Obama Scandals and
NPR
To the everlasting surprise of my more liberal friends, I
regularly listen to NPR when I'm driving. It's not all slanted liberal stuff,
some of the stuff they do is apolitical and very good. Even some of the
political stuff is not all biased and is worth hearing for views a bit
different than other sources.
However, on "The Diane Rehm Show" on NPR on
Nov. 4. a bunch of media people were discussing the accomplishments of the
Obama Administration. I got their names later from a report on the Net. A
Washington Post columnist named Ruth Marcus blew my mind when she went on
blithely claiming "this has been a really relatively scandal-free
administration, first term and second term." Then CNN political analyst
David Gergen seconded her with: "This has been a scandal-free
administration by and large, and we should appreciate that."
Next Washington Post media reporter Paul Farhi agreed with
Marcus, tweeting "It's often a scandal what the news media finds to be a
scandal," linking to a Sunday commentary he wrote with the
now-familiar claim that all the supposed scandals were really phonies.
I'm sitting there listening to this, and thinking that how
Farhi missed little things like the our government department in charge of
making sure guns don't go where they shouldn't somehow deciding it was a good
plan to ship 2000 guns into the hands of Mexican cartels. One of which killed a
US Border Patrolman, the kind of detail that it's really hard to miss. Or the
little incident where two members of the New Black Panthers stood outside a
polling place dressed in fatigues and fondling a large club, even making
clearly racist comments to someone interviewing them on camera, who were
subsequently allowed to walk away from any charges because our current Attorney
General doesn't care to enforce laws when members of his own race are the
perpetrators. Then there's the other detail of an Ambassador left at risk in a
country soaked in violence from myriad groups, despite his requests for more
security; which led to his death and those of three other Americans, while the
known falsehood of it all being a spontaneous attack because of a stupid video
made in California was repeated by all those in charge for weeks before it was
admitted it was a planned attack by Al Qaeda.
Things like giving half a billion dollars to Solyndra when
it was already on the ropes and then watching it fall to pieces with all our
taxpayer dollars clearly would never attract even a blink from Mr. Farhi.
Farhi did finally get to the IRS scandal, as a
great example of Obama being falsely accused. He stated "Rather than
exclusively targeting conservative and Tea Party groups, as many news
organizations had first reported, the IRS held up applications from liberal and
nonpartisan organizations, too, amid confusion and bureaucratic foul-ups."
In August, NPR's website posted a House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee chart that revealed there were just seven
"progressive" groups targeted and all seven were approved for
tax-exempt status.
In contrast, the IRS targeted 104 anti-Obama groups, and 56
of them were still waiting for approval (or stopped trying to gain it). The
seven left-wing groups were asked 33 questions by the IRS. The 104 anti-Obama
groups were asked 1,552 questions.
Gee, somehow seven versus 104 and the lack of approvals even
after enough questions to satisfy the KGB doesn't exactly seem like
information that says nothing really happened here, that it was all just
"confusion and bureaucratic foul-ups".
But just checking on recent events, what can we find?
Well, on Oct. 1st, Dr. Ben Carson made it known that he
had his first-ever encounter with the IRS after he criticizing ObamaCare in
front of Obama at the National Prayer Breakfast back in February. Just a
coincidence, sure it was.
A week after that it was reported that Sarah Hall
Ingram, the IRS bureaucrat who used to head the office directly involved in the
targeting of conservative groups, "may have shared confidential taxpayer
information with White House officials, according to 2012 e-mails uncovered by
the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Ingram, who now heads the
IRS's ObamaCare enforcement division, counseled senior White House officials on
how to deal with a lawsuit from religious groups opposed to the ObamaCare
contraception mandate." Hmm, she "may have shared confidential
taxpayer information".... blabbing the very secrets you are charged with
and sworn to protect is really NOT what our federal employees are supposed to
be doing.
And just before Halloween activities, Paul Bedard at the
Washington Examiner reported the IRS "shared highly confidential tax
information of several Tea Party groups with the Federal Election Commission, a
clear violation of federal law, according to newly obtained e-mails." Say,
that information-sharing thing seems to really have caught on in this
Administration. I'm trying to think of how the media would have handled similar
events when George Bush was in the White House. Somehow a very different
picture comes to mind.
The networks just roll on with all the other news, and if
pressed, their talking heads say all such mention of these events are stuff
made up by the GOP in collusion with Fox News. That's a wonderful reply to the
publication of facts that are easily confirmed if you want to bother with doing
so.
It is the responsibility of the media to inform the nation
about what goes on in the nation and especially in the corridors of power. When
Mr. Bush was President, no one could fault the media for not paying very close
attention to everything he did, or did not, do. Personally, I thought they were
really overzealous with that, there seemed to be a real animus against him.
I don't want any animus towards Mr. Obama, but I do want the
same zealous examination of what goes on during his watch. Clearly the media
are not eager to do that.
Even when it comes to the very numerous videos showing him
stating in simple declarative sentences that we would all be able to keep our
doctors and our plans, people in the media and elsewhere rush to make a variety
of ridiculous excuses. He wasn't lying, people misheard what he said or what he
meant to say, exaggeration in politics is normal and excusable, and he had to
tell a little white lie to get the ACA Bill passed. I like that last one,
that's a classic "the ends justify the means".
It is positively insulting to the intelligence of everyone
for any of these silly statements to be made. Guys, get over it, he stood up
and lied, time and time again, and there is no getting past it. The only real
answer is that he did it to get the Bill passed. That's Chicago politics, why are you surprised?
But I don't think I am alone in being very, very tired of
the scandals and lies. And I don't think we've seen the last of such things. But
November 2014 is coming.
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