Spill Response Not About Oil, But Snake Oil
By Thomas Sowell
Investors.com
The big oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is bad enough in itself. But
politics can make anything worse.
Let's stop and think. Either the government knows how to stop the oil
spill or they don't. If they know how to stop it, then why have they let
thousands of barrels of oil per day keep gushing out, for weeks on end? All
they have to do is tell BP to step aside, while the government comes in to
do it right.
If they don't know, then what is all this political grandstanding about
keeping their boot on the neck of BP, the attorney general of the United
States going down to the Gulf to threaten lawsuits — on what charges was
unspecified — and President Obama showing up in his shirt sleeves?
Just what is Obama going to do in his shirt sleeves, except impress the
gullible? He might as well have shown up in a tuxedo with white tie, for all
the difference it makes.
This government is not about governing. It is about creating an
impression. That worked on the campaign trail in 2008, but it is a disaster
in the White House, where rhetoric is no substitute for reality.
If the Obama administration was for real, and trying to help get the oil
spill contained as soon as possible, the last thing its attorney general
would be doing is threatening a lawsuit. A lawsuit is not going to stop the
oil, and creating a distraction can only make people at BP start directing
their attention toward covering themselves, instead of covering the oil
well.
If and when the attorney general finds that BP did something illegal,
that will be time enough to start a lawsuit. But making a public
announcement at this time accomplishes absolutely nothing substantive. It is
just more political grandstanding.
This is not about oil. This is about snake oil.
Nothing will keep a man or an institution determined to continue on a
failing policy course like past success with that policy. Obama's political
success in the 2008 election campaign was a spectacular triumph of creating
images and impressions.
But creating political impressions and images is not the same thing as
governing. Yet Obama in the White House keeps on saying and doing things to
impress people, instead of governing.
Once the elections were over and the time for governing began, there was
now a new audience to consider — a much more savvy audience, the leaders of
other countries around the world.
However impressed the media and the Obama cult might be with the
president's image, rhetoric and style, leaders of other countries — allies
and enemies alike — are interested in results.
Even our domestic policies can affect foreign leaders, as Ronald Reagan's
breaking of the air traffic controllers' strike impressed the Russians with
what kind of man they were going to have to deal with, as former Soviet
officials said publicly many years later.
By the same token, domestic bungling by Barack Obama sends a dangerous
signal to countries hostile to us, in addition to the signal sent by his
displays of amateurism on the world stage.
President Obama had barely settled into the White House before he began
demonstrating his willingness to sell out this country's friends to appease
our enemies.
His trip to Moscow to try to make a deal with the Russians, based on
reneging on the pre-existing American commitment to put a missile shield in
Eastern Europe, was the kind of shortsighted betrayal whose consequences can
come back to haunt a nation for years.
Obama spoke grandly about "pressing the reset button" on international
relations, as if all the international commitments of the past were his to
disregard.
But if no American commitment can be depended upon beyond a current
administration, then any nation that allies itself with us is jeopardizing
its own national security, because dangers in the international jungle last
longer than four years or even eight years.
We are already seeing the consequences. Even Turkey — formally a NATO
ally — is cozying up to Iran, now that it is painfully clear that Obama is
not going to do anything that has any realistic chance of stopping Iran from
going nuclear.
If leaders of other nations can't depend on the United States, then they
need to make the best deal they can with our enemies. They understand that
preserving their nation's security is a leader's top priority, even if
Barack Obama doesn't.