nChrist
|
 |
« on: July 25, 2013, 05:22:43 PM » |
|
________________________________________ The Patriot Post - Alexander's Essay 7-25-2013 From The Federalist Patriot Free Email Subscription ________________________________________
If Obama Had a City, It Would Look Like Detroit Detroit Is a Metaphor for Obama's America
By Mark Alexander
July 25, 2013
"The multiplication of public offices, increase of expense beyond income, growth and entailment of a public debt, are indications soliciting the employment of the pruning knife." --Thomas Jefferson (1821)
Launching the next leg of his perpetual campaign, Barack Hussein Obama1 took his "Change the Subject" snake oil sales pitch -- which he prefers to call the "Better Bargain for the Middle Class2" tour -- on the road this week. In this, his 18th "political pivot" back to jobs, he is endeavoring to portray the feeble "economic recovery" -- less than 1 percent GDP in each of the last four years -- as his greatest success story. He will re-refocus on the "Republican sequester3," blaming it for his economic policy failures.
Obama's objective is to rally support for even more taxes, spending and debt, in advance of upcoming budget negotiations with House Republicans.
During a seemingly endless stump speech in Galesburg, Illinois, on Wednesday, Obama droned on for nearly 8,000 words, not one of which was "Detroit." "We've come a long way since I first took office," he arrogantly proclaimed. "As a country, we're older and we're wiser." (Seriously, he said that -- as if he alone had raised the collective wisdom of the nation.) However, he did not mention that we're deeper in debt than ever and perilously close to insolvency as a nation, that his socialist policies have failed as such policies always do, that most economic indicators are flat or down, that the number of impoverished families continues to grow, and that his administration is deeply mired in some very troubling scandals.
Regarding those scandals, he characterized his IRS Patriot hit list4 and the alteration of the Benghazi attack script5 just ahead of his 2012 re-election bid as an "endless parade of distractions ... and phony scandals." But there is nothing phony about the IRS targeting conservative groups, or the murder of Americans in Benghazi.
Last week, Obama lost more ground with his most loyal constituency, black voters, when the political value of the Zimmerman/Martin case6 died with the jury's not-guilty verdict.
Desperate to improve his favorability ratings, and to divert attention away from his administration's failings on every level -- including his increasingly beleaguered scheme to nationalize health care -- Obama is betting that his appearances before adoring, handpicked audiences will bolster his national approval. Given the endless media coverage of these staged events, that is probably a good bet.
Unfortunately for Obama, in the same week he announced his "economic success" summits across the nation, the city of Detroit announced its Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing -- with no way to cover billions in unfunded liabilities. That's the largest municipal bankruptcy in history. As you recall, just before his re-election last year, Obama claimed Detroit as one of his success stories: "We refused to let Detroit go bankrupt. We bet on American workers and American ingenuity, and three years later, that bet is paying off in a big way."
Obviously not. Obama's "road forward" has proven to be a dead end for Detroit, as it has for the whole nation.
Recalling Obama's politically motivated remark to make the Zimmerman/Martin case part of his campaign last year -- "If I had a son, he would look like Trayvon" -- the obvious parallel for Obama in this instance would be, "If I had a city, it would look like Detroit."
Detroit is an apropos metaphor for Obama's America1. It is the prototypical terminal manifestation of the Democratic Party's7 socialist economic policies that have created ever-expanding urban poverty plantations8 in once-great cities across the nation. That in turn drives the departure of middle-class families for greener pastures in outlying suburban counties with better schools and lower crime.
Over just the last decade, some 240,000 of Detroit's residents (25 percent of its population), and thousands of businesses, fled the city's oppressive taxes and corrupt one-party government. Indeed, Detroit was a bustling city of nearly 2,000,000 residents as far back as 1950; today, that number is just over 700,000. (Not coincidentally, Detroit's last Republican mayor, Louis Miriani, served more than a half-century ago, from 1957 to 1962.)
Traveling through Detroit, as with other blighted urban centers, I can't help but recall my travels through the urban wastelands of the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Ironically, Russian leaders today understand the importance of lower taxes and decentralized government as a catalyst for free enterprise and economic growth, while Democrat leaders in our nation advocate policies that stifle economic growth and centralize government.
|