The Woodenheaded DINO President
Instead of a fighting Dem, we have a mealymouth, woodenheaded DINO.
Matthew Rothschild at The Progresssive captures another pathetic performance by this president.
"The President’s post-mortem press conference underscores why he lost, and why progressives should no longer invest hope in him.
"While he accepted responsibility for the defeat, and while he acknowledged that people were “frustrated” and wanted “their jobs to come back faster,” he failed to even mention the massive housing crisis that he has so ineptly handled.
"On top of that, he adopted the messaging of the Republicans. He talked about the need to reduce our deficit so we don’t “leave our children a legacy of debt” and so we’re not “racking up the credit card for the next generation.”
"Those lines could have come straight out of the mouth of Rand Paul!
"And like Rand Paul, he saluted business and the free market: “The reason we’ve got an unparalleled standard of living in the history of the world is because we’ve got a free market that is dynamic and entrepreneurial and that free market has to be nurtured and cultivated.”
"Then he pitied big business.
“ 'You just had a successive set of issues in which I think business took the message that, well, gosh, it seems like we may be always painted as the bad guy,; he said. 'And so I’ve got to take responsibility in terms of making sure that I make clear to the business community as well as to the country that the most important thing we can do is to boost and encourage our business sector.' ”
"Really??? That’s “the most important thing” he has to do? Wow!
"He also backpedaled fast on expanding the role of government, conceding without qualification that some people thought “government was getting much more intrusive into people’s lives.” Amazingly, he said, “I’m sympathetic to folks who looked at it and said this is looking like potential overreach.”
"Rather than represent an ideological alternative, he tried to blur the ideological lines. “None of the challenges we face lend themselves to simple solutions or bumper-sticker slogans,” he said. “Nor are the answers found in any one particular philosophy or ideology.”
"And just as he did during his long waffle on health care, he said, “I’m eager to hear good ideas wherever they come from.”
"He repeatedly mentioned the need for “civility” and “consensus” at a time when it’s more important than ever to slug out the ideological differences.
"He also embraced some of the substance of the Republican Party agenda.
"Sounding like John McCain, he endorsed the idea of cutting “earmarks” several times.
"He said he wanted to “accelerate depreciation for business,” which is about the least efficient way to jumpstart the economy.
"He said he wanted to push natural gas.
"And he even waved at restarting “our nuclear industry as a means of reducing our dependence on foreign oil and reducing greenhouse gases.”
"That’s his vision?
"This is pathetic."
Paul Krugman weighed in with this yesterday:
"Urk. I just gave up on the presidential press conference. When Obama declared that Americans rejected Democrats in part because “We were in such a hurry to get things done that we didn’t change how things got done,” I checked out.
"Nobody cares about this stuff — they care about results. Nobody really cares about earmarks; they’re just code for spending less (less on somebody else, of course, not me). Nobody cares about civility and bipartisanship, which in practice are code for Democrats giving in to Republican demands. Nobody cares about parliamentary maneuvers: we can argue about the role of health reform in the election, but I bet not one voter in 50 knows or cares that it was passed using reconciliation (as were the sacred Bush tax cuts we must, must retain).
"If Obama had used fancy footwork and 2 AM sessions to pass a big public works program, and this program had brought unemployment down, Republicans would be screaming about the process — and Democrats would have comfortably held control of Congress. Remember the voter backlash against the way Medicare drug benefits were passed? Neither do I.
"Oh, by the way — nobody cares about the deficit, either."
The hallmark of Obama and the Dems on Capitol Hill: it's never to early to cave to the GOP and call it "bipartisanship".
From David Drumm at Jonathan Turley's blog: "Obama signals he may allow rich to keep their tax breaks.
"Is this some special negotiating strategy that I’m unfamiliar with? Admit willingness to compromise before negotiations even begin. What idiot came up with that idea?"
(It's
same deliberately weak repetitive strategy used for the health care
reform fiasco, the essentially toothless financial reform bill, the
diluted stimulus bill, etc.)




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