Change we can all believe in, Obama’s foreign policy

May 14th, 2008 by everett

D’oh! Obamessiah choked on his vast knowledge of foreign policy when speaking to the faithful hordes in Missouri:

Barack Obama visited rural Cape Girardeau, Missouri yesterday.
During his speech he talked about the need for more Arabic speakers in Afghanistan.
Obama insisted:

“If they are all in Iraq, then its harder for us to use them in Afghanistan.”
Truly.
The problem with this thinking is…
Afghans don’t speak Arabic.
They speak Dari and Pashto.

Gatewaypundit has the video. MSNBC couldn’t be reached for comment because they were in the throes of continual Obamagasms.

Breaking down the Obama spin on his snobbery

April 12th, 2008 by everett

Ed Morrissey has the best breakdown on Obama’s aloof, elitist statement at a San Francisco fundraiser last weekend:

Let’s break this statement into its component insults:

“[T]hey cling to guns…” Cling to guns? Americans have “clung” to guns since the founding of the Republic. It’s such a core value to this nation that its founders placed it second on the Bill of Rights, right after freedom of speech and religion. Speaking of which …
“or [they cling to] religion …” People don’t become religious because the economy hits a few bumps in the road. Obama may have chosen his religion based on politics, but most people follow a religion out of a deeper sense of spirituality. I can’t think of a more condescending and contemptuous analysis of religious dedication than this statement.
“or [they cling to] antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment…” Small-town voters are bigots and xenophobes; there’s no other way to read the first part of this statement. The second part, about them being “anti-immigrant”, is a non-sequitur. They may be anti-illegal immigrant, but that’s a far different issue. Obama offers no proof that small-town voters are xenophobes, but the Frisco audience didn’t demand any, either. It’s part of their own bigotry that makes them see middle America in those terms.
“or [they cling to] anti-trade sentiment …” And this is just jaw-droppingly hypocritical. This comes from the same candidate who opposes the Colombian free-trade agreement and wants to throw NAFTA out the window. Who’s clinging to anti-trade sentiment? Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Big Labor.

It would be difficult to be any more condescending or insulting in so many ways to so many voters in a single sentence. It reveals a deeply elitist and shockingly callow candidate. It’s the “Let them eat cake” of 2008.

Spot on analysis. Obama wants to paint small-town America as out-of-touch xenophobic gun-toting religious racists. Instead, he paints himself as an elite snob, and he’s got a pattern developing that supports my opinion. He remarked about the price of arugula at Whole Foods while in Iowa - where there are no Whole Foods to be found. He tried connect with the common man by showing off his bowling skills - and scored a 37. Then, while campaigning in Philly, he opts for rare imported Spanish ham instead of the traditional cheesesteak.

Now he bags on small-town America, making an emergent picture grow ever more clear of Obama as yet another Limousine Liberal claiming to know what’s best for the rest of us.

Senator Obama on China, Tibet, and the Olympics

April 9th, 2008 by everett

Note to Senator McCain’s campaign: This is a point that can be exploited, and rightly should, when it comes to Senator Obama:

The junior Senator from Illinois has a particularly tricky balancing act when it comes to the subject of the Olympics: Chicago is vying to host the 2016 games and one of Obama’s top campaign advisors and close friends, Valerie Jarrett, is the vice chair of Chicago’s bid committee.

Obombastic remarks get checked

April 8th, 2008 by everett

As Glenn said, “Tempting the YouTube Gods and facing their wrath“:

Here’s the original 100 years comment (you can go up to about the 4 minute mark), also on YouTube:

If you think McCain is talking about a 100 Years War, you are incapable of basic English comprehension.

On Waterboarding and Congress’s cowardice

November 2nd, 2007 by everett

Senate Democrats seem to have realized that by allowing the confirmation of the nominee for Attorney General to go through, they would take away a talking point for Democratic candidates. Where they thought him kosher during his hearings, they now think him the next most-evil thing to Satan’s right-hand. Now they want him to declare waterboarding a form of torture and therefore illegal. The man is not holding office and they want his statement on paper so they can wave it around and use it in the upcoming campaign season. Mukasey’s denouncement of torture would provide ample ammunition for MoveOn ads for the next year. Won’t those be just peachy?

How did Senate Democrats get to this holier-than-thou position on Mukasey where they are horrified and disgusted with waterboarding? By not being so repelled with waterboarding in the past, that’s how. In 2004, Chuck Schumer had this to say about waterboarding:

I think there are probably very few people in this room or in America who would say that torture should never ever be used, particularly if thousands of lives are at stake. . . . It is easy to sit back in the armchair and say that torture can never be used, but when you are in the foxhole it is a very different deal. And I respect, I think we all respect the fact that the President is in the foxhole every day.

Senator and Presidential candidate Obama, in the September 26th debate, appeared to want to have his cake and eat it, too: (the mp3 of this statement is here.)

Barack Obama responded by declaring that we cannot “have the president of the United States state as a matter of policy that there is a loophole or an exception where we would sanction torture.” He then shifted, in the very same breath, to state that “there are going to be all sorts of hypotheticals, an emergency situation, and I will make that judgment at that time.” In other words, he wants to preserve the very same loophole for which he lambastes President Bush.

According to the linked Wall Street Journal story above, Congress had two chances in the past to outlaw waterboarding and failed to do so each time:

Congress has twice had the chance to ban or criminalize waterboarding, but it declined to do so in both the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 and the Military Commissions Act of 2006. And not for lack of trying: In debating the Military Commissions Act, Ted Kennedy offered a detailed amendment that specifically prohibited waterboarding, as well as other coercive interrogation methods; it lost on the Senate floor, 46-53.

Why the outcry to make Mukasey issue a de facto ruling when it is unable to do so through the proper legislative method? If Congress is unable to pass legislation in the open, public method allowed by the Constitution, then it should not try to bypass itself through a condition of one man’s confirmation.

Ed Morrissey has an informative post on this topic that raises the possibiliy that waterboarding could be torture, if not performed under the carefully monitored conditions where it is used in SERE (Search, Evade, Resistance, Escape) training. Which raises the obvious question, what couldn’t be considered torture if not performed properly?