Posted by
Oscar De Los Santos and Kelly L. Goodridge on Wednesday, October 21, 2009 3:12:16 PM
It’s been over two months since General McChrystal, our top commander in Afghanistan, put out the call for more troops. President Barack Hussein Obama continues to hem and haw and hold endless meetings to discuss the issue. Maybe he’s too busy having parties with J-Lo and friends, compiling his enemies list, pushing healthcare, playing B ball and campaigning for fellow Dems to worry about such trivialities as warfare. Meanwhile, things get worse abroad and more of our soldiers are paying the highest of price for an indecisive commander-in-chief.
Obama’s stalling is a perfect example of his methodology: vacillate and ignore a problem or fixate on discussion rather than action. It’s inertia vs. movement.
President George W. Bush was all about action and movement. People denigrated his cowboy diplomacy but he acted in the best interests of his country and those at risk.
Obama is standing still. He’s acting as if he were posing for an oil painting while America suffers. He seems more interested in his celebrity status than the people he was elected to govern and protect.
When we do see Obama move, it’s to advance his personal legacy. Consider that he still claims to have put an end to torture in the context of military interrogations when we never advocated it. Consider that he continues to work to close Gitmo and bring terrorists to American soil. (The Constitutional rights of U.S. citizens are under attack on a daily basis with Obama and his Marxist and Mao-loving camp, even as known terrorists will be given constitutional rights and tried in American courts. OK imagines that so much of the information that could convict the terrorists will need to be omitted during their trials due to national security. In other words, it's hard to feel confident that justice will be served.)
And Obama promises to make Cap and Trade a reality. This on the heels of growing evidence that Al Gore's global warming is a hoax (and a profitable one that’s made the ex-vice president rich in spite of thousands of scientists who counter the issue and want to debate Gore on the issue; he refuses. He even had a reporter’s microphone cut when the questions concerning discrepancies in An Inconvenient Truth grew too warm and inconvenient).
Moreover, Obama promises to make national healthcare come to pass. This is yet another power grab designed to dismantle the greatest healthcare system in the world.
In other words, when it comes to radically changing our country – for the worse – Obama hops to the task with a lilt in his step. But when it comes to directing necessary attention to foreign policy and winning a war, he checks out.
How’s this for cowboy diplomacy: “the strategic nuclear power of the United States has been so greatly modernized and expanded in the last 1,000 days, by the rapid production and deployment of the most modern missile systems, that any and all potential aggressors are clearly confronted now with the impossibility of strategic victory – and the certainty of total destruction – if by reckless attack they should ever force upon us the necessity of a strategic reply.”
Who spoke those words? No one, actually – but President John Fitzgerald Kennedy would have, if he had lived long enough to make it to the Dallas Trade Mart the afternoon he was assassinated. The differences between John Kennedy and Barack Obama – between being a Democrat in the Kennedy era and being a Democrat in the 21st century – are profound. JFK spoke often of peace in the world, but he understood the price that had to be paid in order to attain it. His administration engaged in numerous clandestine activities designed to ensure America’s freedom and safety. Obama’s vision of a pacifist world, on the other hand, is pure fantasy - a utopian dream. Ultimately, it’s about ignoring a problem and hoping it goes away, rather than acting to fix it.
Obama’s M.O. also involves using the lamestream media to set up smokescreens and divert attention from a lack of decision on Afghanistan and our country’s most pressing issues. We hear more about balloon boy hoaxes than about energy bills that will kill our already depleted bank accounts. We hear about Obama’s vow to end “don’t ask, don’t tell” in the military while our soldiers are imperiled abroad. We hear about how baaaaaaaad FOX News is, how Obama will not grant it any interviews until at least 2010 and how it isn’t a true news facility. The latter from Obama advisor David Axelrod, who also told ABC that FOX is undeserving of being treated as a true news organization: “the bigger thing is that other news organizations, like yours, ought not to treat them that way, and we're not going to treat them that way” (Ann Sanner, “White House Continues Attack on Fox News,” October 19, 2009, http://www.gopusa.com/news/2009/october/1019_wh_fox.shtml).
Here’s another line from John Kennedy’s undelivered speech: “If we are strong, our strength will speak for itself. If we are weak, words will be of no help.”
Thankfully, more and more Americans – including many Obama supporters – are getting tired of the endless wordplay. They’re growing exasperated with the stalling and smoke and mirrors. They comprehend that Obama is more about inaction than action. The president’s approval rating has hit a new low. Obama's loyalties or lack thereof are drawing attention. Fewer are laughing when the birthers cry out that being a Natural Born Citizen is an important issue for U.S. presidents. More Americans are questioning why Obama didn't embrace his Muslim root system until after he was elected.
Our soldiers – indeed, all Americans – need more than words and silence from you, Mr. President. We need the kind of action that JFK would have spoken of had he lived to deliver his Trade Mart speech in Dallas: “In this administration also it has been necessary at times to issue specific warnings – warnings that we could not stand by and watch the Communists conquer Laos by force, or intervene in the Congo, or swallow West Berlin, or maintain offensive missiles on Cuba. But while our goals were at least temporarily obtained in these and other instances, our successful defense of freedom was due not to the words we used, but to the strength we stood ready to use on behalf of the principles we stand ready to defend.”
We need actions from you, Obama. Weeks ago.