Samstag, 30. Januar 2010

Bye bye

Hello everybody. Well, the week is over and we hardly can believe that we blogged bloggers. Svetlana, the first time you mentioned, that we have to create our own blog and blog a blogger - we were scared - we have never done this before because we were not computer freaks - but hey we did our job - or as Obama always quotes - YES, we can...!!!!

We really had fun together creating this blog and to blog different professional bloggers, but we still had weird moments, too, right?!!

It was a really nice and informative experience and we truely believe, that blogging will become even more famous than it already is. Personally, we will definetely follow other blogs, because there are still so many other interesting informative blogs on the internet. It is like a 'drug' - you read one comment and immediately there is another link which you start following - an amazing fact!!!!Thank you for introducing blogosphere to us.

tokaface

Freitag, 29. Januar 2010

JOBS, JOBS, JOBS, improvement of the economic situation and health care are the main topics in Obama's speech - Republican denial

Listening to his speech and watching his face, you could see, that he has had to acknowledge that he cannot work as fast as he wants, and even he, as the President of the United States - the most powerful man in the world- has to cur come to a system. His sovran performance still gave him respect. Even though the Republicans continously show him their denial towards his person and political plans and initiative. 'Keep going, OBAMA'

Donnerstag, 28. Januar 2010


How human could a President be without losing respect?

Whow, I really started to be involved by SHERYL GAY STOLBERG`s blog post. It is so amazing in what way she is writing her posts.

http://community.nytimes.com/comments/www.nytimes.com/2010/01/28/us/politics/28obama.html#preview
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/americas/2008/obama_presidency/default.stm

Mittwoch, 27. Januar 2010

Today I read different posts by Bernie Becker he posted for the NYT. You should read his new post. I contacted him today without response, but I hope he will contact me. Let me know what you think. I look forward to your comments.

http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/va-governor-will-rebut-obamas-address/

http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/author/bernie-becker/

Dienstag, 26. Januar 2010

Obama's spending freeze: Prudence or posturing?By Kristi Keck, CNN
January 26, 2010 2:05 p.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Obama to call for partial freeze on discretionary spending
Freeze could help put Obama back in the political center
Some Republicans say it doesn't do enough; some Dems say it goes too far
Watch coverage Wednesday night at 7:30 on CNN.com and 8 on CNN TV
(CNN) -- President Obama's proposed spending freeze could help him recapture the favor of centrist voters, but critics blast the move as nothing more than political posturing.

The president is expected to call for a partial, three-year freeze on discretionary spending in his State of the Union address Wednesday, according to two senior administration officials. The cuts, which Obama will say would save $250 billion, would not apply to national security spending and would not affect major entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security.

The proposal comes as the president's poll numbers dip and concerns about the economy and the federal deficit flare.

It also comes after a shocking election loss for Democrats in Massachusetts, which many have interpreted as an expression of voter frustration with the way Washington is handling the economy.

"I applaud [Obama] for attempting to have some fiscal restraint," Republican strategist Ed Rollins said. "But at the end of the day, he's got to make sure the Democrats are disciplined and they don't have big spending programs alongside of this."

Under Obama's plan, all federal discretionary spending would be frozen at its current level of $447 billion per year. Individual federal agencies would have the power to give some programs increases, while cutting money elsewhere.

Both chambers of Congress would have to approve the freeze when they take up the president's budget for fiscal year 2011, which starts in October. Obama will send his budget plan to Congress after the State of the Union.

Video: 3-year spending freeze

Video: Obama aims to aid middle class
RELATED TOPICS
Barack Obama
National Economy
Government Spending
Jeffrey Sachs, an economist and director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, said Obama's move doesn't make much sense, following a year of unprecedented government spending and a $787 billion stimulus package.

"A little bit of disarray, it seems. Last year, just spend, throw everything into a stimulus package ... and then this year, just across-the-board freeze. Frankly, the government has to make better choices and better plans than throwing things into a big pot in one year and then freezing across the board the next year," he said.

Obama dismissed the idea of an across-the-board spending freeze during a presidential debate in October 2008.

"It sounds good. It's proposed periodically. It doesn't happen," then-candidate Obama said.

"In fact, an across-the-board spending freeze is a hatchet, and we do need a scalpel because there are some programs that don't work at all. There are some that are underfunded. I want to make sure we're focused on the programs that work."

Republican reaction to Obama's proposal was split, with some senior GOP aides saying it is something they could support, and others saying it did not go nearly far enough.

"Given Washington Democrats' unprecedented spending binge, this is like announcing you're going on a diet after winning a pie-eating contest," said Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio. "Will the budget still double the debt over five years and triple it over 10? That's the bottom line."

The senior administration officials acknowledged that discretionary spending is only about one-sixth of the entire federal budget, but said the White House believes that cuts need to start somewhere.

The move is Obama's latest step down a path to a more populist message, aimed at reassuring Americans nervous about the slow pace of the economic recovery. The president on Monday proposed nearly doubling the child care tax credit for middle-class families. Obama is expected to talk about efforts to create more jobs and spur the economy in his speech Wednesday.

iReport: Deliver your State of the Union address

The White House has put a greater emphasis on the economy in the days since Democrats lost their 60-seat supermajority in the Senate. Republican Scott Brown defeated Democrat Martha Coakley in a special election last week to serve the remainder of the late Ted Kennedy's Senate term. Brown capitalized on voter frustrations and captured the independent vote in Massachusetts, a Democratic stronghold.

"I think that is a wake-up call for everybody in this town," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said a day after the election.

Obama's proposal will likely set the stage for a fight with some liberals, but polls suggest it might not be a bad thing for the president to occasionally break ranks.

A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey released Monday indicates that seven in 10 Americans think that the Democrats' loss of their 60-seat supermajority in the Senate is a positive step for the country.

Observers note it will also put Republicans in a position where they can show if they are willing to meet the president halfway.

Democratic strategist James Carville said Tuesday that Obama needs to take control of the narrative in order to get back on track.

"Until this administration stands up and says 'This is what we will face, and this is what we did, and this is our strategy' -- these things are going to continue to happen," he said.


http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/26/spending.freeze.reaction/index.html?eref=rss_politics&iref=polticker