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Want
Hope?
Make a Change.
by Michael Reagan
Aug 02, 2012
President Obama was supposed to be all
about hope and change.
But after almost four years he’s squeezed
the hope out of most of us.
A new Rasmussen poll is the latest proof
that the only hope of getting out of our economic ditch is to fire the
hopeless
guy in the White House who keeps digging it deeper.
Since
early 2009 Rasmussen has been asking
two questions that serve as a good barometer of what people think about
both
our present and our future.
The
first question is: “Will today’s
children be better off than their parents?”
The
answers from late July are as
depressing as the latest GDP numbers. Only 14 percent of adults told
Rasmussen
they expect today’s children to be better off than their parents.
Meanwhile, 65
percent said they think our children will be worse off.
In
2009 those numbers already were nothing
to brag about -- 27 percent and 47 percent. But the trend under Obama
is clear
and grim. The only bright spot is that the poll numbers are so bad they
can’t
get much worse.
The
other question Rasmussen asked is: “Is
it still possible for just about anyone in America to work hard and get
rich?”
Amazingly,
given the Obama administration’s
relentless propaganda assault on the rich and successful, 28 percent of
Americans told Rasmussen they still believe it can be done.
Working
hard and creating wealth by
providing things or services people want or need is as American as
Steve Jobs,
Bruce Springsteen and Mitt Romney.
Millions
have done it. It’s part of the
American Dream. It’s something the president should be publicly
encouraging and
cheering, not punishing and scolding or demeaning.
Unlike
Barack Obama, my father knew this.
Speaking to the 1984 Republican National Convention, Ronald Reagan said
that
what had made America the greatest country in the world was still true:
“The
poet called Miss Liberty’s torch the
‘lamp beside the golden door.’ Well, that was the entrance to America,
and it
still is. And now you really know why we’re here tonight.
“The
glistening hope of that lamp is still
ours. Every promise, every opportunity is still golden in this land.
And
through that golden door our children can walk into tomorrow with the
knowledge
that no one can be denied the promise that is America.
“Her heart
is full; her door is still golden, her future bright. She has arms big
enough
to comfort and strong enough to support, for the strength in her arms
is the
strength of her people. She will carry on in the ‘80s unafraid,
unashamed, and
unsurpassed...
Read the
rest of the article at Townhall
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