TheBlackberryAlarmclock.com

Thingish Things

The Icarus Presidency

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Aug• 01•11

Barack Obama, arguably the most exalted new president in American history, is falling, meteorically, to earth.   It’s not just his poll numbers that are problematic.  His wings are singed.  That is far worse. It is a politically fatal condition.

It was bound to happen.  Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign was almost unfair in its promises.  He ran as a messiah. He was going to halt the rise of the oceans and and heal planet earth. He was going to restore American greatness and usher in an era of “post-partisanship” in Washington.  Mr. Obama was to be America’s Philosopher King.  He would be George Washington, Abe Lincoln, FDR, and Martin Luther King Jr. all wrapped up in one.  Newspapers and magazines ran out of metaphors for the young wunderkind, just two years out of the Illinois state senate.

I remember watching young people’s faces during 2007 and 2008 Obama rallies — particularly the faces of young African-Americans — and thinking how very cruel it was to promise so much.  They became mesmerized with hope at Obama’s rhetorical incantations.  “We are the ones we’ve been waiting for!,” he exclaimed.

Older voters who supported him at least were better armed for disappointment.  They knew, or should have known, the truth to those grandmotherly admonitions:  What goes up must  come down; if it’s too good to be true, it probably is, and beware the door with too many keys.

But everyone wanted to believe.  Even prominent Republicans climbed aboard the Hope Express. This was to be the transformational presidency and no one wanted to be left behind. The Nobel Committee awarded President Obama its Peace Prize before he had done anything, certainly before he ordered the bombing of Libya.

Now, one by one, we are seeing members of the Obama cult slip away from him, both from the Left and from the Right. The false idol is being cast aside like fool’s gold, as all false idols are. And another old truism proves itself correct once more: The taller you are, the harder you fall. 

Icarus flew too high again.  He is plummeting to earth. 

 

 

 

 

Romney Out of Hiding

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Aug• 01•11

from BostonHerald.com

Mitt Romney has done a very good job — politically — in staying above the debt ceiling fray for the past several weeks.  It is no easy feat to do that as a Republican front-runner for President. 

Today Romney emerged from hiding on the issue with shot-gun barrels blazing at President Obama.  Said Romney: 

“As president, my plan would have produced a budget that was cut, capped and balanced – not one that opens the door to higher taxes and puts defense cuts on the table. President Obama’s leadership failure has pushed the economy to the brink at the eleventh hour and 59th minute. While I appreciate the extraordinarily difficult situation President Obama’s lack of leadership has placed Republican Members of Congress in, I personally cannot support this deal.”

Given the highly-conservative audience Romney needs to appeal to in the coming months, I’d say he and his campaign played their cards on this perfectly. 

 

Tyrannically Extreme Radicals and Fanatics to Trim U.S. Borrowing by 7%

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 31•11

Added perspective on the debt ceiling deal emerging in Washington:  If, indeed, a compromise is reached tomorrow to “cut” $3 trillion over the next 10 years — that is to trim the amount we are borrowing over the next decade by $3 trillion — the national debt in 2020 will be $21 trillion rather than $24 trillion, about seven percent less than it otherwise would be.  That is what everyone in Washington is up in arms about.  The nation will remain utterly buried in debt, just in $3 trillion less of it. 

You would never know it from the hysterical headlines lighting up opinion pages across America, attacking Tea Party and Republican “radicals,” “fanatics,” “extremists,” and “tyrants.”

Here is Maria Cardona on CNN opinion today:

(CNN) — We have become victims of the Tyranny of 87. This is not a reference to the years immediately preceding the French Revolution of 1789. I am referring to July 2011 in the United States of America, the greatest democracy in the world. Or so I thought.

Mike Tomasky in Daily Beast:

“…It’s a bleak day for this presidency, and really in American history, as we’ve now embarked on a path that’s very likely to lead to huge cuts in entitlement programs, the domestic budget, and more or less everything every Democrat in Washington (except, apparently, one) wakes up to fight for every day.”

Paul Krugman in The New York Times:   

 “The problem with American politics right now is Republican extremism, and if you’re not willing to say that, you’re helping make that problem worse.”

Krugman on “This Week”:

“The first thing is, we shouldn’t even — from the perspective of a rational person, in other words a progressive on this stuff — we shouldn’t even be talking about spending cuts at all now.”

Maureen Dowd in The New York Times:

“The citizens of this country tremble at the thought that these are the people governing them.”  

Jesse Jackson in Politico:

“[Obama’s] biggest asset at this point is the tea party and Bachmann. These people are so very extreme.”

The quotes go on and on and on.  Kind of like U.S. debt.

Not Even Scratching the Surface

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 30•11

 

It is hard to keep up with the various plans in Washington to raise the debt ceiling.  But one thing is clear: None of the proposals even begin to get U.S. debt under control. That is getting lost in this debate. 

It is the frightening reality.  The “grand compromise plan” –- The Obama-Boehner plan that fell apart; the one that got away -– would have cut $4 trillion in spending.  But President Obama’s 2012 budget borrows almost $10 billion over the next ten years.  The Obama-Boehner plan would not have even addressed half of the new debt being taken on, never mind the $14 trillion we already owe. The lesser plans being talked about would cut anywhere from $1.2 billion to $2.5 billion.  They are really cutting nothing; they are barely reducing the rate of new borrowing. 

That reality, not the impasse in Congress, is what will cause the U.S. to lose its AAA Bond Rating.  Moody’s clearly said that today.  The madness going on in Washington?  It’s not even scratching the surface.   We’re all going to need to buckle in. 

Amy’s Addiction

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 30•11

One more word on Amy Winehouse.

In a day or two we will learn what officially killed her.  But regardless of what is listed as her cause of death, it will have been the disease of addiction that did her in. She almost agreed to sign up for Coastline Behavioral Health outpatient program, when the worst happened.

It is an animal I know well, and it’s a common story theme in my life, why not read more… It has killed a number of my friends, and it damned near killed me in my teens. Mike R., Dave M., Gary L., Tara G., Seth M., Tommy D., John S., Edmundo P., and Jeff R. are a few that come to mind.  Four were tagged as suicides; two died of AIDS; one never woke up; one was killed in a late night auto accident, and one, at age 17, was tied to a chair by Colombian cocaine dealers and shot in the back of the head. But one way or another, they all died of addiction.  The two that were taken by AIDS had beaten the needle, or at least long kicked it, but HIV, an unnamed mystery disease at the time, paid them a lethal visit after they had put it down.  Both helped save my life before it did.

I met them 31 years ago, at the age of 16, in a hard-core rehab center where I had been sent after screwing up stints at three pretty good high schools. I was a disaster. I knew everything.  No one could tell me a thing.  I’d lie at the drop of a hat. And I didn’t have a problem. Especially that.

A year before, at the age of 15, I had had a seizure on the floor of a Metro North train station after inhaling photography chemicals. I didn’t tell anyone because I thought they might not let me do drugs any more. I did get into the rehabnear.me programme to get cured later and realized that despite all of it being fun, I should have enrolled into it long ago. One would think that would make an impression on a young mind.  But a week after that, while I was supposed to be in Spanish class in Rye, NY, I found myself trying to beat a Jamaican drug dealer named “Slim” in the second floor bathroom of a 42nd Street McDonalds.  I was offering to trade him misidentified Lidocaine for LSD.  Slim was none too pleased.  He was kind not to toss me off the balcony of the place.  

Behavior like that, and worse, had become regular.  It had come to seem normal, if not perversely romantic, just months after trying drugs for the first time.  From day one, I was getting high every day, any way I could. My fellow travelers and I would strip our parents’ medicine cabinets of prescription drugs and take handfuls of them – mixing God knows what  — as soon as we got to school. We would smoke, swallow, and snort anything and everything with zero thought to the consequences.  It was behavior, I later learned, that does not promote longevity.

In the movie Marathon Man, there is a famous scene where Laurence Olivier, playing a sadistic Nazi dentist, drills into the teeth of protagonist Dustin Hoffman, causing him excruciating pain. At intermittent points, he takes mercy on Hoffman in applying Oil of Clove to the exposed nerve endings, instantly alleviating the agony.  Drugs, and later alcohol, were my Oil of Clove.  They were temporary relief from all my perceived shortcomings.  Once I knew it was available, nothing was going to deprive me of respite.   

I spent three years at the rehab.  It was a rough place.  Many of the practices used at the time have long been prohibited – shaved heads, humiliation, sign wearing, and lots and lots of screaming – all of which were doled out by tough former junkies, most of whom had done considerable time in the Big House, and later by me to the newcomers. It was just what my prep school a** needed. It taught me for the first time how to be honest with myself, and it put me on the path to a life that could not possibly be more different than the one to which I thought I had been predestined.

It was estimated that one person in 10 who came through those rehab doors stayed and completed the program. I don’t know if that’s true, but that feels about right. Only a handful of people I started with “graduated” with me, and last year, on the 30th anniversary of my walking into the place, I held a reunion.  All but one attending was living a clean and productive life. Almost none of them, including me, drank alcohol. That, too, was tried and given up years later.  I like to think that some of those who did not stay eventually found other ways to address their addictions.   But statistically, most of them did not. We are the very lucky few.

I almost never think of those days anymore.  Even when passing that McDonalds to and from Grand Central every day.  It was 31-years ago, and I am too busy to waste time on the past. But whenever I hear about an Amy Winehouse or a Heath Ledger, or someone far more anonymous, having succumbed to addiction, I cannot help but feel a profound sadness at the waste of life.  For some inexplicable reason, they were not among the lucky few.  They never got it, or “it” got them before they did.

There are millions more out there.  Some will find a new path.  Most will not. But it is important for them all to know that a path is available.  Those of us who, through the grace of God, have made it through can do nothing other than to raise our hands from time to time and affirm, “yes, I was once there, too.” 

Shoots of Green in Red China

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 29•11

 

Vigil for Tortured Falun Gong in China

Meant to link this Wall Street Journal article yesterday for anyone who didn’t see it. It reports a growing rebellion among Chinese Protestants who are demanding greater religious liberties in that authoritarian nation. Religion in China today is all state sponsored. 

“Let your descendants become great politicians like Joseph and Daniel,” Beijing Zion Church, Pastor Jin Mingri is quoted in the story as recently saying.“Let them influence the future course of this country.”

Words like that would have been unheard of in China a decade or two ago.  They are virtually unheard of today.  And yet they are beginning to be said, with increasing frequency, from pulpits around that country, The Journal reports.

For those who believe that freedom is the eventual state of mankind, China is in the very early stages of an individualist revolt. The student revolt in 1989 was snuffed out violently in Tienanmen Square, but the China of today is far different from the China of 1989.  Its population is better educated and its eyes are open far wider thanks to technology and a taste of economic freedom. 

The U.S. appears to be the nation in great social and economic upheaval today.  But in my lifetime, or in my children’s lifetime, a far greater upheaval is historically  inevitable  on the other side of the globe.  Freedom is life.  It is uncontainable. 

 

Lost Tea Party Messaging

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 29•11

from mercerconservatives.blogspot.com

Tea Party members in Congress are ignoring a key component of their messaging to their very great detriment. Maybe they are delivering it back to their home districts, but I hear nothing in the national debate about America’s youth. And our young people, after all, are what the Tea Party revolt is all about. It is about the crushing debt that will steal our children’s future if not dealt with now.

The Tea Party is getting its butt kicked in all quarters — even the Chinese are after them — but they are good men and women who believe they are doing what they must to save the country for our children.  Many of them will lose re-election for their efforts and they know it.  

Rather than just saying “no” in rejecting plan and after plan, though, they need to explain why.  They need to re-elevate the conversation to its roots — we are stealing from our children.  And as far as tax hikes: One more hit off the crack pipe doesn’t fix what’s broken.  We are overspending by 40 percent — borrowing 40 cents on every dollar — and our children will pay the price. 

I don’t speak for the Tea Party. If I were in Congress, I would have taken the grand plan. But I do respect what the Tea Partiers are doing.  I just wish they would better present themselves.  

 

It Ain’t Easy…

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 28•11

Something I wrote? 

 

Lone Star Advice

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 28•11

Paul Burka of The Texas Monthly

I’ve always wondered what it was like for state reporters, who have covered an elected official for years; who have lived and breathed his every utterance; who know what he eats and drinks, how much sleeps and with whom, when that official becomes a presidential or vice presidential candidate.  Suddenly the print and network “big boys” from New York and Washington come flocking in, knocking over the locals to provide the expert analysis on a figure they have been aware of for only a few weeks.  It must be like when the FBI takes over a local investigation in a Bruce Willis movie.  There has to be resentment. 

Paul Burka of The Texas Monthly anticipates this happening with home grown Governor Rick Perry (R), who is poised to enter the presidential fray, in a fun piece today called  “Dear Yankees.”  It acts as a primer for anyone preparing to cover Perry.  It’s a good read. 

“I am writing you this note in the hope that it will help you avoid the political and sociological clichés that Texas is subjected to every time one of our politicians seeks the national stage,” Burka explains. 

@#%!** Goldfish!

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jul• 27•11

I bought six goldfish for my youngest daughter a year ago.  In a week, they were all dead.  So I bought a big tank -– a 10-galloner -– multi-colored pebbles, and a filtration system with the next six fish.  Those were all “gone to heaven” in two weeks.   So I bought “hardier” goldfish, special food, a new filtration system, a light, fish toys, water conditioner, and new pebbles.  Six floaters within days. I changed the water religiously, but not too often.  That didn’t do it.  Six little guppies KIA. So I brought the water into a lab for testing. It was fine.  But still, the next six fish went belly up, too.  And the six after that and after that.  And the six after that.

I finally gave up. I felt like a monster.  I might as well have been stepping on the things outside the store.

Then today, I read the remarkable story about two goldfish living for 134 days after the New Zealand earthquake with no food, no filtration, no light – no nuttin’

One word: @#!%$@!!!!

P.S.: After emptying, cleaning, and drying the 10-gallon tank, my daughter and I bought two adorable white mice (and a wheel, toys, treats, bedding, a house, a wire mesh cover, and some other stuff.) One week later I let them “sleep outside” to get some fresh air. A fox ate ‘em.  Count me out.