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Is there anyway we could make Lula be President? He brought Brazil out of the third world pretty quickly. Maybe he could bring us out of it too?
Talk about undermining your own credibility.
China holds the lion's share of our debt
True story that some may find shocking given my board reputation as some kind of super-liberal:
I am so dissatisfied with Obama that I would consider voting for the right GOP candidate in the 2012 election at this point. It wouldn't be Palin/Bachmann/Newt/Paul or anyone of that ilk. But I might be persuadable in the instance the GOP candidate was Romney or Huntsman.
...I want to talk about something that started to become apparent to me during the debt negotiations. It's something I've never seen in national politics.
It is that nobody loves Obama. This is amazing because every president has people who love him, who feel deep personal affection or connection, who have a stubborn, even beautiful refusal to let what they know are just criticisms affect their feelings of regard. At the height of Bill Clinton's troubles there were always people who'd say, "Look, I love the guy." They'd often be smiling—a wry smile, a shrugging smile. Nobody smiles when they talk about Mr. Obama. There were people who loved George W. Bush when he was at his most unpopular, and they meant it and would say it. But people aren't that way about Mr. Obama. He has supporters and bundlers and contributors, he has voters, he may win. But his support is grim support. And surely this has implications.
The past few weeks I've asked Democrats who supported him how they feel about him. I got back nothing that showed personal investment....
...Why is Mr. Obama different from Messrs. Clinton and Bush? "Clinton radiated personality. As angry as folks got with him about Nafta or Monica, there was always a sense of genuine, generous caring." With Bush, "if folks were upset with him, he still had this goofy kind of personality that folks could relate to. You might think he was totally misguided but he seemed genuinely so. . . . Maybe the most important word that described Clinton and Bush but not Obama is 'genuine.'" He "doesn't exude any feeling that what he says and does is genuine."
...Mr. Obama seemed brilliant at politics when he first emerged in 2004. He understood the nation's longing for unity. We're not divided into red states and blue, he said, we're Big Purple, we can solve our problems together. Four years later he read the lay of the land perfectly—really, perfectly...
The fact is, he's good at dismantling. He's good at critiquing. He's good at not being the last guy, the one you didn't like. But he's not good at building, creating, calling into being. He was good at summoning hope, but he's not good at directing it and turning it into something concrete that answers a broad public desire.
saw this over the weekend, and I think she makes some good points, and I agree with much of what she writes - - maybe it'll strike a chord or two for you.
This isn't even true. It's a pretty massively shared misconception for some reason. Right up there with "The United States doesn't make anything anymore."
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I was thinking of debt held by foreign nations, which is true. China holds the most debt of any single foreign nation.