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Dear
Average American: It’s All Your
Fault
by Jonah Goldberg
Nov 18, 2011
Congratulations,
average American!
It’s your turn to be blamed for President Obama’s -- andAmerica’s --
problems.
This
is the biggest honor you’ve won
since Time magazine named “you” the Person of the Year.
Being
the root cause of our dire
national predicament puts you in some very august company indeed. You
are
joining the ranks of George W. Bush, the Japanese tsunami, the Arab
Spring,
Wall Street fat cats and other luminaries, both living and merely
anthropomorphized.
Last
week at the Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation summit, Obama explained that, “We’ve been a little bit lazy
over
the last couple of decades. We’ve kind of taken for granted -- ‘Well,
people
would want to come here’ -- and we aren’t out there hungry, selling
America and
trying to attract new businesses into America.”
The
White House and its proxies insist
that Obama wasn’t talking about Americans per se. He just meant we’ve
been lazy
about attracting foreign investment.
We’ll
come back to that in a minute.
For now, let’s take him at his word.
Still,
you can understand the
confusion. In September, the president reflected in an interview that
America
is “a great, great country that has gotten a little soft, and we didn’t
have
that same competitive edge that we needed over the last couple of
decades.”
Shortly
after that, he told rich
donors at a fundraiser that “we have lost our ambition, our imagination
and our
willingness to do the things that built the Golden Gate Bridge and
Hoover Dam.”
So,
Obama thinks Americans lack
ambition and are soft, but don’t you dare suggest that he also thinks
they’re
lazy.
The
point of all this is pretty
obvious. Obama has a long-standing habit of seeing failure to support
his
agenda as a failure of character. The Democratic voters of western
Pennsylvania
refused to vote for him, he explained, because they were “bitter.” He
told
black Democrats lacking sufficient enthusiasm for his re-election that
they
needed to “Take off your bedroom slippers, put on your marching shoes.
Shake it
off. Stop complaining, stop grumbling, stop crying.”
And
in the context of the country’s
economic doldrums, Obama sees a lack of ambition, softness, laziness,
etc., in
anyone who doesn’t support his agenda. He’s spent several years now
exhorting
Americans about how we have to “win the future” by doing what he says.
He’s
told us repeatedly that this is our “Sputnik moment” when all Americans
must
drop their selfish, cynical or foolish objections to his program.
People who
disagree aren’t putting their “country first.”
He’s
constantly stoking nationalistic
and quasi-paranoid fears of China to goad Americans into supporting
ever more
“investments” in green energy and high-speed white elephants.
Indeed,
China always seems to be on
the man’s mind. He’s even reportedly expressed envy for Chinese
President Hu
Jintao. “Mr. Obama has told people that it would be so much easier to
be the
president of China,” the New York Times reported last year. “As one
official
put it, ‘No one is scrutinizing Hu Jintao’s words in Tahrir Square.’”
What’s
so pathetic here -- other than
the obvious grotesqueness of envying totalitarian tyrants -- is that
Obama’s
objections are so baseless. Americans remain the most productive
workers in the
world. As Obama himself notes, we attract more foreign investment than
any
other country.
Meanwhile,
it’s Obama and his allies
in Congress who’ve been at the forefront of the effort to make America
less
competitive. Obama delayed free trade deals for years, until he could
lard them
up with Big Labor giveaways. He’s thrown roadblocks in front a
multibillion-dollar U.S.-Canada pipeline project, which many ambitious
and
imaginative people see as something like this generation’s Hoover Dam
or Golden
Gate Bridge. He did postpone those new job-killing smog regulations his
EPA
administrator wants, but he’s also let everyone -- including foreign
investors
-- know that he’ll put them back on the agenda if he’s re-elected.
In
2008, Obama said Bush’s deficit of
$9 trillion was “unpatriotic.” Now he questions the patriotism of those
who
think the Obama deficit of $15 trillion argues against spending even
more money
we don’t have. And of course, there’s that giant unfunded disaster
known as
ObamaCare, which Nancy Pelosi claimed was a “jobs bill” because it
would lead
to “an economy where people could be an artist or a photographer or a
writer
without worrying about keeping their day job in order to have health
insurance.”
But,
yes, by all means, let’s blame
our lack of competitiveness on the American people.
Read
this and other columns at
Townhall
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