Dowd vs. Obama

The Big O. is “yet another president elevating personal quirks into a management style,” says the personal-quirk-oriented Maureen Dowd, picking on him for not coming up with her version of a good manager.

She bemoaned predecessors GW Bush, Clinton, LBJ, and Nixon’s acting out in and from the White House — no Carter, note — but expected of this “psychologically healthy” Obama (this from a book she read).

He was “dazzling” as a politician but is “obdurately self-destructive about politics.” 

He is guilty of

failing to understand that Americans are upset that a series of greedy corporations have screwed over the little guy without enough fierce and immediate pushback from the president.

So this leftist commentator wants a tough guy in the White House.  I do too, but toughness is for beating back the many-tentacled bureaucracy that a president inherits.  Forget about it: he’s one of them.  He loves power.

But as I have said before, God writes straight (sometimes) with crooked lines, and the Dowd critique is quotable even allowing for her crookedness.  In his speech last night:

He appointed a “son of the gulf” spill czar and a new guard dog at M.M.S. and tried to restore a sense of confident leadership — “The one approach I will not accept is inaction” — and compassion, reporting on the shrimpers and fishermen and their “wrenching anxiety that their way of life may be lost.” He acted as if he was the boss of BP on the issue of compensation. And he called on us to pray.

A new last refuge for scoundrels here: prayer.

The rest is to the point, that he’s over his head in spilt oil, crying over it when he should . . .   What?

Waive the union-protective Jones Act, say people who also want action, among other things.  God, after all, helps those who help themselves, said B. Franklin (not God) in his 1736 version of Poor Richard’s Almanack, but Jewish wise men, Sts. Augustin and Ignatius Loyola and others have told us to pray as if all depended on God, act as if it all depended on us.

Assuming you really want that oil mopped up and do not approach it as an opportunity to rail at big business.

I am a jerk

What next from the boy wonder?

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said he had a one-on-one meeting with Obama, in which President Obama told him that he was still a Muslim, the son of a Muslim father, the stepson of Muslim stepfather, that his half brothers in Kenya are Muslims, and that he was sympathetic towards the Muslim agenda.

“Ich bin ein Berliner” was one thing.  We got the point.  Kennedy was never confused with a German.  He could show solidarity with freedom-loving people.  But our man O, the simple tool of America Lasters?

He has something up his sleeve all the time.

(HT: News Alert)

Gay marriage a bad thing

Robert Benne and Gerald McDermott in Christianity Today, Feb. ’04 picked apart arguments for gay marriage, including that it does no harm to society, calling it “a superficial kind of individualism that does not recognize the power of emerging social trends that often start with only a few individuals bucking conventional patterns of behavior.”

Gay marriage is defended as not harming marriage in the short run.  The authors recall the ’60s, “when illegitimacy and cohabitation were relatively rare” and “we were asked, whom do these individuals hurt?”

Now we know the negative social effects these two living arrangements have spawned: lower marriage rates, more instability in the marriages that are enacted, more fatherless children, increased rates of domestic violence and poverty, and a vast expansion of welfare state expenses.

That said, the authors cite three reasons why “the institutionalization of gay marriage” would be bad for marriage, children, and society. 

The first is that it would change “the definition of marriage.”  Such a “scrambling” would be “shock to our fundamental understanding of human social relations and institutions.”

Gays are less faithful, for one thing.  “There is more likely to be a greater understanding of the need for extramarital outlets between two men than between a man and a woman,” wrote gay marriage proponent Andrew Sullivan in his 1996 book, Virtually Normal, approvingly.  “Something of the gay relationship’s necessary honesty, flexibility, and equality could undoubtedly help strengthen and inform many heterosexual bonds,” he added.

Or, as Metropolitan (gay) Church founder Troy Perry told The Dallas Morning News, “Monogamy is not a word the gay community uses.”  For them fidelity calls for “a loving, caring, honest relationship,” in which honesty matters most. “Some would say that committed couples could have multiple sexual partners as long as there’s no deception.”

Even (legally) “married” gays in Netherland have an average of eight partners per year outside their relationship, according to a study made shortly before this article appeared.  “Gay marriage will change marriage more than it will change gays,” commented the authors.

“Further,” they add, gay marriage will provide a wedge for societal acceptance of marriage among more than two partners, or such is the goal of some proponents.

Law Professor Martha Ertman of the University of Utah, for example, wants to render the distinction between traditional marriage and “polyamory” (group marriage) “morally neutral.” She argues that greater openness to gay partnerships will help us establish this moral neutrality.

And

University of Michigan law professor David Chambers wrote in a widely cited 1996 Michigan Law Review piece that he expects gay marriage will lead government to be “more receptive to [marital] units of three or more.”

More to come, including sharp rejoinders from opponents to the authors’ position.

Mike Quigley among the seniors

Astute Reader attended a Seniors Club luncheon at a northwest side parish where Democrat Congressman Mike Quigley was the unannounced speaker, talking up Obamacare.  She missed his introduction, but what she heard was “revolting.”

* 55,000 thousand nuns supported it.  Nothing about the bishops.

* Insurance and drug companies supported the Republicans and lied to scare “you.” 

* There will be no such thing as $500 billion in cuts to Medicare.

* Look how terrific social security is, and Medicare, and the Republicans opposed it for years, even Ronald Reagan.

“Most disgusting of all, he said change is “difficult,” condescending crapola that Michelle Obama also likes to peddle.
 
The progressives are softening us up for some re-education programs. It’s their idea of “the Future.”

Q. ended saying he is soon off to Cuba to learn how to make things here as good as possible for “us.”  (Ah.  Learning from the experts.)
 
But seniors are a tough sell.  The luncheon organizers took a survey at check-in and advised Q. that seventy-plus percent opposed the health bill. His answer?  It’s too late, it passed, get used to it.

(Shut up and do what you’re told.)

Mike Quigley among the seniors

Astute Reader J from the NW Side:

Attended a Seniors Club luncheon . . . at a Northwest Side parish where [Rep.] Mike Quigley [D.-IL] was the unannounced [italics added] speaker. [I liken it to a black alderman requiring time in a Baptist pulpit.]

I was two minutes late into his talk, and missed his introduction, but what I heard was revolting:

[F]ifty-five thousand nuns supported the health care bill (nothing about the USCB); insurance and drug companies supported the Republicans and they have lied and lied in order to scare “you”; there will be no such thing as 500 billion dollars in cuts to medicare; look how terrific social security is, and medicare, and the Republicans opposed it for years, even Ronald Reagan, who later said he wouldn’t touch medicare.
“Most disgusting of all,”
he said “Change is difficult.” Michelle Obama likes to peddle this condescending crapola, too.
So?
The progressives appear to be softening us up for some re-education programs. Come to think of it, that is their idea of “the Future.”
 
Mr. Q. ended by saying he is soon off to Cuba to learn how to make things here as good as possible for “us.”
Say what?  We know El Fidel like Obamacare, but this?
Because I was late, and a guest, I didn’t ask any questions of the congressman. I just glared across the table at his fawning assistant with a camera. I did not applaud.
Well, you do what you can do.
These seniors are tough in their own way. [The luncheon organizers] took a survey of guests at check-in and advised Mr. Q. that seventy-plus percent opposed the health bill. His answer was, it’s too late, it passed, get used to it.
Hey, those guys believe in winning.  It’s their life work.

Dems lost in PA?

One good reason, please, for preferring to see the glass half full in Pennsylvania:

Mark Critz is a “Rush Limbaugh Democrat” who campaigned against almost everything Obama and Murtha support. 
No SEIU line for him?
. . . [H]e was more conservative than the McCain campaign of 2008 and was more apt to criticize Obama than is, say, Lindsay Graham. 
 
Hmmm.  To get elected he did that?
This was hardly a race that can be celebrated by the Democrat leadership today.   Critz is the type of Democrat that Nancy Pelosi was hoping to lose in November.
Good.  An anti-Pelosi congressman?  Replacing one of her faves?  My glass runneth not over, but it’s half full!

About those immigrants

Tom Roeser resurrects this from Teddy Roosevelt:

“In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else—for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed or birthplace or origin.  But this is predicated upon the person’s becoming in every facet an American and nothing but an American. 

            “…There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American but something else also isn’t an American at all.  We have room for but one flag, the American flag…We have room for one language here and that is the English language.  And we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.” 
That’s rough riding over open-border enthusiasm.

Pleeeez talk to us, your highness . . .

He don’t like to talk?

[A]fter [Obama] signed the bill [promoting press freedom around the world], and as the press “wranglers” began aggressively herding us out of the room, I asked if he still has confidence in BP [whom he excoriated on Friday, taking no questions]. He ignored the question so I tried this: “In the interest of press freedom, would you take a couple questions on BP?”

That did elicit a smile, and he told me I was free to ask questions. Someone else shouted, “Will you answer them?”

He said he’s not holding a press conference today as we were escorted out the door.

Obama won't talk

Look, he’s a very superior fella, in every way.  Can you get that straight?

Pro-aborts losing?

What do you know?  The younger you are, the more pro-life!

Americans in the 18 to 29 age bracket are now more likely than their elders to believe abortion should be illegal in all circumstances, according to the data released last week, and generally oppose abortion in greater numbers than Baby Boomers.

That’s Gallup Poll numbers. 

Something’s working.

And try this on for size:

Republican candidates now hold a five-point lead over Democrats in the latest edition of the Generic Congressional Ballot, a further narrowing of the gap between the two parties to the smallest margin this year.

That’s from Rasmussen.

The city works a little better . . .

In the ever-exciting halls of The Hall, something new:

A policy change at Zoning has opened the door for us to get fat off the land, or at least to save us the wait.  Zoning no longer accepts walk-in appointments! Since May 1st, zoning plan examination reviews for building permits are scheduled exclusively through the online building permit application process

This is huge, folks.  City Hall is not easily moved.  With a big enough lever, Archimedes thought he could move the world.  But The Hall?

It may be (who knows?) thanks to the plucky folks at Chicago’s long-overdue Department of Zoning Oversight Fellowship Forum (DoZ-OFF).

Here at DoZ-OFF we were living on a prayer, fed lean from the table scraps left by Zoning, indoctrinated to believe our captors were our saviors.  No more!  A policy change at Zoning has opened the door for us to get fat off the land, or at least to save us the wait.

The supposed mover is puzzled:

How any of this works is still a mystery to us, but we are happy to witness a change.  We did not think we would see one in this lifetime; we were doing this for our children. 

The blogger closes with thanks to his readers — 3,688 hits on 13 posts since last June:

“I think I hear singing in the street,” says the Intern Architect.  [There is no singing in the street, but we’ll let you know if it starts.]

It’s started, I think.