The Necropolitan Sentinel

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Obama: Excuses R Us

STOPmaking-excuses

It has been fairly well established that unless something that happens on his watch reflects well on him, President Obama is in the habit of trying to pass off all bad things to someone or something else.

In the case of our economic woes, the latest pass off target is Europe.  But the Wall Street Journal does a pretty darn good job of taking that argument apart.  First with history:

In 1997 Asia’s economy imploded. Currencies collapsed, countries had their ratings downgraded to junk, millions of people lost their jobs, governments were replaced, regimes fell. In October a jittery Dow, fearing the effects of “Asian contagion,” lost 7.2% of its value in a single day. Trading had to be halted twice.

And yet the American economy was unscathed. In 1997 GDP grew by 4.5%. In 1998 it grew again by 4.5%, this time despite the Russian ruble crisis. In 1999, annual growth reached 4.9%, a pace it hasn’t exceeded since. Unemployment fell to 4.2%. The government ran a surplus.

Obama claims that Europe is our “largest trading partner”.  Well, they’re not:

Europe is not our largest trading partner. Canada is. Followed by China. Followed by Mexico. Followed by Japan. “Europe” only counts as America’s largest trading partner in an aggregate sense. An honest apples-to-apples comparison would find that U.S. trade with North America or East Asia dwarfs trade across the Atlantic.

And, tossing his blatantly false claim aside, is trade where our problem really lies?

Now take the question of how much trade matters to America. In 2009, foreign trade accounted for 24.3% of the U.S. economy. By contrast, the foreign-trade-to-GDP ratio was 51.9% for China, 71.1% for Canada and 89.2% for Germany. When it comes to foreign trade, the U.S. is the world’s least dependent major economy.

That’s right, it isn’t Europe and it isn’t trade that’s the problem.  It is economic policy. Domestic economic policy and a rudderless ship of state, the captain more interested in fund raising and re-election than doing the hard work of trying to turn the situation around. 

Which brings us to another excuse  – Congressional Republicans:

Again, a little history is in order. The Bush tax cuts of 2001 passed the Senate 58-33 in an evenly split chamber. Bill Clinton managed to do business with a GOP that controlled both houses of Congress for six of his eight years in office. Ronald Reagan passed all of his economic agenda through a House that was under constant Democratic control.

Somehow it is only Barack Obama—whose party, in an inconvenient truth for his campaign, still runs the Senate—who seems incapable of working with any Congress not under full partisan control. (And even then he had trouble.) Americans expect their presidents to be able to assemble coalitions of the politically willing in order to achieve pragmatic and relatively popular results. The Obama administration method, by contrast, has been to shove what it can down the public throat, then act surprised when the public gags, or throws up.

Leadership, of course, makes a difference – Clinton, Reagan and Bush were able to exert the sort of leadership necessary to work with Congress to get what they wanted.  Obama seems to think “working with” means he dictates and Congress passes what he dictates.  And when that doesn’t happen, well, it’s off to another fund raiser.

Peggy Noonan talked about politicians “laying down lines” before an event so they can spin what happens in a positive way even if what happens isn’t at all positive.  That’s what you see here – the President of the United States laying down a line of BS about Europe and trade so, if and when Europe collapses he can point his finger across the Atlantic and blame that continent for the problems here.

For the record, it isn’t the first or last time:

As president, Mr. Obama has attempted to make scapegoats of bankers, bondholders, private-equity firms, insurance companies, energy companies, ATMs, the Chamber of Commerce, the Catholic Church, opponents of illegal immigration, European politicians, Supreme Court justices and even Japanese tsunamis.

But he got bin Laden, didn’t he?

However, the 14.3% unemployed are not particularly impressed.

Forward!

~McQ

Twitter: @McQandO

Posted under: Featured Propaganda

Tagged as: , ,

About Bruce McQuain

Bruce McQuain is a retired Army officer, libertarian and blogger whose work appears at Blackfive, Questions and Observations, Hot Air's Green Room, and the Washington Examiner's Opinion Zone.

One comment

  • High Kommissar on June 12, 2012 at 1:29 pm said:

    Reply

    Obabo is worthless as camel dung….and smells like it too…. Time for us to toss him where he truly has earned a right to be:::: in PRISON.

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