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The US Government proves That It Does Not Deserve Our Trust

 
 
Reply Mon 13 May, 2013 08:49 pm
Snooping on the AP News Service, Lying about how it got our Libyan ambassador killed, siccing the IRS on groups it does not like, arresting men in Cleveland with zero evidence, refusing to mirandize Tsarnaev, discarding science (and lying about science) while pushing to deprive teens of plan B abortion pills.....what is the argument that this government is legitimate?
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Type: Discussion • Score: 0 • Views: 211 • Replies: 2
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hawkeye10
 
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Reply Wed 15 May, 2013 12:30 pm
@hawkeye10,
so now team Obama is blaiming two "rouge" IRS employees.....apparently we are not supposed to take this as an admission that the agency is poorly managed!

Milbank at the WP yesterday wrote a good column about our " President Passerby"....the one who claims to have nothing to do with all the bad stuff his adminstration does. this is more of the same.
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hawkeye10
 
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Reply Sat 18 May, 2013 11:08 am
Obama’s trust-in-government deficit

By Dan Balz

Quote:
Whatever else happens as a result of the multiple controversies that have engulfed the administration, one thing is clear: President Obama has failed to meet one of the most important goals he set out when he was first elected, which was to demonstrate that activist government could also be smart government.

Six weeks after winning the presidency in 2008, Obama reflected on the meaning of the election. He was reluctant to claim, as some others were, that his victory marked the beginning of an era in which Americans would embrace bigger government. Suspicion of command-and-control, top-down government, he said, was “a lasting legacy” of Ronald Reagan’s presidency.

So rather than portraying his first election as the end of a long period of conservative ascendancy, Obama called it “a correction to the correction.” As he put it then: “I think what you saw in this election was people saying, ‘Yes, we don’t want some big, bureaucratic, ever-expanding state. On the other hand, we don’t want a state that’s dysfunctional, that doesn’t believe in its mission, that can’t carry out some of the basic functions of government and provide serviced to people and be there when they’re hurting.’ ”

He then described what that meant for the government he was beginning to assemble. “What we don’t know yet is whether my administration and this next generation of leadership is going to be able to hew to a new, more pragmatic approach that is less interested in whether we have big government or small government [but is] more interested in whether we have a smart, effective government.”

What has happened since Obama laid down that challenge for his administration? More Americans favor smaller government over bigger government than when he was first elected, according to exit polls from last November. Public confidence in the federal government is as low as it has ever been, according to a Pew Research Center survey released this spring.
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The full political impact of what is unfolding now may not be clear until closer to the 2014 elections. Obama has been damaged, but how much? Republicans are on the offensive but risk overplaying their hand out of deep dislike for this president. But no matter how the electoral politics turn out, Obama’s goal of creating confidence in bigger government has taken a big hit.


true enough that we increasingly dont trust any body or any institution, so the headwinds against Obama are strong, but he has failed none the less.
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