Oct 11

Associated Press: Obama disconnected from reality

Well It’s good of the AP to finally admit what everybody in this country has known for the last three years, that Obama is completely out of touch and disconnected from reality. How long have I been saying he suffers from a mental disorder? It’s been quite a few years. There’s something wrong with him and everybody in this country whether they admit it or not, knows that to be true. Well, maybe not everybody, but the overwhelming majority does. And the one’s that don’t are just as sick in the head, if not more so than he is.

Finally, some in the lamestream media are beginning to report a little of it. Probably because their bottom line (money and profit margins) due to his policies are being  adversely affected, otherwise they wouldn’t say a word.

Note Obama’s mental disorder pointed out in this AP story:

WASHINGTON — In President Barack Obama’s sales pitch for his jobs bill, there are two versions of reality: The one in his speeches and the one actually unfolding in Washington.

When Obama accuses Republicans of standing in the way of his nearly $450 billion plan, he ignores the fact that his own party has struggled to unite behind the proposal.

When the president says Republicans haven’t explained what they oppose in the plan, he skips over the fact that Republicans who control the House actually have done that in detail.

And when he calls on Congress to “pass this bill now,” he slides past the point that Democrats control the Senate and were never prepared to move immediately, given other priorities. Senators are expected to vote Tuesday on opening debate on the bill, a month after the president unveiled it with a call for its immediate passage.

And Obama’s sick, partisan political spin continues:

The disconnect between what Obama says about his jobs bill and what stands as the political reality flow from his broader aim: to rally the public behind his cause and get Congress to act, or, if not, to pin blame on Republicans.

He is waging a campaign, one in which nuance and context and competing responses don’t always fit in if they don’t help make the case.

For example, when Obama says his jobs plan is made up of ideas that have historically had bipartisan support, he stops the point there. Not mentioned is that Republicans have never embraced the tax increases that he is proposing to cover the cost of his plan.

Likewise, from city to city, Obama is demanding that Congress act (he means Republicans) while it has been clear for weeks that the GOP will not support all of his bill, to say the least. Individual elements of it may well pass, such as Obama’s proposal to extend and expand a payroll tax cut. But Republicans strongly oppose the president’s proposed new spending and his plan to raise taxes on millionaires to pay for the package.

I’ve told you hundreds of times that with Obama, it’s all about the ideology and nothing about the country. In other words, it’s all about the power. Finally, the AP picked up on that.

“He knows it’s not going to pass. He’s betting that voters won’t pick up on it, or even if they do they will blame Congress and he can run against the ‘do-nothing Congress,’” said Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, a senior fellow at the University of Southern California’s School of Policy, Planning and Development.

John Sides, political science professor at George Washington University, said Obama’s approach on the jobs bill is “more about campaigning than governing.”

“He’s mostly just going around talking about this and drawing contrasts with what the Republicans want and what he wants and not really trying to work these legislative levers he might be able to use to get this passed,” Sides said. “That just suggests to me that he is ready to use a failed jobs bill as a campaign message against the Republicans.”

He is without question the worst president in our lifetime, the worst in the past century, and one of, if not the worst of all time. Far worse than Jimmy Carter ever was. The only other two that are on equal footing are Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The only way he could be any worse is if he is reelected.