Obama’s growing disdain for American Worker
By Joseph Curl-The Washington
Times
They say that politics stops at the water's edge, but apparently, that doesn't apply to President Obama, as so many things apparently don't.
They say that politics stops at the water's edge, but apparently, that doesn't apply to President Obama, as so many things apparently don't.
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The
president, jaunting around the world as America 's
economy crumbles and Congress lumbers along, leaderless, dropped into a high
school in Australia .
Talking to the Aussie kids, he said America 's public school students
have "fallen behind" them in math and science. And he said in the U.S. , many
children don't get the "support they need when they're very young" so
they're "already behind" when they enter elementary school.
Of course,
that doesn't apply to the president's and first lady's daughters. There was no
chance the One Percent Couple were going to send their own children to a public
school in the District of Columbia ;
they're off at a private school that costs $30,000 per child per year.
But that
is what Mr. Obama - the president of the United
States - thinks about the state of education in America . And we
Americans should just get used to it. Our president now travels around the
world to pronounce the end of the American era, kowtow to foreign leaders by
saying the U.S.
is no longer the singular force in the world, and essentially disrespect
everything that has made this great country so great.
While the
Nobel Prize winner courts the world, looking for lost love, he holds a special
disdain for the working American. Now, mind you, this from a guy who has never
held down a real job: from community organizer to Illinois
state senator to U.S.
senator to president, taxpayers have been paying his salary since the
mid-1990s.
In the
past three months, his real feelings about the state of the U.S. economy
have come out and, more important, just who's to blame for it. You won't be
surprised: It's YOU.
But before
that, this. In 1979, with the energy market exploding, interest rates soaring
and gas lines growing, President Carter took to the airwaves to deliver what
came to be his most famous speech.
"I
want to talk to you right now about a fundamental threat to American democracy.
... I do not refer to the outward strength of America , a nation that is at peace
tonight everywhere in the world, with unmatched economic power and military
might. The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways. It is a crisis of
confidence. It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit
of our national will. We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the
meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our
nation," the one-term president said.
Although
Mr. Carter never said "malaise," the word has forever since defined
the speech. With Americans looking for leadership, begging for it, the
president came on television and blamed - Them.
Fast-forward
32 years to the New Jimmy Carter. Mr. Obama has decided to travel the country
on his taxpayer-funded 747 to tell the taxpayers that they're doing a terrible
job, that they just have to do more - and do it better. Sure, he blames Congress
for the continuing gridlock over the economy (for him, there is no such thing
as the bully pulpit), but he wants it to be known far and wide that it is the
American worker who has so heinously let down his nation.
Sometimes,
he even disses Americans while campaigning for their votes, as he did in
September during a TV interview. "The way I think about it is, you know,
this is a great, great country that had gotten a little soft and, you know, we
didn't have that same competitive edge that we needed over the last couple of
decades. We need to get back on track," he said in Florida .
In
October, the president, collecting gobs of cash from loaded supporters, once
again targeted the working man (not, of course, the white-collar throng
gathered in, where else, San Francisco , but the
blue-collar worker who actually built America ). "We have lost our
ambition, our imagination, and our willingness to do the things that built the Golden Gate Bridge ,"
he said as House Democratic Leader Nancy
Pelosi no doubt nodded, sipping her chardonnay.
Then, this
month, Mr. Obama did it again overseas (well, it was Hawaii ,
but the president apparently thought he was abroad because he said, "Here
in Asia ...").
"We've
been a little bit lazy, I think, over the past couple of decades. We've kind of
taken for granted. 'Well, people will want to come here' and we aren't out
there hungry, selling America
and trying to attract new business into America ," he said at the Asian
economic summit.
So, there
you have it: The American worker has lost his "ambition [and]
imagination," is "lazy" and has gone "a bit soft."
Spoken
like a true one-term president.
Joseph Curl covered the White House and
politics for a decade for The Washington
Times. He can be reached at jcurl@washingtontimes.com.
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