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Archive for July, 2011

Essential VDH: Obama the Demagogue

by Phantom Ace ( 247 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Barack Obama, Cult of Obama, Democratic Party, Elections 2012, History, Liberal Fascism, Progressives, Socialism, Tranzis at July 11th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

I have often compared Barack Hussein Obama to a 3rd World Liberation Demagogue. He always blames others for his failures. A cult of personality has evolved around Obama. Criticism of his policies is marginalized and dismissed as racist. When cornered on his failures, he demagogues and paints himself as a victim who is trying to do good against the odds.

Obama’s Demagoguery has been more effective than Conservatives would like to admit. His approval ratings are in the mid to upper 40’s, whereas a normal politician would be in the low 30’s. Americans still personally like Obama, despite not liking his policies. Obama has effectively decoupled his policy failures from his job and personal approval. This makes him very formidable even with a bad economy. Victor Davis Hanson explains Obama’s Demagoguery and its effectiveness.

We often associate demagoguery in the U.S. with wild right-wing nationalists or cultural chauvinists, such as Joe McCarthy or Father Coughlin, or with folksy Southern “spread-the-wealth” populists, such as William Jennings Bryan (“The Great Commoner”) or Huey Long. And, of course, abroad there were no better demagogues than Mussolini and Hitler, who both started out as national socialists and then united the classes by transferring class hatred onto foreign bogeymen, in a fashion we later see most effectively in Juan and Eva Perón.

 Demagoguery, at its best, requires good oratory and charisma — which is why Jimmy Carter was such a dismal failure at it, despite his half-hearted demonization of three-martini lunches and private yachts at a time of a record misery index that saw high unemployment, out-of-control inflation, and usurious interest rates, coupled with a neutralist foreign policy that had led to Russians in Afghanistan, Communist takeovers in Central America, and American hostages in Teheran. Carter’s mock-serious delivery was so droll, his presence so wooden, that his fist-pounding against “them” turned into caricature.

Under a more skilled practitioner such as Barack Obama, the arts of demagoguery have become somewhat more refined in our time, but they nevertheless follow the same old patterns:

Read the rest: The Demagogic Style

Barack Hussein Obama and Michelle Obama are the Juan and Eva Peron of the United States. Like their Argentine ideological brethren, they took advantage of an economic emergency to implement a State/Crony Capitalist model. When confronted with the failure of this model Obama, like Juan Peron, demagogues his opponents and blames the “other” for his failure. Make no mistake about it, Obama is our first 3rd World Liberation President.

In order to defeat Obama, we might need a Conservative who can Demagogue back and personally destroy him. Facts will not matter with Obama. He is viewed as a savior who has come to wash away America’s sins. He can get re-elected with 10% unemployment if Conservatives don’t attack him. Hit him on his policies and attack his Demagogic nature with Demagoguery of our own. Emphasize his un-American ideology and call it out for what it is. Barack Hussein Obama is a 3rd World Liberation Ideologue.

US backs Hizballah over Israel in maritime border dispute

by Phantom Ace ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Dhimmitude, Headlines, Hezballah, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Islamists, Israel, Lebanon, Leftist-Islamic Alliance at July 11th, 2011 - 11:34 am

American elites have always had a soft spot for Hizballah. Despite killing 300 marines, kidnapping Americans and possible having a role in 9/11, the group is never take to task by the US. We stood back and allowed Hizballah to takeover Lebanon. Now the Obama Regime is backing Hizballah controlled Lebanon against Israel. The dispute is over a maritime boundary that involves natural gas fields.

In the next few days Israel will submit to the United Nations its take on where its maritime economic border with Lebanon should be, as the two countries scramble for gas reserves estimated to be worth billions of dollars.

Israel’s position is due to be approved by the cabinet on Sunday; Jerusalem argues that Lebanon’s proposal includes major areas belonging to Israel.

[….]

The Lebanese also sent their version to the United States, which conducted an expert review and endorsed the document. A senior Foreign Ministry official told Haaretz that the American diplomat in charge of the issue was Frederic Hof, who was responsible for Syria and Lebanon under the former U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell. Hof has kept the Israel-Lebanon brief despite Mitchell’s resignation two months ago.

I’m sick of my country always backing Islamic interests. Why on earth are we backing Hizballah against Israel in a sea border dispute? This is crazy and just another example of the Islamic influence on the US government. I’m getting sick of it and can’t wait until we have an anti-Islamic government in power. Until then, we will continue enabling Islamic Imperialism, even against a close ally like Israel.

After Assad – The struggle for Syria

by Mojambo ( 90 Comments › )
Filed under Hezballah, Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey at July 11th, 2011 - 11:30 am

Overthrowing the Assad Crime Family will damage the Iranian-Syrian-Hezbollah-Turkish alliance and should be a prime goal of both America and Israel.  I agree with her that Israel should be supporting the Kurds and the Druse in their fight for independence.

by Caroline Glick

Last Saturday, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah gave Hezbollah-backed Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati the political equivalent of a public thrashing. Last Thursday, Mikati gave a speech in which he tried to project an image of a leader of a government that has not abandoned the Western world completely. Mikati gave the impression that his Hezbollah-controlled government is not averse to cooperating with the UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon. The Special Tribunal just indicted four Hezbollah operatives for their role in the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri.
But on Saturday night, Nasrallah gave a speech in which he made clear that he has no intention whatsoever of cooperating with the Special Tribunal and that since he runs the show in Lebanon, Lebanon will not cooperate in any way with the UN judicial body. As an editorial at the NOW Lebanon website run by the anti- Hezbollah March 14 movement wrote, last Saturday night Nasrallah “demolished Mikati’s authority and the office from whence it comes, and used it as a rag to mop up what is left of Lebanese dignity.”
The March 14 movement has tried to make the Special Tribunal the litmus test for Mikati’s legitimacy, demanding that his government either cooperate with the UN Special Tribunal, or resign. But the fact is that the March 14 movement is no match for Hezbollah. Its protests are not capable of dislodging the Iranian-controlled jihadist movement from power.
Just as it always has, the fate of Lebanon today lies in the hands of outside powers. Hezbollah rules the roost in Lebanon because it is backed by Syria and Iran. Unlike the US and France, Iran and Syria are willing to fight for their proxy’s control over Lebanon. And so their proxy controls Lebanon. It follows then that assuming the US and France will continue to betray their allies in the March 14 democracy movement, Hezbollah will be removed from power in Lebanon only if its outside sponsors are unseated.

[…]

And there is good reason for Hezbollah’s concern. The breadth and depth of the anti-regime protests in Syria far overshadow the anti-regime protests in Egypt and Tunisia. As Victor Kotsev noted this week in the Asia Times, something like half a million people participated in the anti-regime demonstrations in Hama last Friday. Since, according to Syria’s 2009 census, Hama has just over 700,000 residents, the rate of public participation in the anti-regime protests dwarfs anything seen in any other Arab state since the anti-regime protests began last December.
According to Tariq Alhomayed, the editor in chief of Asharq Al-Awsat in English, Assad fired his provincial governor of Hama following last Friday’s demonstration for not shooting the demonstrators.
Assad’s move is yet another clear sign that he has no intention of compromising with his opponents. He will sooner destroy his country then let anyone else rule it.
And this makes sense. A son of the Alawite sect that makes up just 12 percent of Syria’s population, Assad has no serious support base in Syrian society outside his family-controlled military. He has repressed every group in his society including much of his own Alawite sect. As Syria expert Gary Gambill noted in Foreign Policy on Thursday, Assad has no post-regime prospects.
And so he can entertain no notion of compromise with his people.

[…]

With the US compliant with Assad and maintaining its policy of appeasing the Iranian regime, the only outside government currently making an attempt to influence events in Syria is Turkey. Although it is being careful to couch its anti-Assad policy in the rhetoric of compromise, given Assad’s inability to make any deal with his opponents, simply by calling for him to compromise, the Turkish government is making it clear that it seeks Assad’s overthrow.
Turkey’s talk of sending troops into Syria to protect civilians and its willingness to set up refugee camps for the Syrians from border towns fleeing the Assad regime’s goons, make clear that Ankara is vying to expand its sphere of influence to Damascus in a post-Assad Syria.
Ankara’s plans are all the more apparent when seen in the context of Turkish Prime Minister Recip Erdogan’s moves to reinstate Turkey as a regional hegemon along the lines of the Ottoman Empire. To this end, according to a report this week in The Hindu, since Erdogan’s Islamist AK Party formed its first government in 2003, it has been actively cultivating ties with Muslim Brotherhood movements throughout the region. The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has deep ties to the Turkish government and the Palestinian Muslim Brotherhood branch Hamas has been publicly supported by Erdogan’s government since 2006.

[…]

Then again, if Assad is overthrown, and his overthrow reinvigorates the Iranian Green revolution, given the pro-Western orientation of much of Iranian society, it is likely that at a minimum, Iran would drastically scale back its sponsorship of Hezbollah and other terror groups.
For Israel, Assad’s overthrow will be clear strategic gain in the short-and medium-term, even if a post-Assad Syrian government exchanges Syria’s Iranian overlords with Turkish overlords. Syria’s main threats to Israel stem from Assad’s support for Palestinian terrorists and Hezbollah, and from his ballistic missile and nuclear programs. While Turkey would perhaps maintain support for Palestinian terrorists and perhaps for Lebanese terrorists, it does not share Syria’s attraction to missiles and nuclear weapons as Iran does. Moreover, Ankara would not have a strong commitment to Hezbollah and so the major threat to Israel in Lebanon would be severely weakened.
Moreover, if Assad’s potential overthrow leads to increased revolutionary activities in Iran, the regime will have less time to devote to its nuclear program, and its nuclear installations will become more vulnerable to penetration and sabotage. A successor regime in Iran, seeking close ties with the West and be willing to pay for those ties by setting aside Iran’s nuclear program.

[…]

Given the strategic opportunities and dangers the situation in Syria presents to it, Israel cannot be a bystander in the drama unfolding to its north. True, Israel does not have the power the US has to dictate the outcome. But to the extent it is able to influence events, Israel should actively assist the non-Islamist regime opponents in Syria. This includes first and foremost the Syrian Kurds, but also the non-Islamist Sunni business class, the Druse and the Christians who are all participating the anti-regime protests. Israel should also oppose Turkish military intervention in Syria and openly advocate the establishment of a democratic, federal government in Syria to replace Assad’s dictatorship.
It might not work. But if it does, the payoff will be extraordinary.

Read the rest: Syria’s rival hegemons

No Obama Boom in 2011

by Phantom Ace ( 10 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Misery Index, Progressives, Socialism, Special Report, unemployment at July 11th, 2011 - 11:03 am

Since 2009, Economic experts in the media have been proclaiming that the economy is booming. When confronted with anemic numbers, they claim it’s always a soft spot and that in the 2nd half of the year, the economy will soar. Well it’s already 1/2 way through 2011 and once again, no sign of this Obama Boom.

Economist Lakshman Achuthan, is one of the few who doesn’t push the Obama Boom. In fact he says there will be no recovery in 2011. He goes on step further, he predicts a recession in 2012.

As the financial world emitted a collective groan when the June jobs data crossed the wires this morning, Lakshman Achuthan was calm, unmoved and not surprised. In fact, the co-founder of the Economic Cycle Research Institute says he’s seen it coming for months.

“The economy is down-shifting…you can see in the jobs number that the sand is shifting,” he says.

[….]

With so much riding on – and priced into – an economic and earnings rebound in the second-half of the year, Achutan not only pours water on that, but ups the ante by saying he cannot rule out slumping into another recession in 2012. “You have a 4/10ths rise in the unemployment rate over the last 3 months. That doesn’t happen in an economy that is reviving or firming or gaining steam,” he explains.

 Lakshman Achuthan is spot on. There isn’t and there will not be an Obama Boom. It’s a media invention designed to create the illusions of a good economy to help the Obama Regime. What these clowns didn’t count on was something called reality. Obama’s policies have failed and no amount of spin will change that.