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Posts Tagged ‘John Podhoretz’

Writer’s block

by Mojambo ( 36 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Conservatism, Elections 2016, Hillary Clinton, Media, Ronald Reagan, Tea Parties at April 7th, 2014 - 7:00 am

Do not think that for one second that the same media which trashed Hillary Clinton for daring to seek the nomination in 2008 instead of passively making way for the Young Messiah will not  protect her in 2016.

by John Podhoretz

When it comes to Obama-era scandals, the American Right’s predominant emotion is frustration — a frustration that causes hypertension levels usually seen only in Cubs fans and the unfortunates hired to do PR for Lindsay Lohan and Shia LeBoeuf.

Liberals dubbed Ronald Reagan the “Teflon president” because they felt nothing ever stuck to him. President Obama is the Scotchguard president; the would-be scandals that ought to be dogging his administration simply seem to bead up into little droplets before they are briskly wiped away.

Conservatives will tell you, and rightly so, that this is happening because the mainstream media — the prestige press and the network television commentariat — are committing sins both of commission and omission. At times, they act as the president’s blocking tackles in some respects, speaking with contempt and dismissal when the scandals are even mentioned.

When they are not actively working in his defense, the media’s managers are downplaying the scandal stories as a general rule — and the failure to pursue them aggressively has the effect of quieting them down.

Why is this happening? Ironically, the mainstream media heavyweights may feel liberated from the responsibility of covering Obama administration malfeasances because of the existence of the alternative conservative media that have arisen over the past 20 years — talk radio, Fox News, and multiple websites.

Mainstream media types loathe the conservative media as much as the conservative media loathe them. The mainstream thinks conservative media are hysterical, ideologically driven by bad or stupid or evil ideas, and are simply after liberal scalps. They do not want to join those they consider jackals.

But the conservative media serve a second purpose, not only for their audiences but for the mainstream. The existence of the Right media means that the stories are being covered by someone, which relieves them of some of the responsibility they might otherwise feel to do the job themselves.

Even better, from their point of view, they also believe the stories are being covered in such a way that the mainstream media can dismiss them and attack them.

[……]

Well, did you know that the Attorney General of the United States was held in contempt back in June 2012 by the House of Representatives for refusing to provide documents to oversight committees regarding the demented Justice Department program that peddled guns to drug dealers later used to kill a federal agent?

That was no small thing — in fact, never before has such a sanction against a sitting cabinet member been declared by Congress. An unprecedented event is the very definition of news, and yet it went all but unacknowledged when it happened — dismissed as an election year stunt to harm the presidential candidacy of a man 90% of those who work in the media voted for.

[……]

Amazing to think it was only 11 months ago that the Internal Revenue Service admitted — on its own! — that it had outright targeted conservative groups for special (i.e., hostile) scrutiny in considering their applications for tax-exempt status. The matter seemed so serious that the president himself said he was outraged by it: “It’s inexcusable and Americans have a right to be angry about it and I am angry about it.”

Though he promised to hold the guilty parties accountable, and though several people resigned and/or retired, what has gone on since looks very much like stonewalling.

The IRS’s general counsel answered “I don’t recall” 80 times — 80 times! — when members of Congress asked him about what went on.

The now-retired person specifically in charge of the matter has repeatedly resorted to Fifth Amendment silence rather than answer Congressional questions.

[……]

And the once-angry president? He isn’t so angry any longer. There was “not even a smidgen of corruption” at work there, he told Bill O’Reilly.

Obama’s attitude is the mainstream attitude. Move along, nothing to see here.

This week, the former deputy director of the CIA acknowledged that he had disobeyed his then-boss, David Petraeus, and edited the administration’s talking points about the attack on an American consulate in Benghazi in September 2012 to remove reference to a terrorist attack.

You may not have heard about it. Why? Because the media long ago decided it was not interested in Benghazi. More that that: the one star reporter who was, Sheryl Atkisson of CBS News, found it necessary to quit her job earlier this year amid reports she couldn’t get airtime because her boss disapproved of the story.

The person serving as Obama’s secretary of state when the attacks happened actually demanded to know what difference the details made about the murder of Ambassador Chris Stevens and three others in Benghazi. That person is now the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2016.

She, too, will get 90% of the media vote.

Obama is Scotchguarded because the people who are supposed to be holding him to account are the ones holding the spray can.

Read the rest –  Conservative media is unintentionally protecting Obama

The time sucker, or “The Unbearable Lightness of Joe Biden”

by Mojambo ( 87 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Elections 2012, Hillary Clinton at August 20th, 2012 - 2:30 pm

According to John Podhoretz, Obama picked Biden as his Vice President (and will keep him on) is because Biden has no constituency of his own,  comes from a state which nobody cares about,  is not Hillary Clinton, and is a complete nonentity i.e. a time sucker like so many people in Washington D.C.

by John Podhoretz

Everyone who has done time in Washington politics or media has a Joe Biden story, and every story is pretty much the same. Here’s mine:

A quarter-century ago, Sen. Joseph I. Biden of Delaware, then in his third term, came in for a lunch with a few editors and reporters at the newspaper where I worked. Its editor welcomed Biden and asked him a question about whatever story was at the top of the news agenda that day.

Biden started talking. And talking. And talking. He spoke and he gesticulated. He wandered off into secondary subjects, and secondary subjects of the secondary subjects. He conjured up a memory of his childhood, and then told a tale from his first campaign.

After 20 minutes without so much as a breath, it was clear to me and others around the table that there was something wrong — that our guest simply did not know how to conclude his peroration.

[……..]

It was not until 45 minutes after he had begun that Joseph I. Biden simply ran out of gas. He came to no conclusion, no closing thought. He just stopped talking, looked down, and at last took a bite of food and drank some water.

I had never been through anything like it. Biden had displayed a literally clinical display of logorrhea, a term Google defines for me as “pathologically incoherent, repetitive speech.”

That condition has never gone away. On April 3 of this year, Biden appeared at a high school in Norfolk, Va., where he was asked a question about gas prices.

[…….]

He then proceeded to speak . . . for 11 minutes. You can watch the video. It’s a little bit like watching Dustin Hoffman in “Rain Man.” Biden walked back and forth, making little eye contact with the audience, as his thoughts poured out of his mouth. Going on. And on.

He spent decades in the Senate doing just this, which was permissible since there are no limits imposed on the amount of time a senator may speak. In her book, “The Obamas,” Jodi Kantor tells a story about Barack Obama, in the first of his three years in the Senate, listening to an endless Biden oration. The future president scribbled a note to an aide. It said: “Kill. Me. Now.”

So why did Obama choose Biden as his running mate? And why is he keeping Biden on as his running mate?

The question naturally arises as a result of Biden’s preposterous and offensive performance on Tuesday, in which he likened the rival ticket’s views of how best to regulate Wall Street with the reimposition of slavery (“They’re gonna put y’all back in chains”).

In a very close race, Biden’s inability to control his own tongue poses a threat to Obama’s chances — simply by virtue of his ability to throw the campaign off course and into the thicket of an unnecessary controversy, even for a day.

The point is, that danger was predictable from the get-go. Obama wanted someone to put him out of his misery listening to Biden in 2005; why did he choose to subject the nation to it in 2008?

First, Biden was chosen in 2008 because, for whatever reason, President Obama did not want to make the obvious choice: Hillary Clinton. The president had the same choice this year and chose again not to make it.

(And for those who say changing running mates in midstream would smack of desperation, there would be a ready answer: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, his role model, ran and won with three different VP candidates in four elections.)

Second, it’s said that Biden was the choice because of his experience. As Chris Cillizza of The Washington Post noted, “a pick designed to shore up the Illinois senator’s foreign policy credentials in advance of the November election against John McCain.”

OK, but Biden’s own foreign-policy credentials — then and now — were and are highly problematic, to put it mildly.

In 2008, he was best known for an utterly cockamamie proposal that the United States should have divided Iraq into three countries after the war concluded. And during the Obama administration, he has become best known for enunciating a peculiar view of Afghanistan according to which the Taliban “per se is not our enemy.” An interesting opinion, given that we’ve been at war with the Taliban for a decade — a war that Barack Obama chose to broaden considerably in 2009.

Biden also opposed the operation that killed Osama bin Laden.

One is forced to conclude that Obama chose Biden because he wanted a running mate who would have no independent standing whatever.

In the end, Biden was and remains a pol from a small state who had never gotten more than 165,000 votes in an election in his life, who came across to those who knew him as a garrulous coot at best and as a solipsistic bore at worst, and who would represent no particular constituency in Obama’s party that would seek to influence the president.

He’s a time suck, as I learned 25 years ago. Unfortunately for the president, Joe Biden might also be a time bomb.

Read the rest  – The incredible lightness of Biden

 

The president’s blocking guard

by Mojambo ( 87 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Eric Holder, Media at June 22nd, 2012 - 5:56 am

The press going into full time protection mode over Barack Obama and the”Fast and Furious” debacle,  is sinking even lower than they did four years ago when they all but openly endorsed him and made it clear that they were acting as agents for his re-election. With Eric Holder being threatened with “contempt charges” – only now is the subject of “F & F” even being covered somewhat by the MSM.  If ever the importance of holding congress at all cost  (rather then being more interested in a rigid ideological  purity test) has been demonstrated –  this is it. A Nancy Pelosi dominated congress would have buried this so deep that it would never have seen the light of day.

by John Podhoretz

There’s a reason you don’t know much about the complicated and confusing mess known as “Fast and Furious.” The mainstream media have largely ignored this Obama administration scandal, which would have dominated mainstream front pages and homepages and programs for months had it all taken place under a Republican administration.

Something changed yesterday. With his attorney general imminently at risk of being held in contempt of Congress, which has happened to administration officials only four times in the past 30 years, the president of the United States moved to claim “executive privilege” in relation to some of the information sought by Congress.

At first glance, this is a perplexing move. Executive privilege is a specific power possessed by the president that allows him to withhold or shield the release of information from Congress because he is its co-equal in power.

But the “Fast and Furious” investigation has to do with the conduct of the Justice Department and Attorney General Eric Holder, not the White House or the president.

It has to do with a botched program inside the Justice Department that led to the death of a federal law-enforcement officer.

[…….]

There’s no question that Congress has the right to examine both the conduct of the Justice Department, whose budget it oversees, and the attorney general, an official confirmed by Congress and obligated by statute to provide all manner of information to relevant committees.

The decision by the president to involve himself directly in this matter is surprising because it means one of two things.

Possibility No. 1: The White House and the president were more directly involved in the “Fast and Furious” fallout than was previously thought. Otherwise, how could there be an assertion of executive privilege? Through the assertion, President Obama is opening himself up to questions about his and the White House’s involvement with an unambiguous disaster.

Possibility No. 2: The claim of executive privilege is a calculated effort to delay the release of certain documents until after Election Day. The claim throws the matter into the courts, with the ultimate adjudication in the hands of the Supreme Court. The process will take months; the Supreme Court doesn’t return to its duties until the first Monday in October.

So even if the claim is entirely baseless, it will work to protect the president from whatever revelations may be contained in the withheld documents.

[……….]

So will the story get covered now?

All in all, it’s really dumbfounding how little the public has been told about “Fast and Furious,” given how colorful and melodramatic a scandal it is. A branch of the Justice Department decided to let thousands of guns sold in the United States make their way to Mexico to track their use by the drug cartels.

Everything went wrong. The Justice Department lost track of the guns, and it is believed that one of them was used to murder Brian Terry, a US Border Patrol agent — not to mention hundreds of Mexican citizens caught in the crossfire of that country’s drug war.

There have been stories, and powerful ones, especially by Sharyl Atkisson of CBS News. But there has been no media drumbeat, no constant stream of interlocking articles and broadcasts that put relentless pressure on the White House and the Justice Department.

In short order, we may have: a) an attorney general in contempt of Congress, b) a president asserting a pretty baffling claim of executive privilege that practically requires him to acknowledge White House involvement in the matter and c) an energized conservative press smelling blood.

[……..]

If things continue this way, it will be an admission that they’ve assigned themselves the job of serving as the president’s blocking guard.

Read the rest – Press lets scandal hide in plain sight

A distraction we do not need

by Mojambo ( 156 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Economy, Election 2008, Elections 2012, Mitt Romney, Racism at May 18th, 2012 - 11:30 am

Referring  of course to  the “birth certificate”, “natural born citizen”, even Rev. Wright nonsense. While I would not mind occasional references to  Jeremiah Wright,  John Podhoretz rightfully points out that Obama’s record of failure is a rich field for us to plow in.  However I do not think that Mitt Romney should feel it is necessary to have to distance himself from what a SUPER PAC does. If we keep our focus on a positive, upbeat vision of America, all the while slamming Obama’s economic, jobs and  national security/foreign policy failures, and side step many controversial social issues (since Obama does not want to talk about his record)  – then one Cheetos eating blogger will be an unhappy man come November.

by John Podhoretz

Yesterday’s breathless campaign hysteria arose out of a not-really-much-of-a-scoop from the broadsheet across town: A rich guy in Omaha wants to spend a lot of money defeating Barack Obama.

Stop the presses. Eek.

Said rich guy sought the advice of a controversial consultant (who’d very much benefit from getting the rich guy’s commission) on a strategy. The consultant proposed reviving the 2008 controversy over Obama’s relationship with his egregious pastor, Jeremiah Wright.

[…….]

For those of us who enjoy seeing such folk sputter and squirm, the idea of a Wright attack against Obama instantly seemed rather piquant. But it only took a moment’s reflection to see how senseless and even stupid such an approach would be.

First, the sheer quantity of facts and figures and issues from Obama’s actual presidency that can be used to argue against a second term are far more devastating.

There’s little point in going after Obama for what someone else said in his earshot years ago, when so many damning things have come out of his own mouth since he became president in 2009.

The trick for Republicans in 2012 is to keep the voter’s eye on Obama’s record as president. If they can do this well and authoritatively, while Mitt Romney offers a positive vision of a post-Obama America, they’ll almost surely win the day.

Obama’s record will allow Republicans to make this a fight about policy, not about personality — about what he has done rather than imputations about what he thinks and what he secretly believes. That’s not only better for the country, it is better politics.

Yes, an aggressive strategy raising important issues from 2008 that got flattened by the Obama steamroller seems immensely alluring to some — that is, to a great many people who can’t get over the fact that America put its fate in the hands of a neophyte Leftie with no record and an effective speaking style.

The impotent rage generated by Obama’s improbable rise has caused many seemingly rational people to seek comfort in all kinds of weird theories to account for his out-of-nowhere triumph.

There’s the birther lunacy, according to which the president wasn’t born on American soil.

There’s the “Obama didn’t write his own book” theory, according to which “Dreams from My Father” was secretly produced by the domestic terrorist William Ayers — whose own turgid writings bear not a trace of the overwrought lyricism of “Dreams” and who had no reason to ghost the memoir of an unknown Harvard Law man. (The latest twist: One leading “ghoster” even says Obama didn’t write the incredibly pretentious post-collegiate letters he sent to his girlfriend.)

[…….]

These ludicrous blatherings have this in common: They all seem to suggest that Obama’s life has been some kind of Leftist-Marxist-Islamist laboratory experiment designed from birth to land him in the White House.

If that were true, we should all just give up now. The geniuses who figured out that a mixed-race kid in Hawaii partly raised in Indonesia with the middle name of Hussein would be the perfect presidential candidate in 2008 must have had supernatural abilities to mind-read an entire society four decades later. If they’re that good, they can have America.

Sure, reminding people of Obama’s willingness to tolerate Wright’s disgusting views is perfectly fair. It’s just a worthless political strategy. Which is what the rich guy in question decided yesterday in announcing he’d rejected the proposal from his consultant.

That consultant, by the way, is the guy who came up with the worst political commercial in recent history — the one in which Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell offered the jaw-dropping assurance to the people of Delaware that she was not a witch.

Smart move, rich guy.

[……]

Read the rest – Exit,  Stage Wright