And now this... by Dana Friggin' Milbank...
(*SNORT*)
Folks... an open "secret"... I don't know where Hillary Clinton stands, but I agree with Dick Morris that Bill Clinton does not want to see Barack Hussein Obama re-elected.
I believe Bill Clinton actually does love our country. Oh... sure... Clinton's no selfless idealist. He had his "Arkansas Mafia" just as Obama has "The Chicago Way." Who can forget the Marc Rich pardon or campaign moneyed funneled via Buddhist Temples?!
Did Clinton take short-cuts around the Constitution? Yep. Remember Haiti?
But Clinton... for all his many, many faults... I'll credit him with loving America... loving "our" America.
In any case, I can't say with confidence that Milbank and other liberal media types are simply following Bill Clinton's "reading between the lines" example or utilizing it for cover, but in either case, here's Milbank's latest:
* * * * *
I had high hopes for President Obama’s speech on the
economy.
I'm sure you did, Dana... I'm sure you did!
But instead of going to Ohio on Thursday with a
compelling plan for the future, the president gave Americans a falsehood
wrapped in a fallacy.
The falsehood is that he has been serious about cutting
government spending.
The fallacy is that this election will be some sort of
referendum that will break the logjam in Washington.
Fallacy first. “Both parties have laid out their policies
on the table for all to see,” Obama said. “What’s holding us back is a
stalemate in Washington between two fundamentally different views of which
direction America should take. And this election is your chance to break that
stalemate.”
He’s right about the stalemate. But he’s absolutely wrong
that November offers an opportunity to break it. No scenario shows either party
with a chance of amassing a solid governing majority of the sort Obama had when
he took office. The way to break the stalemate is through compromise, not
conquest.
Oh, yes, folks... remember... if "The One" had
actually been sincere with all his campaign talk of "hope" and
"change" and "things will be different" (in a positive
way)... he had two years of pretty much total power to do what he felt was
right. How'd that work out, folks... hmm...?
And that leads to the falsehood. Despite his claim that
“both parties have laid out their policies on the table,” Obama has made no
serious proposal to fix the runaway entitlement programs that threaten to swamp
the government’s finances.
Obama has expanded runaway entitlements! Jeez... don't
sugarcoat it, Milbank!
“My own deficit plan would strengthen Medicare and
Medicaid for the long haul by slowing the growth of health-care costs — not
shifting them to seniors and vulnerable families,” Obama said. “And my plan
would reduce our yearly domestic spending to its lowest level as a share of the
economy in nearly 60 years.”
That’s incorrect.
In other words... that's a lie.
As Politifact has pointed out, Obama’s claim that he
would reduce annual domestic spending to a percentage of gross domestic product
not seen in 60 years is true only if you don’t count the enormous spending on
programs such as Medicare. (Obama presumably means he would cut domestic
discretionary spending to a 60-year low, a lesser boast.)
Of more concern is Obama’s nonsensical claim that he has
a deficit plan that would strengthen Medicare for the long haul.
Again, folks... by "nonsensical" Milbank is
simply being polite. What he actually means is that Obama is simply lying.
Again.
He has called for doubling Medicare spending over the
next 10 years, to nearly $1 trillion in 2022.
His cuts in the rate of growth amount to just a few
percentage points.
As The Post’s Lori Montgomery has reported, the
president’s 2013 budget marked “the second year in a row Obama has ignored
calls to restructure Social Security and Medicare entitlement programs.”
(*SHRUG*)
Nothing in Obama’s speech came close to a proposal to fix
the debt problem; he dealt with that only at the end of the speech — largely by
complaining about Republicans’ refusal to consider higher taxes on the wealthy.
Obama alleged, correctly, that Republicans’ refusal to
countenance tax increases scuttled the Bowles-Simpson plan and the Senate’s
Gang of Six plan. He argued, also correctly, that Republicans’ refusal to budge
on taxes is “the biggest source of gridlock in Washington today.” He’s on solid
ground, too, in saying Republicans would end Medicare as we know it.
What Milbank doesn't tell you is that Medicare "as
we know it" must be ended because in reality it's an insupportable Ponzi
scheme!
But none of that is going to help Obama, because he
hasn’t come up with a viable alternative.
It isn’t enough to claim that the other guys have a bad
plan (though they do).
Actually... no... the Republican Plan is flawed... but
even it would be a huge improvement over the current "full speed ahead -
aim for the iceberg" course the politicians have set the ship of state
upon!
As Democratic strategists Stan Greenberg and James
Carville wrote in a memo widely discussed this week, Obama needs a “new
narrative” that “focuses on what we will do to make a better future for the
middle class.”
Instead, Obama’s speech was a rehash of earlier proposals
— such as sending more Americans to community college and spending more on
clean energy. Those plans for additional spending would be more credible if he
had a plausible plan to reform entitlement spending, the biggest driver of
future debt.
Actually... no... they wouldn't be.
(*SMIRK*)
Undoubtedly, Obama would take heat from his base if he put
forth a serious plan along the lines of Bowles-Simpson, whose recommendations
he never quite embraced. Doing so would also blunt his political advantage as
the defender of Medicare from Republican marauders. But taking a stand on
concrete fixes for the nation’s fiscal problems would get Obama credit for
strong leadership — and he would be able to tell the new economic narrative
Americans crave. There’s even the remote chance that taking such a gamble would
bring Republicans to the table.
Early in 2010, Obama told ABC’s Diane Sawyer that he’d
“rather be a really good one-term president than a mediocre two-term
president.” Now he is acting in the opposite manner: hoping to limp to a second
term without addressing the looming debt crisis — which, as JPMorgan Chase’s
Jamie Dimon told Congress this week, has contributed to today’s economic
malaise.
That's because he's a fake, phony fraud and always has
been, Dana. Wake up!
Even at this late stage, Obama should take a risk. The
election, whatever the result, won’t make things any easier.
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