A distinguished columnist, editor and foreign correspondent, Wes Pruden has been a leading voice of conservative thought for more than three decades.
The tantrum in a high chair
Every mom who has ever been at her wit's end recognizes Barack Obama. The president who earlier nagged Congress that it was time for Americans to "eat our peas" finally threw his own peas to the floor and banged his spoon on his supper dish. Such a tantrum in a high chair is a familiar sight in a lot of kitchens.
"Enough is enough," the president cried, frustrated by the tense budget talks at the White House. "Don't call my bluff," he told his Republican tormentors. "I'm going to the American people."
If a pout and a sulk is familiar to Mom, every 2-year-old in town can understand the president's angry frustration. Throwing your peas on the floor, particularly if they're of the English variety, tasting of copy paper and sliding down a tiny throat like unlubricated ball bearings, is the instant gratification every tantrum-thrower yearns for. But it's a presidential strategy we haven't seen before.
These are not the cheers and hosannas the prince of Hyde Park imagined for himself when he agreed to step down from on high to assume the presidential purple. It's going on three years and the natives are restless. They keep asking impertinent questions. Rep. Eric Cantor, the leader of the Republican House majority, ignited the president's ire when he suggested the president and the Democrats take a smaller budget deal than His Excellency wants. The president -- "he got very agitated," in the telling of Mr. Cantor, who was there -- did not appreciate such lack of respect for royalty.
Harry Reid, the president's liege man in the Senate, wanted to boot Mr. Cantor from the talks. "He shouldn't even be at the table," the majority leader said. No tea and cookies for him. Some Democrats disputed the details in the Republican account, but there was general agreement that Mr. Obama lost his celebrated cool. And why not? So far the budget talks have been a classic standoff between the president, who is determined to raise taxes to make the welfare state grow, and the Republicans, who are determined to cut the bipartisan spending that threatens to spin the economy into an abyss of unknown depth.
The president's tantrum can have a positive effect, however, if it captures the full attention of the public. Talk of the economy makes the average voter's head hurt, his teeth itch, and his Jockey shorts bunch up under his belt. The economy has always been like algebra, difficult to grasp, and voters have been willing to leave the algebra to the advocates for the tax-eaters. That may be changing, as one and all begin to recognize that the good life is at risk -- the car, the boat, college for the kids, tropical vacations in Maui. The exceptional nation may be at risk of becoming like the toy nations of Europe.
President Obama plays the empty threat to withhold Grandma's Social Security check. Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, warns of "a huge financial calamity" if Congress refuses to raise the debt limit. This echoes the lamentations of Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner as well as the new chairman of the International Monetary Fund. Moody's, the financial service that measures such things, piles on, with the dire threat that U.S. bonds could be downgraded. Maybe. It all smells like a contrived campaign to put pressure on the Republicans to cave, just as they have the attention of the president and his frightened Democrats.
The scheme of Sen. Mitch McConnell, the leader of the Republicans in the Senate, to give the president the authority to raise the debt limit without serious cuts and bear the consequences, looks better to the Republicans than it did when he introduced it and for his trouble was scorched by some conservatives as the usual Republican sell-out artist. Democrats squealed like stuck pigs. They naturally don't want this responsibility because they understand the eventual consequences of continuing to live it up like pigs in the slophouse. Mr. Obama wants Republicans to share the "credit" for his incompetent management of the economy.
The verdict of history, though on the way, is not quite at hand. The verdict of 2012 soon will be, and looms over everything. It's enough to make a president, swaddled with a bad situation he made much worse, bang his supper dish with his spoon and throw his peas on the floor.
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Comments
America Continues to Waste over 70% of the Energy it Consumes.
Our hedonist energy waste is culturally pervasive, destructive, and inexcusable !
(1) 100's of millions of lights burn unnecessarily every day and night.
(2) We over heat, over cool, and over light our businesses, offices,
SCHOOLS, municipalities, churches, homes, etc…
(3) Over packaging is the norm, and recycling is inadequate. Our landfills are busier than ever. (Plastics are the cause of most cancers and therefore our most heinous polluter.)
(4) Most Americans do not minimize their driving; road congestion is horrendous.
(5) America's incessant obsession with driving and road construction is the ultimate contradiction to sustainable living.
The only way to eliminate waste and over demand for energy is by using the economic impact of taxing energy. Crude oil must be taxed at $160 per barrel(42 gal) and this 'energy consumption tax' be offset by making Federal Income Tax begin at $60k. Only with a substantial and tangible dollar consequence/reward will there be the incentive to conserve energy. Until the price of gas is $5 to $7 per gallon, Americans will not significantly reduce their over consumption and energy waste. In the mean time, the USA continues its hedonist energy waste and gives away its economic and political wealth to the Middle East and China. Know that OPEC is glad to allow supply and demand market forces to drive energy prices to $7gallon.
Ford, GM, and Chrysler continue toward bankrupt, yet basically continue to do business as usual. They must transition to the lucrative business of building solar and wind 'energy producers' for the world's 6.7 BILLION people reason$. They already have the needed infrastructure to mass produce, sell, and install these products. Failure to innovate the auto industry away from energy consumption to energy production will cause the ruin our economy and the environment . Energy demand cannot continue to support dwindling fossil fuel 'supply'.
China, India, and other former 'developing countries' have just begun to compete for the world's remaining fossil fuel. Continued global demand for energy can only be satisfied with conservation and renewable sources.
Mass transit must become FREE, SAFE, CLEAN, and CONVENIENT; thereby rewarding those who reduce their driving.
Global warming continues to increases with our persistent waste and overuse of fossil fuels.
Human extinction will be the reward for our failure to rapidly and broadly implement renewable energy supplies. The incentives necessary to implement sustainable and renewable energy supplies can ONLY occur when we employ the economics of TAXING ENERGY.
STOP the/our/your Energy WASTE !
Lowell Michalove
ON July 15, 2011
The tantrum in a high chair
Petulance is not a positive characteristic generally--and when shown by a Potus during the course of serious negotiations, re: realization of reasonable outcomes there of, one has to be just a bit pessimistic.
It does appear that Obama didn't heed former-President Clinton's pre-Nov. 2008 advice (following a somewhat petulant Obama-response to criticism): If you can't take this kind of heat you shouldn't try to enter the presidential kitchen.
In the present circumstances Sen. McConnell's proposal to legislate needed powers (to raise the debt-ceiling) to Obama would seem to be the most promising way out of the current impasse. Obama could then do what he says has to be done (with options as provided) and take credit for saving the nation by preventing default (also for any perceived gains or losses in the economy after preventing one). Let him take his case, as he wishes to do, to the American people.
They/we will surely judge him in 2012 (once more, and with greater appreciation of his lack of preparation for the office the second time around).
Special K
ON July 15, 2011
The tantrum in a high chair