Victor Davis Hanson captures the essence of the Obama Presidency:
Obama has managed the nearly impossible: the greatest peacetime deficits in U.S. history — about $1.5 trillion per year — in his first three years achieved almost no economic expansion. Instead, unemployment is chronic and stays over 9.2%; growth is stagnant; gas is sky-high — and the president seems stunned that none of what he had promised came to pass. All his liberal nostrums have been tried and been found wanting. There is no successful EU model, no winning blue-state statist paradigm for guidance.
Mr. Hanson refers to Obama as Carter 2.0 (only worse):
In short, Obama came into office with all the Carteresque assumptions on how to take over a private-sector economy and outsource foreign policy to international bodies. He now finds to his utter amazement — as Carter discovered in late 1979 after Teheran, Afghanistan, and Central America — that in the real world none of what worked in word worked in deed. Those who assured Obama that his Harvard lounge fantasies were real have either quit, are now offering new advice, or are criticizing him for once taking them at their word.
Is it all bad? In a conventional sense, Yes! However, Mr. Hanson sees some redeeming aspect to this nightmare of Obama. He believes it may be a return to adulthood for the country after the vacation from reality that began in the Sixties:
Obama, you see, is our nemesis. He is a totem, the logical manifestation of a warped media, the reification of some crazy — and arrogant — ideas about redistributive politics, the statist economy, and cultural and social life that permeated American life the last forty years. He is the president with a 1,000 faces that we have all seen at work, on TV, throughout American life, and at some point the odds determined that we had to have a rendezvous with him— perhaps a catharsis to teach us the wages of Keynesian debt, of a social policy contrary to human nature with its equality of result doctrines, of an all-powerful, all-growing unaccountable government, of the now hip ambiguity about past American protocols and history. Obama is the exaggeration of all the dubious ideas that arose since the 1960s — brought to fruition on his watch, delivered by mellifluous cadences by an untouchable persona.
In fact, a Barack Obama was long overdue. Had he not appeared out of nowhere in 2008, we would have surely had to invent him.
Sadly, I wish “we” could have invented him about 20 years ago. Then, we would be able to assess better today whether we can escape the damage done. At this stage, it is too early to tell. We still are sinking and the majority of the real pain and confusion has not even begun.
“Obama has managed the nearly impossible: the greatest peacetime deficits in U.S. history”
That’s odd. What is the term for the activities of our military in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, and Libya? Are we really at peace? I neither excuse nor forgive Obama for the additional debt that he has piled onto our backs, but this is not peacetime. We are at war. The author lost credibility with me in that first sentence.
Those of us who identified Obama as a saboteur may have been regarded as dotty. Those who did not and do not regard BO as a saboteur have a high standard of evidence, which means, I suppose, that our economy and freedoms must suffer drastic additional damage before the doubters choose to vote against socialism in November, 2011.