Friday, January 27, 2017

A Good Start


            What delicious irony there is in the appointment of Governor Rick Perry to be Secretary of Energy, a department he once vowed to abolish, and of Scott Pruitt to run the EPA, a lawless agency he has long fought to rein in. Similarly, Betsy deVos will, when confirmed as Secretary of Education, ignore the anguished wails of teachers’ unions when she returns to parents the right to choose where best to educate their kids.

            These are but three examples of federal departments that have entangled this country in cobwebs of federal regulations while usurping the constitutional prerogatives of Congress. Bloated bureaucracies are the very institutions that President Trump had in mind when he stated in his inaugural address that he meant to return the power to the people.

            Except for quixotic flailing at unessential issues such as crowd sizes and illegal voting, President Trump, I think, has had a very good start. My favorite image is of him sitting at his desk signing executive orders, while Chief of Staff Reince Priebus stands at his side holding a stack of more orders to be signed. The caption for this image might very well be, “The President at work doing what he said he was going to do.”

            There is more to the job, of course, than reversing President Obama’s extra-constitutional orders. Much of what President Trump has promised to do, like tax reform and repealing and replacing ObamaCare, will require the cooperation of Congress, not to mention a way to circumvent the obnoxious obstructionism of Senator Schumer and the Far Left of the Democratic Party. And let’s see how he establishes bilateral agreements with disappointed trans-pacific partners and renegotiates NAFTA with the pouting President of Mexico. Are we expecting too much of the Great Negotiator?


Saturday, January 21, 2017

The 58th Inauguration


      Like most concerned Americans, I watched President Trump’s inaugural speech with great interest. I even re-read the transcript several times, but this didn’t change my initial impression. I found the speech ominous, uninspiring, and even offensive at times. Politicians accused of having prospered at the expense of the people must have cringed.

      What resonated the most, with me, were phrases like “ravages of other countries…stealing…destroying our jobs,” “crime…gangs…and drugs…this American carnage,” and “rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones.” Dark images, indeed.           
      There was hope and promise in the speech as well, but no mention anywhere of Constitutional freedoms of religion and speech and the right to bear arms. He stressed power to the people, but not individual responsibility, free enterprise, or equal opportunity.  And in anticipation of the Women’s March scheduled for the next day, I thought he might have mentioned the Right to Life. But he didn’t.

       In spite of these negatives, I am encouraged by Trump’s vision of the future. Except for perhaps one or two questionable choices, he has surrounded himself with superb cabinet picks and agency heads, and he has indicated that he is willing to listen to their counsel. I expect these talented leaders to dampen the president’s hubris and rein in the tyrannical impulses of his out-sized ego.

       One thing is for sure: Donald J.Trump is going to shake things up. He is not going to put up with the partisan obstructionism of Chuck Schumer and the congressmen who boycotted his inauguration. But he may not get everything he wants either: he will have to get used to the idea that a Republican-led Congress will not always go along with his policies on such issues as trade, taxes, and immigration.      
        If President Trump’s inaugural speech signals anything, it is that we are in for a wild ride. Hang on.

Monday, January 16, 2017

Honoring the 45th President


            On the eve of the inauguration of our 58th president, it looks like most people have a vested interest in the transition. For some, it’s all about money. Many profited enormously from the rise of the stock market after the elections, but others didn’t, like major Democratic donor George Soros who lost a billion dollars betting that the stock market would crash if Trump were elected. So much for the consequences of pessimism.

            Those who voted for Trump, on the other hand, are buoyed by the optimism of his promises. But will the new president be able to deliver? His opponents have signaled that they won’t help. Democratic members of the Senate led by Chuck Schumer, for example, have declared they will do everything to thwart President Trump’s ambitions, beginning with trying to derail his appointees in the on-going confirmation hearings. They will also oppose the “repeal and replace” of Obamacare and any attempt to pass a budget that will defund Planned Parenthood. And that’s just for starters.

            The opposition to change was not unexpected. But the vitriolic claim that Donald Trump’s presidency is illegitimate was. It’s one thing to examine the causes of a stunning defeat—a flawed candidate, poor messaging, etc.—but quite another to insult the American electorate by saying it was blindly misled by Russian hacking. For the first time in memory, scores of legislators, following the disappointing example of Congressman John Lewis, have declared they will not attend the inauguration in protest. So much for the respect for a solemn ritual and the tradition of a peaceful transition.  

            Donald Trump may not have been the first choice of many voters, including me. But all Americans, regardless of their opinion of the man, must unite in honoring our system of free and open elections and respecting the office of the presidency. Doing otherwise brings dishonor on those who should know better.

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Trump: Obama's Legacy


            For the last eight years I have been an unrelenting critic of Barack Obama. With this final essay I say goodbye to the Narcissist-in-Chief as he struts off the world stage, vaunting his many imagined accomplishments and denying responsibility for his notable failures. But should we be thankful for anything he has done for this country?

            Obama’s legacy can be summarized in a few words. On the international front, those words are Aleppo, Jerusalem, and the South China Sea. Among many others, these best represent disasters resulting from America’s failure to lead.

            Aleppo has become the symbol of Obama’s cowardice. Half a million people have died in Syria and five million displaced because Obama chose to do nothing when Assad crossed the president’s red line and launched the genocide of his own people. Capitalizing on the President’s timidity, Russian and Iran, America’s sworn enemies, moved in, while ISIS continued to fill the vacuum created by Obama’s failure to secure the peace in Iraq.

            Jerusalem symbolizes Obama’s treachery in the abandonment of America’s staunchest ally in the Middle East. No president has ever failed to defend Israel against the pack of anti-Semitic jackals in the United Nations. Not until Obama did this past December.

            The South China Sea is the latest symbol of China’s ascendancy in the Pacific. Its militarizing of the area mocks Obama’s impotence in maintaining America’s dominance in the Far East, as well as his clueless response to North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons aimed at our shores.

            On the domestic front, President Obama has given us racial division, unsustainable national debt, economic anemia, the worst labor-force participation in half a century, and a gaggle of leftist policies on energy, health care, and the environment, not to mention a blind eye to the nature of Islamic terrorism.

            It has taken the American voter eight years to finally put an end to the corrosiveness of Obama’s bankrupt agenda. For all his efforts to fundamentally change America both at home and on the world stage, perhaps we can be thankful for Barack Obama’s true legacy, which, for better or for worse, can be summarized in two words: Donald Trump.