Wednesday, February 10, 2010

“Miss Me Yet?” A Real Morton’s Fork

There's been a lot of chat floating around American cyberspace about the mysterious, larger-than-life appearance of George W. Bush on a Minnesota billboard advert. In the photo, he is smiling (or as the Left says, “smirking”) and waving. The caption reads “Miss Me Yet”?

At first, there were rumors that the billboard was merely a photo shopped hoax (“Are We Lumberjacks”, anyone?) but the sign turned out to be quite real. What is surreal is its appearance in Minnesota, Land of a Thousand Lakes - not to mention a bajillion leftists, and the taxes to go with them. Among their Congressional representatives is Keith Ellison, the only Islamist representative so far. And in the Senate they have the gracious Al Franken, an exemplar of Democrat civility.

That’s why many people thought it was a hoax. Who in Minnesota would actually pay for such a billboard advert? A partial answer was easy enough to track down:

“The ad was purchased by a group of small business owners who wish to remain anonymous,” [Mary] McNamara [general manager for the Minnesota branch of the billboard company] said. However, McNamara did offer this political bombshell: “Some of the people in the group who paid for this were Obama supporters.”

McNamara told us that the message the group hoped to convey was one of “Hope and change, where is it?” She went on to say that she has yet to receive any negative feedback about the ad, which has been up for about a month, and added that some have even contacted her office offering to donate money to keep it up.

However, not everyone is buying McNamara’s portrayal of the group’s ideological makeup. Cindy Erickson, the chairwoman of the Democratic Party in Chisago County, where the billboard is located, suspects the ad’s funders are conservative activists posing as Obama supporters.

“I don’t have any idea who did it, but my thought was that they’re Tea Party people,” she said.

But of course. Anyone who isn’t for Obama is, by default, one of the “Tea Party people”. Either that, or they’re Sarah Palin supporters. What other answer could it be if you’re a Democrat?

While Minnesota has long been a blue state, Chisago is part of a Republican-leaning string of suburban counties surrounding Minneapolis and St. Paul, and Obama lost the 2008 vote in Chisago by 10%. But Erickson argued that local Democrats who voted for him are content with the job the president is doing.

Hmmm…these “contented” voters in Chisago are obviously among the 27% of the nation’s voters who “strongly approve” of Obama’s performance. They trail the 39% who “strongly disapprove of the president’s showing to date.

Even the people who think Obama is a failure aren’t anxious to return to the days of George Bush. Many people consider Obama to be Bush on steroids without the social skills; they’d rather see another kind of billboard, perhaps something like this, from Malkin’s page. She calls it “ a better miss-me-yet” billboard:
Miss Me Yet II?

Michelle Malkin also has a succinct inventory of reasons for not returning to the bad old days. As she says, “sorry to be a wet blanket” but except for the post 9/11 war footing, there’s not a lot to render one nostalgic:
- - - - - - - - -
Here’s her list of Bush’s sins, all nine of them [go to her website for the links in each enumeration]:

1) joined with open-borders progressives McCain and Kennedy to try to force shamnesty down our throats;
2) massively expanded the federal role in education;
3) championed the Medicare prescription drug entitlement using phony math;
4) kowtowed to the jihadi-enabling Saudis;
5) stocked DHS with incompetents and cronies;
6) pushed Hillarycare for housing;
7) enabled turncoat Arlen Specter;
8) nominated crony Harriet Myers to the Supreme Court;
9) pre-socialized the economy for Obama by embracing TARP, the auto bailouts, the AIG bailout, and in his own words:
“I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free-market system.”

I wasn’t aware of the last quote, but it certainly rounds off his missteps during his tenure. The only other thing I'd add is partially related to #5: Bush was loyal to his people long past their sell-by date. Rumsfeld comes to mind.

I voted for Bush the first time to save us from the fate of being governed by Al Gore. Like many others, my vote was “against the other guy”, for Gore was a whacko who believed that we needed to be rid of the internal combustion engine, a prevaricator who claimed he invented the internet, a malodorous left-over from Clinton’s Shame. In comparison, Bush seemed to have had a fairly good record as governor of Texas; certainly he served with a lot more integrity than Gore had exhibited as Bill Clinton’s vice-president. With Gore in the catbird seat for two terms we’d already be living in the poverty of cap and trade while his ‘green’ hysteria and hypocrisy continued unabated.

The second time around, what the Dems offered was even worse than their first run at Bush. The feckless, reckless John Kerry was, and continues to be, an immature hate-America-first elitist, following in his father’s footsteps. There’s one sour apple who didn’t roll far from that poison apple tree. Of course, with Kerry in office, we’d have had entertaining Nixonesque drama queen exchanges with the press. The man is thin-skinned enough to be one of the Professionally Aggrieved.

But yeah, I sure don’t want to roll back to Bush. I wouldn’t mind fast-forwarding past President Obama, though. In fact, I’d — gulp — take Gore over Obama. No, on second thought, maybe Kerry instead. Uh, no, make that Gore. Umm…

Ugh. What a Morton’s Fork!

7 comments:

Bruno said...

We may have "a bajillion leftists" here in Minnesota, but I am proud and happy to say that I live in the 6th district of Minnesota, home of US Congresswoman Michele Bachmann. She is hated by the left (read the online comment section of the Star Tribune every time they run a biased story on her). There are many correct-thinking people here also as evidenced by our election of this remarkable woman to congress. I will say that GW Bush was never my man, but it makes one yearn for the "good old days" now that we have Obama teleprompting his way through his presidency with the credit card in his hand. For alternate views from Minnesota, visit my blog.

Anonymous said...

In all honesty, I think my cat would be a better president than Barack Obama.

X said...

Bush was quite the curate's egg, wasn't he?

Charles Martel said...

The Republican party (with the exception of the Reagan years) has evolved into a rubber stamp for the leftist agenda pursued by the Democrats. The only dichotomy that matters in America today is not Republican vs. Democrat, but rather big government vs. limited government and subsumed under this overriding contrasting view of the role of government are the additional dichotomies of tradition vs. progressivism, custom vs. innovation and prudence vs. radical change.

George Bush, and the Republicans as a whole, have largely failed to articulate a coherent governing philosophy substantially at odds with the prevailing orthodoxies of the left. Consider Bush/McCain on immigration, global warming, entitlements, border enforcement, budgetary restraint, oil exploration and drilling, education, torture, McCain Feingold and, of course, the religion of peace. Worse, the Republicans have served to protect the flank of the Democratic party by ostensibly providing an alternative when in fact the basic tenets of liberalism remain unchallenged. And so, the legitimate concerns of a majority of Americans have been thwarted by a two party system that has failed to provide real competing visions for America - just leftism and leftism lite.

And THAT is George Bush's failed legacy in a nutshell. His intellectual incoherence served to protect the flank of progressives while at the same time giving them a bogeyman to hold up to ridicule. Even now, we hear the left deriding Bush and conservatives as though Bush were an exemplar of small government philosophy.

The damage done to the small government movement by Bush and his father will be felt for years.

Thank GOD that Obama won in 2008. McCain would have driven the final nail into the small government coffin.

EscapeVelocity said...

Who are the idiots that invited Somalis to live in Minneapolis St Paul are in large numbers.

Those fools deserve everything those Somalis give them.

EscapeVelocity said...

There are many criticisms to make of GW Bush, but all I can say is thank Bush for Roberts and Alito. His legacy on the court will be very positive for a long time to come.

(PS - He almost screwed that one up....Harriet Meyers.)

Proud Infidel said...

I think Natalie's cat, like any of my two cats, would be a better President than Obama too.

Bush was a singular disapointment to me because I thought he was he was a Reagan type conservative, we all know how that turned out. Michelle Malkin and Charles Martel above hit the nail on the head about GW and the Republican party during Bush's 8 years.

The fact that some people actually DO miss him and wish he was still President is a testament to how bad Obama is. He's shown us all what real out of control government spending is all about. Bush was small potatoes in that department compared to Obama.

Post a Comment

All comments are subject to pre-approval by blog admins.

Gates of Vienna's rules about comments require that they be civil, temperate, on-topic, and show decorum. For more information, click here.

Users are asked to limit each comment to about 500 words. If you need to say more, leave a link to your own blog.

Also: long or off-topic comments may be posted on news feed threads.

To add a link in a comment, use this format:
<a href="http://mywebsite.com">My Title</a>

Please do not paste long URLs!

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.