Well, President Obama's phony hit counts from two weeks back
turned out to be phony indeed. Now he's back, pretty much
to the status quo ante: simply a dominant phony lead
over Mitt and Gary:
Apologies for missing the usual weekly posting last week. I'd provide
an excuse, but excuses are even more boring than apologies.
Phoniness did not miss a week, however.
I'll try to hit the high points:
The big phoniness did not involve the candidates directly, but
was emitted by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who found
a tenuous argument to
vote with the four diehard liberal justices to preserve
Obamacare.
Mark
Steyn was as unimpressed as I:
There's nothing constitutionally seemly about a Court
decision that says this law is only legal because the people's
representatives flat-out lied to the people when they passed it.
Throughout the Obamacare debates, Democrats explicitly denied it was a
massive tax hike: "You reject that it's a tax increase?" George
Stephanopoulos demanded to know on ABC. "I absolutely reject that
notion," replied the president. Yet "that notion" is the only one that
would fly at the Supreme Court. The jurists found the individual mandate
constitutional by declining to recognize it as a mandate at all. For
Roberts' defenders on the right, this is apparently a daring rout of Big
Government: Like Nelson contemplating the Danish fleet at the Battle of
Copenhagen, the chief justice held the telescope to his blind eye and
declared, "I see no ships."
Michael
Barone notes and exposes the phony excuse for Obama's mediocre
standings in the polls and (possible) defeat in November: it's
because he's black. Er, Barone says, waitaminnit:
There's an obvious problem with the racism alibi. Barack Obama has run
for president before, and he won. Voters in 2008 knew he was black. Most
of them voted for him. He carried 28 states and won 365 electoral votes.
Nationwide, he won 53% of the popular vote. That may not sound like a
landslide, but it's a higher percentage than any Democratic nominee
except Andrew Jackson, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson.
The liberal punditry is dragging out this charge now in order to
swing voters on the fence. "You may have voted for Obama in 2008,
fine, but if you don't do the same in 2012, you're a racist."
Get used to about four months of various permutations of this
phony argument.
President Obama and I were (reportedly) within a mile of each
other this past Monday, as he visited Durham, home of my employer,
the University Near Here. I didn't even try to attend, but apparently
I missed…
President Obama today ridiculed Mitt Romney's campaign for saying his
former private-equity investment firm engaged in "outsourcing" services
rather than "0ffshoring" [sic] jobs.
"You cannot make this stuff up," Obama told backers in New Hampshire.
"What Governor Romney and his advisers don't seem to understand is this:
If you're a worker whose job went overseas, you don't need somebody
trying to explain to you the difference between outsourcing and
offshoring," Obama said.
I mean, how different could those things be? They both begin with "O",
end in "ing", and they relate to jobs. Trust me, says the President,
you fine Granite Staters don't need to bother your pretty little
heads with any argument that makes relevant, not very difficult,
distinctions!
Could somebody please get Barack Obama to shut up about "outsourcing"
until some undergraduate aide has explained to him what the word means?
As it stands, the president is showing himself an ignorant rube on the
subject, and that is to nobody's advantage.
Unfortunately, Kevin, that's not likely to happen. As long as the
President can make a demagogic know-nothing argument, he
probably will do so. Yes, they think you're stupid.
The anti-Romney charges are loosely based on a Washington Post
article; Jen Rubin, their house right-wing blogger tells the
story of Romney's rebuttal and the Post's subsequent
"clarification" article. She also links to the Post's
Glenn Kessler awarding the coveted four Pinocchios
to an Obama ad on the topic.
Disclaimers:
Unquoted opinions expressed herein are solely those of the
blogger.
Pun Salad is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates
Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a
means for the blogger to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.