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In
Obamaland, the Past is Irrelevant
By Guy Benson
7/11/2011
President
Obama inhabits a very
special world. It’s
a world in which his
entire slate of previous statements, policy preferences, and actions is
apparently wiped clean every time he delivers a new speech or press
statement. As my
friend Mary Katharine
Ham likes to quip, what Obama said -- or did -- last week, last month,
or last
year is regarded as irrelevant, so long as he’s making himself “crystal
clear”
today. Call it a
transcendent belief in
“the fierce urgency of now.” I’ll
illustrate this phenomenon shortly.
First,
a few basic takeaways from
today’s lengthy presidential news conference, which made little actual
news. The president
said a debt deal is
still a ways off, and stated that although he appreciates John
Boehner’s “good
faith efforts” to help prevent a disastrous default, Republicans must
“budge”
on taxes for a workable compromise to materialize.
He called on both sides to make concessions,
arguing
that it’s time to “rip off the Bandaid” and “eat our peas.” He forswore short-term
extensions, vowing to
reject any 30-to-90 day debt ceiling patches.
“This is the United States of America, and we
don’t manage our affairs
in three-month increments,” he asserted.
(Except when we do, of course).
He also flatly stated that an accord will be
forged by the August 2nd
deadline. “We’re
going to meet every day
until we get this thing resolved,” he said.
Negotiations are ongoing.
Now,
back to mystical Obamaland: The
president talked quite a lot about the
pressing and imperative need to strike a comprehensive debt deal this
morning. Largely
reprising his hectoring
performance of June 29th, Obama called on both sides to sacrifice their
respective sacred cows to facilitate an agreement post-haste. Such a visionary
pragmatist. Except...this
latest incarnation of Barack
Obama seems to have forgotten that a previous one was demanding a
“clean” debt
ceiling hike as recently as six weeks ago.
Out: We must hike this debt ceiling without
any grand deal
immediately! In: We
must reach a grand
deal to hike the debt ceiling immediately!
No matter; new day, new paradigm.
Head spin.
To
oppose a debt limit increase would
be patently “irresponsible,” today’s Barack Obama intoned -- an
apparent
repudiation of 2006’s Barack Obama, who did precisely that. “Revenue increases” are
“fair” and essential,
today’s Barack Obama insisted -- contradicting 2009’s Barack Obama, who
noted
that raising taxes is “the last thing you want to do” in a sluggish
economy.
Head spin.
The
president also spoke passionately
about the necessity of making tough choices to help control the swollen
national debt. He
assured us he’s
“willing to do hard things politically” to reach an agreement. What might those “hard
things” be? He
won’t say.
It’s as if today’s Barack Obama has forgotten
that when presented with
an obvious opportunity to offer leadership on this front, February’s
Barack
Obama introduced a budget that was universally panned for its
inadequacy and
utter refusal to propose any “hard things.”
And that April’s Barack Obama discarded
February’s Barack Obama’s budget
in favor of a laughably non-specific “vision,” which still hasn’t been
fleshed
out. And that
2010’s Barack Obama appointed
a bipartisan debt commission to devise exactly the sort of
comprehensive
solution that today’s Barack Obama demands -- but that February’s
Barack Obama
completely disregarded its recommendations in crafting his (later
abandoned)
budget proposal. Head
spin.
Applying
icing to his rhetorical cake,
the president wrapped up his press conference by promising that his
policies
will help corral deficits and debt, eventually.
Without missing a beat, he closed with an
astonishing brainstorm: He
encouraged Americans to envision a large-scale government program to
spur job
growth through major infrastructure projects as a solution to high
unemployment. Today’s
Barack Obama
clearly didn’t know or care that the large-scale government program to
spur job
growth through major infrastructure projects -- championed by 2009’s
Barack
Obama, then mocked by June’s Barack Obama -- didn’t even come close to
meeting
the expectations and projections 2009’s Barack Obama established. Head spin.
No
worries, though. Today
is a brand new day. Problem:
Today’s Barack Obama will soon
become yesterday’s Barack Obama -- whose stated policies and
preferences are
liable to slide into obsolescence as soon as tomorrow’s Barack Obama
opens his
mouth. What comes
next is anyone’s guess.
This
cycle of presidential
body-snatching may be a totally incoherent approach to governance, but
it sure
is exciting.
Read
it with links at Townhall
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