http://www.nationaljournal.com/njmagazi ... 7_2566.phpQuote:
Having praised President Obama's job performance in two recent columns, it is with regret that I now worry that he may be deepening what looks more and more like a depression and may engineer so much spending, debt, and government control of the economy as to leave most Americans permanently less prosperous and less free.
Other Obama-admiring centrists have expressed similar concerns. Like them, I would like to be proved wrong. After all, if this president fails, who will revive our economy? And when? And what kind of America will our children inherit?
(snip)
This is not to deny that the liberal wish list in Obama's staggering $3.6 trillion budget would be wonderful if we had limitless resources. But in the real world, it could put vast areas of the economy under permanent government mismanagement, kill millions of jobs, drive investors and employers overseas, and bankrupt the nation.
Meanwhile, liberal Democrats in Congress are racing to gratify their interest groups in a slew of ways likely to do much more harm than good: pushing a union-backed "card-check" bill that would bypass secret-ballot elections on unionization and facilitate intimidation of reluctant workers; slipping into the stimulus package a formula to reimburse states that increase welfare dependency among single mothers and reduce their incentives to work; defunding a program that now pays for the parents of some 1,700 poor kids to choose private schools over crumbling D.C. public schools; fencing out would-be immigrants with much-needed skills.
[snip]
Obama can take credit for keeping campaign promises (which he might have been wiser to defer) on health care, energy, and more, and for ending some of George W. Bush's budget gimmickry. But he has been deceptive in basing his deficit projections on phantom expenditure cuts and wildly optimistic revenue estimates, and in proclaiming "a new era of responsibility" to be paid for by raising taxes only on "the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans."
(snip)
Small wonder that liberal commentators who complained about Obama's initial stabs at bipartisanship are ecstatic about his budget. And small wonder that some centrists who have had high hopes for Obama -- including New York Times columnist David Brooks, my colleague Clive Crook, David Gergen, and Christopher Buckley -- are sounding alarms.
Edited to shorten excerpt. ~ RS
I saw this coming......starting in 2004, long before my advanced degree. Stuart should have seen this coming. Mr Neocon David Brooks should have seen this coming. Chris Buckley should have seen this coming. David Gergen should have seen this coming. Kathleen Parker could have seen this coming if she didn't get over her hissy fit and obsession with Palin. Even Tommy the Pinball Wizard could have seen this coming.
Obama was a member of the Joyce Foundation. He was Acorns attorney. Stuart's National Journal ranked him the most liberal senator. Obama has had 4 years of US Senate experience and about 8 years in the State Senate with votes there. Leopards do not change their spots. These FOOLS could have seen this with a MINIMAL amount of homework at his actions, instead of drinking the flavor-aid of Obama's words and joining his cult.
These "centrists" had their candidate in 2008. Then then bolt and vote for the Cult of Obama when their candidate got in. McCain wasn't my pick in the primary. I was a team player and voted for him because I knew how bad Obama was. I have more respect for liberals than these people.
People like these are why I will NEVER refer to myself as a centrist or a moderate. Small L libertarian, yes. Mainstream conservative, yes. Far right (depending on the definition) yes.
But I want to be far away from the David Brooks crowd.