As Michael Barone writes, “Thuggery is unattractive. Ineffective thuggery even more so. Which may be one reason so many Americans have been reacting negatively to the response of Barack Obama and his administration to BP’s gulf oil spill:”
Take Interior Secretary Ken Salazar’s remark that he would keep his “boot on the neck” of BP, which brings to mind George Orwell’s definition of totalitarianism as “a boot stamping on a human face — forever.” Except that Salazar’s boot hasn’t gotten much in the way of results yet.
Or consider Obama’s undoubtedly carefully considered statement to Matt Lauer that he was consulting with experts “so I know whose ass to kick.” Attacking others is a standard campaign tactic when you’re in political trouble, and certainly BP, which appears to have taken unwise shortcuts in the gulf, is an attractive target.
AdvertisementBut you don’t always win arguments that way. The Obama White House gleefully took on Dick Cheney on the issue of terrorist interrogations. It turned out that more Americans agreed with Cheney’s stand, despite his low poll numbers, than Obama’s.
Then there is Obama’s decision to impose a six-month moratorium on deepwater oil drilling in the gulf. This penalizes companies with better safety records than BP’s and will result in many advanced drilling rigs being sent to offshore oil fields abroad.
The justification offered was an Interior Department report supposedly “peer reviewed” by “experts identified by the National Academy of Engineering.” But it turned out the drafts the experts saw didn’t include any recommendation for a moratorium. Eight of the cited experts have said they oppose the moratorium as more economically devastating than the oil spill and “counterproductive” to safety.
This was blatant dishonesty by the administration, on an Orwellian scale. In defense of a policy that has all the earmarks of mindless panic, that penalizes firms and individuals guilty of no wrongdoing and that will worsen rather than improve our energy situation. Ineffective thuggery.
But then, “blatant dishonesty on an Orwellian scale” certainly sums up the current administration’s method of operations on just about all issues extremely well, doesn’t it? Or as Smitty at Stacy McCain’s Website writes, in response to Rahm Emanuel’s apparent swan song, “Let’s face it: running banana republic-style regime in a country where people are armed and can still speak out is hahrd.”
And speaking of Rahm, at the Belmont Club, it’s “Attack Speed, Rahmming Speed!”












I happen to have a friend who works on offshore oil rigs. His rig has already been relocated to the west coast of Africa.
Obama literally gave the finger to both Hilary Clinton and John McCain during the campaign, and he has organized gangs to terrorize people who work for various financial institutions. He has run crude Chicago-style shakedowns on the auto industry, financial houses and banks and BP. The only things we haven’t seen are the brown shirts and arm bands.
Who needs energy or jobs when we have bike paths? The Great Leap Backwards continues apace. Barack to the Future!, as Ed coined it.
bob: The shirts appear to be purple this time and it wouldn’t be a surprise to learn that the arm bands have made it past the design stage, needing only the right “crisis” for them to be issued.
The biggest scandal in the history of the United States is right in front of your face in this oil spill and not one article written on it to date; not one person except me has figured it out!
The scandal is so large that it would be analogous to Birney Madoff is a shoplifter of a candy bar in comparison.
Obviously PJ does not want the story so I will let the cat out of the bag elsewhere!
I’m just like “Slim”, all you have/had to do is ask.