July 1, 2010 10:12 AM

Obama: Impotence Abroad, Omnipotence at Home

By
CBSNews
(Weekly Standard)  Irwin M. Stelzer is a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard, director of -economic policy studies at the Hudson Institute, and a columnist for the Sunday Times (London).

There is something strange going on in American politics. Call it the belated triumph of George McGovern's "Come home, America" campaign.

While the secretary of defense works on plans to reduce spending on the military, his boss concocts plan after plan to increase spending on social programs. Even overseas interventions deemed important to national security are grudging, time-limited affairs-we might drop in for a while, but we are soon homeward bound. The American government's power to influence foreign events is assumed to be extraordinarily limited. While increasingly threatening and intransigent enemies strut across the world stage in defiance of sanctions and pleadings of international institutions, America has cast its lot with those multilateral institutions, eschewing unilateralism even when vital overseas interests are involved, pursuing the approval of adversaries from the Arab Middle East to Russia, Asia, and Africa.

Fast forward to domestic policy. Here government power is considered almost without limit. Fossil fuels create environmental and security problems, so government will order the invention of alternatives. The health care system is flawed, but rather than repair it we will transform it into one run largely by government. If Americans cannot be wooed to support these transformations, they are to be ignored by an administration and Congress that is far to their left, deploying a variety of parliamentary tricks. No wooing of support from Americans, from whom approval for domestic interventions is seen as less necessary than is the approval of the "international community" for our foreign policy.

Indeed, when it comes to domestic policy, so strong is the administration's sense of rectitude that the approval of the international community, so sought after in overseas affairs, matters not. If attacking a leading British company helps make the case for preventing offshore drilling, attack it the president will. If the European nations decide that austerity is necessary to get their finances in order, lecture them on the need to continue their stimulus programs. If Germany's trade policies don't suit the administration, go after Angela Merkel in advance of a G20 meeting. Those, of course, are traditional allies.

An exception to the policy of disregarding the views of other nations on U.S. domestic policy can always be made for a less friendly nation. If China manipulates its currency, rather than publicly identifying that practice, as the law requires, postpone the mandated report, even though currency manipulation by the Chinese regime undercuts the president's goal of doubling exports in the next five years. China, after all, is a potential adversary, to be wooed, while Britain, its pension funds heavily dependent on dividends from BP, is to be lacerated, never mind that we rely on its troops to support our efforts in Afghanistan.

The contrast between our policy postures at home and abroad is also obvious when it comes to the personal relationships struck by the president in those two different contexts. Foreign leaders are treated with a deference bordering on subservience. Apologies for perceived past misbehavior are accompanied with bowing and a tolerance of insults. Never mind that Hugo Chávez has heaped scorn upon American presidents, past and present, from a podium at the United Nations. His offer of a handshake and a book of anti-American rants is eagerly accepted by the president, providing our enemies in Latin America with a photo-op they dared not hope for in their wildest dreams.

Domestic Posture

Contrast this attitude with the posture taken at home. The president feels that the reach of the government extends into the boardrooms of the world, and demands and gets the firing of the CEO of General Motors, before turning on BP and forcing that company to recall to Britain its CEO, a man with whom he refused to meet during the long months of the Gulf oil leak. Bankers are denounced, insurance companies named and shamed for adjusting premiums to cost levels inflated by his health care reform. Government, seen as powerless to project American power abroad, is seen as so powerful at home that it has no need to extend any courtesies to the leaders of its private sector, trade unions excepted. So powerful that it is in a position to transform huge swaths of the economy, to impose "reforms" far more radical than any contemplated by Franklin Roosevelt, scuppering democratic processes when necessary in favor of executive orders to get the job done, publicly humiliating the Supreme Court when it read the right of free speech to include speech by those Obama believes distort the political process by making their views known.

Transformation on this scale costs money. The theory of the administration is that deficits now are necessary to finance changes that it deems to be in the public interest. So, huge bills to finance the changes await payment by a later generation, either in the form of higher taxes or a debased currency. Costs are serially underestimated, the value of vaguely described benefits overstated. The fact is that no such determination of the value of massive expenditures is necessary when change is driven by a vision of an America transformed into one very different from the America that exists today. That is why the likes of Nancy Pelosi do not feel in any way embarrassed by telling us that we won't understand what is in the health care bill until after it is passed: This is an exercise in ideology, not in prudent investment now for benefits later. As such, it needs no detailed justification, especially since the wishes of those most affected by it are deemed largely irrelevant.

Underlying this disparity between foreign and domestic policies, between catering to foreign audiences while ignoring the wishes of American voters, is an ideology that is profoundly anticapitalist. As the Economist, an Obama supporter, puts it, Obama has "all too often given the impression that capitalism is something unpleasant he found on the sole of his sneaker." He does not believe that private entrepreneurs create wealth: Somehow, most likely by means illegal or at minimum immoral, using methods designed further to disadvantage the already disadvantaged, these private-sector players have got their hands on wealth, which it is the role of a powerful government to snatch for its own, superior purposes. The same government that is powerless to stem the flow of gasoline to the nuclear-weapons-building mullahs feels it can allocate a larger part of America's resources than any peacetime government has ever attempted to do. The same government that is so unwilling to affect events that it stands silent while its enemies abroad savage, assassinate, and hang dissidents, eagerly denounces businesses that behave in a way inconsistent with the wishes of the administration.

It is almost as if collective schizophrenia dominates policymakers. Impotence abroad, omnipotence at home; shrinkage of the reach of government abroad, expansion at home; frugality in foreign and military affairs, profligacy at home; appeals for public approval of foreign citizens, deafness to the desires of voters at home.

It is, of course, possible that all this is a considered goal, what Tony Blair once called "joined-up government"-policies that are indeed accurate reflections of the goal of this government, which sees its foreign and domestic policies as consistent one with the other, rational trade-offs that allow government to advance its reach at home because it is retreating abroad.

Never mind that this is just when nations that do not like us, that see us as the enemy, are using their domestic resources to increase their power relative to ours-China its booming economy to fund control of resources and a military capable of projecting power around the world; Iran its oil wealth to gain the nuclear weapons that will allow it to replace us and our allies as powers to be reckoned with in the Middle East; Russia its vast natural resources to revive its military and regain control of what it calls its near-abroad; Venezuela its oil revenues to pay for replacing American influence with its Bolivarian revolution. They have indeed joined their economies to their foreign policy goals, while we view domestic and foreign policy as separate things, the one to be strengthened while weakening the other.

They've got it right.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

By Irwin M. Stelzer:
Reprinted with permission from The Weekly Standard

Weekly Standard
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by elz523 July 7, 2010 5:15 PM EDT
The projections for the budget at the time that George Bush took over the White House were for budget surpluses as far as the eye could see. That is no myth. The projections today are for budget deficits for as far as the eye can see. George Bush in between and a mighty recession have had a substantial amount of impact on this. I agree that the White House is not planning for the appopriate amount of spending reductions/tax increases necessary to balance the budget after this recession ends, but no one should want these things to happen until the recession ends. Balancing the budget today is the kind of mistake that turns a recession into a depression.
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by lklambert July 4, 2010 10:47 PM EDT
Bush was an idiot and there is enough blame to go around but the fact of the matter is we have a dipstick socialist president from day one has and is running us into the ground. And apologizing to the UN about our military involvement in there crisis fields of bodies American bodies. They give this guy a Nobel Peace prize for what being a socialistic and racist pig who screws every American on a daily basis surrounds himself with some of the most linear think individuals on the planet. And has a share in some of the worlds most notorious slush fund companies that are operating to date. You can't spend a dime and expect to get back a twenty unless your hand is in the right place. And Michelle what a joke Opra on roids. So what Bush screwed the pooch so did his dad. And Clinton did not inhale are we that stupid. They are gone and superman is here and in office only problem Lex Luther works under him his own personal VP. And Nancy P gives me this hideous dream were I wake up and she is lying next to me in bed with her teeth in a jar like almost every congress person in office. They remind me of Wayne Newtons skin its been pulled stretched and sanded to the point I'm waiting for his face to pop.
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by lklambert July 4, 2010 6:27 PM EDT
Pop Quiz
Top 3 things that make the world go round.
Energy
Oil
Water
All 3 of which the majority is controlled by the World Bank by the way they cannot ever be sued for any reason. The UN which can cannot be sued either one cannot be voted out once a treaty is signed with them it cannot be reversed but can be amended but the UN answers to the world bank. Chrysler produced the 1st. hybrid as a concept car and planned on production series it was shut down just as GM and the EV1. Chrysler never patented the cars technology but along came Honda and the Civic hybrid funny all the technology used by Honda was the same as Chryslers but with a modern teck. Green house teck has existed since the 30's try to build a green home a cool mil will get you one. Water can be made to be safe and drinkable for less than 1 tenth of a cent per 10 gallons. Who owns the majority of water treatment facilities private companies with ties to the World bank. Should we charge for air I think not yet Obama and his cronies are being led by the nose by the UN and the world Bank and there is absolutely nothing the American people can do about it.
Natural Gas a clean source of energy is causing more pollution and reeking havoc on America and laws to protect us do not apply to these companies. Land set aside for the American people {never to be touch or infringed upon by any gov agency or companies it is ours. Yea Right thousands are getting sick every day by water that you can set on fire try suing or proving you got sick from it. The laws are set up for companies to not have to disclose info and you have to prove your case to some high paid lawyer that because you smoked a hooter 20 yrs. ago you are trash and cannot be trusted what a joke 2and 2 or for what I or you may have done in the past for the life of me I cannot find a comparison between my past and polluted water which the people I am suing don't have to answer mine are your questions. I was in an explosion proved without a shadow of a doubt it was not my fault but it did not stop the team of lawyers from trying to shred my character. No one thinks he or she can make a difference and voting well baby Bush pretty much proved that was a joke. $$$$ equates to one day having papers to go from town to town and you will have 2 kinds of people those with and those without. I posted some very serious things yesterday things most will never know and it was pulled faster than I can pass gas.
I think that again history is our greatest ally and the day we made it incorrect and almost vehement to those who chose to believe or practice what they wanted our country was founded on Christian principals and values never said you had to be a Christian just adhere to the spirit of those values and every nation that has turned there backs on those values has fallen. History does not lie it has already happened and therefore is not open for debate but a lesson to be taught. God help us all. Obama may not be the Antichrist if there is such a thing but if there is he is paving the road for him. I bled my brothers bled as well as my father and the majority of my family lineage for this country only to see it destroyed by fools on a daily basis. And yes Barrack you show up at my door I would tell you what an idiot I think you are even if it meant dying in prison knowing I would not back down from my beliefs.
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by elz523 July 4, 2010 11:07 AM EDT
You are right that Gitmo is still there and the wars are continuing. This needs to change.

There are, however, some legacy items that last longer than others. A recession and budget deficits both occurring at the same time create a real problem for an incoming administration and that can be traced to the previous administration. It is now time for us to start judging Obama for the economy, but it is only now and we still have to remember the cards that we have been dealt by Bush and the Republicans.
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by noloyalisti July 2, 2010 3:08 PM EDT
You nailed it right on the head: this is not a left versus right issue but a top versus bottom. We have a full blown class war in America. The bottom 98% against the top 2%. And so far the 2% are winning big time.
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by sjc_1 July 5, 2010 10:45 AM EDT
It is up to the private sector, building roads, bridges and schools can only do just so much.
by skepticalJM July 2, 2010 5:56 AM EDT
"Impotence abroad, omnipotence at home"...
I wish it were so... all our biggest enemies are right here in the United States.
But of course that would mean we have a government that could deal with them, but we don't; instead we have a bunch of hypocrites.
But then again, isn't that CAPITALISM'S biggest virtue ... creating hypocrites!
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by Leaderless July 1, 2010 11:20 PM EDT
obama: impotence abroad, omnipotence at home.
================================================
No kidding.....
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by scottyusa July 1, 2010 9:13 PM EDT
I cannot believe all these posters blaming Obama for all this mess we are in. There is no way he could do all this by himself. It is the three headed dragon we must blame; Obama, Reid and Pelosi. I have problems understanding how the rest of the democtrats got sucked into this hypocracy.
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by leepoe1 July 2, 2010 7:51 AM EDT
It is as if George Bush never existed. Do you even remember that he started with a budget surplus and a warning that bin Laden was going to attack us? I love conservative memory. It only goes back two years and then it turns into "everything was heavenly." Bill Clinton created millions of jobs on his watch. Bush lost millions. You can't shoot your wad on two wars and huge tax breaks to the rich without making anyone that follows you "impotent."
by rational_1 July 2, 2010 11:42 AM EDT
leepoe1 - This Clinton surplus you mention is a total myth. Don't believe me? Look up the annual national debt each year of the Clinton presidency and you'll see it increasing every year ($4.6T in his first year, increasing to $5.8T when he left office). You're right that Bush was the one that really started spending money like it was going out of style but Obama makes even him look like a miser by comparison. And what have we really gotten out of all that spending? Seriously - can anyone look at the economy and unemployment rate right now and think the federal government has spent so much of OUR money in a fruitful way? I have NO confidence in this community organizer turned President.
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by cleantheDCcesspool July 1, 2010 8:03 PM EDT
Today's loser is Pelosi for saying unemployment checks create jobs. Citizens of California please, for the sake of the country, get rid of Pelosi, Lee, Waters, Waxman, Woolsey, Stark, and Boxer. They are enablers for obamao and his head-in-the-clouds utopian thinking that spending will fix this economy. NOTHING he has proposed has yet worked toward that end, and he continues to operate on that theory. Oust the lib lunatic nutcases.
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by elz523 July 4, 2010 11:00 AM EDT
Tea partier, I realize that you don't understand how this works, but the unemployed immediately spend their unemployment checks. They don't have the luxury of putting these into savings. So this is demand for our economy and demand creates jobs. Speaker Pelois was correct in saying the unemployment checks create jobs and it appears that you are the loser for not understanding how this works.
by noloyalisti July 1, 2010 6:09 PM EDT
It was Bushoccio that set up a socialist system but it was for the filthy rich. It gave taxpayer handouts to the war profiteers, used taxpayer funded military to occupy two countries for oil corporations and cut taxes on the filthy rich.

The Bushoccio Crime Family privatized the profits but socialized the risk: as one example just look at their bankster bailout.
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