“You will not see your taxes increased a single dime. I repeat: not one single dime. In fact, the recovery plan provides a tax cut . . . and these checks are on the way.”To which the Post responds:
So much for summoning the country to sacrifice. Obama has been no more willing to ask average Americans to pitch in, even once the recession is over, than Bush.(The WP meant to write "than Bush was." A major newspaper should take greater care.)
Lisa, it seems, agrees with the WP's contention that Obama should demand greater sacrifice. And I presume that Johnson agrees with Lisa.
So where does this stance leave us? We find ourselves in a classic damned-if-you-do-damned-if-you-don't situation:
1. If Obama does lower taxes, NQ will say that he is "unwilling to ask for sacrifice."
2. If Obama had asked for higher taxes, NQ would have called him a socialist.
In fact, Johnson's site has damned the President as a socialist on previous occasions, as have plenty of other blogs. Thus, No Quarter offers both Option 1 attacks and Option 2 attacks, even though the two options are mutually contradictory.
Oh, but it gets worse: LisaB makes a head-snapping ideological switch within the same post. She goes on to quote (again, approvingly) Forbes:
Christopher Buckley, David Gergen and David Brooks. All three used to insist that Obama was some species of centrist or moderate. Now that Obama has proposed the most massive expansion of government in the history of the republic, each has recognized that just conceivably he might have been mistaken.Okay, now we have Bam-Bam the bolshie, hoisting the red flag while working through a rap version of The Internationale. Just a paragraph ago, he was insufficiently FDR-ish; now he's gone beyond FDR-land and on into Marxville.
Which is it?
Before you say it: I am not getting soft on Obama. I am asking for political consistency, of the sort that one finds on (for example) The Confluence, a site which has always criticized our president from a left-ish perspective. That's my perspective as well, and I really cannot give even a tenth of a damn about anything David Brooks has to say.
To my way of thinking, Obama's stimulus package will probably fail because it is not sufficiently aggressive, and because Geithner favors the interests of the Wall Street crowd over the interests of the average citizen. In my view, Obama should nationalize the banks outright, offer HOLC-style relief to homeowners, and initiate massive government jobs programs. The problem is not that Obama has resurrected the Keynes/FDR legacy; the problem is his betrayal of that legacy.
I'm troubled by those who assail half-measures as extremism. I'm also troubled by irresponsible bloggers who try to squish together a left-wing and a right-wing critique. The two viewpoints are distinct and cannot intertwine.
I ask, in short, for consistency.
Yes, Tabatha? I see your hand raised. You have something to contribute...?
Ah. No, Tabatha: Emerson did not say "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." That is a commonly heard misquotation. He said "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds." In the hobgoblin hierarchy, a foolish inconsistency can be even more dangerous.
6 comments:
Good post, Joe.
A "foolish" consistency IS quite correct. However...
It was Emerson, not Thoreau.
:)
Thanks. I corrected my piece. Just to establish, y'know, consistency.
The biggest problem I see over at No Quarter is not just a lack of focus, as you note, but the sheer number of daily posts, sometimes seven or eight a day. It would be better if they had maybe one or two really good pieces a day and spent more time developing them. Then a bit more consistency might be achieved.
I would be happy as hell if Obama turned out to be "too liberal."
Back during the campaign we had winger visitors at TC claiming Obama was a socialist. I told them that they were making me want to vote for him.
Great piece Joseph and I agree totally. I've heard the phrase nationalizing risk while privatizing profits. It doesn't make much sense to me. They should have just took them all over, fired all the bad management and corrupt traders, and prosecuted every person proven to be a crook.
Instead, people who defrauded their institutions not only get to keep their ill gotten gains they get to keep on doing what they did to ruin the institutions in the first place. I have a serious problem with not nationalizing the banks.
As for no-quarter I've basically stopped going there. I used to go there several times a day though I did take their stories with a grain of salt. They have an agenda and are pushing it just like everyone else.
Take the whole Rezko situation. While I do agree that Obama was probably involved in the pay to play scenario there is absolutely zero evidence that Obama ever did anything illegal in conjunction with Rezko. He probably did but we also need to point out that he could have been a victim of the guy rather than a co-conspirator.
No-quarter never published any of the alternate possibilities. They do this with all their points of view and they twist the facts to their perception of the truth instead of letting the facts dictate what is true or not true. The very definition of spin, I guess. This is the same thing that happened on Kos a couple of years back when I stopped reading it.
I agree that there are so many posters on NoQuarter and Larry has said before that not all of the posts reflect his own opinions. I think he has welcomed anyone anti-Obama to post there and many old posters who were all Hillary supporters but fall under different political views. From what I can tell Larry is a Libertarian. I have agreed with him on almost everything except for the economy and his opinion on how to fix it. Whenever you visit NQ you just have to remember that there are some liberal posters similar to those at The Confluence and there are others who are Libertarian or moderate Republicans who supported Hillary.
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