John Kerry said, "Why don't you ask Osama Bin Laden if he's better off now than he was 4 years ago?"
Bill Clinton said a lot of things, and he sounded like he knew what he was talking about, because he can use numbers without putting people to sleep--and he can slyly put in front of people the chutzpa of Paul Ryan, who attacks President Obama for cutting "to the dollar" the same amount Paul Ryan had cut from Medicare.
But most of all, the President himself finally swung into high gear and said, "They want your vote, but they don't want to you to know their plan. And that's because all they have to offer is the same prescription they've have for the last thirty years:
'Have a surplus? Try a tax cut.'
'Deficit too high? Try another.'
'Feel a cold coming on? Take two taxes cuts, roll back some regulations, and call us in the morning.'"
These are the lines we can use around the water cooler the next morning with our co-workers, who are quoting Rush Limbaugh.
"If you reject the notion this nation's promise is reserved for the few, your voices must be heard in this election."
"If you reject the notion that our government is forever beholden to the highest bidder, you need to stand up in this election."
I also like the phrase, "Trickle down tax cut pixie dust."
So, okay, now we've got a gun toting leader who knows what it takes to play the game.
NPR this morning was all about the potential political effect of the disappointing unemployment numbers which came out after the President's speech. You would think the speech was not news, only the jobs report. But the President, speaking here in Portsmouth, put today's report in perspective. When he took office, 800,000 jobs were being lost every month. Today we have a report of 95,000 jobs being added in a month, and that's supposed to be devastating news.
One wonders what they are thinking at NPR, or if they are thinking at all. Probably, they are simply wimping out, afraid the Republicans will be angry at them and try to cut their funding again, as if by showing fear, NPR can tame the bully.
But President Obama is doing better now, in the late rounds. For the first half of the fight, he was simply covering up and taking punches. Now, he's starting to bounce off the ropes and throw a few combinations.





