First Dubya, then effete cool guy meets elite men, women

George Dubya’s farewell to the Marines, vs. Barack Obama’s first appearance as president:

Here we have an illuminating contrast: the United States Marines greeting President George W. Bush on Labor Day versus the Marines greeting President Obama at Camp Lejeune last week.  . . . .

They know who’s on their side.

————-

A day or so later:  A dissenting view of the two presumably telling videos comes from Greyhawk, of the milblog Mudville Gazette, who says it’s a put-up job: Obama’s audience was standing at attention, for one thing, and presumably you can’t get the spontaneity shown in the Bush video.  That and the paste-up nature of the contrasting video made Greyhawk, who is regularly cited by the libertarian Instapundit, very suspicious.

However, from Mrs. Greyhawk comes a link to Amy Proctor — hey, I’m just getting to know these folks myself — who runs the whole CNN video (at “Bottom Line Upfront”) and concludes it was an “embarrassing response” that Obama got.  It was the CNN anchor who called it “tepid,” remember.  I’d just as soon let the Greyhawks argue it out, but I am leaning (back) towards my initial reaction. 

Of course, I do think Obama is a disaster waiting to happen for us all, and that may influence me.  What do you think?

Superman

Cocky Locky is finding matters more complicated than he thought:

Sources close to the White House say Mr Obama and his staff have been “overwhelmed” by the economic meltdown and have voiced concerns that the new president is not getting enough rest.

British officials, meanwhile, admit that the White House and US State Department staff were utterly bemused by complaints that the Prime Minister should have been granted full-blown press conference and a formal dinner, as has been customary. They concede that Obama aides seemed unfamiliar with the expectations that surround a major visit by a British prime minister.

Oh that British visit.  There’s hostility to the Brits among staff:

The real views of many in Obama administration were laid bare by a State Department official involved in planning the Brown visit, who reacted with fury when questioned by The Sunday Telegraph about why the event was so low-key.

The official dismissed any notion of the special relationship, saying: “There’s nothing special about Britain. You’re just the same as the other 190 countries in the world. You shouldn’t expect special treatment.”

On the other hand,

The apparent lack of attention to detail by the Obama administration is indicative of what many believe to be Mr Obama’s determination to do too much too quickly.

We know what that is: transform the economy into Euro-style low-growth stagnancy, with comcomitant 30% drop in living standards (says Michael Boskin of Stanford and Hoover Institution in Wall St. Journal).

The Sunday Telegraph understands that one of Mr Obama’s most prominent African American backers, whose endorsement he spent two years cultivating, has told friends that he detects a weakness in Mr Obama’s character.

“The one real serious flaw I see . . . is that he thinks he can manage all this,” the well-known figure told a Washington official, who spoke to this newspaper. “He’s underestimating the flood of things that will hit his desk.”

A Democratic strategist, who is friends with several senior White House aides, revealed that the president has regularly appeared worn out and drawn during evening work sessions with senior staff in the West Wing and has been forced to make decisions more quickly than he is comfortable.

He’s gonna trip one of these days, and the bloom will be off the rose.

Not sure? Fire anyway!

Some columnizing here on an important subject:

Ladies and gentlemen of the central Oak Park chapter of Catholics and other Americans United for Separation of Abortion and Legality be seated. It’s time once again to engage in our favorite pastime, playing God! (Cheers, applause from small group huddled in church basement.)

We gather as usual to say we know when the unborn acquire rights, even if Obama as candidate has professed ignorance in the matter. Above his pay grade, he said. Let us for the sake of argument say we’re not sure either. Calling on an old but golden argument, let us consider what to do in such uncertainty, asking our president to join us.

. . . .

 

Maura and her editors just love that budget

I had delivered to my doorstep this morning on this cold, clear Sunday a near-perfect White House press release, courtesy of Chicago Tribune.  It begins with a straightforward lede, of press-office quality:

From front to back and on nearly every page, President Barack Obama’s new budget plan delivers a message that’s seldom been heard in American politics for more than three decades: It’s time for the rich to pay their fair share and lighten the load on the middle class.

“Seldom . . . for more than three decades” jars.  Maybe “in” the last three decades? 

And “in American politics”?  She’s kidding.  The left wing has been silent on the subject?

Let’s not quibble, however.  At issue is whether Maura has that Chris Matthews tingle going up (and down) her leg or legs.  Consider her declaration that “the new budget would [? in what circumstance?] focus [she means “bestow”?] more benefits on ordinary Americans and look to the affluent for more help in paying for them.

Thanks be to God!

The budget “lays out the facts starkly,” she says.  Since Reagan cut taxes, “lower-class incomes have stagnated, middle-class incomes have increased only slightly, . . . the incomes of the richest Americans have skyrocketed.

That’s it.  O. said it, it must be so.  No independent verification needed for this fan.  It’s in the budget book.

“If the country is going to recover from this economic crisis, Obama argues, that is going to have to change,” she writes.

And who is she to argue?  She quotes him: The nation “has grown and prospered when all Americans have shared in the opportunities created by our economy.”  Or, gosh darn it, to cut through the standard Obama overwriting, people have profited when the nation has prospered.

And oh my, get that “have shared in the opportunities.”  He’s for equal opportunity, apparently.  Probably not. 

O. is “gearing up for a fight” with his all-purpose bad guys, “special interests and lobbyists” (though not with the lobbyists he has recently hired).

So is Maura.  “To be sure,” she writes, “some Republicans denounced the shift in priorities as class warfare.”  Some. (And all but three rejected the recently steamrollered spending bill.}

Moreover, “some economists” said higher taxes “could” reduce rich people’s “entrepreneurial energy.”  Come on.  She means would dry up investing. 

“Many economists, on the other hand,” don’t think so.  They say overall and middle-class prosperity have happened simultaneously.  No kidding.  “During the economic boom that followed World War II, income inequalities eased as the middle class prospered.”  Really.  Inequality didn’t increase when the middle class prospered?

“And those in the upper income brackets were heavily taxed” in this period, she says, again equating simultaneity with causation.  Anyhow, “most wealthy Americans found ways to shelter much of their income from the highest rates.”  In which case, what’s the point of raising their rates?

She found two of the many at the Brookings Institution, which Christian Science Monitor recently called “centrist” but Seattle Times called “left-leaning” (which I have found more common).  Pay your money, take your choice.  Maura takes a pass.

Obama will “undo the Bush tax cuts,” one of the two explains.  He is Roberton Williams, of the Tax Policy Center, a Brookings operation, though Maura does not say so.

“Obama wants to help people afford college,” Williams told her. “His focus is on . . . long-term investment potential and have major, major social benefits.”  Sure, like crushing deficits to be paid off by generations to come.

It is indeed a two-headed monster, this budget: presumably an economy-helper and definitely a social-welfare promoter.  In any case, O. demonstrates a “laserlike focus on bolstering the middle class as a long-needed correction,” she writes, allowing that “others see in it the seeds of new inequalities.”

One of these would be the (right-leaning) Heritage Foundation fellow, who has two paragraphs at the end in which to state his case if not make it.  He makes a key point point, that almost half the citizenry will pay no taxes in the Obama scheme of things.  If he went further and noted that demagogues, I mean Democrats, will have the electorate where it wants it in that case, Maura ignored it.  If he didn’t, he should have, because Obama is on the way to locking in the non-taxpayer majority for future elections from now forever more.

That’s the politics of it.  I do not expect Maura and Chi Trib or LA Times to buy into that version.  I do expect them to do more than provide for us hard-copy breakfast-table readers an almost entirely White House version. 

Something had to be there to snuggle next to the 9–by-18–inch Macy’s ad on page 7, section 1, final edition, delivered to my doorstep, and Maura Reynolds supplied the supporting copy, as the ad people say.  That was not her doing, of course.  But really, John Kass can’t carry the whole paper, can he?

Is there an earmark in your future?

Even Obama has an earmark in this spending bill:

Big story just breaking… Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis and White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel each have at least one earmark in the omnibus spending bill before Congress.

Update: The story also includes the discovery of the name Obama in the section of the bill dealing with education money.

Update II: CQ Politics has posted the story noting that President Obama appears because the bill “is an accumulation of leftovers from 2008 — spending measures that weren’t enacted before the 110th Congress expired.”

Crafty fellows and gals.

Tags:

Nowhere stimulus?

La. Gov. Bobby Jindal is up for tonight as post-mortem Republican commentator after Big O.  He’s a hot item and has some quite good things to say.

“We want the president to succeed,” he [told fellow governors yesterday]. “But let’s be clear we have a completely different philosophy about the best way to succeed.”

He poked some holes in the gigantic stimulus bill just passed by Congress and said it was clearly filled with attempts to create “temporary two-year work programs rather than real jobs.”

Recalling the infamous “Bridge to Nowhere” pork-barrel earmark in Alaska, Mr. Jindal called the president’s major initiative “a stimulus package to nowhere.”

“If you want to build a road to connect an industrial site with its market, fine. But don’t just build it to build it,” he [said].

This from John Fund in WSJ.com’s Political Diary today.

He wasn’t kidding

He came to Rosa’s house and said, “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help.”

[Rahm] Emanuel is a multimillionaire, but lived for the last five years for free in the tony Capitol Hill townhouse owned by [Rep. Rosa] De Lauro and her husband, Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg.

During that time, he also served as chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee – which gave Greenberg huge polling contracts. It paid Greenberg’s firm $239,996 in 2006 and $317,775 in 2008. (Emanuel’s own campaign committee has also paid Greenberg more than $50,000 since 2004.)

And that ain’t all.  There’s the Freddie Mac connection too.  Rahm, we hardly knew ye . . .