Friday, November 28, 2008

It’s not what you say …

it’s the way that you say it. A comparison was drawn recently between Barack Obama’s interview on 60 Minutes … his talking in dulcet tones and in complete sentences … and George Bush’s grating, fractured English. However, it seems to me that we all need to pay more attention to what people say and not to the melodious nature of their rhetoric. For instance, shortly after his election to the most powerful political position in the world, I would still like to know if Obama:
- Is going to raise taxes on the wealthy and lower taxes on 95% of Americans?
- Is going to withdraw American troops from Iraq before the most recent Iraq-set target date of the end of 2011?
- Is going to zero-out unproductive and non-effective government agencies?
- Is going to reach across the aisle to Republicans or have Rahm Emanuel take out his Uzi?
- Is going to bail out unconditionally the big three auto makers or make the United Auto Workers first bite the bullet?
- Is going to install almost a trillion dollar stimulus package or pull in the U.S.’s fiscal horns?
- Is going to create a civilian defense force bigger than our military?
- Is going to renegotiate NAFTA and back away from other free-trade agreements?
- Is going to eliminate workers’s secret union ballot?
- And many more.
Somehow, after cringing through one of GWB’s leaden presentations, still I always knew where he stood. Not so the case with our current President elect.

2 comments:

DEN said...

Maybe its time to give the negative drumbeat a rest.

Your unequivocal black-and-white president for the past 8 years has brought America to the brink of disaster.

How can Obama be any worse?

George W. Potts said...

At least he stuck to his guns ... unlike yourself and many who backed the war ... then claimed they didn't. Equivocation is the refuge of the uncertain (and the talking heads.).