Monday, March 26, 2012

JUST HOW UNIFYING IS THE PRESIDENT?

I have been critical of the President since before he was elected. I read both of his books and researched his voting record. His values are so diametrically opposed to mine that I foolishly didn't think he could get elected in “my” America. Yet I can try to understand how he did. He had a large majority of African-Americans looking for respect and I don't blame them. He also had a lot of other people, mostly young and idealistic, either assuaging their white-guilt or simply and realistically hoping for something new and refreshing. I'm not racist but I had to look within to personally reflect on whether his race had anything to do with my feelings and was convinced that was not so. It was simply his outlook and left wing ideology that put me off, not his color. After hearing Allen West and Herman Cain, I am comfortable with my self analysis. Obama certainly appealed to the gullible with his hope and change; post racial; post partisan promises but he has been the exact opposite of what he promised. What is most discouraging to me is that he is so dishonest and lies with such ease. I respect the office of the Presidency but I have to question whether he does. I was pondering about how to change people's minds for this election and planning to write about it when Jim Geraghty of the Morning Jolt saved me the trouble. Here is his article addressing much of the same issue. I will have more in the future.


Are Obama's 2008 Voters Getting What They Expected?
Morning Jolt. . . with Jim Geraghty

Yesterday's discussion of disillusioned Obama voters appeared to be greatly appreciated, with James Taranto, Melissa Clouthier, Moe Lane, and Rush Limbaugh adding to the discussion.

As we contemplate how to persuade wavering Obama voters, perhaps a good place to start is to ask them what they expected him to deliver. When they marked the box for him in 2008, where did they think the country would be in 2012?

The diehard Democrats will instantly respond, "He inherited a lot of problems, much worse than anyone expected. Bush had eight years to louse up this country; you can't expect Obama to clean up his mess in half the time. Obama would accomplish more if the Republicans hadn't obstructed him every step of the way. He can't be held responsible for the headwinds such as the tsunami in Japan, the European debt crisis, the slowing of the global economy, and ATMs' taking people's jobs."

Of course, none of these is an answer to the question above; they're defensive justifications for why Obama hasn't delivered what they expected. You've asked them, effectively, "When you voted for hope, what were you hoping for?" And if they respond by offering all the reasons they blame Republicans, you can conclude these Obama voters are not persuadable, and you can move on to others.

When you prompt non-diehard Obama voters to think of their expectations on Election Day 2008, they'll probably conclude that some, many, or all, are unmet. They'll probably talk about the epic economic anxieties that were gripping almost all Americans in the autumn of 2008. They'll probably express this in very personal terms, about the value of their home, the value of their 401(k) or other retirement savings, their ability to find a job or find a better job than the one they have now. Perhaps they'll remember the exorbitant gasoline prices from the summer of 2008. They may remember their incredulity at TARP, at watching the richest people they could imagine -- Wall Street bankers! -- coming to Congress and begging for billions and saying that if they didn't get it, the economy would collapse. Long-established businesses were declaring bankruptcy left and right: Lehman Brothers. Washington Mutual, IndyMac, Circuit City, Linens n' Things. The 2008 election occurred amidst an atmosphere of unequaled crisis. You almost can't blame late-breaking Obama voters for turning to a candidate who was running as a messiah figure.

Mind you, during all of these discussions with wavering Obama voters, we have to hold our tongues and resist expressing incredulity that they believed Obama could deliver an economic renaissance. In these conversations, for now, it is more important to listen than to talk; you're collecting data and intelligence on how these people reached their conclusion on whom to vote for and their hierarchy of values. No matter how naïve, ill-informed, stupid, unrealistic, or inane their reasoning is, you will not persuade them by calling them any of those labels. Nod sympathetically. The time to argue will come later. For now, you just want to get a sense of what they think is important in this decision.

My suspicion is that most Obama voters figured that by the spring of 2012, the United States would be in much better shape than it is now. They may not have had specific benchmarks in mind -- 8.3 percent unemployment, $3.82 per gallon gasoline, and so on. But they probably doubted that they would see the federal government fining them for not having health insurance. (Remember that Obama ran against the individual mandate in the Democratic primary.)

You also will probably hear a bit about Obama as a unifying figure. Look back to that 2004 convention speech, the first time most Americans saw him, and the sound bite from the speech most likely to be replayed over and over again:

There is not a liberal America and a conservative America -- there is the United States of America. There is not a Black America and a White America and Latino America and Asian America -- there's the United States of America.

Let's face it, you and I wouldn't disagree with that! It's a wonderful unifying sentiment. It's even an implicit rebuke of those who are most obsessed with racial divisions and ensuring every aspect of American life is sufficiently diverse -- the folks who prompted Bill Clinton to wag his finger and denounce as "bean counters" with "quota games." No wonder so many people felt warm and fuzzy feelings when they first saw him.

Of course, you and I look at the body of Obama's work and conclude that none of his noble-sounding sentiments mean much of anything to him when he sees a political opportunity. The sentiment in the convention speech is uniting, inspiring, idealistic, and elevating. And then he goes out and urges his supporters to "get in their faces" and "hit back twice as hard," urges his Latino supporters to "punish our enemies," refers to citizens who disagree with him as "teabaggers," and tells White House guests that he believes racism was a factor in the rise of the Tea Party.

But a significant number of voters saw that guy at the convention in Boston and believed that he meant what he said. What's more, like the old poster from the X-Files, they wanted to believe. And it's been a long, slow process of letting go of that idealistic vision.

So the first task is to contrast the prospect of Obama, the ideal that some of his voters expected, and what he has been and produced. If you can get an Obama voter to express disappointment in the man they voted for in 2008, well, you're halfway to getting that voter to A) vote Republican or B) not vote, which is almost as good for our purposes.

IT'S TIME TO GET INVOLVED

 I know, many people don't like politics but let's face it, if you're alive, have family, eat food and buy gas, you're already involved. The most important thing we can do for our country and ourselves is to make sure Barak Obama is not re-elected. We also need to get some new conservative blood into Congress, both the House and the Senate. Tea Parties are doing this on the local level now and were responsible for the November 2010 reversals suffered by the Democratic Party. We need to help continue that trend. I am going to be contributing articles to the Clear Lake Tea Party and urge you to donate or volunteer with your own local Tea Party. The following article by Robert Ringer explains how Obama's radical agenda led to the formation of the Tea Party concept. As much as I cannot stand Obama and his policies, I agree with Ringer that his being elected awakened a lot of people to the destructiveness of the Progressive movement.

I'm going to temporarily suspend this newsletter and concentrate on the Tea Party newsletter but I am saving all of your emails and will make sure you get updates from time to time.  Let's pitch in to win one for the Gipper.

Sign up here for the Clear Lake Tea party newsletter:  http://clearlaketeaparty.com/

                                                                                     Thanks for your support,
                                                                                             Gene Rutt

Negatives, Positives, and The Natural Law of Balance: Why Obama is Responsible for the Tea Party
By Robert Ringer - Tuesday, March 13, 2012

An interesting question from reader ...
Robert, I have been going back through your audio program Path to Power once again and would like to see you expand on a topic. In the program you make it very clear that every perceived negative has an off-setting positive, and yet we are all fighting hard to stop Barry and the leftists from taking over the country.
I find myself fighting discouragement over future prospects based on how this coming USA election goes, and yet, according to your Path to Power training, this really shouldn't bother me.
Your thoughts as to the "there is no such thing as a negative" as it specifically applies to our current leftist administration, please!
A fair question. It's absolutely true that for every (perceived) negative, there is an offsetting positive. Unfortunately, people are usually not enlightened enough to recognize the offsetting positives when something bad happens in their life.
I like to refer to this as the Natural Law of Balance, which is pretty much synonymous with Emerson's Law of Compensation. Simply put, the universe is in balance. We see it at work all around us: electrons and protons, night and day, male and female, hot and cold, life and death, two sides to a coin. Nothing is one way: For every positive, there's an offsetting negative; for every negative, there's an offsetting positive.
Back in 2008, I upset a lot of people by saying that those of us who want to live in a free country would be better off if Barack Obama won the presidential election rather than Mush McCain. Had McCain become president, it would be have been viewed by most conservatives as a positive. But they would have been wrong.
True, it would have kept Obama out of the Oval Office for at least awhile, but there is no doubt in my mind that McCain would have continued the RINOs' inexorable move to the left ... more slowly than Barack Obama, and thus more dangerously.
Early on, I knew that Obama was a Marxist. Everything about his past, his associations, his voting record, and his own written and spoken words all made that clear. I felt that if he could keep the public mesmerized long enough to be able to sneak into the White House through the side door, with his Marxist soul mate at his side, it would be like having Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven running the United States government!
To most libertarians and conservatives, this seemed like a result too horrific to contemplate. But guess what? Barack Obama's lightning-fast implementation of his radical agenda awoke the walking dead. Foolish independents, in particular, opened their eyes in horror and began asking, "What the hell is going on here?"
The result? The Tea Party was born. That's right, the Emperor of Envy gave birth to the Tea Party through his own words and actions. Now, instead of the frog being boiled slowly, Obama's election has brought the fight into the open. And the fight I'm referring to is the one between the roughly 50 percent of the public who work for a living and the 50 percent who vote for a living.
That, Glenn J., is your offsetting positive in Barack Obama's rise to power. Without him, we would have continued to drift slowly down the road to serfdom. Count me out. I'm tired of drifting to the left.
So when I say "there is no such thing as a negative," it's because words like negative and problem are just that -- words. It's all in how one perceives the facts in any given situation. The offsetting positive when a "problem" arises often leads us to say, sometimes many years later, "That turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to me."
By the way, I never said that Obama's election should not bother you. It should bother you. It should bother you so much that you become motivated to join the fight to save what's left of our once-great country for your children and grandchildren.
In that vein, you say that you're fighting discouragement? Save your energy. Discouragement is not the enemy. The enemy is the far left -- the progressives, the socialists, the Marxists, and the communists. Forget about discouragement, and focus on defeating the enemy.

Copyright © 2012 Robert Ringer
ROBERT RINGER is a New York Times #1 bestselling author and host of the highly acclaimed Liberty Education Interview Series, which features interviews with top political, economic, and social leaders. He has appeared on Fox News, Fox Business, The Tonight Show, Today, The Dennis Miller Show, Good Morning America, The Lars Larson Show, ABC Nightline, and The Charlie Rose Show, and has been the subject of feature articles in such major publications as Time, People, The Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Barron's, and The New York Times.


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