Broken Promises

Barack Obama’s long list:

I’m sure people could add to this list, but there’s enough here to establish a pattern. Even if you stipulate that politicians often make claims they can’t keep–that some are the product of cynical deception and others the product of unforeseen circumstances–Mr. Obama is in a category all his own.

Does it matter? I think so, in part because I don’t believe it’s good to have as president someone for whom words have no objective meaning and who believes he can construct his own narrative to fit his own needs. But I also think we’re seeing an accretion occur. It’s happening later than I would have hoped, but the public does seem to be tuning out the president. The latest pivot to the economy–has that pivot occurred a half-dozen or a dozen times before?–is meaningless. Nothing has happened before; why should anything happen now?

Mr. Obama talks, and he talks, and he talks. My how he loves to talk. But his words don’t translate into anything real. And eventually that does take a toll.

Actually, his words often do translate to something real — it’s just that it’s the opposite of what the words would indicate.

2 thoughts on “Broken Promises”

  1. What got me in the first place was how casually Obama reversed his positions in 2008 on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (giving only a weak argument for changing his mind) once he had locked in the Democrat nomination. Sure, there’s an argument that every such candidate heads to the “center” after a nomination win, but the perfunctory nature of Obama’s move was an indication to me of his character. He wasn’t taking seriously at all those concerns of his Democrat supporters. This early judgment has since been enforced many times by the actions of Obama and his associates.

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