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Obama Throws Fit In White House

Von: bigred@shout.net [Profil]
Datum: 07.11.2009 22:53
Message-ID: <ac42acaf-6a9a-4972-93d4-58b030bac209@h2g2000vbd.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.activism alt.conspiracy
(Melchizedek Communique, MC110709) President Barack Obama has thrown a
fit at a White House meeting, according to the Globe, a weekly tabloid
newspaper.

In its latest November 9, 2009 issue, Globe also notices that Obama is
losing weight fast and, allegedly, smoking cigarettes like a chimney.

First Lady Michelle Obama, in attendance at an inner-circle oval
office confab, reportedly burst into tears when the normally friendly
Obama snarled, "What the hell is going on? Why do people hate me?"

In truth, there is not hatred but rather increasing distrust. A little
over a year ago, Barack Obama entered into an oral contract with the
American people: In return for votes, he would deliver "shovel ready
jobs."

But then, on the very day those votes were delivered, "the candidate
who campaigned on what he called the 'fierce urgency of now' became
the president-elect who needed time." [1] The promised jobs would take
time -- years -- maybe never, was the new deal. Hence, Obama has
violated contract law and might be subject to lawsuit.

Meanwhile, like a shark circling about, Jeb Bush, carrying the blood
of Franklin Pierce in his veins, is filing his teeth. And foreign-born
Arnold Schwarzenegger is thinking, "If Obama can be President, then
why not me?"

Early in the Obama presidency, after the oral contract had been
callously broken, talk was heard about "shared sacrifice." Then, on
March 23, 2009, Melchizedek Communique suggested, "Why not a 10
percent pay cut across-the-board for all government employees?" Then
they too could "share the sacrifice." And vroom! Faster than an oral
contract can be broken, no more talk was heard about the "shared
sacrifice."

In the times of Millard Fillmore, he also introduced the idea of
"shared sacrifice." Congressman Fillmore, in reaction to a depressed
state of business throughout the U.S. in 1834, urged it "was only
right that the legislators themselves, and all public officers from
the president down, should... be put upon an equality with the rest of
the nation. He was willing to suffer a reduction of his compensation,
the same ratio that he asked the other officers of the government to
reduce theirs." [2]

------- Notes -------
[1] "Months into Obama's presidency, promise of 'change' is a slow
go". By Candy Crowley, CNN Senior Political Correspondent.
November 4, 2009 1:27 a.m. EST
[2] Scarry, Robert J. Millard Fillmore. Jefferson, NC: McFarland &
Co., 2001

-------

Via Melchizedek Communique
http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html


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