Editorial: Obama's rapid hope loss

| More

published: Wed, 18 Nov, 2009

MCT
photo credit: MCT

Well, Mr. President, it was good while it lasted. But this week transformed our patient, moon-eyed gaze into an expectant glare. The trip across Asia demonstrated the United States’ declining global influence, and that does not leave much optimism for domestic matters.

When voters, including many college students, elected President Barack Obama, many thought they were creating the Utopian States of America. The new USA would bring health care to all citizens, regain lost prestige on the world stage and summon Captain Planet to save a wheezing Earth.

One year later, the Magic 8 Ball says, “Outlook not so good.”

Today is the 146th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. If Obama ever wants to scratch the legacy of his presidential idol, he needs to work a little harder.

The United States has waning clout overseas, and, both domestically and internationally, Obama has been deflated on issue after issue — but never worse than this week in China.

He foolishly snubbed the Dalai Lama in hopes of setting a good tone for negotiations with Chinese president Hu Jintao. According to The New York Times, Obama avoided contact with “Chinese liberals, free press advocates and even average Chinese.”

These are the acts of a president who knows the United States does not have much leverage left. Yet for all these concessions, Obama did not get any tangible results from his talk with Jintao. Realistically, China doesn’t have to give the United States anything, because the United States owes China a lot of money for two wars, bailouts, stimuli, tax cuts and more. The national debt at press time was $12 trillion, according to U.S. Debt Clock.

Earlier in the week, Japan called for “more equal” relations with the United States and a relocation of Marines stationed in Okinawa.

Meanwhile, Obama admitted that the Guantanamo Bay prisoner facility will not be closed by January, his original deadline for closure. Iran is now refusing to send uranium abroad for enrichment, defying a deal negotiated with the United States. Israel is ignoring the White House and expanding settlements, and senators in Obama’s own party are planning to block debate on health care.

The one thing Obama and world leaders agreed upon was that they wouldn’t agree on anything binding at the upcoming United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen.

It’s been a bad year.

Obama is losing prestige fast — the Gallup daily tracking poll shows that his approval rating dropped from 68 percent in January to 50 percent currently. This is going to make every policy objective much harder to accomplish.

However, the blame cannot be placed solely on Obama. He can’t sign legislation that Congress doesn’t send to him. The debts and obligations were run up before his inauguration. The United States has been getting weaker — a decline exacerbated by an exhausted military and lingering recession — and now other countries are piling on.

Considering Obama was handed the Oval Office keys with a roll of duct tape, he is doing an adequate job.

A bigger problem is that student voters got hyper-hoped. We overdosed and now we’re crashing.

Obama promised many lofty accomplishments in a short time span, and such massive progression was never going to happen immediately. Citizens should not be mad that Obama is breaking promises, but much like the moral in a “West Wing” episode, they should be mad that Obama made promises he could never keep.

And anyone who believed the campaign rhetoric should be mad at themselves for falling for it.

Comments

Let's see where President

Let's see where President Obama stands after he announces his decision on the Pentagon's troop surge in Afghanistan. It's not surprising to see that our hopes are deflating like punctured balloons, which, as you know, were blown up not only by a number of factors including Senator Obama's 'change' rhetoric but also by our desire to erase eight years of failed international and domestic policies under President Bush's regime. His weight as the Commander in Chief seems nil as the war hawks are still pushing for more troops, more spending, more war; and his inclusion and power in his own party seems spurious as the Republicans, the minority, are pushing the Democrats around as they did a few years ago. The president right now has a lot of work to do. He has a chance to turn this around, though, by directing the health care debate instead of getting hurt by it; he also has some time to consider wiser options for our Afghanistan debacle. PEACE.


Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.

Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.


"And anyone who believed the

"And anyone who believed the campaign rhetoric should be mad at themselves for falling for it"

Actually, you should be forced to pay for every last dime of the $2T in new debt piled up under OBammy and the Trillions more in new debt to pay for healthcare and the obaination called Cap and Tax.

But at least I am glad that you recognize that you were idiots and fell for an empty suit.


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options


CAPTCHA
Are you human? (we've been getting a lot of spam lately...)
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters (without spaces) shown in the image.

Right Sidebar

MULTIMEDIA

Having an awesome spring break


published: Thu, 4 Mar, 2010

Students share why their spring break will be awesome — or not so awesome.


Mysteries in a chemistry lab


published: Mon, 1 Mar, 2010

Go on a virtual tour of a chemistry lab and find out why everyone might start talking about metal-organic frameworks in the near future.





Centennial Celebration