Fact-Checking Obama

From conservative.org, by Brent Bozell, Issue 209 – August 15, 2012

Brent BozellBarack Obama is the man who admitted his memoir “Dreams  of My Father” was semi-fictional. “For the sake of compression, some of the  characters that appear are composites of people, I’ve known, and some events  appear out of precise chronology.” Translation: On some pages, I’m taking poetic  license with the facts to burnish my image.

The problem is, Obama’s still using poetic license. So where are the  reporters to point out where he doesn’t tell the truth? Let’s take just one  typical Obama stump speech, on July 5 in Sandusky, Ohio, and look for the fibs  and stretches. They’re not hard to find.

1. There are the biographical tall tales. “My grandfather fought in Patton’s  army.” In 2009, AP’s Nancy Benac noted that the president’s grandfather, Stanley  Dunham, was in a supply and maintenance company, not in combat. That’s noble  work, but “fought in Patton’s army” implies something else. Moreover, Benac  reported Dunham’s company was assigned to Patton’s army for two months in 1945,  and then quoted Obama’s own self-boosting memoir: “Gramps returned from the war  never having seen real combat.” Why has Benac been alone in exploring this  blatant exaggeration?

2. There are the policy myths. “So when folks said let’s go ahead and let the  auto industry go bankrupt, we said no, let’s bet on American workers. Let’s bet  on American industries. And now, GM is back on top and Chrysler is moving and  Ford is going strong.”

Put aside for a moment that GM being “on top” is a stretch. GM still owes the  public $30 billion for the bailout. But the real screamer in that passage is  Ford never succumbed to bankruptcy and bailouts, and therefore shouldn’t be  included in any boast of any sort of Obama achievements.

Some lines in the speech just sound ridiculous based on the last three and a  half years, such as: “I want to balance our budget. I want to reduce our  deficit, deal with our debt, but I want to do it in a balanced and responsible  way.” This might not be strictly “false” – it’s opinion – but it’s certainly  disingenuous. He said the same thing in 2008 and then delivered the biggest  trillion-dollar deficits in history.

Obama also refuses to admit the failure of the “stimulus,” claiming in one  passage “I do want to rebuild our roads and our bridges” because it would “put a  lot of people back to work – and that’s good for the entire economy.” Except  it’s demonstrably not true.

3. Then there are the religious myths. “When I first got my job as an  organizer for the Catholic churches in Chicago, they taught me that no  government program can replace good neighbors and people who care deeply about  their communities [and] who are fighting on their behalf.”

In how many ways is this deeply insincere? Obama was hired by a Jewish  Alinskyite leftist named Jerry Kellman for something called the Developing  Communities Project, which did have Catholic support, but Obama’s own memoir  described the community organizing work as a chance to “start to build power” – with a “hard-headedness” based on “politics, not religion.”

In his stump speech, Obama’s trying to create two false impressions: (1) that  he’s not waging war on the Catholic Church with his HHS mandate to force  Catholics to fund contraceptives and sterilization against their conscience, and  (2) that he’s some sort of moderate about how government programs couldn’t  possibly replace person-to-person private charity. If he were Catholic, he might  be excommunicated.

4. Finally there are the campaign myths. Obama bizarrely told the crowd in  Sandusky “back in 2008, everybody said we couldn’t do it because we were  outspent, we weren’t favored.” Did Obama mean in the primary race? By a slim  margin, he outraised Hillary Clinton, who was the early favorite. But this spin  is comical if it refers to the general election, where Obama outraised McCain  $779 million to $347 million.

Then Obama added: “That first race that I ran as a state senator, Michelle  and I, we were going around knocking on doors, passing out leaflets. Nobody gave  us a shot. Everybody said, ‘Nobody can pronounce your name, how are you going to  win?’” But Obama ran unopposed in 1996 in both the primary and the general  election. In a burst of Chicago-style politics, Obama removed his primary  opponents (including the incumbent state senator, Alice Palmer) from the ballot  by challenging their signatures.

When will the alleged fact-checkers in the news media vet Obama’s stump  speech and demand he start telling the truth?

L. Brent Bozell III is president of the Media Research Center.

Read More :: http://conservative.org/fact-checking-obama/14745/#ixzz23cqLdd1t

About these ads

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 60 other followers

%d bloggers like this: