Friday, February 27, 2009
Newt May Be Up To Something
This from Commentary's Jennifer Rubin:
Perhaps the most intriguing and least easy to categorize speech at CPAC came from Newt Gingrich. It was the most partisan of assaults and the least pro-Republican in advocacy. It was the most raucous and the most sober. And it was not clear whether it was the opening of a presidential campaign, a political movement, or just a graduate course on political science.
First a word about tone and presentation. It is an art to give a speech to a large room packed with supporters and not talk in “speech” voice with awkward phrasing, trite lines and predictable timing. Gingrich has a well-modulated voice and the ability to deliver biting sarcasm without a sneer. He spoke in conversational language and in quiet tones and held the room in the palm of his hand.
But he didn’t start that way — entering from the back of a jammed room like a candidate, or perhaps the president entering the House of Representatives. Ah, I thought, this is the presidential campaign starter. But maybe not.
He was relentless in attacking the president, Nancy Pelosi (whom he teased mercilessly about popping up to applaud the president’s speech before he completed the applause lines) and the Obama administration. He began by excoriating Eric Holder for his comments that Americans were “cowards” and declared that he “welcomed the opportunity to have a dialogue with you about cowardice anytime and any place.” He then suggested Detroit where they could chat about failed government, failed bureaucracy and failed schools. He declared that we “should be committed to liberating the people of Detroit.
But his sharpest criticism was reserved for liberals and the president. Reading from the New York Times, which declared that the new budget “sweeps away Reagan’s ideas,” he mused that the Times certainly hoped so and had suffered great disappointments –the Soviet Union disappears, private industry thrives, big government fails and they lost readership. He deadpanned :”It was great 25 years.”
His ire was mostly directed at the Obama budget, which he says is an effort to “create a European model.” And his language was harsh. ”The administration thinks we’re just plain dumb,” he said. ”A bill with 8,000 earmarks doesn’t count? I was looking for change I can believe in. I wonder how dumb they think we are, that they think we wouldn’t notice 8,000 earmarks.” And on tax policy he noted that Obama is “not going to raise taxes on anyone making less than $250, 000–unless they use electricity.” Or other fuels.
But the heart of a speech was call to make the 2010 and 2012 elections “the most consequential in U.S. history. ” He declared, “Every person who didn’t read the stimulus — everyone of them deserves to be defeated.” But this was not a Republican call to arms per se — indeed, this is where it got interesting. In his vision, Obama is part of the “failed Bush-Obama” policies of big government, lots of bureaucracy and high taxes. That’s the political or intellectual exercise he is engaging in and asking others to engage in — Obama is the past ( already!) and part of the failure of big government. Gingrich’s movement, by contrast, is the low tax, anti-bureaucracy, pro-jobs “American party.”
Unlike Ronald Reagan, Gingrich isn’t per se calling Democrats and Independents to join the Republican party. No, he’s is calling for a “tripartite” movement to oppose the failed Obama/Bush regime. A true third party? Or a stealth presidential campaign? It wasn’t clear.
Gingrich was in top form today. However, it is not altogether clear, other than throwing out the Democratic Congressional majority, what he is up to. And perhaps he hasn’t quite decided himself.
I think he has decided and knows just what he's doing.
Labels: 2012 Election, Age of Obama, Bailouts, Economic Cycles, The Panic of 2008
Sunday, February 15, 2009
The only Thing We Have to Fear is...
I was giving a listen to NPR this morning, and to my amazement, they were subtly harping on President Obama, saying something like this: "The President said that the only thing we have to fear is..." ...not fear itself, but...that Americans will lose more jobs, savings and homes. And that "this recession might linger for years. Our economy will lose 5 million more jobs. Unemployment will approach double digits. Our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse,..."
And now his former rival, an opponent who was overly gracious in his treatment of Obama during the campaign, John McCain, had this to say in the morning news shows:
"[The President is off to] a bad beginning because it wasn't what we promised the American people, what President Obama promised the American people, that we would sit down together," McCain told CNN's "State of the Union With John King."
I think Obama was a clever and attractive candidate, but we'll leave the jury out awhile longer on what kind of president he'll ultimately be, but I agree with McCain. He's off to a bad start. Uninspiring, but more importantly, fear mongering to get what amounts to heavily larded spending bills to be carried on the backs of the already over-taxed middle class in the name of reviving the economy. Instead, he's on his way to burdening it even more than it is.
And have you heard the latest, now that they've rammed the porkulus bill through Congress, statehouses and city halls are pondering what they can get to do with all that money. I can't thing of a greater thing over which to be in fear but how a government bureaucrat may be pondering how to spend my tax money, but not only my tax money, but the tax money of my children and my children's children to the nth power.
Can you say the D word?
Labels: Age of Obama
Sunday, February 08, 2009
Has Capitalism Failed Us?
HT: Instapundit.
Sunday, February 01, 2009
Speaking About Abortion,...
The Ad NBC Won't Play Tonight
I am not a Catholic. I also do not think this ad overly heavy or profound from my point of view, but it is what it is, and NBC said, no:
Labels: Age of Obama
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