The
broiling controversies of the Benghazi scandal, the IRS wrongdoing, and the questionable
seizure of Associated Press telephone records by the Department of Justice have
forced those on the left and those that don't pay much attention to what goes
on in the political realm to recognize that our government indulges in improper
and oppressive behavior. And this tumultuous atmosphere has spawned some wild
and crazy things.
Joe
Scarborough, host of MSNBC's "Morning Joe" program and vociferous gun
control advocate, had an epiphany brought on by the federal government's
improper behavior. During a roundtable discussion on the show he said, “My
argument [for gun control] is less persuasive today because of these scandals.”
He went on to explain that “People say, ‘Hey, if they do this with the IRS,
asking people what books you read, then how can I trust them with information
about my Second Amendment rights?’” There was general agreement among the show’s
other participants.
Another
unusual thing was former White House senior advisor David Axelrod’s defense of
President Barack Obama. He said that the president can't be held responsible
for what underlings do. The reason is that our government is so large that no
one person can control what all of the two million Executive Branch employees
do.
He's
right: government is way too big and far too powerful. David Axelrod is a
limited government guy. Who knew?
But
the fact that government is too big doesn't relieve the President of the United
States, whomever that might be at any given time, of the duty to manage the
Executive Branch and keep it within its constitutional limits, and to always
respect the citizens it serves. Plainly, Mr. Obama has not done that.
In
our highly charged political environment, not everything that the president's
loyal opposition calls a scandal is truly a scandal. But conversely, everything
that Mr. Obama's sycophantic fans wish was not a scandal isn't a scandal, and
their efforts to explain them away often border on silliness. Columnist Reg
Henry ably demonstrated that with inadequate attempts to downplay a few of them
and make them go away.
Of
the Fast and Furious debacle Mr. Henry said it "was a crackpot scheme to
trace guns to Mexican drug cartels, but it was a hard sell because, as you
know, guns don't kill people."
He
is obviously correct about it being a crackpot scheme, although that characterization
does not do justice to this colossal idiocy. And his sarcastic comment about
guns not killing people unintentionally conveyed the truth.
But
he's totally wrong about whether Fast and Furious is a scandal. Not only did
the the Justice Department fail to achieve the fundamental goal of this
misadventure — to trace the guns they provided to the Mexican cartels — but an
American Border Patrol officer was murdered with one of them. That indeed is a
scandal.
Next,
in trying to wish away the Green Energy fiasco, he states, "The Solyndra
scandal involved a big waste of public money, but the real offense seemed to be
that the administration was promoting solar power. Oh, the horror."
So-called
"public money" is money taxed away from taxpayers ostensibly to be
used responsibly and for beneficial purposes, not so that billions can be
wasted on the personal whim of the president to prop up a preferred industry,
one that is so unstable that it cannot succeed even after being propped up. Mr.
Henry is apparently unaware that it is neither within the president's nor the
federal government's authority to decide which industries succeed and which do
not.
In
reference to what he called "Benghazi-gate," he cautions us that
"it's far from clear what the president knew and when he knew it."
But again he misses the point. What makes Benghazi a scandal is not what Mr.
Obama and then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton knew and when they knew it,
although that certainly deserves an explanation, it's the fact that his
administration and/or her department disgracefully failed to provide requested
and needed security upgrades before the attack began. Had they acted properly
it just might have prevented all four of the murders that resulted from the
attack on the Benghazi consulate. And then, there’s the video smoke screen to
explain.
Some believe the Obama administration overtly engineered the
effort by
the IRS to target conservatives,
Tea Party groups and other conservative organizations. But others blame this oppressive behavior on a
"culture of suspicion" of conservative organizations created by President Obama's near-continuous public
criticism of those individuals and organizations. After all, if the president repeatedly
makes public statements saying these
people are up to no good, shouldn't good bureaucrats try to please the boss and
go after the bad guys?
President Obama told graduates of
The Ohio State University earlier this month that “you've grown
up hearing voices that incessantly warn of government as nothing more than some
separate, sinister entity that's at the root of all our problems. ... They'll
warn that tyranny is always lurking just around the corner. You should reject
these voices.” But the swirling controversies that
demonstrate actual government tyranny render that advice dangerous and unworthy.
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