Eh... let's hear this funny... totally not a serious piece has to say. I mean, he's a comedian, it must be chock full of mirth and merriment...: (I actually give the guy credit for a well thought out piece, and coming to the conclusion that he does.... even if we disagree on other points. But yeah... this is TOTALLY NOT A SERIOUS PIECE YOU GUYS! Secondly, I apologize for such a long read... I know memes are about the extent of some people's attention span and level of reading comprehension.)
New York CNN ย โย
Can liberals ever be happy? I keep asking myself this question as I hear an increasing number complaining about President Obama.
There seems to be a Greek chorus of liberal whining: โIโm disappointed by him.โ โI expected more.โ โI thought he would be different.โ
Earlier this week, singer Jackson Browne, a vocal 2008 Obama supporter, lamented that President Obama is โโฆjust as beholden to the people who put him in office as any of the Republicans would be.โ
Matt Damon, who had very publicly supported Obama in 2008, has now very publicly attacked President Obama. Damon even went so far as to heap praise on former President Bush, saying: โI would kiss George W. Bush on the mouthโ in appreciation for his work fighting AIDS in Africa. Although Damon did note his kiss of Bush would be limited to: โThree seconds, no tongue.โ
Others turning on Obama include John Cusack, comedian/actor Jon Lovitz, and even the distinguished professor Cornel West, who called Obama: โA black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs and a black puppet of corporate plutocrats.โ
A new Gallup Poll released this week found that President Obamaโs support among liberals was at its lowest point in seven months, although itโs still a solid majority of 70%.
Whatโs clear is that the liberals speaking out donโt want a president, they want a king. Albeit a liberal king โ but still a king, who would be unrestrained by Congress as well as the checks and balances enshrined in our Constitution.
These disenchanted liberals apparently wanted Obama โ upon taking office โ to have instantly transformed every campaign promise into law by the simple wave of a pen. Or maybe they would have preferred Obama to have walked out onto a White House balcony where, in a scene reminiscent of the musical โEvita,โ he would be greeted by adoring throngs waiting below, and on the spot, declare that all his ideas were now the law of the land.
But hereโs the problem. Barack Obama is not a king, heโs the president of the United States. For those who may have forgotten the โSchoolhouse Rockโ cartoon of โHow a bill becomes a law,โ Congress needs to first pass the bill before it has any chance of becoming a law.
Our Founding Fathers set up a governmental structure that requires the president to engage in give and take with the legislative branch. Of course, if the Founding Fathers could see the current state of our dysfunctional Congress, they may have instead chosen a dictatorship. But they didnโt, instead drafting a system to guard us against tyranny.
Consequently, President Obama is required to navigate through myriad vested interests that exercise influence on the 535 members of Congress. Keep in mind most of Congress was in office before President Obama was elected and most will be there when he leaves. Powerful members of Congress are like summer camp counselors and Obama is like the camper. He will only be there a relatively short amount of time, but they will remain to run the camp. And they know it.
Thus, as opposed to a king, a president has to engage in activity that some on the left view as a dirty word. That wicked word is: compromise.
In fairness, there are many on the far right who also disdain compromise. Who can forget tea party darling Herman Cainโs statement: โโฆpeople are sick and tired of this word in Washington: compromise. This is why nothing ever gets done.โ (This is amazing logic, because you would normally think it was the lack of compromise that prevents things from getting done in Washington.)
To me, the liberals who are so very disappointed with President Obama either had unrealistic expectations for him, viewing him as a messianic figure who would magically solve all of our nationโs woes, or simply refuse to grasp the reality of our American political system. In either case, the answer is: The problem is not Obama, itโs you.
Being president requires some degree of compromise due to the very nature of our government. That is the way it has been for more than 200 years. While President Obama may be far from perfect โ and, I, too, have been disappointed with some of his decisions โ I certainly prefer him to a king.
By
Snake ·