blackangst1
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
- 22,902
- 2,359
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Who cares if he is 'victimized' or not? It's a big boy's world out there.
To me, it reflects quite poorly on Obama because of his inability to recognize the impact of a radicalized opposition party as well as a lack of understanding of just how deeply radicalized Republicans had actually become. To me this just shows that his team was largely incompetent politically for the first two years of his administration.
This article shows why Obama was not the right person to be president in 2008; we needed a real liberal leader, to fix things like they have in the past, and Obama had a misguided fixation on some sort of 'centrist' cooperative approach that was not going to do any good. But he was the one who could get elected.
It was a real missed opportunity, but it would be hard to do much better with money and media and politics the way they are right now.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/01/30/120130fa_fact_lizza
It was also interesting to see that Obama's team was worried about deficits causing bond rates to go up, the same argument many on here have used. An argument that also turned out to be laughably false.
Cheer up, he started making progress when he cut social security taxes. Making it collapse faster than it already was is a great ploy to force the Republicans to the table.
I found the article to be very even handed and matter of fact. It certainly didn't spare the criticism of Obama for dumb political moves and a misunderstanding of the severity of the recession we were facing.
I also don't really find its points about Republican radicalization to be something that can be argued.
You didn't quite have a super majority in the Senate, so it doesn't matter who was President they weren't getting stuff done.
He's right. I've seen few posters as devoid of logic and analytical thinking as this one. Previous post as case in point.great way to get support in your threads!
