Steyn on the imperial Obama
Mark Steyn is a funny guy, although his subject matter couldn’t be less funny:
The most telling line, the one that encapsulates the gulf between the boundless fantasies of the faculty-lounge utopian and the messiness of reality, was this: “What we’re also discovering is that insurance is complicated to buy.” Gee, thanks for sharing, genius. Maybe you should have thought of that before you governmentalized one-sixth of the economy. By “we,” the president means “I.” Out here in the ruder provinces of his decrepit realm, we “folks” are well aware of how complicated insurance is. What isn’t complicated in the Sultanate of Sclerosis? But, as with so many other things, Obama always gives the vague impression that routine features of humdrum human existence are entirely alien to him. Marie Antoinette, informed that the peasantry could no longer afford bread, is alleged to have responded, “Let them eat cake.” There is no evidence these words ever passed her lips, but certainly no one ever accused her of saying, “If you like your cake, you can keep your cake,” and then having to walk it back with “What we’re also discovering is that cake is complicated to buy.” That contribution to the annals of monarchical unworldliness had to await the reign of Queen Barry Antoinette, whose powdered wig seems to have slipped over his eyes.
Still, as historian Michael Beschloss pronounced the day after his election, he’s “probably the smartest guy ever to become president.” Naturally, Obama shares this assessment. As he assured us five years ago, “I know more about policies on any particular issue than my policy directors.” Well, apart from his signature health-care policy. That’s a mystery to him. “I was not informed directly that the website would not be working,” he told us. The buck stops with something called “the executive branch,” which is apparently nothing to do with him. As evidence that he was entirely out of the loop, he offered this:
“Had I been I informed, I wouldn’t be going out saying, ‘Boy, this is going to be great.’ You know, I’m accused of a lot of things, but I don’t think I’m stupid enough to go around saying, “This is going to be like shopping on Amazon or Travelocity,” a week before the website opens, if I thought that it wasn’t going to work.”
Ooooo-kay. So, if I follow correctly, the smartest president ever is not smart enough to ensure that his website works; he’s not smart enough to inquire of others as to whether his website works; he’s not smart enough to check that his website works before he goes out and tells people what a great website experience they’re in for. But he is smart enough to know that he’s not stupid enough to go around bragging about how well it works if he’d already been informed that it doesn’t work. So he’s smart enough to know that if he’d known what he didn’t know he’d know enough not to let it be known that he knew nothing. The country’s in the very best of hands.
Back in the past when I mentioned that civil war was going to be the end road the US is leading itself to, people reacted in many ways. Eyes of accusation or claims that war should be avoided, were all made.
I wonder what these people are thinking and writing now. Making up even more excuses, as usual? Probably.
@neo-neocon
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Good article. Like the humour.
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This situation brings back an old acronym from the military. “FUBAR” … it means ‘F***** UP BEYOND ALL REPAIR’.
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The plane is coming straight down, burning, in a tight spiral. It just hasn’t hit ground yet. Nor has the on-board fuel exploded.
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The insurance companies aren’t going to play this game. Reinstatement is a pure money loser.
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I hope the Progressive/Fascist God/King Barry burns as many of his supporters as possible. Pain is effective at getting people to pay attention.
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This is about as skillful a put down of Obamacare as we’re likely to see. Steyn has a biting wit. If I were running for national office, I’d certainly be having him help write my speeches. Humor is a wonderful political weapon when wielded with skill.
Steyn has no peer. More than a few match his astuteness but none match his wit. The combination makes for a national treasure.
Geoffrey Britain – agree except I have to put him near the top of the list on the astuteness scale too.
Regarding the content, it’s a frequent theme of his to call into question BO’s superior intelligence, and he does it in a way that’s not only hilarious, but he nearly always has a unique perspective.
I couldn’t agree with him more in this article – once again Obama makes a bunch of absurd and stupid statements, this time that he’s not stupid- except the statements themselves show he actually is just as dumb as he’s been accused of being.
Mark Steyn is always funny, spot-on and a class act.
I get the impression that whenever the LEft talks about smartness, they really mean evil. So someone who is dumb would be someone who is not evil in their lexicon.