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Posts Tagged ‘Jimmy Carter’

Malaise Redux

by 1389AD ( 68 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Energy, Environmentalism, Misery Index, Open thread at October 12th, 2011 - 5:00 pm

Jimmy O’Bama

Uploaded by captianusa on Jul 17, 2011
32nd anniv of Jimmy Carter’s “malaise” speech – Obama remix


Jimmy Carter Jr., – all we need is a “malaise speech”; Obama takes nation’s citizens for fools

by Mojambo ( 214 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Elections 2012, unemployment at July 13th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

(Picture Update Hat Tip: Huckfunn)

We are right now living through Jimmy Carter’s second term if by some quirk of time travel we could go back to 1980 and reelect the vicious little peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia.  From appeasement of Islamic radicals, waging an undeclared war on our friends, hamstringing our military, to excessive moralizing and sanctimony, high unemployment, no growth, inflation, and a hectoring style trying to tell us that our good days are behind us, Barack Hussein Obama is Jimmy Carter’s political son.

by Charles Hurt

It has taken three decades, but Americans are finally living through Jimmy Carter’s second term.

Now we’ve got Jimmy Jr. barking at us from the White House about eating our peas and ripping off our Band-Aid. He might not even let us have our Social Security checks.

These are just the latest in a long line of nagging lectures. Already, we have been taught how we should sneeze into the crook of our arm. We need to drive less. And we need to caulk up those drafty houses of ours.

What ever happened to the soaring rhetoric and big bold ideas President Obama promised us in that historic election of his?

Is this what he meant by a new kind of politics? If so, no thanks. Oh, and it is not new. Jimmy already dragged us through all this once and we just barely survived it.

One of the most unpleasant things about Mr. Carter was the condescending disdain he could barely disguise for struggling Americans and their irritating malaise.

Increasingly, Jimmy Jr. is having difficulty concealing that very same disdain for us as the political winds around him turn hostile and all of his bright ideas lie fallow as nothing more than socialist hocus-pocus.

But even Mr. Carter never laid bare so baldly and plainly as Mr. Obama did earlier this week his deep-seated contempt for this whole annoying process we call “democracy.”

The problem with reaching a deal to raise the debt ceiling, he explained in a long sermon, is that there is this huge wave of Republicans who won control of the House in the last election by promising not to raise any more taxes and to cut the absurd overspending that has driven this town for decades.

He bemoaned – in public – that these Republicans are more concerned about the “next election” rather than doing “what’s right for the country.” In other words, he is saying the honorable thing would be for these Republicans to ignore the expressed wishes of voters, break their campaign promises and raise taxes. Wow.

As if the whole problem of Washington spending us into oblivion is the fault of stingy taxpayers and stupid voters. And what we really need is Jimmy Jr., who knows what is best for us despite what we may think.

[……]

So when would these tax hikes that he is demanding take effect?

In 2013, well after Mr. Obama must face voters for re-election.

Lucky for us, it appears more and more unlikely every day that we will have to suffer through a third term of Jimmy Carter‘s.

Read the rest –  Welcome to Jimmy Carter’s 2nd term

 

Michael Goodwin makes a good point that in listening to Obama’s speeches and press conferences, there is something of the movie “Groundhog Day” about it all. The same moralizing, stupid metaphors, immaturity, and barely concealed contempt for the American public seems to characterize it all.  “There’s a novel campaign theme: Elect me because you’re too dumb to understand how smart I am.” lol!

by Michael Goodwin

When President Obama started talking at his news conference Monday, I listened intently for 15 minutes or so. Then I got fidgety as his half-truths about the debt grew into full-blown whoppers. As he droned on, I did something I never did before during an Obama appearance: I turned off the TV.

Enough. He is the Man Who Won’t Listen to Anybody, so why should anybody listen to him?

[…..]

But for now, I will leave that unhappy duty to others. I am tired of Barack Obama. There’s nothing new there. His speeches are like “Groundhog Day.”

His presidency is a spectacular failure, his historic mandate squandered by adherence to leftist ideology and relentless partisanship. His policies are crushing the prospects for growth and dooming the hopes of 24 million Americans who are unemployed or working part-time.

Yet he is not going to change. He listens only to his own voice, which is why he has lost virtually his entire economic team.

The biggest media myth is that he is a centrist. Oh, please. It’s a theory without evidence, for there is not a single example on domestic issues where he voluntarily staked out a spot in the American middle.

Sure, on occasion, Obama will be to the right of the far, far left, but that is not the center. That just means he’s not Michael Moore.

[…..]
That’s the subtext of the debt-ceiling talks and his press conference. He voted against raising the ceiling as a senator, calling the need for an increase a “failure.”

Now he is not embarrassed to demand a hike of about $2.5 trillion, and more hair of the spending-and-taxing dog. He reveals his belief that your money is really the government’s and it will decide how much you can keep. The only cut he is comfortable with is in the defense budget.

He says it’s time to “pull off the Band-Aid” and “eat our peas.” Translation: It’s time for Republicans to give him everything he wants. That’s his definition of being an adult and acting in the national interest.

[…..]

In answering a question about a poll showing that two-thirds of voters don’t want the debt ceiling raised, he blew off 70 million Americans by saying they aren’t paying attention.

There’s a novel campaign theme: Elect me because you’re too dumb to understand how smart I am.

Harry Truman ran against a “Do-Nothing” Congress. Obama is running against a “Know-Nothing” nation.

Read  the rest – US to dumb to know that O is always right
Rodan Update: Here’s a video from 2008. We are now in 2011 and it was spot on!

Yawning Heights; and The Return of Barack Carter-Obama

by Mojambo ( 107 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Egypt, Leftist-Islamic Alliance at March 1st, 2011 - 4:30 pm

Frankly, for all the talk about how articulate he is (actually how well he reads his teleprompter),  I have always found Barack Obama to be an overrated, pedantic bore who has a store of platitudes that he can pull out at any moment. Thanks to a pliant press, he has this undeserved reputation of being an inspiring speaker but when he has to talk of f the cuff, or his teleprompter does not work, he is reduced to “umm”, “uhh”, and Navy “Corpseman”.

by Robert Morrison

Aleksandr Zinoviev wrote a book under the old Soviet Union called The Yawning Heights. He used it to describe, almost obscenely, the speeches of Communist Party boss Leonid Brezhnev. The Russian words for “glistening” and “yawning” are very close and with Comrade Leonid’s drunken slurring, “the glistening heights of socialism” to which he was forever summoning his chained peoples came out “yawning heights.”

President Obama is surely no drunk. And we are not yet a captive people. But President Obama is also a bore. It’s not his fault. It’s socialism’s fault. Irish poet Oscar Wilde was once asked what he thought of world socialism. Wilde archly replied: “I think it would consume too many evenings.” He was right about that.

Socialism politicizes everything — literature, medicine, science, law, education, culture, religion, sports, all of life. And that ultimately makes socialism a crushing bore. President Obama is finding that tens of millions of Americans have tuned him out as he summons us to the heights. His audience for the State of the Union Address is down 18% this year over his first year.

Part of this is his speechwriter, a 29-year old who seems never to have had any contact with literature, American history, poetry, or the Bible. The speeches he crafts for this president are textbook examples of ennui.

Two million people gathered two years ago on the Mall to hear President Obama take the Oath of Office. It was assuredly an historic moment. But now, barely 25 months later, can anyone-supporter or opponent-recall a single memorable line from Inaugural Address? “Starting today, we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin again the work of remaking America.” He said that?

[….]

Mr. Obama was said by Newsweek’s Evan Thomas to hover over the nations at Normandy “like a god.” Awesome, but what did he say there?

Hand our leader a foreign crisis — like Libya. What does the president have to say about that? “This violence is unacceptable.”  We don’t need a $400,000-a-year Commander-in-Chief and his $172,000-a-year speechwriter to tell us that.

He’s not the only war leader, by the way, with this problem. For all the hoopla about the movie, The King’s Speech, I doubt that any ticket-buyers can quote a single line of that much labored over radio address. His Majesty overcomes his stammer, by the Grace of God, but brings forth a rhetorical mouse.

[…]

Gov. Mitch Daniels wants us all to get over Ronald Reagan. Part of Reagan’s appeal to Americans in general and to conservatives in particular is that he was a Great Communicator. He modestly said it had been his privilege to communicate great ideas. He quoted the Founders more than any of the four presidents before him. And more than any of the four presidents who came after him. Maybe the reason Reagan was so great is that he didn’t think himself great.

When Ted Kennedy toasted Democratic Wise Man, Averell Harriman, the Massachusetts pol said Harriman at ninety was not so old: “Averell, you are only half as old as Ronald Reagan’s ideas.” All the liberal partygoers roared their approval.

President Reagan graciously responded to the jibe with thanks to the senator. “The Constitution is almost two hundred years old, and that’s where I get all my ideas,” the president said. Reagan was winsome, witty, and wise. He was never a bore. And we’ll never get over our need to such a leader

Read the rest: President Obama’s Yawning Heights

The parallels between Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama were commented on by conservatives before the 2008 election and now sadly they are becoming manifest. Obama’s incredibly feckless foreign policy as well as his spineless demeanor when faced with having to make a tough decision, is doing nothing but encouraging our adversaries to go for the jugular. It seems he really believed the 2008 hype how the world was going to love him and therefore would act better once George W. Bush were gone. As we commented on yesterday, Hillary Clinton has been a massive failure as Secretary of State.

by Ross Kaminsky

On Monday’s edition of CNN’s Situation Room, host Wolf Blitzer and political analyst Gloria Borger discussed President Barack Obama’s response to the situation in Libya, bringing unwitting clarity to the issue Barack Obama’s projected and real weakness.

First, they wondered aloud how it could have been that Barack Obama would come out relatively quickly against Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak who, while not a paragon of democratic virtue, was nevertheless an important and mostly reliable ally of the U.S. and partner in peace with Israel for three decades, but stay silent about Libya’s Colonel Muammar Gaddafi for nearly two weeks. Gaddafi is a man who has been responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Americans and other westerners and who doesn’t even have allies in the Arab world.

[…]

In attempting to answer their own question of the administration’s delayed reaction to the revolt in Libya, Blitzer said that perhaps Obama was worried that strong words against Gaddafi might put at risk about 150 American diplomats in Tripoli. But the only way that would make sense is if Obama knows that he is, or at least is perceived in Libya as, the second coming of Jimmy Carter: a man who would let American diplomats be taken hostage and then not have the wisdom or courage to do whatever it takes to rescue them and cause great and permanent harm to the hostage takers.

After all, in the purely political world in which Barack Obama lives — and I write this understanding how Machiavellian it sounds — the taking of an American hostage by the Libyan (or any other) government could be as much a political opportunity as a political risk for our president. Of course, a rescue attempt could go horribly wrong, resulting in the death of those who we were trying to rescue. That would indeed reflect badly on the president, but not nearly as badly as doing nothing. Implicit in Blitzer and Borger’s comments is the all too believable suggestion that Barack Obama is too likely to do nothing, too afraid of a bad outcome or too disdainful of U.S. military power to do something, and that therefore the risk of American hostages is indeed one he cannot take.

[…]

When even CNN implicitly recognizes that Barack Obama probably is, and certainly is seen in the Arab world as, every bit as spineless as the worst American president in recent generations (until the current one), Barack Obama and Democrats who hope to get elected or re-elected in 2012 had better hope that foreign policy magically drops off the table as an issue before the elections. The way things are going in North Africa and the Middle East, the Obama-Carter comparisons are likely to haunt our current president through the election and will increase the chances that Barack Obama’s first term is also his last — much to the chagrin of dictators around the world.

Read the rest here: Barack Carter-Obama is back

The Oval Office equivalent of the Edsel keeps on typing

by Mojambo ( 142 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Politics, Progressives at October 11th, 2010 - 6:30 pm

I must admit that I am, in a perverse sort of way, addicted to reading about Jimmy Carter (the same way I have become addicted to the CNN fiasco “Parker Spitzer”).  Jay Nordlinger of the National Review refers to it as “Carterpalooza“. The parallels to Barack Hussein Obama are so similar that they are frightening to anyone who was eligible to vote during the 1976 -80 years. The messianic complex, the persecution complex, the sense of self righteousness, of moral superiority and virtue are mind numbing. Not only is (at least until Obama came along) the worst president ever but the worst ex- president too!

by Joe Queenan

In November 1980, the American people made a disastrous decision whose reverberations are still being felt today. Rather than biting the bullet and re-electing the glum, uncharismatic, hopeless Jimmy Carter to the White House—thereby ensuring that he would return to Plains, Ga., at the conclusion of his second term and keep his blabberpuss shut—they turfed him out into the street.

That made him mad. Really mad. By giving one of America’s dopiest presidents the bum’s rush, the American people ensured that Mr. Carter would spend the rest of his life trying to even the score, trying to persuade them that they had made a huge mistake when they cast their lot with Ronald Reagan, trying to convince them that they were a bunch of jerks.

The particular form of retribution Carter chose was as sinister and cruel as any known to man. He took his pen in hand and began to write books. Long books. Boring books. Dour books. Yes, long, boring, dour, numerous books. Books with sanctimonious names like “Keeping Faith” and “Living Faith” and “Leading a Worthy Life.” Books with pompous names like “Turning Point,” “Our Endangered Values” and “Always a Reckoning.” Books with hokey names like “Christmas in Plains” and “Everything to Gain: Making the Most of the Rest of Your Life.” And yes, even books with names like “The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer” that defy classification.

He has not set his pen down since.

[…]

The Oval Office equivalent of the Edsel, Mr. Carter has spent three decades in the wilderness retrofitting his image as the best, the brightest, and the noblest ex-president of them all. This is like trying to get credit for touchdowns 30 years after the clock has run out, with the score reading Eureka College 50, Navy 0.

Being history’s most admired ex-president is like being the most beloved former skipper of a torpedoed aircraft carrier. If the ship sank while you were at the helm, it doesn’t really matter what a great job you did manning the inflatable lifeboat afterward. Mr. Carter inhabits some weird parallel universe with people like George Foreman, who were despised when they were at their peak and then manufactured a touchy-feely post-career aura that made some people forget how much they disliked them when they were famous. But George Foreman, unlike Jimmy Carter, is funny. And George Foreman could throw a punch.

[…]

Read the rest here: Jimmy Carter; Can’t stop the typing