There are Lies, Damned Lies and Democrats
Steny
Hoyer certainly is a creative man. Asked about Barack Obama's promise
that everyone would be able to keep his health coverage if he liked it
and the recent revelation that the Democrats knew all along that
millions of Americans would lose their health plans under ObamaCare, he
had an answer.
"I
think the message [the promise] was accurate. It was not precise
enough...[it] should have been caveated with - 'assuming you have a
policy that in fact does do what the bill is designed to do,'" reports National Review.
My, that's rich.
Almost Frank Rich.
Since Hoyer's lie about a lie speaks for itself, let's just have a little fun here. Try this on for size:
Subject: "But you said that if we supported your law, no one would lose his freedom of speech!"
Leader:
"My message was accurate. It just wasn't precise enough. It should have
been caveated with, 'assuming you agree with me.'"
Or how about this:
Subject: "But you said that if we gave you power, no one would be killed!"
Leader: "My message was accurate. It just wasn't precise enough. It should have been caveated with, 'assuming I like you.'"
Man, I'm good at this. Hey, DNC, do I have a future?
If
you're old enough to have lived through the days of "no Soviet
domination of Eastern Europe" (hat tip: the liberal Gerald Ford), you
may remember the spectacle of a Soviet government representative being
interviewed on American television. He would just tell the most
ridiculous lies. I mean, up was down, black was white, day was night. It
really was laughable for any quasi-informed American viewer.
For Soviet subjects, however, it was no joke.
They were living under a government of the lie.
You
see, one thing about this big, crazy world we live in where there's one
in every bunch is that -- no matter how corrupt or wicked you are --
you can always find someone to do your bidding. There are always a few
people willing to stuff the ballot boxes, intimidate political
opponents, pull the gas-chamber lever or the trigger, or tell any lie
you want told with a face straighter than the last man in a world of
women (Jay Blarney comes to mind -- the straight face part, not the man
part). "I vas just following orders, you zee."
Of
course, we see people telling little lies all the time, lies that don't
exceed the boundaries of their moral framework (it's not right, just
reality). But do understand that with some people, there's only one
limiting factor determining what lies they'll tell:
What they can get away with.
So
it shouldn't surprise anyone that Hussein Obama (PBUH) said, when
ObamaCare was up before the U.S. Extreme Court, that he was confident
the "Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary
step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a
democratically elected Congress." Of course, as many know, it was only
unprecedented when men still wore powdered wigs -- the Court has been
overturning laws enacted by "democratically elected" Congresses for 200
years. It's called "judicial review."
Now,
being a former constitutional law lecturer, Obama (PBUH) knew this full
well. But he also knew the media wouldn't call him on his ridiculous
Sovietesque lie and that the average reality-TV-watching American hasn't
the foggiest idea what the Court's role is, anyway. Heck, recent
man-on-the-street interviews show that some Americans don't know what
the Holocaust was and that others were willing to sign a petition advocating an "Orwellian," "Nazi-style police state."
This,
by the way, is why Obama (PBUH) et al. want to import and legalize as
many low-info undocumented Democrats as possible. Many people in this
world are accustomed to overlords with whom they have a patron-client
relationship, and they accept government lies as long as the slave pork
barrel is kept stocked. It reminds me of a Mexican fellow I saw a few
years ago wearing a shirt stating, "Everybody lies. Nobody cares." Well,
I care, even though I realize many Americans don't care that I care.
The
increased acceptance of lies is a sign of a nation in decline. But the
good news -- or the bad news (depending on whether or not one is a liar)
-- is that you can well live a lie, but you can't live well with the
consequences of living a lie.
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