Monday, July 16, 2012

My Problem Is I'm Too Good By Clarice Feldman

 

My Problem Is I'm Too Good by Clarice Feldman over at the American Thinker

A dear, now deceased, relative used to say, "My problem is I'm too good," without realizing the humor of that self-evaluation. I was reminded of that this week, when for the first time President Obama acknowledged he just might have a teeny flaw.

"The mistake of my first term - couple of years - was thinking that this job was just about getting the policy right. And that's important. But the nature of this office is also to tell a story to the American people that gives them a sense of unity and purpose and optimism, especially during tough times.

"It's funny - when I ran, everybody said, well he can give a good speech but can he actually manage the job?"

bgates and hit & run , those wise guys, chimed in immediately.

Bgates:

"I also shouldn't have skimped on those bargain basement vacations, and it wouldn't have killed me to play some golf or watch some basketball once in a while either."

"And I should have been tougher on those kikes."

Barack Obama: Needs to talk more

Nancy Pelosi: Too reverent towards our founding documents

Magic Johnson: Not enough time spent with the ladies

Hit & run:

"I also shouldn't have accepted so much personal responsibility for the lack of any meaningful recovery in the economy and endeavored to blame other people and events more. Oh, and technology. I should have blamed technology more."

ABC noted that this sort of self-analysis by politicians often lends itself to lampooning:

Call it "too much substance, not enough style?" President Barack Obama says his biggest mistake since getting to the White House three and a half years ago has been his tendency to tackle the job as national policy wonk rather than the inspiring figure he cut in the 2008 campaign. [snip]

Presidents - politicians in general - tend to sidestep questions about their biggest mistake in office, though they sometimes stumble spectacularly over them ( as George W. Bush did in April 2004), or offer up a self-serving answer that might be lampooned as "I just love America too much." Obama seems to be saying that, dagnabbit, he just took the job too gosh-darn seriously. Republicans wasted little time in mocking the answer. Republican National Committee spokesman Tim Miller tweeted "I'd go w/ utter economic failure."

I wonder what the media would do if asked what its major flaw was.

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/07/my_problem_is_im_too_good.html#ixzz20hmxHbu1

 

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