Misstatement Of The Union

Agree with everything Bill says, except the part about McCain. He'd have been just as bad.
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Misstatement Of The Union
By: BillOReilly.com Thursday, January 14, 2016

The USA and the world are generally pretty swell right now. Don't believe it? Then you didn't listen closely to President Obama's final State of the Union address this week.

The commander-in-chief assured us that the economy is purring, the United States is more powerful than ever, and the people should be content. It makes you wonder whether the president ever sees those polls showing that two-thirds of Americans feel the country is on the wrong track.

If he did, he would probably blame talk radio, Fox News, Republicans, and other 'nattering nabobs of negativism,' that famous phrase written for Vice President Spiro Agnew by wordsmith William Safire.

Just to be clear, Mr. Obama is correct when he says the United States remains 'the most powerful nation on earth.' Of course it is, but the USA has become less powerful under his watch. ISIS continues to sow panic and shed blood across large swaths of the Middle East and North Africa, while China and Russia and Iran thumb their collective noses in our direction.

Senator John McCain, who could have been presenting his final State of the Union address had he won in 2008, appeared on The Factor and accused the president of harboring an 'almost pathological denial.' McCain, who knows a thing or two about wars and turmoil, lamented that there are more crises and refugees than at any time since World War II. So who you gonna' believe, President Obama? Or Senator McCain and your lyin' eyes?

The president is also right on the money, so to speak, when he points to a low unemployment rate. But he ignores the fact that so many Americans have dropped out of the work force, while those who are working know they're getting hammered every time they open that paycheck. About half of U.S. workers make $30,000 a year or less. It's bad news for them, their families, and the political establishment, good news for Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.

One word conspicuously absent from Tuesday's speech was 'debt.' As in the $19-trillion of debt the federal government has taken on, most of it amassed during President Obama's tenure. For a little perspective, every single day our national debt rises by about the same amount as that winning Powerball jackpot.

Sending your kids to college costs far more, health care costs far more, food prices are up, wages are stagnant. That is simply not a recipe for prosperity, Mr. President, nothing about which to boast. Sure, the price of gas has nosedived, helping average Americans immensely. But we all know that President Obama would actually prefer gas to be more expensive. Because, you know, climate change.

It's been seven years since President Barack Obama soared into office, riding a crest of good will and high hopes. Seems like a few decades ago, doesn't it? We have now reached the point where Joe Biden is being assigned to cure cancer. Old Joe better hurry, he only has one year left.

President Obama is not a man given to regrets. He has, as our friendly former psychiatrist Charles Krauthammer points out, a rather lofty self-regard. But on Tuesday night the president did lament his failure to bridge the political divide. That came right after he ridiculed anyone who disagrees with him on climate change or Islamic terror or education or spending or just about anything else.

We all want 'better politics,' as you put it, Mr. President. But that comes from talking to the other side, searching for common ground, and solving problems. It doesn't come from dismissing and demonizing those with whom you disagree.

No question, President Obama can still give a pretty good speech. And his acolytes still see him as a near-deity taking on the malevolent forces of evil. But most Americans are sorely disappointed. We wanted so much more, Mr. President. To borrow from Terry Malloy in 'On the Waterfront,' you could have been a contender.

Our next president needs to focus on problem-solving, not ideology and speech-giving, from day one. On January 20, 2017, we will thank Barack Obama for his service and his efforts. But most of us will look back with regret. Sad.
 
Agree with everything Bill says, except the part about McCain. He'd have been just as bad.
-------
Misstatement Of The Union
By: BillOReilly.com Thursday, January 14, 2016

The USA and the world are generally pretty swell right now. Don't believe it? Then you didn't listen closely to President Obama's final State of the Union address this week.

The commander-in-chief assured us that the economy is purring, the United States is more powerful than ever, and the people should be content. It makes you wonder whether the president ever sees those polls showing that two-thirds of Americans feel the country is on the wrong track.

If he did, he would probably blame talk radio, Fox News, Republicans, and other 'nattering nabobs of negativism,' that famous phrase written for Vice President Spiro Agnew by wordsmith William Safire.

Just to be clear, Mr. Obama is correct when he says the United States remains 'the most powerful nation on earth.' Of course it is, but the USA has become less powerful under his watch. ISIS continues to sow panic and shed blood across large swaths of the Middle East and North Africa, while China and Russia and Iran thumb their collective noses in our direction.

Senator John McCain, who could have been presenting his final State of the Union address had he won in 2008, appeared on The Factor and accused the president of harboring an 'almost pathological denial.' McCain, who knows a thing or two about wars and turmoil, lamented that there are more crises and refugees than at any time since World War II. So who you gonna' believe, President Obama? Or Senator McCain and your lyin' eyes?

The president is also right on the money, so to speak, when he points to a low unemployment rate. But he ignores the fact that so many Americans have dropped out of the work force, while those who are working know they're getting hammered every time they open that paycheck. About half of U.S. workers make $30,000 a year or less. It's bad news for them, their families, and the political establishment, good news for Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.

One word conspicuously absent from Tuesday's speech was 'debt.' As in the $19-trillion of debt the federal government has taken on, most of it amassed during President Obama's tenure. For a little perspective, every single day our national debt rises by about the same amount as that winning Powerball jackpot.

Sending your kids to college costs far more, health care costs far more, food prices are up, wages are stagnant. That is simply not a recipe for prosperity, Mr. President, nothing about which to boast. Sure, the price of gas has nosedived, helping average Americans immensely. But we all know that President Obama would actually prefer gas to be more expensive. Because, you know, climate change.

It's been seven years since President Barack Obama soared into office, riding a crest of good will and high hopes. Seems like a few decades ago, doesn't it? We have now reached the point where Joe Biden is being assigned to cure cancer. Old Joe better hurry, he only has one year left.

President Obama is not a man given to regrets. He has, as our friendly former psychiatrist Charles Krauthammer points out, a rather lofty self-regard. But on Tuesday night the president did lament his failure to bridge the political divide. That came right after he ridiculed anyone who disagrees with him on climate change or Islamic terror or education or spending or just about anything else.

We all want 'better politics,' as you put it, Mr. President. But that comes from talking to the other side, searching for common ground, and solving problems. It doesn't come from dismissing and demonizing those with whom you disagree.

No question, President Obama can still give a pretty good speech. And his acolytes still see him as a near-deity taking on the malevolent forces of evil. But most Americans are sorely disappointed. We wanted so much more, Mr. President. To borrow from Terry Malloy in 'On the Waterfront,' you could have been a contender.

Our next president needs to focus on problem-solving, not ideology and speech-giving, from day one. On January 20, 2017, we will thank Barack Obama for his service and his efforts. But most of us will look back with regret. Sad.

I, for one, will NOT be thanking his sorry ass for "his service and efforts".
 
I can't give you a like because I detest Bill O'reilly and the world will be a better place when his old generation dies off, but I am starting to get the Trump bug, when it comes to problem solving over idea ology. It started with a "slippery slope" and now every decision is made based on the outcome of some feared future slippery slope. We can't help the poor because that is a slippery slope and someday everybody will be poor and there will be nobody left to help them. We can't cut any regulation because then the corporations will take over the whole world and our own neighborhood. Don't matter what the current problem is, it can't be solved because that would be a "slippery slope." So it's like an insane asylumn being run by idealists.
 
"...wages are stagnant."
No, they're not.

"United States GDP per capita PPP 1990-2016 | Data | Chart | Calendar
"The Gross Domestic Product per capita in the United States was last recorded at 52117.76 US dollars in 2014, when adjusted by purchasing power parity (PPP). The GDP per Capita, in the United States, when adjusted by Purchasing Power Parity is equivalent to 293 percent of the world's average. GDP per capita PPP in the United States averaged 45395.74 USD from 1990 until 2014, reaching an all time high of 52117.76 USD in 2014 and a record low of 36543.10 USD in 1991. GDP per capita PPP in the United States is reported by the World Bank."

http://www.tradingeconomics.com/united-states/gdp-per-capita-ppp
 
Like compare job growth under Obama to job growth under the last republican, in their seventh years?

The markets get a whiff of what a liberal smells like in june and then find out in october of 15

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Obama believes the country just isn't good enough for someone as special as he is. He can barely conceal his utter contempt for voters. He doesn't bother to conceal it for those who dare to disagree with His Royal Highness.

Some would argue that Jimmy Carter, Mr. Sanctimonious himself, was a worse president. I don't think so. Carter faced problems several magnitudes greater than anything that has crossed Obama's desk, that is, when he wasn't out on the links or partying with Beyoncé. Carter was basically a decent man who was way out of his depth and saddled with a misguided world view. He was despised by the Kennedys and DC insiders, who made life tough for him. Obama, by contrast, has been treated with unctuous obeisance by the media and his party.

Obama has presided over a disastrous foreign policy, a terrible economy, wrecked the health care system, played the race card at every opportunity, poisoned relations between the police and minorities, politicized every agency and every decision, fomented and exacerbated divisions along every fault line and thumbed his nose at the Constitution. The one thing I give him credit for is he hasn't gotten us involved in any wars, at least yet, but he did manage to set US-Russian relations back to Cold War levels. He has been a complete and total disaster.
 
Obama believes the country just isn't good enough for someone as special as he is. He can barely conceal his utter contempt for voters. He doesn't bother to conceal it for those who dare to disagree with His Royal Highness.
Sounds just like Trump.
 
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