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Your opinion on the job that President Obama is doing so far (1 Viewer)

Your opinion on the job that President Obama is doing so far

  • strongly approve

    Votes: 43 17.8%
  • mildly approve

    Votes: 43 17.8%
  • mildly disapprove

    Votes: 31 12.8%
  • strongly disapprove

    Votes: 121 50.0%
  • neutral/no opinion

    Votes: 4 1.7%

  • Total voters
    242
I think people are starting to come to the conclusion that our economy will get worse over the next two years, not better.
+1Unemployment still at 9% - there's no reason to increase wages with a ready workforce available.Production is stagnantWholesale prices are upPetroleum prices are up with summer increases sure to push them higherForeclosures are still a substantial chunk of home salesTaxes have to go up to mitigate the gigantic deficits created by the enormous level of government expendituresI'm not sure where one could come to the conclusion that the economy is going to improve. Inflationary pressures are going to take hold and this over-valued market is going to have to correct.
 
A recent report here on how weaker unions can be a "huge landscape-altering type of action" & that "the GOP could benefit long-term by crippling a key source of campaign funding and volunteers for Democrats." A nationwide push to weaken unions could move states like Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, Washington state and Pennsylvania solidly into the republican column.

We can talk about realignment elections, but this could be a far-reaching and permanent realigning action when all is said and done.

MADISON, Wis. – The high-stakes fight in Wisconsin over union rights is about more than pay and benefits in the public sector. It could have far-reaching effects on electoral politics in this and other states by helping solidify Republican power for years, experts said Monday.

While Republican Gov. Scott Walker's plan to wipe out collective bargaining rights for most public employees has galvanized Democrats and union members in opposition, the GOP could benefit long-term by crippling a key source of campaign funding and volunteers for Democrats.

"It would be a huge landscape-altering type of action, and it would tilt the scales significantly in favor of the Republicans," said Mike McCabe, director of the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, which has long tracked union involvement in Wisconsin elections. "This is a national push, and it's being simultaneously pushed in a number of states. I think Wisconsin is moving the fastest and most aggressively so far."
 
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Obama's attempt to distance himself from Wisconsin rally fails
In a good indication that the Wisconsin protests have become a liability for Democrats, the White House and the DNC have clumsily attempted to distance themselves from the event in the New York Times:

Administration officials said Sunday that the White House had done nothing to encourage the demonstrations in Wisconsin — nor was it doing so in Ohio, Florida and other states where new Republican governors are trying to make deep cuts to balance their budget. …

And, officials and union leaders said, reports of the involvement of the Democratic National Committee — specifically Organizing for America, the grass-roots network born of Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign — were overblown to start with. …

“This is a Wisconsin story, not a Washington one,” said Dan Pfeiffer, the White House communications director. “False claims of White House involvement are attempts to distract from the organic grass-roots opposition that is happening in Wisconsin.”

But apparently someone forget to tell the DNC’s communication director Bob Woodhouse to scrub his Twitter feed to reflect this new strategy. Doug Ross has pointed out a Feb. 17 Tweet from Woodhouse saying that the White House was “proudly” playing a role in the protest.

With all of the baseless claims made by Democrats that the Tea Party movement was Republican Party Astroturf, it doesn’t seem likely that the GOP will let this blunder by the DNC slide.
 
Does Obama even know somethings going on in Libya?

As Ben Smith reports, “here's a situation pretty much without precedent: The Libyan Ambassador to the U.S. just called on the United States to denounce his country's leaders -- and his employers -- more forcefully.”

"I want the U.S. to tell the world and to work with the countries who love peace...they have to stop this," Ambassador Ali Ojli said, suggesting that he had resigned his post, in an interview with Al Jazeera English.

"I would never ask us to intervene physically in Libya," he said, but called on the Obama Administration to "take a strong position that what's happening in libya must be stopped now…”

The Wall Street Journal has a powerful editorial calling for a strong U.S. response—and not just a rhetorical one. Marc Lynch, writing at Foreign Policy's website, also sees the urgency and gravity of the situation.

And the Obama administration? The president hasn't discussed the situation since calling generally for restraint on Friday. Then this afternoon, Secretary of State Clinton issued a truly pathetic statement:

The world is watching the situation in Libya with alarm. We join the international community in strongly condemning the violence in Libya. Our thoughts and prayers are with those whose lives have been lost, and with their loved ones. The government of Libya has a responsibility to respect the universal rights of the people, including the right to free expression and assembly. Now is the time to stop this unacceptable bloodshed. We are working urgently with friends and partners around the world to convey this message to the Libyan government.

No direct condemnation of the Qaddafi regime. No expression of support for the demonstrators. No hint of action on our part—no immediate economic embargo, no threats against any individuals involved in the atrocities, no call for a U.N. Security Council meeting, no sign of possible NATO enforcement of a no-fly zone, no demand that the border be opened for humanitarian aid. Instead, the State Department is trying to "convey a message" to the Libyan government.

This is your State Department at work. Surely there are some in the White House—I think there are some—who are cringing at such an absence of moral clarity on the part of the U.S. government and at such a failure of American leadership. Let's hope they persuade the president to step forward very soon to overrule the State Department, and to put the United States, in both speech and deed, strongly and unequivocally on the side of decency and freedom.
 
24 months ago, the conventional wisdom was that the republican brand was damaged, conservatism would wander in the wilderness for 40 years and we were in a new liberal era. Today, the House is controlled by the GOP, there are many freshly-minted republicans in governor's mansions across the country, and those governors are pushing towards landmark labor union reform that has the potential to seriously and permanently damage the fundraising ability of the democrat party machine. Its amazing how wrong conventional wisdom can be.

 
'Fensalk said:
24 months ago, the conventional wisdom was that the republican brand was damaged, conservatism would wander in the wilderness for 40 years and we were in a new liberal era. Today, the House is controlled by the GOP, there are many freshly-minted republicans in governor's mansions across the country, and those governors are pushing towards landmark labor union reform that has the potential to seriously and permanently damage the fundraising ability of the democrat party machine. Its amazing how wrong conventional wisdom can be.
And with a few stupid moves of their own, the republicans will hand the advantage back to the democrats. Thats how they keep the lemmings in order.
 
Obama's spineless response to the situation in Libya

This article is a hammer and Obama is a nail.

What is the White House’s strategy on the Libyan crisis? Quite simply there isn’t one. As Alex Spillius noted in his post yesterday, the US government has been remarkably meek on Libya. Like the EU, the Obama administration is stuck in classic deer in the headlights mode, offering little more than mealy-mouthed statements condemning the state-sponsored violence against anti-government protesters on the streets of Tripoli, Benghazi, Tobruk and other key Libyan cities, which has already claimed at least 1,000 lives.

Both Barack Obama’s and Hillary Clinton’s remarks today on Libya were distinctly underwhelming and non-confrontational, offering little beyond a carefully worded expression of outrage, except for a pledge to hold yet more meetings with the international community to discuss the Libyan situation. And both failed to even mention the man behind the reign of terror sweeping the country – “Mad Dog” Gaddafi, a ruthless dictator with Libyan, American and British blood on his hands.

This is an historic moment. One of the most brutal, evil and anti-American tyrants of our time is facing a massive popular revolt that is threatening to finally remove him from power after more than four decades as absolute ruler of his country. It is not a time for fence-sitting or navel-gazing from the world’s only superpower. President Obama should be openly calling for Muammar Gaddafi to step aside immediately, and if he doesn’t, face complete international isolation – including comprehensive sanctions, travel bans, the freezing of bank accounts, and a halt to Western investment and trade.

The Libyan people don’t need lofty neutrality from Washington. They do however need the president of the most powerful nation on earth to actively back their aspirations for freedom and democracy. And they certainly aren’t waiting for toothless statements from a divided UN Security Council or a morally bankrupt Human Rights Council.

President Obama is already being outflanked by Nicolas Sarkozy, who has taken a far tougher line on Libya than his US counterpart. It is hugely embarrassing when even the French are doing more to confront a murderous dictator than the traditional leader of the free world. Frankly, President Obama makes Jimmy Carter look like General MacArthur by comparison. The US administration needs to wake up from its slumber and start showing some real leadership on the world stage in place of its existing milquetoast foreign policy.
 
What possible motive does Obama have for not coming out publicly to condemn what's happening in Libya? WTF?

 
'Statorama said:
There's a button under the poll that allows you to delete your vote if you've changed your mind.
Thanks for pointing that out. Great feature.Went from mildly disapprove to strongly disapprove. Someone please step forward to put up a serious challenge next year. Obama is just not right for the job.
 
Obama's spineless response to the situation in Libya

This article is a hammer and Obama is a nail.

What is the White House’s strategy on the Libyan crisis? Quite simply there isn’t one. As Alex Spillius noted in his post yesterday, the US government has been remarkably meek on Libya. Like the EU, the Obama administration is stuck in classic deer in the headlights mode, offering little more than mealy-mouthed statements condemning the state-sponsored violence against anti-government protesters on the streets of Tripoli, Benghazi, Tobruk and other key Libyan cities, which has already claimed at least 1,000 lives.

Both Barack Obama’s and Hillary Clinton’s remarks today on Libya were distinctly underwhelming and non-confrontational, offering little beyond a carefully worded expression of outrage, except for a pledge to hold yet more meetings with the international community to discuss the Libyan situation. And both failed to even mention the man behind the reign of terror sweeping the country – “Mad Dog” Gaddafi, a ruthless dictator with Libyan, American and British blood on his hands.

This is an historic moment. One of the most brutal, evil and anti-American tyrants of our time is facing a massive popular revolt that is threatening to finally remove him from power after more than four decades as absolute ruler of his country. It is not a time for fence-sitting or navel-gazing from the world’s only superpower. President Obama should be openly calling for Muammar Gaddafi to step aside immediately, and if he doesn’t, face complete international isolation – including comprehensive sanctions, travel bans, the freezing of bank accounts, and a halt to Western investment and trade.

The Libyan people don’t need lofty neutrality from Washington. They do however need the president of the most powerful nation on earth to actively back their aspirations for freedom and democracy. And they certainly aren’t waiting for toothless statements from a divided UN Security Council or a morally bankrupt Human Rights Council.

President Obama is already being outflanked by Nicolas Sarkozy, who has taken a far tougher line on Libya than his US counterpart. It is hugely embarrassing when even the French are doing more to confront a murderous dictator than the traditional leader of the free world. Frankly, President Obama makes Jimmy Carter look like General MacArthur by comparison. The US administration needs to wake up from its slumber and start showing some real leadership on the world stage in place of its existing milquetoast foreign policy.
Stat you realize we still have American diplomats and nationals in Libya right?
 
Mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac (FMCC.OB) on Thursday asked for an additional $500 million in taxpayer aid after reporting its sixth straight quarterly loss. Including the latest request, Freddie Mac will have received more than $64 billion in direct aid from the government.
What is 64 Billion dollars among friends and taxpayers...Its not like it's your money, oh wait...
 
GM's sweetheart tax deal

Being owned by the Government has it's priviledges.

The U.S. Treasury is giving up $14 billion in tax revenue because of a sweetheart deal it's giving General Motors.

The automaker is expected to post its first profitable year since 2004 when it reports fourth-quarter results on Thursday. But GM won't have to worry about being hit with a big tax bill because billions in previous losses will provide shelter for years to come.

That break will reduce GM's U.S. tax bill by an estimated $14 billion in the coming years, and its global taxes by close to $19 billion, according to a company filing. ...

While it's unclear why GM was allowed to carry over its losses, some experts insist that GM got preferential treatment.

"A lot of things were done differently here," said Heidi Sorvino, head of the bankruptcy practice at Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith. She said that the tax break was just another example of how GM's bankruptcy process was unlike any previous bankruptcies.

Officials with the Treasury Department and GM insist that the tax break was not special treatment, and that any company going through bankruptcy could have gotten the same breaks.

Treasury spokesman Mark Paustenbach said GM's ability to hang onto the tax breaks it had before bankruptcy "depends on the application of long-standing tax rules to GM's particular facts. The Treasury Department did not publish any guidance during the economic downturn that changed these rules either in general or for corporations that received government assistance."
 
I was actually ok with Obama there for a while once I realized he really wasn't going to do much of anything. I figured, just get through his first term and hopefully we get someone new in 2012. But now that ####'s hittin' the fan in so many places I'm starting to get more than a little concerned. So far Obama has continued to stay out of almost everything but at some point we're going to need a real leader. In 2+ years I've yet to see him be one, except in speeches. What kind of "man of action" will he be?

 
I found a really interesting article on the effect of the mideast crisis on oil, and then on the US economy.

One thing seems certain: The U.S. recovery is under threat. James Hamilton, a member of the economics department of the University of California, San Diego, has studied the effect of oil shocks from 1859 through 2010. He finds, “All but one of the 11 postwar recessions were associated with an increase in the price of oil. .  .  . The correlation between oil shocks and economic recessions appears to be too strong to be just a coincidence.”

Many economists argue that past oil shocks have had such a jolting effect on the economy because policy-makers reacted irrationally​—​they rationed supplies instead of letting prices rise, they tightened monetary policy to avoid inflation when they should have loosened it to offset the growth-dampening effect of higher oil prices. Unfortunately, this hard-won wisdom might not be applicable in current circumstances. Higher oil prices are hitting the economy at a time when monetary policy is already loose and, combined with eye-watering fiscal deficits, threatening to unleash an inflationary wave. With the printing presses already running at top speed, and a flood of red ink pouring over the national ledgers, policy-makers, even those wise enough to avoid past errors, have little room for maneuver should oil prices stay at anything like current levels.

The best attempt at a back-of-the-envelope calculation of the effect of higher oil prices on the current recovery comes from Marc Sumerlin of the Lindsey Group consultancy. Every $10 per barrel increase in the price of oil costs the American economy $46 billion in real income per year. That would offset about 38 percent of the stimulus effect of the $120 billion payroll tax cut agreed to by President Obama and the outgoing Congress at the end of last year, and knock about 0.3-0.4 percent off the growth rate. Since most forecasters are guessing that the economy will grow this year at somewhere between 3.5 percent and 4 percent, the recovery would continue, but at a somewhat reduced rate. A serious and sustained oil price shock (think unrest in Saudi Arabia should King Abdullah die) would roil financial markets and markedly increase the negative drag on the recovery.
Summary:1. All but one postWW2 recession was associated with an oil shock.

2. The effect of those oil shocks could be reduced by loosening monetary policy, but that's not really possible today since monetary policy is already so loose.

3. A rough estimate suggests every time the price of a barrel of crude rises $10, you should knock .3%-.4% off the current estimated 2011 GDP growth rate of 3.5%-4%. GDP growth under 2.5% could mean higher unemployment. $120 oil would probably be enough to push unemployment higher. $200 oil causes a recession by itself, with no other external negative influences.

 
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Obama making the case that Obamacare sucks

The last few weeks have seen something of a tactical change in the Obama administration’s approach to defending the health-care bill enacted last year. In two instances, the administration has admitted that the law is a hugely problematic and burdensome mess and given the appearance of a willingness to do something about it. But in both cases, that willingness turns out to be far less than it seems.

First, in a Senate Finance Committee hearing last month, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius admitted that the CLASS Act—which is the new entitlement program for long-term care in Obamacare—is “totally unsustainable” as it’s laid out in the law. She then repeated the point before the House Ways and Means Committee, saying “we very much share the concerns that have been expressed that, as written into law, the framework of the program was not sustainable.” She insisted, however, that the law gives her the flexibility to completely redesign the program on her own, without any new authority from Congress, and that she could do it in a way that would make the program less than totally unsustainable.

The CLASS Act was basically a gimmick intended to game the CBO process so that the overall bill could be scored as reducing the deficit. The law says this new program would start collecting premiums five years before it starts providing benefits, so that within the ten-year budget window that the CBO is required to score it would turn out to have a net surplus and so help offset some of Obamacare’s other costs. But once the program really got going, it would very quickly start running huge deficits. Having passed the bill (in part on the back of this and other absurd “deficit reduction” claims), the Obama administration now wants to avoid the impression of being caught off guard when its fiscal assumptions collapse and so is acknowledging what has been obvious to basically all outside observers from the beginning: that the CLASS Act is a budgetary time bomb. So, as the New York Times put it (with a tone of credulity worthy of Pravda in its heyday), “administration officials, who played down such concerns 15 months ago, say they now share them.” Everyone’s entitled to a change of heart, right?

Then this week, President Obama himself seemed to signal another such change on the question of Obamacare’s impositions on the states. Speaking to a group of governors yesterday, the president said he would support legislation that would allow states to opt out of some of Obamacare’s requirements (including the individual mandate, the employer mandate, and the state exchanges) if they show they can achieve exactly the same results in some other way. Obamacare itself actually already contains such a provision, but it would allow states to apply for such waivers starting in 2017—after these mandates and requirements have been in place for three years. Obama now says he would let states apply for waivers in 2014, when the new rules begin.

This change of heart, like the one regarding the CLASS Act, is a concession to the fact that the law’s requirements are understood by many state officials (of both parties) as immensely burdensome and problematic. But like the one regarding the CLASS Act, it is also not an actual concession in practice. The states would be required to show that their alternative policies would provide the same or greater insurance benefits to the same or greater number of people, presumably as assessed by HHS. So it allows no flexibility regarding ends, and therefore very little flexibility regarding means. In fact, while it would allow conservative-leaning governors essentially no freedom to move in the direction of greater competition and more consumer-driven health care (which conservatives tend to see as the actual path to reducing costs and therefore insuring more people while improving quality) it would give liberal-leaning governors significant freedom to move in the direction of more government control. Indeed, as the New York Times notes today, while the approach Obama supports would not allow for many consumer-driven reforms it “might allow interested states to establish a single-payer system in which the government is the sole insurer.” And of course, it would not actually tell governors exactly what they should do in advance but—in the pattern of the larger law, which is also powerfully evident in Sebelius’s claim to be able to make sweeping changes on her own—it would let HHS decide what counts and what doesn’t. As former HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt told the Washington Post:

Obama was essentially telling states, ‘We’ll give you permission to ask for permission sooner rather than later.’ What Republicans are saying is that we don’t want to have to ask for permission at all, because we can’t afford to build the system that you’ve laid out for us.

It seems that the administration has landed on a new way of dealing with the fact that the health-care debate will be far from over when the president is up for reelection next year. Rather than defend their health-care law, they’re going to say that it has many huge problems that they want to fix, but then allow for only those fixes that do not actually permit a different approach to our health-care financing crisis. They must hope that this will counteract the growing practical concerns about the law. But admitting that Obamacare is deeply flawed and that some major claims made on its behalf before it passed were false should have a very different effect: It should strengthen the case for repealing the law and replacing it with actual health-care reform.
 
I was actually ok with Obama there for a while once I realized he really wasn't going to do much of anything. I figured, just get through his first term and hopefully we get someone new in 2012. But now that ####'s hittin' the fan in so many places I'm starting to get more than a little concerned. So far Obama has continued to stay out of almost everything but at some point we're going to need a real leader. In 2+ years I've yet to see him be one, except in speeches. What kind of "man of action" will he be?
Hope and Change!
 
If you were a girl, and you were single, and Obama was single, and he asked you out on a date, and you said yes, would you play hard to get?

 
It is now 20 months before the 2012 election.

This chart from 538.com of the average approval rating of incumbent presidents begins to diverge at about March of the year prior to the election. On average, the incumbents who lose begin to see a decline in their approval ratings now, while the ones who win on average start to see their approval ratings rise now.

Obama will be adding another data point to this, and so far, his ratings have begun to decline again to 46%. He's upside down in the Gallup poll again after having recovered quite a bit a couple months ago.

12 months prior to the election is another point to watch. As this 538.com chart shows, only one incumbent president (Harry Truman) was under 50% approval in the last 12 months prior to the election and won a second term. In the last 9 months prior to the election, all 3 incumbents who lost were under 50% approval and stayed there.

 
Judge Vinson clarifying his Obamacare ruling

Basically

- When he said Obamacare was unconstitutional he meant it

- That it was unlawful of the administration to continue implementation despite his order

- He'll take the motion as a request for a stay, but only on the condition that the administration files an expedited appeal within 7 days

While I believe that my order was as clear and unambiguous as it could be, it is possible that the defendants may have perhaps been confused or misunderstood its import. Accordingly, I will attempt to synopsize the 78-page order and clarify its intended effect. To that extent, the defendants motion to clarify is GRANTED.

[synopsis snipped]

So to clarify my order and judgment: The individual mandate was declared

unconstitutional. Because that essential provision was unseverable from the rest of the Act, the entire legislation was void. This declaratory judgment was expected to be treated as the practical and functional equivalent of an injunction with respect to the parties to the litigation. This expectation was based on the longstanding presumption that the defendants themselves identified and agreed to be bound by, which provides that a declaratory judgment against federal officials is a de facto injunction. To the extent that the defendants were unable (or believed that they were unable) to comply, it was expected that they would immediately seek a stay of the ruling, and at that point in time present their arguments for why such a stay is necessary, which is the usual and standard procedure. It was not expected that they would effectively ignore the order and declaratory judgment for two and one-half weeks, continue to implement the Act, and only then file a belated motion to clarify. [FN6]

[FN6] The defendants have suggested in reply to the plaintiffs response that the reason for the delay was due to the fact that my order required careful analysis, and it was only after this careful review that the defendants could determine its potential impact with respect to implementation of the Act (see doc. 164 at 11). This seems contrary to media reports that the White House declared within hours after entry of my order that implementation will proceed apace regardless of the ruling. See, e.g., N.C. Aizenman and Amy Goldstein, U.S. Judge in Florida Rejects Health Law, Washington Post, Feb. 1, 2011, at A01 (quoting a senior White House official).
Edit: even more awesomeness
As both sides have repeatedly emphasized throughout this case, the Act seeks to comprehensively reform and regulate more than one-sixth of the national economy. It does so via several hundred statutory provisions and thousands of regulations that put myriad obligations and responsibilities on individuals, employers, and the states. It has generated considerable uncertainty while the Constitutionality of the Act is being litigated in the courts. The sooner this issue is finally decided by the Supreme Court, the better off the entire nation will be. And yet, it has been more than one month from the entry of my order and judgment and still the defendants have not filed their notice of appeal.

It should not be at all difficult or challenging to “fast-track” this case. The

briefing with respect to the general issues involved are mostly already done, as the federal government is currently defending several other similar challenges to the Act that are making their way through the appellate courts. Furthermore, the legal issues specific to this case have already been fully and very competently briefed. With a few additional modifications and edits (to comply with the appellate rules), the parties could probably just change the caption of the case, add colored covers, and be done with their briefing.
 
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Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, announced today that it has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Obama Department of Justice (DOJ) to obtain documents detailing Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan’s participation in discussions related to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of March 23, 2010, also known as Obamacare, while she served as U.S. Solicitor General. The constitutionality of the “individual mandate” in President Obama’s health care reform may end up before the U.S. Supreme Court.
 
Judicial Watch, the public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption, announced today that it has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Obama Department of Justice (DOJ) to obtain documents detailing Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan's participation in discussions related to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of March 23, 2010, also known as Obamacare, while she served as U.S. Solicitor General. The constitutionality of the "individual mandate" in President Obama's health care reform may end up before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Judicial Watch specializes in making money on kooks. Kooks, it is what they do. I am not sure if Judicial Watch has ever had a real success story.
 
Border Agents Forced to Face Down Bullets With Bean Bags, Critics Say

The U.S. Border Patrol is under fire for allegedly ordering its elite, SWAT-style units to use non-lethal bean bag ammunition before responding with deadly force – even against suspects armed with high-powered semi-automatic and automatic weapons like AK-47s.

"When the suspected aliens did not drop their weapons, two Border Patrol agents deployed ‘less than lethal' beanbags at the suspected aliens,” according to a FBI search warrant request filed in the U.S. District Court in Tucson on Dec. 29. “At this time, at least one of the suspected aliens fired at the Border Patbrol agents. Two Border Patrol agents returned fire, one with his long gun and one with his pistol. Border Patrol agent Brian Terry was shot with one bullet and died shortly after.”

Ramirez said regardless of whether the men were ordered to use the bean bags, the simple fact that a Border Patrol tactical team was armed with bean bag ammunition at all was “asinine.”

“BORTAC is like a SWAT unit; they’re our most highly trained, specialized unit of agents. These guys go in when we have a serious problem. It would be like sending a SWAT team into a bust with bean bags. ... They were outgunned by far.”

 
Since everything is cool, Obama starts golfing again

Good thing this guy became President when there weren't a lot of problems to deal with. He's spent a full two months of his presidency on the golf course.

Well, the mercury has crept back up above 60 degrees here in Washington, and so it’s time once again for President Obama to head out to the golf course.

This is the president’s 60th time golfing as president, meaning Obama has spent two months of his presidency on the golf course.

The rounds usually take about five hours, including motorcading back an forth to the course.

According to statistics compiled by CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller, who keeps close tabs on the president’s activities, Obama played 30 rounds in 2010, 28 rounds in 2009, and two this year, including today.
 
Since everything is cool, Obama starts golfing again

Good thing this guy became President when there weren't a lot of problems to deal with. He's spent a full two months of his presidency on the golf course.

Well, the mercury has crept back up above 60 degrees here in Washington, and so it’s time once again for President Obama to head out to the golf course.

This is the president’s 60th time golfing as president, meaning Obama has spent two months of his presidency on the golf course.

The rounds usually take about five hours, including motorcading back an forth to the course.

According to statistics compiled by CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller, who keeps close tabs on the president’s activities, Obama played 30 rounds in 2010, 28 rounds in 2009, and two this year, including today.
Didn't you hate it when people talked about all the time Bush spent at Camp David? This stuff has no place in political discussion.
 
Obamacare waivers go over 1,000 mark

Burdensome laws only apply to those that aren't friends with the President

The number of temporary healthcare reform waivers granted by the Obama administration to organizations climbed to more than 1,000, according to new numbers disclosed by the Department of Health and Human Services.

HHS posted 126 new waivers on Friday, bringing the total to 1,040 organizations that have been granted a one-year exemption from a new coverage requirement included in the healthcare reform law enacted almost a year ago.
 
Dem Sen. Joe Manchin: Obama has "failed to lead" on spending

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia took to the Senate floor Tuesday morning to criticize President Obama for a failure of leadership in the effort to deal with the deficit and debt.

Manchin deemed the two budget proposals expected to be considered Tuesday - a Democratic plan containing $6.5 billion in new cuts and a Republican plan to cut about $60 billion - flawed. The former, he said, "doesn't go nearly far enough" to address the nation's fiscal woes, while the latter "blindly hacks the budget with no sense of our priorities or of our values as a country."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is bringing both proposals up for a vote even though neither is expected to pass; he says he wants to get the votes on the record and show that compromise is necessary. Manchin denounced the strategy as "political theater," asking, "why are we voting on partisan proposals that we know will fail, that we know don't balance our nation's priorities with the need to get our fiscal house in order?"

Manchin, who is facing a tough reelection campaign in 2012, then went after the president.

"Why are we doing all this when the most powerful person in these negotiations - our president - has failed to lead this debate or offer a serious proposal for spending and cuts that he would be willing to fight for?" asked Manchin. "How does that make sense?"

He went on to say that "this debate will be decided when the president leads these tough negotiations. And, right now that's not happening."

"The bottom line is this - the president is the leader of this great nation, and when it comes to an issue of significant national importance, the president must lead. Not the majority leader or speaker, but the president," the West Virginia Democrat said. "He must sit down with leaders of both parties and help hammer out a real bipartisan compromise that moves our nation forward and establishes the priorities that represent our values and all hard-working families."

Manchin added: "I truly believe that he can do it."

CBS News Congressional Correspondent Nancy Cordes called it significant that Manchin went after Mr. Obama both harshly and repeatedly.

"Outside of Anthony Weiner and maybe Joe Lieberman, that's just not something you hear very often from a member of the president's own party," she said. "And in Weiner's case, he's pushing the president to be more liberal -- not more conservative. You could say that Manchin's remarks aren't a huge surprise given the lack of fondness for Obama in West Virginia, but that in itself is part of the story: the new political reality after the last election, which left many democrats eager to put some distance between themselves and Mr. Obama."

Even before the speech, Manchin would not have been mistaken for a party-line Democrat; in his hard-fought Senate campaign last year, the then-governor famously shot a cap-and-trade bill. (Manchin was elected in a special election to replace Sen. Robert Byrd, which is why he is up for election again next year.) His criticism will put more pressure on the White House to take a stronger hand in working out a budget deal, without which the government will shut down on March 18th.

When the Senate passed a stopgap measure last week to keep the government open for two additional weeks, Reid called on the White House to take an active negotiation in working out a longer-term compromise bill. Republicans have been cool to White House involvement, however, and the man who is meant to serve as lead negotiator - Vice President Joe Biden - today arrived in Russia. Republicans are saying that a longer-term deal is unlikely before March 18th and telling reporters that another sort-term Continuing Resolution will be necessary to keep the government open.

Reid said Tuesday that he would force a vote on the Republican budget plan even as Senate Republicans, perhaps fearful of having to vote in favor of some of the drastic cuts in their proposal, move to keep the vote from taking place.

In addition to Manchin, at least two Democratic senators - Claire McCaskill of Missouri and Ben Nelson of Nebraska, both of whom are up for re-election next year - have questioned whether the Democratic proposal goes far enough.

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