Thursday, March 8, 2012

Re: The Incomplete Greatness of Barack Obama

In his first three years in office, Barack Obama has gotten more done
-- ending the Iraq War, turning around Detroit, repealing Don't Ask,
Don't Tell, averting another Great Depression
---
giving O credit for these things is deceptive and insane.
He's done his best to promote socialism and minorities ... just like
we knew he would.

http://www.stupidvideos.com/video/politics/Obama_the_Monkey_Boy/#207020

On Mar 8, 9:53 am, Tommy News <tommysn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The Incomplete Greatness of Barack Obama
> In his first three years in office, Barack Obama has gotten more done
> -- ending the Iraq War, turning around Detroit, repealing Don't Ask,
> Don't Tell, averting another Great Depression -- than any president in
> decades. Yet polls show that most Americans think he's achieved very
> little. That gap between perception and reality, which could make all
> the difference in this November's election, is the subject of the
> cover story in the March/April issue of the Washington Monthly, by
> Editor in Chief Paul Glastris.
>
> The problem for Obama, Glastris explains, is that while liberals
> measure him against their hopes, and conservatives against their
> fears, few have evaluated him by the more relevant yardstick: how his
> deeds compare to those of other presidents. By this measure, Obama
> does extraordinarily well, and not just in terms of quantity. True,
> his biggest and most controversial accomplishments, like health care
> reform and the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, have been widely
> criticized as crimped, compromised, slow to take effect, and
> vulnerable to being overturned. But so too, notes Glastris, were many
> of history's most important and lasting presidential achievements,
> from Social Security to the GI Bill.
>
> Taking a deep dive into the full range of this administration's
> policies, Glastris concludes that historians in the future will likely
> consider Obama as one of America's great presidents -- if he gets
> re-elected and can protect his legacy from Republicans who would
> dismantle it. But Obama's striking inability to speak up for his own
> record has put him in an unenviable spot: in order to win that crucial
> second term, he must first convince voters that he has a substantial
> record of achievement to defend in the first place.
>
> Read "The Incomplete Greatness of Barack Obama."
>
> Plus: "Obama's Top 50 Accomplishments"
>
> More:http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/magazine/march_april_2012/features/t...
>
> --
> Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
> Have a great day,
> Tommy
>
> --
> Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
> Have a great day,
> Tommy

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