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A Living Lie

A Living Lie
By Thomas Sowell
Tuesday, April 15, 2008

An e-mail from a reader said that, while Hillary Clinton tells lies, Barack Obama is himself a lie. That is becoming painfully apparent with each new revelation of how drastically his carefully crafted image this election year contrasts with what he has actually been saying and doing for many years.

Senator Obama's election year image is that of a man who can bring the country together, overcoming differences of party or race, as well as solving our international problems by talking with Iran and other countries with which we are at odds, and performing other miscellaneous miracles as needed.

There is, of course, not a speck of evidence that Obama has ever transcended party differences in the United States Senate. Voting records analyzed by the National Journal show him to be the farthest left of anyone in the Senate. Nor has he sponsored any significant bipartisan legislation -- nor any other significant legislation, for that matter.

Senator Obama is all talk -- glib talk, exciting talk, confident talk, but still just talk.

Some of his recent talk in San Francisco has stirred up controversy because it revealed yet another blatant contradiction between Barack Obama's public image and his reality.

Speaking privately to supporters in heavily left-liberal San Francisco, Obama let down his hair and described working class people in Pennsylvania as so "bitter" that they "cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them."

Like so much that Obama has said and done over the years, this is standard stuff on the far left, where guns and religion are regarded as signs of psychological dysfunction -- and where opinions different from those of the left are ascribed to emotions ("bitter" in this case), rather than to arguments that need to be answered.

Like so many others on the left, Obama rejects "stereotypes" when they are stereotypes he doesn't like but blithely throws around his own stereotypes about "a typical white person" or "bitter" gun-toting, religious and racist working class people.

In politics, the clearer a statement is, the more certain it is to be followed by a "clarification," when people react adversely to what was plainly said.

Obama and his supporters were still busy "clarifying" Jeremiah Wright's very plain statements when it suddenly became necessary to "clarify" Senator Obama's own statements in San Francisco.

People who have been cheering whistle-blowers for years have suddenly denounced the person who blew the whistle on what Obama said in private that is so contradictory to what he has been saying in public.

However inconsistent Obama's words, his behavior has been remarkably consistent over the years. He has sought out and joined with the radical, anti-Western left, whether Jeremiah Wright, William Ayers of the terrorist Weatherman underground or pro-Palestinian and anti-Israeli Rashid Khalidi.

Obama is also part of a long tradition on the left of being for the working class in the abstract, or as people potentially useful for the purposes of the left, but having disdain or contempt for them as human beings.

Karl Marx said, "The working class is revolutionary or it is nothing." In other words, they mattered only in so far as they were willing to carry out the Marxist agenda.

Fabian socialist George Bernard Shaw included the working class among the "detestable" people who "have no right to live." He added: "I should despair if I did not know that they will all die presently, and that there is no need on earth why they should be replaced by people like themselves."

Similar statements on the left go back as far as Rousseau in the 18th century and come forward into our own times.

It is understandable that young people are so strongly attracted to Obama. Youth is another name for inexperience -- and experience is what is most needed when dealing with skillful and charismatic demagogues.

Those of us old enough to have seen the type again and again over the years can no longer find them exciting. Instead, they are as tedious as they are dangerous.



Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of Basic Economics: A Citizen's Guide to the Economy. (Note: This article is borrowed from Townhall.com)

©Creators Syndicate
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I AM the change you can BELIEVE in...

                                                   Michael Ramirez / 21 March 2008 
 
 
Tags: obama   change  
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Michael Ramirez: I Second That...

 
Cartoons By Michael Ramirez
 
Source: IBDeditorials.com/cartoons (March 19, 2008)
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Judgment at Philadelphia

Or: Senator Barack Obama's "I Have A Goal" Speech
 
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"Obama's speech was an act of political necessity, not courage." 
                                                                               --Rush Limbaugh
 
Another commentator (I believe it was Sally Quinn of the Washington Post on CNN shortly after the speech) gushed that it was a "magnificent" speech and the most important speech on race since Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech 45 years ago...
 
 
King was appealing to a nation's better angels during a time of racial upheaval, courageously asking all of us to judge the content of one's character and not the color of one's skin. His message was from the heart--a social manifesto with political overtones to move lawmakers to action in the civil rights struggle. The public setting of the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. was fraught with danger as handlers and police mingled about in full view of an assembled throng...
 
 
Obama was attempting to recover from the public relations fiasco brought on by his "crazy uncle," Rev. Jeremiah Wright, consciously asking all of us to suspend judgment on his mentor while he interjects race in lieu of character. His message was from the head--a political manipulation of the social undercurrent of race meant to "spark a (supposed) dialogue" on this important issue. The handpicked audience in the studio setting was treated to a vivid blue backdrop of eight prominent flags and the aforementioned "rock star" hovering over them with teleprompters at the ready. Very safe...
 
 
And yet, Obama never made eye contact as he feverishly worked the teleprompters--back and forth, to and fro--delivering his speech. The current rash of "body language experts" would question his authenticity but not his delivery--it was flawless. And I suddenly found myself mesmerized by the cadence of the words and the lilt of the voice... yes, I can understand why Sally Quinn was taken in by the magnificence of the speech. SNAP OUT OF IT!! But what about the message?? 
 
 
He begins with the three most important words in the Constitution: "We the People." With this opening he attempts to engage us in his dialogue, but it rings hollow because he needed to focus on "He the Problem." Obama proceeds to spend the next thirty minutes deftly weaving Jeremiah Wright, faith, Grandmother, race, Geraldine Ferraro, bigotry, Black Community, understanding, White America, hate, War in Iraq, change, Health Care, hope, Global Warming, and politics as usual. (Okay, so that last one was implied.) His theme throughout the message is that we the people are still on the road to forming "a more perfect union" with he, Obama, as the new Dream Weaver. (What a coincidence that the song that comes to mind was recorded in the mid-70s by Gary Wright... "Ooh, dream weaver / I believe you can get me through the night / Ooh, dream weaver / I believe we can reach the morning light") 
 
 
All in all, Obama's message was mostly about race and change. But it was just a political speech. Again, I simply label it his "I Have A Goal" speech, and that is to convince most Democrats that he is worthy of his party's nomination (emphasis on race) and to convince most Americans that he is worthy of their ultimate choice as President (emphasis on change). If he is honest about race, then Obama will acknowledge the need to tap into the white guilt that permeates our consciousness. He is the self-annointed agent of change who will transcend the politics of hate and end our long national nightmare of racism in America. (Sigh of relief.) Don't you feel better already?!
 
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("What?! That's it?!") (Now you know how I felt after Obama's speech...)
 
 
 
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"Don't tell me words don't matter..."

Like I said before: Actions (and pictures) speak louder than words...
 
Tom Harking Steak Fry Iowa Democrat Hillary Clinton Barack Obama John Edwards Criss Dodd Joe Biden Bill Richardson
 
Reminder: This photograph was taken at the Tom Harkin Iowa Steak Fry in Indianola, Iowa, on 16 September 2007, and was published in TIME magazine. A video of this event on YouTube documents the playing of the National Anthem at the time this image was captured. Not pictured here, but at the far right of the stage, other loyal Democrats (including John Edwards, Tom Harkin, and Joseph Biden) were standing with hand over hearts in honor of America. In fact, all of the participants on stage struck this patriotic pose with one notable exception.
 
"I pledge allegiance to the flag..." Just words!!
 
"Oh, say can you see by the dawn's early light..." Just words!!
 
"God Bless America..." Just words!!
 
"I don't think that my church is actually particularly contoversial..." Just words!!
 
"Not God bless America... God damn America!!" Just words!!

"I did not hear such incendiary language..." Just words!!
 
"In White America... U.S. of KKK A." Just words!!
 
"I wasn't in church... I would not repudiate the man..." Just words!!
 
"For the first time in my adult lifetime, I'm really proud of my country..." Just words!!
 
"I won't wear that (flag) pin on my chest..." Just words!!
 
 
(Note: I apologize for not having a cool YouTube video screen at the ready... Hey, I'm new at this!!)
 


 
Tags: obama   Words  
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Michael Ramirez: An Exit Strategy, Part 2

Cartoons By Michael Ramirez
Source: IBDeditorials.com/cartoons (March 18, 2008)
 
Tags: cartoon   obama  
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Obama and the Minister: An Exit Strategy

The conventional wisdom circulating on talk radio, cable news networks, and the web is near unanimous: Sen. Barack Obama needs to distance himself from Rev. Jeremiah Wright... NOW!! Better yet: YESTERDAY!! Okay, how about TOMORROW!!

To achieve this feat, the good Senator is presenting his mea culpa to the world in a speech on national television tomorrow morning at which time he will wax eloquently about race, judgment, and crotchety old uncles. "Hey, I didn't know my pastor was foaming with this hatred while Michelle and I were away trying to figure out why it is we want to lead a country that we have just recently grown to respect. Honest!!"

Actually, Mr. Obama will no doubt WOW them in Peoria, as well as in the network news bureaus in New York. But I predict that he will fall short of the mark. Why?? Because of this simple fact of life: Actions speak louder than words.

A better exit strategy: Appear at the podium with Oprah Winfrey and announce to the world that you and your family have left the Trinity United Church of Christ to join the loving congregation at Ms. Winfrey's church home. Ms. Winfrey can share her misgivings with Rev. Wright and how Sen. Obama's capacity to learn and grow and seek forgiveness are the true qualities that America needs in these times of economic and social uncertainty. Mr. Obama can offer his own apology to America and ask for forgiveness and reconciliation. He can say once and for all time that his time at Trinity served its purpose in leading him to a relationship with Jesus Christ and provided a spiritual home for almost twenty years (without his knowledge of the good pastor's darker side). "But enough about me--we have a country to heal!!"
 
I can see the headlines in Wednesday's New York Times: Obama Says Good Riddance to Wright and "God Bless America!"
 
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Our National Alienation

 
Our National Alienation and Amnesia

How do we ask our children to fight, and perhaps die,
for a country they do not know?

By William J. Bennett

Tens of millions of Americans are about to celebrate our nation’s Founding. The worrisome question is, will future generations take to this celebration the way we have for the past 231 years if they do not know the first, second, or third thing about their country?

Two years ago, the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David McCullough told the U.S. Senate that American History was our nation’s worst subject in school. The latest National Assessment of Educational Progress (a.k.a., “our Nation’s Report Card”), released last month, bears that out again. Our children do worse in American history than they do in reading or math. McCullough testified we were facing the prospect of national amnesia, saying, “Amnesia of society is just as detrimental as amnesia for the individual. We are running a terrible risk. Our very freedom depends on education, and we are failing our children in not providing that education.”


Double Tragedy

McCullough is right, and it is a double tragedy: a) our children no longer know their country’s history and b) the story they do not know is the greatest political story ever told.

It is not our children’s fault. Our country’s adults are expected to instill a love of country in its children, but the greatness and purpose of that country are mocked by the chattering classes: Newspaper columns and television reports drip with a constant cynicism about
America while doubts about her motives on the world stage are the coin of the realm. Too many commentators are too ready to believe the worst about our leaders and our country, and our children’s history books — and even some of the teachers — close off any remaining possibility of helping children learn about their country.

Many of our history books are either too tendentious — disseminating a one-sided, politically correct view of the history of the greatest nation that ever existed; or, worse, they are boring — providing a watered down, anemic version of a people who have fought wars at home and abroad for the purposes of liberty and equality, conquered deadly diseases, and placed men on the moon.

Today, we have textbooks that give severalchapters to Bill Clinton’s “reinventing government” theme but dismiss Dwight Eisenhower’s support of the Interstate Highway Act in 1956 with a single sentence. Young Americans are likely to learn more about Eisenhower’s impact on the country by actually driving with their parents on an Interstate and seeing the signs by the roadside than by reading biased textbooks.

The National History Standards team completely missed the moon. They called for standards which emphasized Soviet gains in space in the 1960s and the American Challenger disaster in 1986, but they completely omitted any reference to the
U.S. landing on the moon.

Historians of greater standing, like the late Arthur Schlesinger Jr., pointed to the moon landing as thegreatest event of the 20th century. It happens also to have been JFK’s greatest success. Schlesinger is right and the standards are wrong. 

 

Former Secretary of Education William J. Bennett is the author of America: The Last Best Hope, Volume 2 (From a World at War to the Triumph of Freedom), and the Washington fellow of the Claremont Institute. This is an excerpt from a recent essay (September 2007).


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Obama and the Minister

This is more than just a “political issue”—this is about CHARACTER and JUDGMENT.  If we are to believe that Mr. Obama transcends the bottom tier of political discourse on racism and “politics as usual,” then he needs to explain his position on his mentor’s message.  To me, a person of true character would have left this man’s “church” long before ascending to the privileged office of U.S. Senator, having judged that this messenger was spewing a vindictive diatribe of hatred and racism from a personal perspective, not a religious one.  Mr. Wright—he does not deserve the title of “reverend” or “minister” with his blasphemous and heinous assertions—is a disgrace to his people and his God.  If this truly is Mr. Obama’s “sounding board” and “mentor,” then America needs to look elsewhere for a potential leader—to one who loves his/her country and believes in the best of all God’s children. Dr. King asked us to judge by the content of one’s character, not by the color of their skin.  Mr. Wright’s character (and perspective) is dangerously flawed, while Mr. Obama’s judgment should be seriously questioned.
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Upthedownstreamofconsciousness...1

Why is there no three-day government holiday for the Ides of March?? The demise of Julius Caesar in 44 B.C. by Marcus Brutus either interrupted the brilliant career of a noted reformer (Julian calendar) or saved the world from a ruthless tyrant (self-proclaimed dictator for life). Perspective is a curious thing. Actually, we prefer to commemorate LIFE and not murder in America--hence, the celebrations of birthdays (July 4, MLK, Christmas) are popular. We once singled out Lincoln (12 February) and Washington (22 February) for this honor, but even they fell victim to the utilitarian three-day government holiday known as "Presidents Day" which gave automakers another excuse to have a "sale." Perhaps we should reconsider a three-day government holiday for mid-March and simply proclaim it as "Cleaning Day" to give every American the opportunity to clean out their attics, spare bedrooms, and garages. End.
 
 
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