Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Rush for Obama-slation

There’s a plan behind the Obama frenzy to issue and overturn presidential orders and at the root of the frenzy of his fellow Democrats in Congress to propose, pass, and get signed into law legislation which radically changes the American social, economic, and political landscape.

As for actually reading and digesting the import of any bills before Congress votes on them and the president signing them, the prevailing philosophy is: Damn the reading, full speed ahead. Of paramount importance is keeping focused on the election of 2010.

Rahm Emanuel, the president’s version of Karl Rove, must be absolutely giddy over his achievements to date in this very young administration. As Obama’s entourage headed off to Europe en masse, 500 bodies strong, including speech writers, advisors, security personnel, chefs, personal attendants, and designated bottle washers, Rahm must be proud indeed of what they have done so far.

Now comes the biggest challenge to date. The European excursion has multiple purposes but chief among them is Obama’s need to persuade heads of state that Obama is right and that they are all as wrong as snow in April. Whatever the results, they have good reason to be cocky, considering their successes so far.

First, there was the campaign itself, a campaign in which Obama could promise and say virtually anything and commit gaffe after gaffe with impunity, knowing the mass media would cover for him, which it did repeatedly. Maybe, as Obama said, there really are 57 states and the rest of us just haven’t noticed the new arrivals?

Then there were all the promises he made regarding such hot topics as funding embryonic stem cell research, unfetterring gays in the military, shuttering Gitmo, massively increasing spending and taxes, pushing for union-sought card check, wiping out abortion restrictions via FOCA, instituting Cap and Trade, et al. All those initiatives have been fulfilled or are in process of fulfillment.

Our president hasn’t yet made specific proposals on other campaign promises and implicit aims. Sharing the wealth, dismantling the military, stemming the rising seas, restructuring the planet, climbing every mountain, swimming every sea will have to wait for his return so give the man time.

Most recently he tested the opposition waters to see what he could get away with in his quest for dictatorial powers. Obama crossed his Rubicon with his outrageous and unprecedented dismissal by fiat of the CEO of a major American corporation. And there was barely a ripple in the waters.

Call it a power grab or a dictatorial presumption by a power hungry Chief Executive, President Obama tipped his hand with that action. He revealed what some of us have long suspected, that he sees himself far removed from the norm of what a president is and what powers a president should have in a representative democratic republic.

There was good reason for his nickname, the Obamassiah.

GM’s Rick Wagoner ostensibly stepped down at the president’s “behest,” a euphemism for “demand” and took his $22 million dollar parachute with him as he bailed. Anyone who thinks his resignation was in any way voluntary must also think UAW President Ron Gettlefinger will be fired next. Those believers should set out cookies for the Easter Bunny in a few weeks and hope he leaves a few colored eggs.

Obama’s alter ego in the House, Rep. Barney Frank, not one to be reticent despite the many reasons he should hide in the House cloakroom, or bathroom, weighed in with his own scheme to save, protect, and preserve America’s economy.

Barney, ever the stickler for protocol and propriety, knows how to do all that: wage controls over the private sector by government: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politics/Beyond-AIG-A-Bill-to-let-Big-Government-Set-Your-Salary-42158597.html.

Say, what?

It’s true. Rep Frank in his role as Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, was foiled in the House attempt to impose a confiscatory and unconstitutional tax on bonuses for greedy AIG execs. But he has a default ploy: Let government determine what each and every employee of any firm which was sucker enough to accept bailout bucks deserves as recompense.

Again, no reference to overseeing and approving the salaries of Gettelfinger and other union bigwigs. One does not bite the union hand that feeds, and elects, one.

There was no reference, either,...


(Read the rest of this article at http://genelalor.com/)

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