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December 14, 2008

Great Expectations

By Ivan Hentschel

Too Much, Too Soon, Too Naive

::::::::

Whenever we place unrealistic expectations upon ourselves or someone else, disappointment and sorrow are soon to follow. Both the "Audacity of Hope" and the Obama administration have just been dragged into unfair territory.

Articles just this morning include:

-A plea by many for Obama to legalize "Mary Jane";

-An expose' demanding that Obama stop sexual exploitation of children;

-A call for Obama to nationalize and oversee American automobile production;

-More calls for immediate universal health care;

-A plea for Obama to stop smoking to become a role model for others.

This weeks' emails included:

- Various invitations from multiple groups, sponsoring Obama "house parties". At these gatherings, they will apparently produce lists of issues and problems, which they will presumably submit to the Obama administration for immediate action. This presupposes an immediate response, but no one seems braced for disappointment. Proverbial caution has been thrown to the proverbial wind.

- I recieved no less than 8 (eight) petitions from assorted groups, asking Obama to save whales, save polar bears, end poverty, stop global warming, reduce nukes, reform banks, turn coal green and reform Congressional ethics laws. And they all "expect" them to be a fait accompli by early 2009.
In none of these do I see or hear the word "compromise", nor do I sense any reasonable approach concerning just how long it takes to accomplish any of these.

Does no one recognize that Obama must work with the through the fickle Congress to get any of this done? Perhaps I have erred on the side of realism.

The "Audacity of Hope" is mutating into unreasonable demands and expectations. The only way for the new administration to succeed, to any measureable degree, is for the American people NOT TO BURDEN it with lists of demands founded on the wildest of dreams and unrealistic expectations.  

Surely we can do better, today.

Put yet another way, why should we party so hearty that we give Obama a hangover before he even reaches office?

And does anyone we remember how we scoffed at the Bush administration, for proposing "Aspirational horizons"? I am also inclined to think that unbounded ecstasy and euphoria can lead to catastrophic misery.


Authors Bio:
A retired sales ad marketing trainer, escapee from the automobile business, who reads vorciously and writes whenever possible. The rest of the available time is spent doing woodworking or cooking. Lives in central TX, where the weather is great and politics are dubious. Usually logical and sensible but can be very cranky when assaulted by anybody leaning too far to the right and doesn't know it.

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