For those of us that are calendar-impaired, it is now nearly four months since the awful events at Benghazi, Libya unfolded, leaving four Americans, including our Ambassador, dead at the hands of Islamic terrorists. Were it not for this terrible toll suffered in conjunction by a total destruction of diplomatic respect and protocol. the lack of response by the American Government would be laughable.
While many Americans think that this chain of events certainly raises to the highest level of governmental concerns, the president has chosen to push what little responsibility he has taken down the chain of command. The head of the CIA has been sacked, but not for any malfeasance related to his responsibility for the Benghazi deaths. Apparently several mid-level State Department drones were fired, but on further investigation, it seems that they haven't really lost their jobs after all.
All of which leaves us with Hillary, who is still(?) head of the State Department. While she did accept "responsibility" albeit phoned in from Peru, she has gone from being silent to, as of late, being invisible as well. Her strategy here seems to be to keep running out the clock until her replacement is sworn in.
This strategy should come as no surprise to those of us who remember the Clinton White House years with its chains of unanswered questions regarding Whitewater and those Rose Law Firm billing records. Assuming that she continues to be a no-show at the Congressional hearings on Benghazi, there is really only one last touch stone left in this saga. Hillary obviously subscribes to the Leona Helmsley school of social responsibility which might counsel: Hearings? Hearings are for the little people.
So now, the last remaining question is the over and under on the exact date that Hillary will turn the final page on responsibility. This would be the date on which some intrepid questioner will ask herself about the 9/11/2012 fiasco. The response will be a quick look of disbelief, followed by something along the line: We've been over and over that and it is, frankly, old news. We think the American people want to turn the page and put that behind us. When this happens, the campaign for 2016 will have officially begun.
Analysis, opinions and musings from America's Home Town, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Monday, December 24, 2012
Give Up or Fight On?
Dr. Larry P. Arnn |
By structure, we were forced to chose between two individuals, each representing a political party, one of whom emerged victorious, but by a small enough margin that some now speak of the United States as a House Divided. While the Democrats have retained the Presidency and a majority position in the Senate, Republicans continue to lead the House. As we creep ever closer to the fiscal Cliff, the dividing line is at the same time both stark and obscured.
During the election. the Left hammered away at the Republicans' purported lack of empathy for the needy of America. The charges were colorful, but not helpful in that they steered attention away from the key issues as they created the illusion of an infinitely wealthy upper crust refusing to help those less fortunate. Millionaires and Billionaires became the bogeymen of the day. If only those fattest of cats would pay their "fair share", all would be well. Would that it be so easy. The Federal deficit is ballooning to the point that even a 100% tax rate wouldn't help for very long. The focus, as of late, has been on tax rates, but the real issue is runaway spending. "Tax and Spend" has morphed into "Spend, Tax, Borrow and Print More Money." We don't have to look farther than some of our European neighbors to see where this strategy leads.
For his first two years in office, The President's party had full control of both chambers of the Legislature. This period of free reign, that is, free, to some extent of the normal checks and balances provided by the government's design, produced several blockbuster bills, that might have, had there been more balance, emerged in a more effective form, or, perhaps, not at all. In spite of the stacked deck, the Affordable Care Act was passed only through parliamentary shenanigans that would have impressed Houdini. Many of us are still not sure exactly what it does, or what it might eventually cost. Yes, there were, and still are, serious concerns regarding health care, serious enough to merit open debate and discussion and perhaps some carefully crafted remedies.
During the same two-year reign, a massive federal stimulus bill was also passed. This Keynesian handout failed miserably in its stated purpose of stimulating the economy as it was tightly aimed at the Left's special interests. These two acts were the headliners in a spending spree which threatens to push the Federal deficit to astronomical levels, where amounts of less than a $ hundred billion are now considered rounding errors. The effects of unfettered deficit growth are both real and frightening.
Many in both the government and the media are quick to point to the Republican-led House as the fly in the ointment. We would rather argue that the House is performing the exact role for which it was designed in demanding fiscal responsibility. John Boehner, for all his barnacles, stands as a colossus against this rush to fiscal perdition. Checks and balances are not just quaint antiques. Yes, the President won re-election, but the office to which he was elected was President, not Emperor. We suggest that he might dust off his constitutional law text books while he vacations.
A tip of the hat to Dr. Larry P. Arnn , president of Hillsdale College, for his comments in a recent radio interview with Hugh Hewitt. Click on the link to read a transcript as presented in the December issue of Hillsdale's publication, Imprimis. Dr. Arnn does an excellent job of putting the constitutional concerns stemming from the results of the November election into historical context. His resounding answer to the query: "Time to Give Up or Time to Fight On?" is a resounding call for a redoubling of effort by all right-thinking Americans.
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