Skip to main content

Here's a guy with the guts to get a historic (maybe flawed) Health Care Bill passed in the first place. Then on the same day 26 Republican Governors challenged it in the Supreme Court. Obama could lose all his political capital and re-election with the Supreme Court overturning the individual mandate and other provisions of the Health Care Bill. So, like when he took down Osama bin Laden (leadership with a tough decision again), he went for broke. He could have let the case be litigated after the 2012 elections. Instead he was brilliant in his gambit that the Supreme Court, with a disgraceful 30% approval rating would not overturn a law by the peoples' representatives with a 5-4 ruling. And guess what? The guy on the majority Conservative side; the guy who G W Bush appointed - and who Obama opposed in the Senate confirmation hearing - that guy who was the Chief Justice and the leader of the other 4 bumbling characters on the Right side of the Bench; that guy ruled in favor of Obama. And that guy was at Harvard too with the same Professor as Obama. Brilliant!

 

That's leadership, baby!

 

Look at leadership in the challenge of the racist Arizona immigration laws. Look how he stiff-armed the Republicans with his Executive Privilege invocation on the Eric Holder Fast and Furious contempt shyte. Look at leadership to get the US auto industry on top. Look at leadership to get the Europeans to do the fighting to remove Qadaffi, with only US intel and small change. Look at leadership in turning up tariffs on the Chinese where they're engaged in market dumping.

 

That's leadership, baby!

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Not only is Obama making Bush look like a wannabe gunslinger, but the Chicago boys (Axelrod, Pluffe, Rahm, etc.) make Karl Rove and company look like choir boys. Don't ever underestimate the ground game by the Obama campaign. Look at the poll numbers in the Swing States.

 

 

Ii said last year that Independents would not forgive the TEA party for bringing America to the brink of default on its debt obligations and causing a downgrade of its debt rating; and that this will be shown in a trouncing of Republicans in Nov 2012. But you know what, Obama himself will out the GOP in November.

Kari
Originally Posted by Kari:

Not only is Obama making Bush look like a wannabe gunslinger, but the Chicago boys (Axelrod, Pluffe, Rahm, etc.) make Karl Rove and company look like choir boys. Don't ever underestimate the ground game by the Obama campaign. Look at the poll numbers in the Swing States.

 

 

Ii said last year that Independents would not forgive the TEA party for bringing America to the brink of default on its debt obligations and causing a downgrade of its debt rating; and that this will be shown in a trouncing of Republicans in Nov 2012. But you know what, Obama himself will out the GOP in November.

Both them bais good gunslinger, Obama got Osama, Bush got Saddam.  Now, that's some gunslingers, don't you agree?

FM
Originally Posted by Kari:
Not only is Obama making Bush look like a wannabe gunslinger, but the Chicago boys (Axelrod, Pluffe, Rahm, etc.) make Karl Rove and company look like choir boys.



It's true -- in all the areas where Bush shocked and disgusted the world, Obama has gone even further. The SN prints this extremely cautious editorial:

 

 

Last week a New York Times op-ed by former American President Jimmy Carter questioned “how far [the United States’] violation of human rights has extended” since the 9/11 attacks. While conceding that “the country has made mistakes in the past,” Carter argued that “the widespread abuse of human rights over the last decade has been a dramatic change from the past.” Since 2001 the US President has acquired – and used – the power to authorize the assassination and indefinite detention of American citizens, and to operate without the constraints of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which required court warrants for wiretapping and other domestic surveillance. Carter also noticed the stealthy progress of “Popular state laws [that] permit detaining individuals because of their appearance, where they worship or with whom they associate.” 

 

President Bush unquestionably took most of the decisions that led America astray, but President Obama is hardly blameless in these matters. A classic instance of how his administration lost its way is its zeal for ‘targeted killings’ – especially those that take place in military theatres that pose no clear threat to American interests. Emboldened by the killing of Osama bin Laden, the White House has repeatedly trumpeted the success of its strikes against al Qaeda leaders. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), have become the weapon of choice not only in Afghanistan – where President Karzai insisted they be stopped after more than 30 civilian homes were destroyed in drone strikes this year – but also in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen.

 

Two months ago the New York Times published a damning account of how obsessed parts of the White House have become with the use of drones to move through a notorious ‘kill list’ of leading terrorists. Among other revelations, the article pointed out that despite a high-minded insistence on limiting strikes to situations with a “near certainty” of zero civilian deaths, the Obama administration has repeatedly shifted its aims, and metrics, to conceal the true cost of the programme. For instance: “Mr. Obama embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties that did little to box him in. It in effect counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants â€Ķ unless there is explicit intelligence posthumously proving them innocent.”

 

This willingness to manipulate estimates of the effectiveness of military action – reminiscent of the notorious ‘body counts’ of the Vietnam war – prompted President Carter to complain in his op-ed: “We don’t know how many hundreds of innocent civilians have been killed in these attacks, each one approved by the highest authorities in Washington. This would have been unthinkable in previous times.”

Washington’s recent indifference to the deaths of foreign civilians has also come to the notice of Christof Heyns, UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial Killings, Summary or Arbitrary Executions. Noting that “targeted killings take place far from areas where it’s recognised as being an armed conflict” Heyns recently told a conference organised by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) that drone strikes threaten to undermine decades of international law. Heyns then asked: “Are we to accept major changes to the international legal system which has been in existence since world war two and survived nuclear threats?”

 

The Bush administration was rightly condemned for its willingness to produce self-serving definitions that extended the reach of executive power but, to date, President Obama has faced precious little criticism for his readiness to retain Bush’s inflated executive powers. Nor has Obama been called to account for his willingness to game the system to his advantage. The ACLU estimates that US drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia have killed up to 4,000 people since 2002.  Since President Obama has explicitly assumed moral responsibility for the attacks, he should be far more wary of offering such a potentially valuable hostage to fortune. There is absolutely no guarantee that he will be judged sympathetically for persevering a programme that caused thousands of civilian deaths, against repeated cautions from military and intelligence staff, and the strident objections of foreign leaders.

 

Candidate Obama was a brilliant contradiction:  a complex intellectual who spoke with clarity, a charismatic legal scholar who didn’t shirk from the necessary condemnation of a morally bankrupt presidency. On many points of law and respect for the constitution, however, the Obama presidency has been a retreat from this high ground. This diminution of expectations is not lost on his rivals. Asked about the President’s aggressive counter-terrorism policies, Michael Hayden, CIA director under President George W Bush, and current adviser to Mitt Romney, told the New York Times that “secrecy has its costs.” Commenting specifically on the use of drones Hayden warned: “This program rests on the personal legitimacy of the president, and that’s not sustainable.”  Hayden added: “I have lived the life of someone taking action on the basis of [The Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Office of Legal Counsel’s] secret memos, and it ain’t a good life. Democracies do not make war on the basis of legal memos locked in a D.O.J. safe.”


President Obama would do well to remember this warning as he campaigns for a crucial second term.

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×