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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
22. What
Wed Jul 10, 2013, 02:02 PM
Jul 2013

"I don't care whether some of you don't believe it, but I feel more sorrowful than anything else about my changed sentiments toward the President."

...I don't understand, is that most of things you listed were known years ago. When did your "sentiments" change? The fact that the President is advancing some policies that you disagree with, doesn't mean he has changed.

President Obama is one of the best Presidents this country has seen, and he operates like all President's in the scope of a vast bureaucracy, and in this current climate, massive obstruction.

I don't understand the notion of focusing on the negatives to justify withdrawing support from a President who has done a lot of good and just recently won re-election by a decisive margin.

For every disappointing claim, I can cite extremely positive achievements to counter the "pot smoker," "Community Organizer," "trade" and "rule of law" negatives.

The Stimulus.

Obama’s stimulus package aids people with disabilities

By Mike Ervin,

<...>

The first is a one-time additional payment of $250 to people who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and other selected Social Security benefits. Many SSI recipients live on less than $10,000 a year, and so this additional income will make a significant difference.

Second, the stimulus package also allocates $500 million to help the Social Security Administration reduce the processing time for claims and appeals decisions. During the Bush years, the number of people awaiting final determination on their Social Security disability claims more than doubled to 755,000. Many were waiting two years or more for determination, without income. Obama’s allocation should help end this disgrace.

<...>

More creatively, Obama provided $140 million to support centers for independent living. These nonresidential centers are run by people with disabilities and are focal points for services and advocacy. There are hundreds of these centers throughout the United States, providing thousands of good jobs for people with disabilities and others in their communities.

The stimulus package will also invest in the future by providing $540 million for vocational rehabilitation programs, which assist people with disabilities in obtaining higher education and jobs.

- more -

http://progressive.org/mag/mpervin030509.html

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act included a number of provisions of particular concern to people with disabilities.

•The Act included $500 million to help the Social Security Administration reduce its backlog in processing disability applications;
•The Act supplied $12.2 billion in funding to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA);
•The Act also provided $87 billion to states to bolster their Medicaid programs during the downturn; and,
•The Act provided over $500 million in funding for vocational rehabilitation services to help with job training, education and placement.
•The Act provided over $140 million in funding for independent living centers across the country.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/issues/disabilities


Before the health care law, the President signed the expansion of CHIP.

Obama Signs Children’s Health Insurance Bill

By ROBERT PEAR

WASHINGTON — The House gave final approval on Wednesday to a bill extending health insurance to millions of low-income children, and President Obama signed it this afternoon, in the first of what he hopes will be many steps to guarantee coverage for all Americans.

<...>

The roll call ended a two-year odyssey for the child health legislation, which President George W. Bush adamantly opposed on the ground it would lead to “government-run health care for every American.”

<...>

In a major change, the bill allows states to cover certain legal immigrants — namely, children under 21 and pregnant women — as well as citizens.

Until now, legal immigrants have generally been barred from Medicaid and the State Children’s Health Insurance Program for five years after they enter the United States. States will now be able to cover those immigrants without the five-year delay.

- more -

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/05/us/politics/05health.html


The health care law.



Who Benefits from the ACA Medicaid Expansion?

A key element of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the expansion of Medicaid to nearly all individuals with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL) ($15,415 for an individual; $26,344 for a family of three in 2012) in 2014. Medicaid currently provides health coverage for over 60 million individuals, including 1 in 4 children, but low parent eligibility levels and restrictions in eligibility for other adults mean that many low income individuals remain uninsured. The ACA expands coverage by setting a national Medicaid eligibility floor for nearly all groups. By 2016, Medicaid, along with the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), will cover an additional 17 million individuals, mostly low-income adults, leading to a significant reduction in the number of uninsured people.

Medicaid does not cover many low-income adults today. To qualify for Medicaid prior to health reform, individuals had to meet financial eligibility criteria and belong to one of the following specific groups: children, parents, pregnant women, people with severe disability, and seniors. Non-disabled adults without dependent children were generally excluded from Medicaid unless the state obtained a waiver to cover them. The federal government sets minimum eligibility levels for each category, which are up to 133% FPL for pregnant women and children but are much lower for parents (under 50% FPL in most states). States have the option to expand coverage to higher incomes, but Medicaid eligibility levels for adults remain very limited (Figure 1). Seventeen states limit Medicaid coverage to parents earning less than 50 percent of poverty ($9,545 for a family of 3), and only eight states provide full Medicaid coverage to other low-income adults. State-by state Medicaid eligibility levels for parents and other adults are available here.



The ACA expands Medicaid to a national floor of 138% of poverty ($15,415 for an individual; $26,344 for a family of three). The threshold is 133% FPL, but 5% of an individual’s income is disregarded, effectively raising the limit to 138% FPL. The expansion of coverage will make many low-income adults newly eligible for Medicaid and reduce the current variation in eligibility levels across states. To preserve the current base of coverage, states must also maintain minimum eligibility levels in place as of March 2010, when the law was signed. This requirement remains in effect until 2014 for adults and 2019 for children. Under the ACA, states also have the option to expand coverage early to low-income adults prior to 2014. To date, eight states (CA, CT, CO, DC, MN, MO, NJ and WA) have taken up this option to extend Medicaid to adults. Nearly all of these states previously provided solely state- or county-funded coverage to some low-income adults. By moving these adults to Medicaid and obtaining federal financing, these states were able to maintain and, in some cases, expand coverage. Together these early expansions covered over half a million adults as of April 2012.

Eligibility requirements for the elderly and persons with disabilities do not change under reform although some individuals with disabilities may become newly eligible under the adult expansion. Lawfully residing immigrants will be eligible for the Medicaid expansion, although many will continue to be subject to a five-year waiting period before they may enroll in coverage. States have the option to eliminate this five-year waiting period for children and pregnant women but not for other adults. Undocumented immigrants will remain ineligible for Medicaid.

- more -

http://www.kff.org/medicaid/quicktake_aca_medicaid.cfm


Arizona Gov. Brewer Opts For ‘Obamacare’ Medicaid Expansion

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) on Monday said the state will join the Medicaid expansion under the new federal health care law, the Associated Press reported.

Her announcement came as a surprise to many observers, and it distinguishes Brewer from other Republican governors. The Supreme Court's ruling last summer on the Affordable Care Act, widely known as "Obamacare," made the Medicaid expansion under the federal law optional and state leaders such as Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R), Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) and South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) have already opted out.

But in her State of the State address on Monday, Brewer rejected the notion that a rejection of the expansion would reduce the federal government's deficit.

http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entry/arizona-gov-brewer-opts-for-obamacare-medicaid-expansion


HHS Ruling Helps Workers But Spells Trouble for Employer Mandate
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023207327



LGBT rights.



http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2012/05/09/481147/obama-marriage-2/

Pres.Obama urging state lawmakers to legalize gay marriage in Illinois
http://blogs.suntimes.com/sweet/2012/12/obama_urging_state_lawmakers_t.html


The End of the Iraq War: A Timeline



http://www.whitehouse.gov/iraq


Osama bin Laden brought to justice




Rescuing the auto industry.



<...>

Before the domestic auto rescue, President Obama made$5 billion in Federal loans available to small auto parts suppliers:

The Treasury Department announced a $5 billion program to aid struggling auto-parts suppliers, raising the likelihood the government will extend more aid to General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC.

What a lot of folks, including politicians, don't seem to realize is that GM and Chrysler merely ASSEMBLE cars. They don't make the parts.

<...>

Obama rescued the Domestic Auto Industry.

But BEFORE that. BEFORE that. BEFORE he sent the domestic auto industry into structuered bankruptcy, he made sure the LITTLE GUYS....the SMALL manufacturing companies that make SPRINGS or BOLTS or LATCHES or TINY WIDGETS were able to stay afloat so that when GM got back on its feet again it didn't have to look to CHINA or MEXICO to make those parts because the previous suppliers had gone belly up.

- more -

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/02/29/1069618/-What-Happened-Before-the-Rescue-of-the-Domestic-Auto-Industry


Report: Wall Street’s Opposition to Dodd-Frank Reforms Echoes Its Resistance to New Deal Financial Safeguards

Bedrock Consumer Protections Once Were Flogged as ‘Exceedingly Dangerous,’ ‘Monstrous Systems’ That Would ‘Cripple’ the Economy

WASHINGTON, D.C. – As the nation approaches the first anniversary of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, opponents are claiming that the new measure is extraordinarily damaging, especially to Main Street. But industry’s alarmist rhetoric bears striking resemblance to the last time it faced sweeping new safeguards: during the New Deal reforms. The parallels between the language used both then and now are detailed in a report released today by Public Citizen and the Cry Wolf Project.

In the decades since the Great Depression, Americans acknowledged the necessity of having safeguards in place to prevent another crash of the financial markets, including the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and laws requiring public companies to accurately disclose their financial affairs. Although these are now seen as bedrock protections when they were first introduced, Wall Street cried foul, the new report, “Industry Repeats Itself: The Financial Reform Fight,” found.

“The business community’s wildly inaccurate forecasts about the New Deal reforms devalue the credibility of the ominous predictions they are making today,” said Taylor Lincoln, research director of Public Citizen’s Congress Watch division and author of the report. “If history comes close to repeating itself, industry is going to look very silly for its hand-wringing over Dodd-Frank when people look back.”

<...>

In fact, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is designed to prevent another Wall Street crash, which really made it tough on everyone by causing massive job loss and severely hurting corner butchers and bakers, as well as retirees, families with mortgages and others. The Dodd-Frank law increases transparency (particularly in derivatives markets); creates a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to ensure that consumers receive straightforward information about financial products and to police abusive practices; improves corporate governance; increases capital requirements for banks; deters particularly large financial institutions from providing incentives for employees to take undue risks; and gives the government the ability to take failed investment institutions into receivership, similar to the FDIC’s authority regarding commercial banks. Much of it has yet to be implemented.

- more -

http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2011/07/12-0


Lisa Jackson to Leave EPA: Earthjustice Statement

Statement from Earthjustice Vice President of Litigation Patti Goldman:

“America owes Lisa Jackson a debt of gratitude for her work to protect the public's health from polluters and their allies in Congress. For her efforts to clean up pollution and better protect the environment and public health, she faced a steady barrage from members of Congress and the industrial polluters who back them. Her detractors are the same people who told us taking lead out of gasoline in the 1970's would break the economy and that taking acid out of acid rain in the 1990's would ruin the country. In both cases, the environment and economy were strengthened and this is the approach Lisa Jackson took. There is a lot of unfinished business started by Jackson that the next EPA director will need to attend to. Whoever it is, they'll need the support of the President and they'll need to be ready for a non-stop barrage of attacks from the chemical, industrial and fossil fuel industries and their allies in Congress.

“After 17 years of Earthjustice litigation it was Lisa Jackson who finally regulated mercury and other toxic pollutants coming from power plants. After a decade of litigation from Earthjustice and others, it was Lisa Jackson who supported and implemented regulations aimed at curbing greenhouse gases. After more than a decade of Earthjustice litigation it was Lisa Jackson who finally implemented the first regulation of mercury from cement kilns all over the country.”

http://earthjustice.org/news/press/2012/lisa-jackson-to-leave-epa-earthjustice-statement


Justice Is Served

By Laura W. Murphy

June 2011 marks the 40th anniversary of President Richard Nixon's declaration of a "war on drugs" — a war that has cost roughly a trillion dollars, has produced little to no effect on the supply of or demand for drugs in the United States, and has contributed to making America the world's largest incarcerator. Throughout the month, check back daily for posts about the drug war, its victims and what needs to be done to restore fairness and create effective policy.

Today is an exciting day for the ACLU and criminal justice advocates around the country. Following much thought and careful deliberation, the United States Sentencing Commission took another step toward creating fairness in federal sentencing by retroactively applying the new Fair Sentencing Act (FSA) guidelines to individuals sentenced before the law was enacted. This decision will help ensure that over 12,000 people — 85 percent of whom are African-Americans — will have the opportunity to have their sentences for crack cocaine offenses reviewed by a federal judge and possibly reduced.

This decision is particularly important to me because, as director of the ACLU's Washington Legislative Office, I have advocated for Congress and the sentencing commission to reform federal crack cocaine laws for almost 20 years. In 1993, the ACLU lead the coalition that convened the first national symposium highlighting the crack cocaine disparity entitled "The 100 to 1 Ratio: Racial Bias in Cocaine Laws." Now, 25 years after the first crack cocaine law was enacted in the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act, the sentencing commission has taken another step toward ending the racial and sentencing disparities that continue to exist in our criminal justice system.

By voting in favor of retroactivity, I am pleased that the commission chose justice over demagoguery and concluded that retroactivity was necessary to ensuring that the goals of the FSA were fully realized. It is important to remember that even with today's commission vote not every crack cocaine offender will have his or her sentence reduced. Judges are still required to determine whether a person qualifies for a retroactive reduction so, contrary to what some have said, this is not a "get out of jail free card."

- more -

http://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/justice-served

Chance at Freedom: Retroactive Crack Sentence Reductions For Up to 12,000 May Begin Today
http://www.aclu.org/blog/criminal-law-reform/chance-freedom-retroactive-crack-sentence-reductions-12000-may-begin-today


Here's a great clip from December 2010: Rachel Maddow on securing loose nuclear materials
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/26315908/vp/40859004

The START Treaty.

MADDOW: If the Senate ratifies the START Treaty tomorrow, it caps an astonishing period in American political history.

For the last two years, Democrats have held the White House as well as big majorities in both the House and the Senate. Their record of achievement in that time, even in the face of unified, at times totally random Republican opposition, Republican opposition even do things Republicans had proposed in the first place, unified Republican opposition even to their own ideas—their track record even in the face of that is historic.

Whether you agree or disagree with what Democrats have done in the first two years of President Obama‘s presidency, they have freaking done it. The Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act for women, expanding children‘s health insurance, new hate crimes legislation that they said could not be done, tobacco regulation, credit card reform, student loan reform, the stimulus - which in addition to helping pull this country back from the brink of a Great Depression was also the largest tax cut ever, the largest investment in clean energy ever, the single largest investment in education in our country ever.

There was also a little thing you may have heard of called health reform. Also, Wall Street reform, the improvements to the new G.I. bill, the most expansive food safety bill since the 1930s.

http://www.nbcnews.com/id/40898769/ns/msnbc_tv-rachel_maddow_show/


Trade:

In case you missed it: Good moves by the Obama administration
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1002540300

Transparency, Declassification, and the Obama Presidency

By Lee White

<...>

Steven Aftergood (Director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists and the publisher of the blog Secrecy News)

In retrospect, the Administration erred in making its early public statements promising unprecedented transparency. The President raised expectations so high that the ensuing disappointment was inevitable. The smarter move would have been to demonstrate openness in actions, not in words, and to exceed public expectations.

<...>

Thomas Blanton (Director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.)

There are obviously some differences of opinion on this subject. My own is that too often we conflate "the Obama administration" with actions of specific agencies or specific bureaucrats, when in fact the policy decision at the top has been pretty good, just stymied by ongoing bureaucratic obfuscation in the middle and the bottom. Or even worse, continuity by federal career employees of Bush policies that the White House has not succeeded in changing.

<...>

Anne Weismann (Chief Counsel for Citizen's for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington-CREW)

In my assessment, the administration's record on transparency is mixed. Without question, President Obama put strong, pro-transparency policies in place that really set the benchmark for a more open government. The problem has been in implementing those policies at the agency level. Agencies have been encouraged to make proactive disclosures, but they have shown little regard for the quality of and public interest in the information they are posting. And the administration has not provided them much guidance on this front.

<...>

Patrice McDermott (Executive Director of OpenTheGovernment.Org)

I think it is a very mixed bag. There are strong indications that the initiatives and efforts of the Obama Administration have begun to institutionalize changes in the attitudes of components of the Executive Branch, mostly in the area of domestic right-to-know. While the effectiveness of FOIA as a disclosure and accountability tool for the public continues to lag behind the promises the President and the Attorney General made, much more attention is being directed by agencies to improving the process, and agencies are putting more information out proactively (without requiring or waiting for a FOIA request)—and not just the usual stuff they want you to know. The greatest frustration on the domestic policy front has been the ongoing changes in policy personnel in the White House, creating problems of follow-through and consistency.

<...>

- more -

http://www.historians.org/Perspectives/issues/2012/1209/Transparency-Declassification-and-Obama-Presidency.cfm

Obama offers GOP an ambitious, progressive debt-reduction plan
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10021905787

Obama First POTUS in History to Publicly Support Divestment Movement
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023144219

New State Dept. Envoy Begins Work Of Closing Guantánamo

The new State Department special envoy for closing the United States military's detention center located at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba began the effort to shut down the polarizing prison camp, McClatchy reported Thursday.

Clifford Sloan, a former publisher of Slate magazine and a Washington attorney who’s worked in all three branches of government, embarked on a one-day tour of the prison facility, where he had discussions with military and medical personnel.

In a major national security speech in May, President Barack Obama vowed to close Gitmo, which he said has "become a symbol around the world for an America that flouts the rule of law." Obama has drawn criticism, mostly from the left, for failing to close the detention center during his first term in office, despite his 2008 campaign pledge to do so.

“President Obama has been very clear as he laid out the goal,and the objective is to close Guantánamo," Sloan told McClatchy. “Our marching orders are clear.”

http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entry/new-state-dept-envoy-begins-work-of-closing

ACLU Comment on Appointment of Envoy to Close Guantánamo
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023036083





Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I feel the same confusion as you, Cali. Myrina Jul 2013 #1
*sigh* Roy Rolling Jul 2013 #79
Beautifully Stated. bvar22 Jul 2013 #139
I think he can not do this: fasttense Jul 2013 #120
He's a fairly mainstream Democrat who's more pragmatic than ideological. geek tragedy Jul 2013 #2
Except that Democratic legislators are leading the fight against the drug war RainDog Jul 2013 #20
To be blunt, a black dude with a very public use geek tragedy Jul 2013 #38
I agree. but... RainDog Jul 2013 #78
That IS true...but Bonobo Jul 2013 #154
Far from mainstream - he is a far right ideologue perpetrating the values of the hoarding class, grahamhgreen Jul 2013 #52
The cartoon character you describe would geek tragedy Jul 2013 #59
I hear hs also kicks puppies competitively for distance and accuracy ... JoePhilly Jul 2013 #109
That gave me the best laugh I've had Skidmore Jul 2013 #118
LOL. Nah, just wants to starve our grannies is all. grahamhgreen Jul 2013 #147
I was going to say also..."mainstream"? Not by any measure. Safetykitten Jul 2013 #152
Remember the right wing mocking the left wing in 2008? JoePhilly Jul 2013 #107
If you read what his positions were in the 2008 campaign, virtually none of this geek tragedy Jul 2013 #110
That particular difference, small is it was, is one of my favorites. JoePhilly Jul 2013 #116
Of course, Hillary was right on the merits. Obama's position was more or less, we'll reduce costs geek tragedy Jul 2013 #123
Yup ... it does seem like some folks really weren't paying attention. JoePhilly Jul 2013 #124
From 2007: geek tragedy Jul 2013 #126
If I recall, that quote came ... JoePhilly Jul 2013 #129
Dodd, Biden and Clinton all tried to hit Obama with that language. geek tragedy Jul 2013 #131
Nor should anyone have been surprised when Obama JoePhilly Jul 2013 #132
"post a list of accomplishments, and its denounced." Jamaal510 Jul 2013 #141
Amen - and we need pragmatists treestar Jul 2013 #149
Well, the ACA is perhaps not the best example tularetom Jul 2013 #151
He did not give it away as you state treestar Jul 2013 #155
So you are telling me it's either still in the act or he fought mightily to keep it there tularetom Jul 2013 #162
It is not hard to connect the dots Harmony Blue Jul 2013 #3
Policy decisions have always been made behind closed doors and will be for the foreseeable future. n geek tragedy Jul 2013 #5
Which is exactly what he ran against. ie, he has no core. grahamhgreen Jul 2013 #53
sometimes when you move up you lose touch with what is important to the citizens. liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #4
Obama promise meter is still a pretty good guage uponit7771 Jul 2013 #6
Actually many of us can figure it out for ourselves. We don't need a "promise meter" to see it. Dawgs Jul 2013 #14
Thank god we have somebody to let us know what is forgivable and what isn't. renie408 Jul 2013 #29
I know what is unforgivable for me. Race to the Top. That is unforgivable. liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #47
Seriously? This trumps all other things for you, including the increasingly conservative bias on the renie408 Jul 2013 #81
Yes we all do have to draw a line somewhere, and it was a personal experience that drove that liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #87
I was going to say renie408 Jul 2013 #98
ohhh there is plenty of marching in lockstep around here frylock Jul 2013 #125
"Unforgivable." melodrama much? geek tragedy Jul 2013 #127
how's that bit about ending the "revolving door" going? nashville_brook Jul 2013 #103
How did a constitutional law professor end up with his policies? truebluegreen Jul 2013 #7
Can you call an adjunct a professor? Wasn't he just a part timer? Peregrine Took Jul 2013 #67
Yes, just a part-timer. And he may have been a volunteer lecturer, an unpaid part-timer who was AnotherMcIntosh Jul 2013 #71
That is certainly the most important aspect of my question truebluegreen Jul 2013 #100
You're ignorant to try to make this insult RainDog Jul 2013 #157
Do you believe that all professors agree with you on all subjects? treestar Jul 2013 #150
I think he's answered most of those questions in interviews. JaneyVee Jul 2013 #8
I've seen and heard interviews with him, and I don't believe he did. cali Jul 2013 #9
Questions like why he is so enthusiastic about eliminating the availability of medical marijuana rhett o rick Jul 2013 #28
President Eisenhower warned us long ago about... polichick Jul 2013 #10
That is one of two possibilities in my mind. Maybe there are scary ass invisible forces at work. GoneFishin Jul 2013 #27
I've thought about the snake oil thing too, and to some extent... polichick Jul 2013 #36
If that was the case, I still believe that bottle of snake oil was less damaging than... Amonester Jul 2013 #90
No argument here. GoneFishin Jul 2013 #119
This /\ renie408 Jul 2013 #32
boy ain't that the truth. The guy in the White House definitely is not the decider anymore. liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #41
I first noticed it when he laughed about legitimate questions from his base about pot legalization. Dawgs Jul 2013 #11
He just wants us to learn from the mistakes of his youth Fumesucker Jul 2013 #12
I think he wants to pass laws in the world that exists Recursion Jul 2013 #13
say what? that made no sense. cali Jul 2013 #17
We're not crushing global corporatism any time soon Recursion Jul 2013 #19
I think you're patently wrong. If that were so, we wouldn't see him appointing cali Jul 2013 #24
You will call whomever he appoints a corporatist Recursion Jul 2013 #161
Im so pissed off at the TPP thing that Im beside myself. bunnies Jul 2013 #15
Same here. And re: TPP, there is NO transparency. truedelphi Jul 2013 #72
Monsanto. bunnies Jul 2013 #84
It is strange, how Obama seems to have morphed into quinnox Jul 2013 #16
I actually believe that much of it is because he's a caring father. Dawgs Jul 2013 #18
maybe if he knew somone with glaucoma or AIDS or cancer who has benefited from liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #23
During the debates he compared himself to an old school Republican. pa28 Jul 2013 #50
he contradicted himself many times. Making many promises to many different groups. That liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #55
Is this close enough? GeorgeGist Jul 2013 #122
I didn't care for Go Vols Jul 2013 #138
Politics without priniciples is the foundation of the 3rd Way. Tierra_y_Libertad Jul 2013 #21
just a matter of poor spelling ChairmanAgnostic Jul 2013 #30
Yep. And the Father Knows Best wing of the party just love daddy. Tierra_y_Libertad Jul 2013 #35
What ProSense Jul 2013 #22
this stuff is just sad. do you ever post things in your own words without endless cali Jul 2013 #26
Well, I understand ProSense Jul 2013 #42
you just can't do it. you meaninglessly throw back my words cali Jul 2013 #48
its not a lack of writing skills galileoreloaded Jul 2013 #75
I do. Puglover Jul 2013 #160
Thread hijacking with a filibuster. AnotherMcIntosh Jul 2013 #31
you just hit the nail on the head. cali Jul 2013 #40
kinda reminds me of all that stuff OFA spews in their emails before they pitch you for money lol nt msongs Jul 2013 #70
Aaaiiieee! Its the attack of the links! quinnox Jul 2013 #37
Useless without a picture of the adorable White House dog NoOneMan Jul 2013 #39
stealing that one quinnox Jul 2013 #43
Hey now, that's one promise Obama actually kept leftstreet Jul 2013 #136
Ugh.. G_j Jul 2013 #54
I have the exact same feeling I had in the Clinton ..... Bonhomme Richard Jul 2013 #25
I'm not sure its relevant what he believes NoOneMan Jul 2013 #33
So in other words, in our current day, banana republic style of truedelphi Jul 2013 #74
The people get a turd-polisher that the majority of the people approve of NoOneMan Jul 2013 #80
Now, That is Transparent. Thanks for posting. Amonester Jul 2013 #96
No, I have zero on ignore. :) NoOneMan Jul 2013 #101
I agree with what you wrote here, and that Dream World was not the endah-dah-worl Amonester Jul 2013 #105
We knew everything we needed to 40 years ago to have that world NoOneMan Jul 2013 #111
I left the USA on May 18th 1979 for truedelphi Jul 2013 #135
There is no utopian world but there are socialist countries that get a hell of a lot more out liberal_at_heart Jul 2013 #112
I think the link below could be an explanation for what's going on: snappyturtle Jul 2013 #34
And it could well be. zeemike Jul 2013 #68
I'm right there with you, Cali. I am an intelligent person and I cannot make head nor tails out Nay Jul 2013 #44
It goes deeper than Holder or Obama Life Long Dem Jul 2013 #45
Cali, your voiced concerns have us all wondering and the single simple answer to all would seem: indepat Jul 2013 #46
I would like an explanation when one of Obama's upaloopa Jul 2013 #49
Right On Cal, it's very confusing! Radicalman Jul 2013 #51
His beliefs are irrelevant, he is employed by the elite to represent their interests. nt Demo_Chris Jul 2013 #56
Well said. Sad to see a man lose his core to unpricipled behavior, but such are small men. grahamhgreen Jul 2013 #58
It's a job, and he is well compensated for doing it. nt Demo_Chris Jul 2013 #60
In my view, as he said of Rmoney, Obama has no core. Or, he has a core, but it is antithetical to grahamhgreen Jul 2013 #57
His family background may hold the key. AnotherMcIntosh Jul 2013 #61
Are you suggesting that his grandfather was a 'British collaborator?' nt msanthrope Jul 2013 #86
I know I sound like a broken record but he does not work for US. MrSlayer Jul 2013 #62
I was thinking something similar when I was at the gym. I became disillusioned Cleita Jul 2013 #63
Obama has offered to relinquish some of the executive power Billy Pilgrim Jul 2013 #64
No one is calling him a tyrant. rhett o rick Jul 2013 #73
My point is, we'll see. Billy Pilgrim Jul 2013 #94
Obama claimed the power to execute U.S. citizens Maedhros Jul 2013 #89
I find him to be a complete enigma. Peregrine Took Jul 2013 #65
I think big money is such a huge part of our government now that he has to Flaxbee Jul 2013 #66
I felt it at Rick Warren. A thumb in the eye, a kidney punch. rhett o rick Jul 2013 #69
The Script for his administration was Written-On-the-Wall when he did this: bvar22 Jul 2013 #140
And it looks glum for 2016. THe Oligarch Cabal has us right where they want us. nm rhett o rick Jul 2013 #156
I'm not at all confused by this... RevStPatrick Jul 2013 #76
I don't think that your conspiracy theory is logical. totodeinhere Jul 2013 #88
Progress on the wedge issues yes. But not on $$$ issues. GoneFishin Jul 2013 #114
I agree, GF senseandsensibility Jul 2013 #146
K&R MotherPetrie Jul 2013 #77
Me too. He's clearly a different person than the man who ran for the office... ReRe Jul 2013 #82
The best way to judge him is by his actions Freddie Stubbs Jul 2013 #83
Here's a few things we know... raindaddy Jul 2013 #85
$$$$$ forestpath Jul 2013 #91
My feelings exactly, Cali. JDPriestly Jul 2013 #92
US reaction to 911 showed two things - what an incredible motivator fear is... NRaleighLiberal Jul 2013 #97
Agreed. JDPriestly Jul 2013 #99
You're not alone. But there's no sense in crying over spilled milk, hon. Zorra Jul 2013 #93
similarly confused, but sadly, not all that surprised - power, greed, money, politics. NRaleighLiberal Jul 2013 #95
this may go down as the worst "revolving door" White House yet nashville_brook Jul 2013 #102
I knew the fanatics would be the first to jump ship. aquart Jul 2013 #104
except I'm not remotely a fanatic and nor or most others here who share the sentiments cali Jul 2013 #117
Of course. aquart Jul 2013 #121
He sure isn't what he claimed to be, either time. And I don't buy that he sold out, as an excuse. SammyWinstonJack Jul 2013 #106
took the words right out of my mouth.... mike_c Jul 2013 #108
I wish I understood also. felix_numinous Jul 2013 #113
Washington has ALWAYS been WAY behind where the rest of the country wants to be.... Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2013 #115
"Despite being called Madame Obamahater, I'd vote for him again" ProSense Jul 2013 #128
The NSA and the MIC felix_numinous Jul 2013 #130
I believe Cheney threatened to eat his children. Or possibly space aliens are controlling .... Scuba Jul 2013 #133
consider what he was thrown into ellennelle Jul 2013 #134
Look at a billionaire Sec. of Commerce and torturer as FBI head, then Corruption Inc Jul 2013 #137
I have tried to keep believing but it is very hard when so many of the things I was hoping for do jwirr Jul 2013 #142
you misread him from the beginning. DCBob Jul 2013 #143
I'm going by his own words as candidate and Senator cali Jul 2013 #148
Actually he's done quite well keeping his campaign promises.. DCBob Jul 2013 #158
all campaign promises do not have equal weight. cali Jul 2013 #159
Sure, but defining the weights is the issue. DCBob Jul 2013 #163
Those are all good questions . . . markpkessinger Jul 2013 #144
troubling questions about this president; even more troubling questions about any possible president carolinayellowdog Jul 2013 #145
I have some insight... Bonobo Jul 2013 #153
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