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Home Front: Politix
As challenges mount, ardor for Obama cools - MSNBC ?
2009-01-19
Barack Obama got a global standing ovation long before he was elected president. But in a fickle and fast-moving world, the overseas reviews are already turning mixed. Find Wallace Hartley at once.
Listing to port are we? There must be something he can play to calm these people! Now quickly, go back out and fix the deckchairs.
Though much of the world will party through the night Tuesday after Obama is sworn in as America's 44th president -- just as it did when he was elected -- there are signs the ardor is cooling as the sheer weight of his challenges sinks in.

A deepening global recession, new hostilities in the Middle East, complications in closing the Guantanamo Bay prison, Iran, North Korea, Afghanistan -- an impatient world has a stake in all of them and is asking how much change Obama can deliver.

"Just two months ago, the future president seemed a cross between Superman and Merlin the magician," Massimo Gramellini wrote in a commentary for Italy's La Stampa newspaper. "Now he himself admits he won't be able to keep all his promises, and who knows? Maybe someone will ask for his impeachment by the end of next week."

"The idealism has diminished," said Samuel Solvit, who heads an Obama support network in France. "Everyone was dreaming a little. Now people are more realistic."

Muslims want to know why Obama hasn't joined the chorus of international criticism of Israel's Gaza offensive. Last week posters of him were set on fire in Tehran to shouts of "Death to Obama!" It's his non-Muslim dominate side coming out.
"By the time Obama takes office, hundreds or thousands more will be killed in Gaza and it will be too late for him to act," said Adel Fawzi, an Egyptian government clerk in Cairo.
Yep, too late, never enough, impossible, more future bomb vest children will die, the juice did it.
Obama has expressed concern about Gaza, but says he's reluctant to say much more until his inauguration.
It's the turtle on the fence post syndrone, he's got bloody nowhere to go. More at 8:00 and 10:00.
Meanwhile the global economic collapse is already closing in on him. Around the world, leaders and their publics are waiting to see what he does to calm roiled markets and restore confidence.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and German Chancellor Angela Merkel both say they're confident the Obama administration will succeed in working with Europe and China to build a stronger global economy. "He has a big vision of how America can contribute to the long-term prosperity of the world," Brown said.
It's not a vision, it's history speaking. Take a long look at the last 100 years.
"The chances of us working this out are good," Merkel said in Berlin, where Madame Tussauds rolled out a wax likeness of Obama to great fanfare.

Sweden's prime minister, Fredrik Reinfeldt, told parliament last week he empathizes with the monumental challenges facing Obama. "I think it's difficult to find an American president who is being met with such a number of expectations as Barack Obama," he said.
Could Red State voters actually be your friends? We have very, very low expectations for this "presidency."
That's the problem, said Reginald Dale, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington: People everywhere simply expect too much, practically ensuring Obama will disappoint.
Expectation management, why does it hate us?
"The United States can't solve all the world's problems," he said in an interview. "It doesn't have enough money or military power. And the president is constrained by Congress and the constitution. The founding fathers wanted to stop someone from being like a monarch."
With the help of ACORN, feckless voters came as close as they could!
Posted by:Besoeker

#11  When he leaves office in 4 years the comparisons to Hoover will be resounding all over. This inauguration will be the death rattle of Rooseveltian liberalism and it will be in the ash can of history by then. What will succeed it, I do not know. But in 6 years, it will be hard to remember what 20th century liberalism was like.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2009-01-19 21:07  

#10  Chris had credibility? He lost that a while ago.

Gonna be interesting to see how the Missus & Hillary interact. In public it will no doubt be all politeness.
Posted by: lotp   2009-01-19 20:04  

#9  "We sold our credibility, for what?"

/"tingles" Matthews
Posted by: Frank G   2009-01-19 19:56  

#8  Translation: they keep sending flowers, but he never returns their calls.
Posted by: DMFD   2009-01-19 19:43  

#7  Wel-l-l, despite CNN attempt to show "happy faces" [Black-, Asians] IMO there wasn't that much applause or cheers after the Bam-Man gave his pre-inaugural speech yesterday in Washington, DC.

We'll see howzit today.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-01-19 18:50  

#6  spot on AP.

Chairman Maobama is screwed. His ego + inexperience + clinton retread advisors + shrew of a 1st lady should make for an interesting 4 yrs.
Posted by: Bob Cheaper aka Broadhead6   2009-01-19 18:38  

#5  The leftards are already pissed off that the rich big $$ donors get to sit up front in a heated tent and drink free Krystal Champagne while the regular rubes have to freeze their arses off and buy cans of coke for $5 apiece, standing so far back that you can't see his halo.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2009-01-19 17:05  

#4  The Big O played the Hope and Change™ shuck and jive on the electorate, of whom, the LLL, mainstream dems, pi$$ed off trunks and pi$$ed off independents voted for him.

He cannot be everything to everyone, as he owes too many people too much across the political spectrum. Plus, IMHO, Prosecutor Fitzgerald knows a lot of what went on with Blago and co.

Because of the above all kinds of other convoluted sh*t, Hillary and co has machiavellied herself into the catbird seat, so the Big O is more of a figurehead than a real president.

And as everything goes further south, the Big O will be the Man who takes the fall. The Dems are in charge and so have the power to fix everything. So to speak. Enjoy Hope and Change---in the Twilight Zone.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2009-01-19 16:29  

#3  Indeed... I wonder if he has already had an O F**j Moment
Posted by: .5MT   2009-01-19 15:43  

#2  They disappointed because Obama can't carry out the role they've assigned to him - lapdog to the world. We elected him president, not king.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2009-01-19 15:40  

#1  The United States can't solve all the world's problems

Actually, we can. But the cure is a hell of a lot worse than the disease.


It would take about 18 hours to cure all the worlds problems. Including ours.
Posted by: .5MT   2009-01-19 14:21  

00:00