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Written by Jack Kelly |
| Wednesday, 25
February 2009 |
His most ardent supporters debate
whether Mr. Obama is more like Abraham Lincoln or like Franklin
Delano Roosevelt. But so far, the president he most closely
resembles is Jimmy Carter. Call him Jimmy Obama.
In 1976, Mr. Carter was a fresh new
face with a thin political resume who blew past better known
Democrats in the primaries running as an "outsider" and a
"reformer."
Jimmy Carter, like Barack Hussein
Obama, took office during tough economic times. Mr. Carter
coined the term "misery index" (the rates of inflation and
unemployment added together).
Mr. Carter proceeded to make a bad
situation worse. The misery index stood at 13.57 in the summer
of 1976 when he was clubbing President Ford with it. Four years
later, it had risen to 21.98.
It's way too early to pass judgment
on Mr. Obama's economic stewardship. But the early signs are
not favorable. Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner rolls out a vague proposal for TARP II, a second
bailout of the banks. The stock market tanks. Mr. Obama signs
the "stimulus bill." The stock market tanks. Mr. Obama unveils
his plan to subsidize some home mortgages. The stock market
slips, and the president is mocked on the floor of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange.
As a candidate, Jimmy Carter pledged
to have a higher ethical standard. But he suffered
embarrassment when Bert Lance, his director of the Office of
Management and Budget, was forced to resign over alleged
mismanagement and corruption at the Calhoun National Bank in
Georgia when Lance was chairman of its board.
Mr. Obama has suffered one
embarrassment after another with his nominees. Mr. Geithner was
confirmed despite not having paid his payroll taxes for four
years, but tax troubles forced Tom Daschle, his nominee for
Secretary of Health and Human Services, to withdraw. New Mexico
Gov. Bill Richardson withdrew his nomination for Secretary of
Commerce when it was revealed the FBI was investigating the
governor in connection with a "pay to play" scandal in New
Mexico.
Most presidents describe the economy
in rather more rosy terms than the facts may warrant in order to
keep the spirits of Americans up. The only two in modern times
to talk the economy down are Mr. Carter and Mr. Obama.
In 1979, Mr. Carter gave his famous
"malaise" speech. "The public and political pundits reacted
very harshly to the speech, criticizing Carter for not offering
enough solutions to the problems he identified," said the
Encyclopedia of Earth.
Mr. Obama has said repeatedly the
economy is in its worst "crisis" since the Great Depression --
though the statistical evidence indicates the 1982 recession was
worse -- and has predicted "catastrophe" if the measures he
seeks aren't enacted into law.
"The danger for him is using the
Jimmy Carter malaise rhetoric, particularly for Mr. Obama, who
was elected because people thought he was the solution," said
pollster Frank Luntz. "There's only so much negativity they
will tolerate from him before they will feel betrayed."
In foreign policy, President Carter
believed he could charm America's enemies by reaching out to
them, and by apologizing for American "arrogance." But events
were unkind. On his watch, the mullahs took power in Iran and
seized the U.S. embassy there, and the Soviet Union invaded
Afghanistan.
So far, the substance of Barack
Obama's foreign policy has been very like that of George W.
Bush. But his rhetoric echoes that of Mr. Carter. The first
interview he granted to a foreign news organization was to al
Arabiya, which has had kind things to say about Islamist
terrorists. The president was apologetic for U.S. policy toward
Moslems in the past.
"When his self-inflation as a
redeemer of U.S.-Moslem relations leads him to suggest that
pre-Obama America was disrespectful or insensitive or uncaring
of Moslems, he is engaging not just in fiction but in gratuitous
disparagement of the country he is now privileged to lead," said
columnist Charles Krauthammer.
Dr. Krauthammer is also a medical physician. In
determining whether the new American president has any spine,
any spine at all as Jimmy Carter had none, he observes,
"preliminary X-rays are not very encouraging."
Jack Kelly is a former Marine and Green Beret and a former
deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force in the Reagan
administration. He is national security writer for the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. |