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Obama will be remembered in history for his accomplishmentsts
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Jan 9, 2016 16:01:27   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Although not nearly so critical of the president as many on OPP are, I have not been altogether pleased with his administration. But, I found this article intriguing, worth both reading and contemplating. It is one man's perspective, but it goes to show that an argument can be made for the achievements of the last seven years...whether persuasive or not. As Mr. Meyer writes, time will tell.

By Dick Meyer, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, July 21, 2015 | 2 a.m.

I’ve never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isn’t among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president, and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.

Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesn’t aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era, and certainly not Obama.

Why? Marcus Aurelius said, “Man is puny in the face of destiny.” If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, “Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.”

Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.

One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didn’t last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.

This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. It’s wobbly centrism to a left-flank frustrated Obama hasn’t done more for them. And it’s naïve hot air to Washington’s political clans that think Obama doesn’t play the game well.

Changing minds with a keypad is a fool’s errand; I’m surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:

• The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not today’s talking/tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.

• Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Only LBJ’s Great Society laws compare. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It’s now off life support. Key goals are being met. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted and people will say, “Keep the government out of my Obamacare.”

• The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didn’t happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet, few give Obama much credit.

• The first: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesn’t get much goodwill for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, “What have you done for me lately?” That’s fair; he’s president. He doesn’t ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.

• Dignity and honesty: Obama’s administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. It’s the first two-term presidency not to be derailed by scandal since Eisenhower. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals don’t compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clinton’s carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.

Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the “No Drama Obama” style that befits the office.

Obama isn’t a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. He’s head over heart, cool over warm. Yet, he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasn’t a catalyst for same-sex marriage but nourished the culture that made it possible.

It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story — history.

In that longer view, we should feel well served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.

Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC. Scripps has been operating since 1917.

Reply
Jan 9, 2016 16:07:01   #
Zombiefarmer23 Loc: Bull Hills
 
slatten49 wrote:
Although not nearly so critical of the president as many on OPP are, I have not been altogether pleased with his administration. But, I found this article intriguing, worth both reading and contemplating. It is one man's perspective, but it goes to show that an argument can be made for the achievements of the last seven years...whether persuasive or not. As Mr. Meyers writes, time will tell.

By Dick Meyer, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, July 21, 2015 | 2 a.m.

I’ve never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isn’t among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president, and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.

Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesn’t aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era, and certainly not Obama.

Why? Marcus Aurelius said, “Man is puny in the face of destiny.” If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, “Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.”

Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.

One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didn’t last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.

This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. It’s wobbly centrism to a left-flank frustrated Obama hasn’t done more for them. And it’s naïve hot air to Washington’s political clans that think Obama doesn’t play the game well.

Changing minds with a keypad is a fool’s errand; I’m surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:

• The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not today’s talking/tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.

• Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Only LBJ’s Great Society laws compare. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It’s now off life support. Key goals are being met. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted and people will say, “Keep the government out of my Obamacare.”

• The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didn’t happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet, few give Obama much credit.

• The first: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesn’t get much goodwill for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, “What have you done for me lately?” That’s fair; he’s president. He doesn’t ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.

• Dignity and honesty: Obama’s administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. It’s the first two-term presidency not to be derailed by scandal since Eisenhower. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals don’t compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clinton’s carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.

Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the “No Drama Obama” style that befits the office.

Obama isn’t a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. He’s head over heart, cool over warm. Yet, he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasn’t a catalyst for same-sex marriage but nourished the culture that made it possible.

It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story — history.

In that longer view, we should feel well served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.

Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC. Scripps has been operating since 1917.
Although not nearly so critical of the president a... (show quote)


That post is one large load of road Apple. Nice troll.

Reply
Jan 9, 2016 16:32:46   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Zombiefarmer23 wrote:
That post is one large load of road Apple. Nice troll.

Interesting idea of what a troll is Zombie, but...I am certainly aware of other perspectives. Reading ones possibly different from mine has never been harmful. Besides, self-censorship is the worst kind. :wink:

Reply
 
 
Jan 9, 2016 16:52:58   #
dillonmj54
 
The Iran deal was not signed by Iran - they do not have to honor any of it. Google it. Obamacare is rapidly putting hospitals and 50% of state exchanges out of business - and there are still well over 12 million uninsured. The recovery is a lie. Jobs are still leaving the country at a record rate, and the true unemployment rate is 17 to 23% because part timers who want full time jobs are counted as fully employed. Many college graduates cannot find jobs that pay enough to support themselves.The oil boom jobs are disappearing by the 10s of thousands. Obama is supposedly half-white and not the first fully black president, and was mostly rejected on his trip to Africa for his political views. Obama has been caught in many lies - like about how mass shootings do not occur in other countries - he said this to a crowd in Paris right after the mass shooting there. What about the mass school shootings in England and Scotland just a few decades ago? What about the mass shooting in the park in Norway? Don't the mass shootings in Mexico, Central and South America, Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia count? What about the lies about Obamacare? "If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. If you like your health plan, you can keep your health plan." How about his statements that if we didn't negotiate a deal with Iran that the alternative was war? We have not had any deals with Iran for 40 years and there has been no war with Iran. There have been more lies, but you get the idea. Zombiefarmer23 is right.

Reply
Jan 9, 2016 17:16:50   #
Tyster
 
slatten49 wrote:
Although not nearly so critical of the president as many on OPP are, I have not been altogether pleased with his administration. But, I found this article intriguing, worth both reading and contemplating. It is one man's perspective, but it goes to show that an argument can be made for the achievements of the last seven years...whether persuasive or not. As Mr. Meyer writes, time will tell.

By Dick Meyer, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, July 21, 2015 | 2 a.m.


I’ve never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isn’t among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president, and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.

Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesn’t aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era, and certainly not Obama.

Why? Marcus Aurelius said, “Man is puny in the face of destiny.” If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, “Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.”

Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.

One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didn’t last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.

This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. It’s wobbly centrism to a left-flank frustrated Obama hasn’t done more for them. And it’s naïve hot air to Washington’s political clans that think Obama doesn’t play the game well.

Changing minds with a keypad is a fool’s errand; I’m surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:

• The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not today’s talking/tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.

• Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Only LBJ’s Great Society laws compare. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It’s now off life support. Key goals are being met. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted and people will say, “Keep the government out of my Obamacare.”

• The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didn’t happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet, few give Obama much credit.

• The first: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesn’t get much goodwill for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, “What have you done for me lately?” That’s fair; he’s president. He doesn’t ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.

• Dignity and honesty: Obama’s administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. It’s the first two-term presidency not to be derailed by scandal since Eisenhower. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals don’t compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clinton’s carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.

Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the “No Drama Obama” style that befits the office.

Obama isn’t a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. He’s head over heart, cool over warm. Yet, he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasn’t a catalyst for same-sex marriage but nourished the culture that made it possible.

It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story — history.

In that longer view, we should feel well served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.

Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC. Scripps has been operating since 1917.
Although not nearly so critical of the president a... (show quote)


Opinions are like assholes... everyone has one and most stick to the same degree. Meyer starts off telling us he doesn't take sides, but every example is replete with bias.

The Iran deal: The only accomplishment here is that any agreement was made. However, the methodology used to negotiate was sorely lacking and it is obvious that Iran will not abide by it in any case. What did we get from the "deal"? Zip. Forget the ban on nuke development... we just gave them $150B to invest in furthering it. Our negotiators couldn't even get concessions regarding Americans being released. This agreement will prove to be ineffective, unenforceable and ultimately will not prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

Obamacare: This is a poorly crafted policy that contained too many hidden pitfalls. Obama has delayed some of the more painful tax ramifications... not because they are ill conceived, but because they would ignite too much opposition and lead to public demands that it be scuttled. Given the composition of Congress at that time, getting the bill passed was not complicated or difficult. It has been a cornerstone of the losses in power by the Democrats.

The financial meltdown: This was an avoidable economic event that happened primarily due to Democrat opposition to clamping down on Fannie and Freddie. Obama was not the first President to inherit financial challenges... so did Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush. The recovery has been far longer under the auspices of the Obama administration... largely due to additional regulations and demands on business when the situation needed to have a more hands off approach. Obama cannot be faulted for what he inherited, however, he does need to take responsibility for the actions that have stymied the recovery.

The first: So what? Contrary to the claims of racism, the country was ready to support someone such as Obama and knock down the color barrier. Unfortunately, Obama has stoked the flames of racism rather than dampen them. Given what he has done, or rather, not done, to improve the plight of many blacks, they should be ashamed of him. The reason he can't or won't trumpet that accomplishment is that blacks mean nothing to him beyond being a blind voting block.

Dignity and Honesty: Obama and those in his administration have been caught in so many lies, half-truths and misrepresentations that this paragraph is a joke. He slams other administrations for a few scandals that he considers so much more disastrous. But what was the real issue with Watergate... the President committing crimes? No, Nixon's weakness was his paranoia and that resulted in him unwisely covering up a crime that he had no foreknowledge of. That was his scandal... covering up something that was realistically minor. How does that differ from Benghazi? The problem with Benghazi is that it resulted in a conspiratorial cover up. Same issue as with Watergate, but Meyer's attempt to minimize the errors of Obama's administration is just wishful thinking and underscores his intense bias.

Meyers attempts to prove that the Obama administration will be remembered for his accomplishments. However, given that he has been in office for 7 years, his accomplishments - if any can be considered as such - are few and far between. Blame Republicans all he wants, but the truth is that he had a Democrat controlled House and Senate for two years, and kept control of the Senate for the first six. Compare to Reagan who had many successes despite never having either the Senate or the House in his corner.

Obama may or may not go down in history as the worst President, but it is hard to see where he could ever come close to being considered a good one, and definitely not a great one. Again, that is just wishful, unfounded thinking.

Reply
Jan 9, 2016 17:16:54   #
jer48 Loc: perris ca
 
slatten49 wrote:
Although not nearly so critical of the president as many on OPP are, I have not been altogether pleased with his administration. But, I found this article intriguing, worth both reading and contemplating. It is one man's perspective, but it goes to show that an argument can be made for the achievements of the last seven years...whether persuasive or not. As Mr. Meyer writes, time will tell.

By Dick Meyer, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, July 21, 2015 | 2 a.m.

I’ve never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isn’t among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president, and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.

Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesn’t aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era, and certainly not Obama.

Why? Marcus Aurelius said, “Man is puny in the face of destiny.” If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, “Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.”

Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.

One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didn’t last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.

This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. It’s wobbly centrism to a left-flank frustrated Obama hasn’t done more for them. And it’s naïve hot air to Washington’s political clans that think Obama doesn’t play the game well.

Changing minds with a keypad is a fool’s errand; I’m surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:

• The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not today’s talking/tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.

• Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Only LBJ’s Great Society laws compare. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It’s now off life support. Key goals are being met. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted and people will say, “Keep the government out of my Obamacare.”

• The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didn’t happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet, few give Obama much credit.

• The first: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesn’t get much goodwill for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, “What have you done for me lately?” That’s fair; he’s president. He doesn’t ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.

• Dignity and honesty: Obama’s administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. It’s the first two-term presidency not to be derailed by scandal since Eisenhower. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals don’t compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clinton’s carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.

Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the “No Drama Obama” style that befits the office.

Obama isn’t a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. He’s head over heart, cool over warm. Yet, he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasn’t a catalyst for same-sex marriage but nourished the culture that made it possible.

It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story — history.

In that longer view, we should feel well served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.

Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC. Scripps has been operating since 1917.
Although not nearly so critical of the president a... (show quote)


your a liberal idiot and oboma is unpatriotic get real worst king in history

Reply
Jan 9, 2016 17:19:44   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
Zombiefarmer23 wrote:
That post is one large load of road Apple.



Thank you for the use of polite language as opposed to foul.

Quote:
Nice troll.


I feel the need to defend Slatten against this adjective. In fact, he is one of our most diplomatic and fair minded site members. He is willing to look at both sides.

His preface, I felt, made it clear the article was thought provoking and not necessarily to his agreement.


PS: Only myself and BearK are allowed to pick on Slatten. :mrgreen: :roll: :lol:

Reply
 
 
Jan 9, 2016 17:25:02   #
peter11937 Loc: NYS
 
slatten49 wrote:
Although not nearly so critical of the president as many on OPP are, I have not been altogether pleased with his administration. But, I found this article intriguing, worth both reading and contemplating. It is one man's perspective, but it goes to show that an argument can be made for the achievements of the last seven years...whether persuasive or not. As Mr. Meyer writes, time will tell.

By Dick Meyer, Las Vegas Sun
Tuesday, July 21, 2015 | 2 a.m.

I’ve never written a column like this. Readers rarely believe it, but I am not on any political team. Generosity toward the high and mighty isn’t among my few virtues. But this needs to be said: Americans are lucky to have Barack Obama as president, and we should wake up and appreciate it while we can.

Obama will go down in history as an extraordinary president, probably a great one. He will have done this in an era that doesn’t aggrandize leaders and presidents, but shrinks them. All presidents have had profound opposition, vicious enemies and colossal failures. A few were beloved and others deeply respected in their day, but none in the modern era, and certainly not Obama.

Why? Marcus Aurelius said, “Man is puny in the face of destiny.” If the stoic king were writing about modern, democratic sovereigns, he might say, “Kings are puny in a world blind to destiny, a world seen through the sacred screens of televisions and computers that can view only the puny.”

Many presidents fared better in history than in office. But it would be a morale booster and a sign of civic maturity if more Americans appreciated what an exceptional president they have right now. It could be a long wait for the next one.

One can hate Democrats, disagree with Obama on big issues, dislike his style or be disappointed the excitement of his election didn’t last. But his accomplishments, ambitious goals, dignity and honesty under tough circumstances demand admiration and appreciation.

This is, of course, perverse liberal-media propaganda to conservative Obama-haters. It’s wobbly centrism to a left-flank frustrated Obama hasn’t done more for them. And it’s naïve hot air to Washington’s political clans that think Obama doesn’t play the game well.

Changing minds with a keypad is a fool’s errand; I’m surely a fool, but not on that count. I simply offer some points for the open-minded to ponder:

• The Iran deal: Time will reveal if the deal worked, not today’s talking/tweeting heads. What cannot be in dispute is this was a momentous initiative, a gutsy political risk, a diplomatic success and, potentially, a giant step in defusing a long-ticking time bomb.

• Obamacare: In the midst of the worst economy since the Great Depression, Obama delivered one of the most important domestic programs since the New Deal. Only LBJ’s Great Society laws compare. Obamacare has survived two challenges in the Supreme Court and constant, kabuki-style congressional votes to repeal. It’s now off life support. Key goals are being met. It will evolve and improve. One day it will be taken for granted and people will say, “Keep the government out of my Obamacare.”

• The financial meltdown: Obama inherited it, then managed the recovery to the degree possible in the global economy. The recovery has been steady, though slow. The worst-case predictions didn’t happen. He began to reverse the deregulation of the financial industry. He delivered a significant Asian trade deal. Yet, few give Obama much credit.

• The first: Becoming the first black president is itself an epic triumph. Obama doesn’t get much goodwill for that any more. We properly canonize Rosa Parks, Jackie Robinson and Martin Luther King. Of Obama, we ask, “What have you done for me lately?” That’s fair; he’s president. He doesn’t ask for credit for being the first black one. He and his family are at risk every day, and we take their courage for granted.

• Dignity and honesty: Obama’s administration has been as free of corruption and, well, peccadillo as any in memory. It’s the first two-term presidency not to be derailed by scandal since Eisenhower. A few will stay in paranoid lather about Benghazi or Fast and Furious, but those pseudo-scandals don’t compare to Watergate, Iran-Contra, Bill Clinton’s carnal antics or the phony evidence used to justify attacking Iraq.

Obama has weathered a recession, invisible racism, a reckless Republican Congress, a lily-livered Democratic Party, attacks from the richest pressure groups ever (super PACs) and a 24/7, ADHD press corps under existential pressure to deliver page views and Nielsen ratings. He has done it with the “No Drama Obama” style that befits the office.

Obama isn’t a performer like Reagan or a preacher like Clinton. He’s head over heart, cool over warm. Yet, he did his pastoral duties after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon and Charleston. He wasn’t a catalyst for same-sex marriage but nourished the culture that made it possible.

It is harder than ever to see the big canvas and thus find fresh perspectives. We view current events as puny rivers of tweets, not grand chapters in the ultimate story — history.

In that longer view, we should feel well served. So, Mr. President, on behalf of an ungrateful nation, thank you.

Dick Meyer is chief Washington correspondent for the Scripps Washington Bureau and DecodeDC. Scripps has been operating since 1917.
Although not nearly so critical of the president a... (show quote)


Well, Dick, there never was an Iran deal. Iran is on track for a nuclear weapon and have now an ICBM to use. They believe in the Mohammedan end times, so war there is inevitable. Thanks, Pres. Obama.

Pastoral duties....what utter nonsense, YEARS after Sandy Hook he sheds a tear? Yet nothing after Hassan's murders, etc etc......despicably phony , not praiseworthy.

His "leading from behind" has left he mid east in shreds with hundreds of thousands dead, pogroms killing Christians, jihads mixed with the refugees now killing and raping in Europe and America. They'd be killing Jews in the Mid East, but they are either already left or are in Israel already.
Pres. Obama has done nothing to releduce the cases underlying our continuing now for 9 years. That the increasing national debt, the entitlement culture and the Obama government's unbridled lust for more and more power, the Congress be damned.

Pres. Obama's disinterest in international issues has alienated Israel, encouraged Putin, caused military adventurism in China, caused Japan to start to rearm while reducing our Military to PRE WW2 levels
He, Prs. Obama, will go down in American history...as the bottom of the barrel worst ever president.

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Jan 9, 2016 17:34:01   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
AuntiE wrote:
I feel the need to defend Slatten against this adjective. In fact, he is one of our most diplomatic and fair minded site members. He is willing to look at both sides.

His preface, I felt, made it clear the article was thought provoking and not necessarily to his agreement.


PS: Only myself and BearK are allowed to pick on Slatten. :mrgreen: :roll: :lol:

Than you, AuntiE for understanding my preface, though I expected a reasonable amount of criticism for posting this article. You show reason for my tolerating your usual sniping at me. :lol: BearK generally comforts me. :thumbup:

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Jan 9, 2016 17:35:30   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
errant hit :oops:

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Jan 9, 2016 17:46:07   #
Zombiefarmer23 Loc: Bull Hills
 
AuntiE wrote:
I feel the need to defend Slatten against this adjective. In fact, he is one of our most diplomatic and fair minded site members. He is willing to look at both sides.

His preface, I felt, made it clear the article was thought provoking and not necessarily to his agreement.


PS: Only myself and BearK are allowed to pick on Slatten. :mrgreen: :roll: :lol:


You misunderstand my meaning. IMO Mr. 49 seems to be a centrist, a moderate? I read his preface and it indicated to me a desire for comment on the article, e.g. road Apples. The word troll describes a method of fishing, i.e. can I catch a comment with this post?

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Jan 9, 2016 17:50:32   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Zombiefarmer23 wrote:
You misunderstand my meaning. IMO Mr. 49 seems to be a centrist, a moderate? I read his preface and it indicated to me a desire for comment on the article, e.g. road Apples. The word troll describes a method of fishing, i.e. can I catch a comment with this post?

That is a reasonable reading of my expectations, Zombie, less vitriolic diatribes. :wink:

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Jan 9, 2016 17:51:12   #
samual0729
 
slattan 49 your brain must be up your ass he has completely destroyed this once great country wake up look at the race problems he has caused now a cop gets shot and nary a word from him did he not say once i am a muslim i am one of you yes he will be remembered as a black ass-hole :thumbdown: :thumbdown: :thumbdown:

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Jan 9, 2016 17:55:32   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
slatten49 wrote:
Than you, AuntiE for understanding my preface, though I expected a reasonable amount of criticism for posting this article. You show reason for my tolerating your usual sniping at me. :lol: BearK generally comforts me. :thumbup:


She and I bring balance to your life.....except when I talk with the Sgt. Major to change the balance. :mrgreen: 8-) :twisted:

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Jan 9, 2016 17:58:41   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
Zombiefarmer23 wrote:
You misunderstand my meaning. IMO Mr. 49 seems to be a centrist, a moderate? I read his preface and it indicated to me a desire for comment on the article, e.g. road Apples. The word troll describes a method of fishing, i.e. can I catch a comment with this post?


He is very much a centrist/moderate with an ability to see both sides without vitrolic commentary.

Aha, as he often goes fishing, trolling would be applicable.

Again, only BearK and myself are allowed to berate him. We keep his life in balance. 8-) :roll: :lol: :mrgreen:

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