Amid all the charges and countercharges in Washington over the
government shutdown, there is at least one common theme: Barack Obama’s
various charges always lead to a dead end. They are chaos, and chaos is
hard to understand, much less refute.
By that I mean when the president takes up a line of argument against
his opponents, it cannot really be taken seriously — not just because
it is usually not factual, but also because it always contradicts
positions that Obama himself has taken earlier or things he has
previously asserted. Whom to believe — Obama 1.0, Obama 2.0, or Obama
3.0?
When the president derides the idea of shutting down the government
over the debt ceiling, we almost automatically assume that he himself
tried to do just that when as a senator he voted against the Bush
administration request in 2006, when the debt was about $6 trillion less
than it is now.
When the president blasts the Republicans for trying to subvert the
“settled law” of Obamacare, we trust that Obama himself had earlier done
precisely that when he unilaterally subverted his own legislation — by
quite illegally discarding the employer mandate provision of Obamacare.
At least the Republicans tried to revise elements of Obamacare through
existing legislative protocols; the president preferred executive fiat
to nullify a settled law.
When the president deplores the lack of bipartisanship and the
lockstep Republican effort to defund Obamacare, we remember that the
president steamrolled the legislation through the Congress without a
single Republican vote.
When the president laments the loss of civility and reminds the
public that he uses “calm” rhetoric during the impasse, we know he has
accused his opponents of being on an “ideological crusade” and of being
hostage takers and blackmailers who have “a gun held to the head of the
American people,” while his top media adviser Dan Pfeiffer has said that
they had “a bomb strapped to their chest.”
When the president insists that the Republican effort to hold up the
budget is unprecedented, we automatically deduce that, in fact, the
action has many precedents, and on frequent prior occasions was a
favored ploy of Democrats to gain leverage over Republican
administrations.
In short, whenever the president prefaces a sweeping statement with
one of his many emphatics — “make no mistake about it,” “I’m not making
this up,” “in point of fact,” “let me be perfectly clear” — we know that
the reverse is always true. For Obama, how something is said matters
far more than what is said.
Though, if anything, his oratorical skills are even more overrated than his management skills.
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