known for ? for dikes and for cleaning up water and for dealing with spills. They offered to help and, yet, no, they too, with a proverbial can’t even get a phone call back. That is what the Norwegians are telling us, and the Dutch are telling us. And then the entrepreneurial Americans, the company in Maine that has the boom and the absorbents, those companies that are waiting for the Obama administration eight weeks later for the regulators to come in and say, OK, we’ll purchase from you now. We’ll do all that we can. That’s where some of the frustration is.

    Now, we saw the same thing though with Katrina, didn’t we? So, I’m not going to point fingers and make this a partisan issue at all, point fingers at different administrations. But it is that inherent problem that we have with government, not necessarily being prepared, because our priorities in government are wrong. National security, safety of the people, needs to be the top priority. That’s where we need to be funding instead of funding these other things on the periphery that really just get in the way of the private sector’s progress, their ability to produce and to thrive and to prosper, Instead, our priorities in the national government have been screwed up.

    The “Who, who?” questions are accompanied by a look of “I’ve never heard any of this.” And I added emphasis to some of Palin’s words because they need to be recognized as important.

    But O’Reilly exemplifies what I wrote above, “[D, E, and F] all imply that our President cares more about his own ideological agenda than he cares about being a President of all the people, more than he cares about taking care of the Peoples? business. That would make him a Congressionally enabled Dictator rather than a President. Who wants to believe that?”

    Nobody wants to believe it, but more people like O’Reilly need to accept it as a possibility to be judged against the evidence. The jury is still out.

  • Flagstaff

    the link “the interview” does.