By Kevin McCullough
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Last week the executive branch of our nation's government
seemed recklessly ignorant of nearly everything related to their job. For a
group of highly educated, highly accomplished, highly perched folks who seem to
regularly look down on regular Americans they seemed extraordinarily ignorant
of things they should at least have basic knowledge of.
The President claimed he had no idea of the findings of
the IRS' Inspector General's report citing systemic agency wrong doing until he
"saw it on the news (like the rest of the American people...)" The
Attorney General said, "I don't know" so many times before
congressional committees last week that private citizens began doing montages
of the collected admission of ignorance for their YouTube channels. Then on
Friday--trying the President's tactic--the outgoing IRS Commissioner reverted
back to being unable to know anything until he had seen it "in the
press."
While campaigning in 2008 & 2012 this administration
asserted things all the time. When they made assertions they seemed nearly
offended if someone questioned them. For after all they are a bunch of highly
educated, highly accomplished, highly perched folks who seemed to think they
had the right to look down on regular Americans.
But that's largely the way it's been for much of the last
few years.
When running for office this President referred to people
who knew their Constitution (normally in spite of their public education,
seldom because of it), and worshipped God, as "Bitter Clingers."
After winning office he had his Secretary of Homeland
Security classify people who lawfully owned firearms, happened to go to church,
happened to respect the lives of unborn children, happen to have previously
served in the nation's military, happen to strongly support the nuclear family,
happen to pay their taxes, happen to walk dogs, or happen to wake up on
Tuesdays and make it to their place of employment, labeled "potential
extremists."
Meanwhile he removed "Islamic terrorism" from
the White House lexicon, and called acts of terrorism on American soil
"workplace violence."
The scandals bleeding profusely from the executive branch
this week have been both acknowledged and denied by that branch of government.
Apologized for and defended by the President's team. Condemned and excused by
executive branch appointees.
And while this duplicitous approach seems to have now
been noticed for the very first time by much of the White House press corp, in
reality, we-the-people, have been putting up with this behavior since the first
year of the Obama administration.
The difference now: the press is finally reporting on
that their two-faced nature. So smart they should never be questioned in their
assertions, but ignorant beyond degree when wrong doing takes places in their
departments, offices, and White House.
John Stewart, hardly a conservative apologist by any
stretch, made one of the strongest points of this last week when he observed
that the last "arrow in the quiver" for the administration had been
their believability and trust. The President mocked and disputed the idea that
any American should ever mistrust their government--for instance--on the issue
of guns being confiscated from regular citizens. Stewart followed that clip
with a CBS News clip showing evening anchor Scott Pelley announcing the IRS'
admission to systematically and systemically targeting what in essence amounted
to groups of people that were expressly opponents of Obama policies.
But the real low-water mark this week came when
journalists across the nation realized that while they had basically reported
to the American people for the last six years that the President was a man of
trust--they themselves discovered their phone lines, conversations, numbers
dialed, tips shared, and sources outed--all in the hands of the administration.
At least the journalists of America were smart enough to
figure out that in previous administrations when investigations were done to
find someone in the administration who was leaking information to the press--it
normally wasn't the journalists who were spied on, and treated with suspicion.
Then came the justification memes in the news cycles. The
fact that David Axelrod and Steven Miller both ended up arguing that the
American government is in essence "so big" that no one can fully know
what was going on "below" them only served to reinforce what millions
of Americans of every political stripe already believed.
Either through malfeasance or through ignorant negligence
a big centralized government will crush the freedoms, rights, and protections
of the "free" individual.
The distinct problem for the administration at this point
is that so many facts are being revealed, so many wrongs have been committed,
and so many of them point directly to a motive that seems to address a
President's ambition to be re-elected, that this President will more or less
find himself on defense whether each and every act involved him or not.
The very same way the left punished President Bush for
the actions of those involved in Abu Graib, even though he had nothing to do
with the acts committed. Obama's scandals are in the same buildings, committed
by people that meet with him or his cabinet every day, and who knew his mind,
and followed his wishes.
The fact that the President, the Attorney General, and
the outgoing IRS Commissioner, came out looking like tweedle dee, and tweedle
dumb and dumber--while openly admitting to nothing, but saying they had
perfectly good motives for all of it, points to one very big problem for them.
The administration has crafted an environment where
hubris in wrong doing has become their altered reality.
As the whistleblowers line up, there will not be enough
cover for everyone, and low level resignations will not cut it.
I've believed it since his days in the Illinois Senate,
President Obama is a more strident purist in his leftist agenda for America
than Bill Clinton ever was. But Clinton was the more clever operative. The
Obama team's consistent chorus of, "Uh... I don't know... I only saw what
was on the tee-vee," has already lost its shine.
We are about to see one of the ugliest chapters in
elective politics, and the administration has only itself to thank for it.
So observes this bitter-clinger...
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