Name:
Michael Goldberg
Diet Type:
vegan
Gender:
male
Location:
USA
Pets:
one dog, one cat
Relationship Status:
Married

Name:
Michael Goldberg
Diet Type:
vegan
Gender:
male
Location:
USA
Pets:
one dog, one cat
Relationship Status:
Married
I think you write off President Obama much too quickly. This President came into office with these problems created by the Bush crime family:
1 Iraq war
2 Afghanistan
3 Worst financial crisis since Great Depression
4 Gitmo
5 Global warming
6 Health care crisis
7 Underfunded, understaffed FDA
8 Mismanaged, criminal Environmental Protection Agency
9 Military pushed to the breaking point.
10 Rest of world disgusted with the U.S. government
And those are just some of the problems.
He has been in office one year. He has accomplished many things in his first year in office.
Is he perfect, no. But to just dismiss him is naive and ignorant of what he is up against, which includes a group of his own party (blue dogs) who have derailed health care reform.
A president without solid support in the Senate is severly handicapped. Add the financial might of corporate America and you begin to see what the President is up against.
And who, by the way, do you think would be doing a better job than Obama?
Wow, he hasn't been in office a year yet and you claim he' failing?
Good Grief!
I think you must have a practice outside the ghetto and inner city poverty boundaries. You're too darn civilized. Obama rocked your world?
I do claim President Obama’s presidency is failing. For people to avoid looking at this premise objectively is, in my opinion, a flaw that will not make things better, only worse.
The argument that it’s only been eleven months, how can I say he’s failing, we need to give him more time before making such judgments and proclamations provides me with the opportunity to re-visit something that I wrote in a previous blog post about red flags and warning signs in relationships. This issue with President Obama is an important application of that principle:
In a relationship of any kind, if we see red flags and warning signs that there are problems in the relationship, that things are not going smoothly, that there are things which were anticipated to happen which haven’t happened, and we choose to ignore those red flags and warning signs and instead tell ourselves, “It’s okay, give it more time, it’ll all work out,” this is usually an error.
If a promise made during courtship is not fulfilled after the marriage has begun, there is no guarantee that other promises that were made will come to fruition. To say nothing and assume that everything will work out is a problematic tactical maneuver that is just asking for trouble.
It is wiser, perhaps, to acknowledge that the relationship is failing and floundering, based on the unfulfilled promises, because that’s the only way to engage and intervene to get the relationship back on track.
The point is to not deny red flags and warning signs, to not ignore the flaws in the relationship that have been uncovered, but rather to deal with them in order to repair the relationship and to encourage and, hopefully, to insure that future promises are kept.
In regard to President Obama, I’ll use the current Health Care Reform legislation as an example of how he has failed the American people up to now:
Whether you like a public option or not is irrelevant. When Barack Obama courted the American people, when he was trying to engender trust with us such that we would enter into a relationship with him, i.e. elect him, he promised and campaigned for a public option.
Once the relationship was solidified, once he was elected, he didn’t aggressively push for it to happen, and the other day he denied every having it as part of his campaign platform, despite that fact that he’s on video doing exactly that. This is clearly a misrepresentation of the truth.
To avoid taking responsibility for campaign promises is a major red flag and warning sign we should all be paying attention to, particularly from a person who campaigned for transparency and truth telling in government.
What President Obama has done, in this example, is politics as usual and business as usual, regardless of what benefits may accrue from the health care bill that is finally passed.
Truth be told, the health care reform bill we end up with may be laudatory in some respects, but it is likely to fall short of what it could have been had President Obama fought for the American people the same way he fought to get elected.
How President Obama handled health care reform is a red flag and warning sign that this is how he is going to deal with all his campaign promises, and that we are not going to get what we thought we were getting when we elected him President.
Rather than sit back, say nothing critical and give him more time before expressing our concerns about the decisions he’s making that will dramatically affect all of our lives, perhaps it’s our responsibility to speak out and express our dissatisfaction, with the hope that by doing so we can get him back on the path of real change we can believe in.
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I'm not sure of the point you're making. Please clarify so I can respond... thanks.
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I think you write off President Obama much too quickly. This President came into office with these problems created by the Bush crime family:
1 Iraq war
2 Afghanistan
3 Worst financial crisis since Great Depression
4 Gitmo
5 Global warming
6 Health care crisis
7 Underfunded, understaffed FDA
8 Mismanaged, criminal Environmental Protection Agency
9 Military pushed to the breaking point.
10 Rest of world disgusted with the U.S. government
And those are just some of the problems.
He has been in office one year. He has accomplished many things in his first year in office.
Is he perfect, no. But to just dismiss him is naive and ignorant of what he is up against, which includes a group of his own party (blue dogs) who have derailed health care reform.
A president without solid support in the Senate is severly handicapped. Add the financial might of corporate America and you begin to see what the President is up against.
And who, by the way, do you think would be doing a better job than Obama?