Showing posts with label obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obama. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Maze cartoon about Obama and his stance on the Ground Zero Mosque and East Jerusalem. By Yonatan Frimer

Maze cartoon about Obama's stance on the Ground Zero Mosque.
maze cartoon of Obama on ground zero and building in Jerusalem
Maze cartoon by Yonatan Frimer about Obama's stance that the Ground Zero mosque should be built since no one should be restricted from building based on their religious beliefs, except he says the opposite when building in Jerusalem, which is a conflict in policy.
Click here for a printable, hi-res file of Obama's Ground Zero Maze
Click here for the solution to the jerusalem and ground zero maze



Article on the topic of this maze cartoon:

Obama backs Ground Zero mosque

Simon Mann, Washington

BARACK Obama has endorsed the building of an Islamic community centre and mosque near Ground Zero in New York, saying, "Muslims have the same right to practise their religion as everyone else" in America.

"That includes the right to build a place of worship … on private property in lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and ordinances. This is America," the President told guests at a dinner at the White House honouring the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

"Our commitment to religious freedom must be unshakeable,'' he said. ''The principle that people of all faiths are welcome in this country and that they will not be treated differently by their government is essential to who we are."

Click here to read the full article about Obama backing ground zero mosque

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Maze cartoon of Obama's camaign promise of "Change" By Yonatan Frimer

The Promise from Obama Maze

maze of obama change
Editoral Cartoon Maze in Larger and Printable Format
Can't solve the maze? Click here for the maze solution
Editorial Maze Cartoon "Obama's change"

Next Maze >>

Maze Cartoon topic in the news:

GDP grew by 3.2 percent in first quarter

By Ian Swanson - 04/30/10 09:18 AM ET

The nation’s gross domestic product increased 3.2 percent in the first quarter of 2010, bolstering the Obama administration’s arguments that the economy is improving.

The jump in GDP was lower that the 5.6 percent increase registered in the last quarter of 2009, but still represents significant economic growth. It’s the third quarter in a row that the U.S. economy has expanded.

President Barack Obama is scheduled to make a statement on the figures from the Rose Garden on Friday morning. (Read More)


For more Yonatan Frimer mazes, visit:
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Ink Blot Mazes - Maze art
Buy maze art by Yonatan Frimer

Monday, April 5, 2010

Editorial Maze Reform: Political mazes by Yonatan Frimer and RSL

Political Maze on Health-care Reform
Political Cartoon Maze Obama Healthcare pill thats is hard  to swallow
Political Cartoon Maze - Obamacare

Can't solve the maze? click here for the maze solution

Click here to download Political Cartoon Maze on Obamacare in high quality

Want more mazes? visit our websites:
Team Of Monkeys Editorial Cartoon Maze
Ink Blot Mazes -Maze Art
Buy Maze art on Fine Art America

Political Maze Iranian Regime Puppets
Political  Cartoon Maze Iranian Puppet Regime
Political Cartoon Iranian Regime
Can't solve the maze? click here for the maze solution
Click here to download Political Cartoon Maze of Iranian Regime puppets in high quality

Political maze cartoon of the Iranian supreme leader Ali Hoseyni Khāmene’i
using his team of monkeys to control a puppet baring the likeness of Mahmoud ahmadinejad, the current president of Iran.

Arrows mark the entrance and exit of the maze.


Want more mazes? visit our websites:
Team Of Monkeys Editorial Cartoon Maze
Ink Blot Mazes -Maze Art
Buy Maze art on Fine Art America


Political Maze Cartoon of Gaze Situation
Political maze  cartoon of gaza situation
Political Maze Cartoon of Gaze Situation
Can't solve the maze? click here for the maze solution
Click here to download Political Cartoon Maze of Iranian Regime puppets in high quality
Monkeys depicting the Palestinians aim arms, guns and rockets at a giant sleeping monkeys marked as Israeli. The overall message of the cartoon is that the Palestinians are going to wake a sleeping giant.



Want more mazes? visit our websites:
Team Of Monkeys Editorial Cartoon Maze
Ink Blot Mazes -Maze Art
Buy Maze art on Fine Art America


Editorial Maze Cartoon of Gaza Guns and Butter
Editorial  maze cartoon of gaza guns and butter
Guns and Butter in Gaza
Can't solve the maze? click here for the maze solution
Click here to download Political Cartoon Maze of Iranian Regime puppets in high quality

Monkeys depicting the Palestinians aim arms, guns and rockets at a giant sleeping monkeys marked as Israeli. The overall message of the cartoon is that the Palestinians are going to wake a sleeping giant.



Want more mazes? visit our websites:
Team Of Monkeys Editorial Cartoon Maze
Ink Blot Mazes -Maze Art
Buy Maze art on Fine Art America

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Maze News: The latest news on mazes


Michelle Obama's official White House portrait released. How you can get those arms!

February 28, 8:05 AM · 1 comment
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Photo by Reuters/Landov

The first official portrait of First Lady Michelle Obama shows a woman who is classy, confident, and able to hold her own in a fist fight--not that she would ever stoop to that level. Mrs. Obama's portrait is beautiful, but her classic Michael Kors dress is causing a stir because of its lack of sleeves. Some say the First Lady should have chosen a more traditional, conservative dress more akin to what Eleanor Roosevelt might have worn back in the era of the Great Depression. Well, the economy may be tanking, but women have come a long way since the 1930's. Michelle Obama's portrait is an accurate rendition of a smart, strong, independent, elegant woman and mother who takes great care of herself. As far as I'm concerned, that's a wonderful message to send out to America's women and young girls.

I know that most of us will never have a private chef, a personal trainer ,or a staff of people to look after our house and children while we steal an hour at the gym, but I'm pretty sure the First Lady has a lot on her plate, too. So how does she find the time to stay in such great shape? Check out how you can get Michelle Obama's toned arms at cnn.com/2009/HEALTH


Ban's lifting will remove research hurdles


Alan Trounson, Institute for Regenerative Medicine
By Jennifer Brown, The Denver Post
Published: Monday, March 9, 2009 10:53 PM EDT
DENVER — Stem-cell researcher Dr. Dennis Roop was teaching a class on bioethics Monday morning when he glanced at his watch — the next 15 minutes, he told his medical students, would revitalize science.




Alan Trounson, president of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, poses for a portrait at his offices in San Francisco, Monday, March 9, 2009. Trounson reacted favorably to the news that President Obama on Monday cleared the way for a significant increase in federal dollars for embryonic stem cell research.(AP Photo/Eric Risberg)





As President Barack Obama was lifting the ban on federal money for embryonic stem-cell research, the University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine professor was lecturing about the stem cells his lab has created from human skin.

Roop and other Colorado scientists — on the cusp of major breakthroughs that could someday cure Parkinson's disease and help paralyzed people walk — celebrated the reversal of policy.

``It's a clear signal that this administration is taking politics out of science and restoring science to its rightful place,'' Roop said.

He said Obama's executive order will invigorate research stalled under former President George W. Bush's ban, which limited the use of taxpayer money to only the stem-cell lines produced before 2001.

Those cell lines are no longer fit for human use, perhaps degenerated after eight years in frozen storage and contaminated with animal cells, Colorado researchers said. Cell lines created since then, using private or, in some cases, state money, are now available for research with Obama's order.

Roop, director of CU's Charles C. Gates Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Biology Program, intends to compare the capabilities of stem cells created from human skin to embryonic stem cells. Within a few years, he believes doctors will treat diseases using stem cells created from the patient's own skin, perhaps closing the controversial chapter on embryonic stem cells.


``It's almost limitless what you can propose to use them for,'' said Roop, who believes skin stem cells could potentially cure cancer and heart disease, among other illnesses.

The stem-cell ban also slowed research by Dr. Curt Freed, who is at the forefront of developing a cure for Parkinson's disease.

The UCD researcher has transplanted stem cells recovered from aborted fetuses into patients with Parkinson's. He also has used stem cells to cure Parkinson's in rats.

``These Republican presidents have taken the position that they would prefer to see tissue discarded than used to help people,'' Freed said. ``You basically get put on hold for a long time.''

Obama's order — combined with the stimulus package that infuses money into the grant-making National Institutes of Health — will jump-start research at public universities in particular. Besides the new money, universities will no longer have to follow a federal rule that banned work on embryonic stem cells in the same building with any federally funded research.

The end of the ban comes at a perfect time for Dr. Stephen Davies, a UCD neurosurgery professor who is trying to cure paralysis with stem-cell transplants. Rats with spinal injuries in Davies' lab had a 40 percent regeneration of nerve fibers within eight days of receiving stem-cell transplants, he said. He hopes to try the therapy on people soon.

``It's great news that there is now going to be more latitude,'' he said. ``It's going to create a lot of opportunities.''



Prepare to be A-MAZE-D

Posted By macmac

2 days ago

SUDBURY, ON – Come one, come all and test your spatial and memory skills at Science North! Maze-A-Palooza, a new special exhibition about mazes opened to the public on Saturday, February 28th – just in time for March Break!

Explore 13 interactive mazes and come face to face with mystifying illusions and mind-boggling puzzles! Each maze features a dynamic environment where you’ll discover a surprise around every corner, and develop new methods of problem-solving through improvisation, trial and error, observation and testing, and logic and reasoning.

Solve puzzles and patterns, challenge the relationship between the mind and the eye and nurture your inner musician! Maze-A-Palooza offers challenging and interactive maze experiences for all ages including the Music Maze, Puzzle Maze, Colour Maze and Maze of Illusions!~ You can also run a marathon with your fingers in the Continuous Quad Maze or become a "webmaster", climbing over and under without getting tangled, through an intricate web of ropes!~

“Research shows that exercising the brain can keep it healthy and sharp. The Maze-A-Palooza special exhibition at Science North is sure to give your brain a good workout,” says Jennifer Pink, Science North’s Science Director. “No matter how young or old you are, this exhibition will engage and challenge you!”

Prepare to be A-MAZE-D!

Maze-A-Palooza will be on display in the Special Exhibits Hall at Science North from February 28th, 2009 to March 29th, 2009. Visit sciencenorth.ca/maze for all the details.





Mountain Maze Is Gone – Temporarily
by Dana Wilbourn

posted March 10, 2009

Click to Enlarge
Photo by Dana Wilbourn
A new Mountain Maze will rise soon from the ground where the old Maze stood for 20 years at the Lookout Mountain Commons
The Mountain Maze playground for Lookout Mountain, Tn., has been completely dismantled and removed by city public works employees. Ansley Moses told city commissioners at their monthly meeting on Tuesday the demolition work was completed in just one week. Initial estimates had allowed two to three weeks for demolition.

Mr. Moses commended the city employees for their excellent work and recommended to the commission that the city reward them with a monetary bonus because they saved the city quite a bit by completing the work in such a short time. The commission voted to approve the bonus request which amounts to about $5 per hour-worked.


Parks and Playgrounds Commissioner Will Moses said some site preparation is required before the new Mountain Maze is built. He recommended the city let the contractor/supplier, GameTime, do the preparation. The new Mountain Maze should be complete about mid-April to the end of the month, he said.

Portions of the old Mountain Maze will see continued use in the Natural Bridge area and at Chattanooga Christian School.

Police Chief Randall Bowden and Commissioner Carol Mutter told the commission that two police officers have been injured this week. Neither officer was on-duty at the time of the accidents which, though unrelated, were both farm-type accidents.

Patrolman Don Massengale has a crushed foot and will be out for several weeks.

Capt. Jim Purser was hit by a tree limb that whipped back over the hood of his tractor and struck him across his eyes. He is temporarily blind and underwent six hours of facial reconstruction surgery on Tuesday to rebuild his eye sockets. Additional surgeries will be required by the end of the week.

Mayor Greg Brown said he will discuss with the commissioners soon some way to assist Capt. Purser’s family during this difficult time. “As a community, we need to help them,” he said.

Chief Bowden also informed the commissioners about a recent arrest made in cooperation with the Chattanooga Police Department. The Chattanooga Police called the Lookout Mountain Police on Sunday night for assistance in stopping a car running from them and traveling up Scenic Highway at a high rate of speed.

Lookout Mountain officers clocked the speeding car on radar at 75 mph as it crossed the Incline. Officers engaged in the chase near the top of the mountain and the driver lost control trying to make a sharp right turn and ran off the road. The Tennessee Highway Patrol came and took the report from both police agencies. Drugs and alcohol are believed to be involved.

Mayor Brown read a resolution from the commissioners expressing heart-felt recognition and thanks for Judge W. Bradley Weeks who announced his retirement at the commission meeting last month. Judge Weeks served as Lookout Mountain Municipal judge for 10 years.

Ansley Moses presented a financial report to the commissioners. Over 97% of city property taxes have already been collected for 2009, he said. The city should end the fiscal year in June with a surplus of over $1 million.

After the meeting, a citizen attending the meeting said it would be nice if the state and federal governments could be run as efficiently as this city.

Education Commissioner Bill Mitchell reported Grandparents Day at Lookout Mountain School is March 11. Also, Spring Break is March 16–20.

John Martin addressed the commission about a request for a zoning variation for residential property owned by Robert Williams and family at the end of Bartram Road.

The Williams family, he said, wishes to subdivide their property into three lots. Current zoning requires new lots to have a minimum of 140 feet of road frontage. The property in question sits at the end of a cul-de-sac and does not have the required frontage.

Without subdividing the lot, the Williams’ could build one house on the property and not be required to meet the frontage minimum. The ordinance requires any property subdivided after 1995 meet the new frontage requirements.

Bob McDowell, speaking for neighbors bordering the property, said they all object to the granting of a variance. Two of the three lots, he said, would be very difficult to build on and would likely require blasting to prepare them for building. The blasting would be intrusive and possibly cause damage to existing structures, he said.

Mayor Brown told Mr. Martin it is customary that neighbors agree with a proposal before a variance is given. He said he has walked the property and has some concerns about the possibilities for building on it.

Mayor Brown said the commission will not make a ruling until more commissioners have had a chance to walk the property. He said it would be good if all parties got together and tried to come to some agreement.

Chief Bowden said the WWTA has to be satisfied and sign-off on the building plans before he can issue a building permit. Looking at the survey, he said, there are several areas of concern that the WWTA will have to rule on.

In the Mayor’s Report, Mayor Brown said the 2010 Fiscal Year Budget is beginning to be a bit of concern. The state is considering cuts, revenues are down, and the Hall Income Tax revenues are going to be significantly reduced because of the economy.

“More than any municipality in the State, Lookout Mountain relies heavily on the Hall Tax,” Mayor Brown said. The Tennessee Hall Tax is currently 27% of the city’s revenue.

In closing the meeting, Mayor Brown urged everyone to support the mountain businesses. The new grocery store is opening April 1, at the earliest, or around April 15 at the latest. There are three empty buildings in the business district, he said.

The next meeting of the Lookout Mountain City Commission will be Tuesday, April 14, at 5:30 p.m.

Dana Wilbourn

dbwilbourn@yahoo.com





Maze artist contact info:

Yonatan Frimer
Maze Artist
email: yfrimer@yahoo.com
Phone: (646)-335-0761
http://www.inkblotmazes.com/



Those mazes, again...




Blivet Maze
Blivet Maze small
Blivet Maze - 2009, By Yonatan Frimer




Maze Illusion - 2009
Optical illusion maze of another impossible object

maze of box illusion small
Maze illusion - 2008 - By Yonatan Frimer




Maze of the Statue of Liberty - 2009
maze of the statue of liberty, small size
Maze of Liberty - 2009 - Yonatan Frimer




President Barak Obama Maze Portrait - 2009

president barak obama small maze

Maze portrait of Barak Obama - By Yonatan Frimer


Friday, March 6, 2009

Ink Blot Mazes

Welcome to InkBlotMazes.com!

You've probably seen our mazes in a newspaper, magazine, or games book and wanted more. Well, you've come to the right place, we have lots more Inkblot Mazes right here.


Click on any maze image to view it in a higher resolution.


Blivet Maze - Optical illusion maze of an impossible object.
Blivet Maze medium
Blivet Maze - 2009, By Yonatan Frimer


They that mistake life's accessories for life itself are like them that go too fast in a maze: their very haste confuses them

Seneca quotes (Roman philosopher, mid-1st century AD)




Maze of Monkey Illusion - 2009
Optical illusion maze caused by conflicting horizontal and vertical lines.

maze of monkey illusion medium InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Maze of Monkey Illusion - 2008 - By Yonatan Frimer



“Boris Podolsky: James! How's the rat business?

James Moreland: Well, actually it's mostly students I'm experimenting on now.

Kurt Godel: My God, the mazes must be enormous.

IQ quotes (Movie)



Maze of the Statue of Liberty - 2009
maze of the Statue Of Liberty - InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Maze of Liberty - 2009 - Yonatan Frimer


The man of character, sensitive to the meaning of what he is doing, will know how to discover the ethical paths in the maze of possible behavior.

Earl Warren quotes (American Republican Politician and Judge, 1891-1974)


Barak Obama Maze - 2009

barak obama maze

Maze of Barak Obama - By Yonatan Frimer


Real obstacles don't take you in circles. They can be overcome. Invented ones are like a maze.
Barbara Sher


Maze of 3D Impossible Object - 2009 - By Yonatan Frimer
maze of 3d impossible box
Maze Zen Impossible - Yonatan Frimer 2009


It is easier to penetrate your audience with one sharp, clean point or idea, thand with a maze of half-baked unremarkable, uninspiring ideas that will never motivate or be remembered.

~ Stavros Cosmopulos quotes



Maze Museum 2006
international maze of a museum
Mazeum, by Yonatan Frimer


Happiness, that grand mistress of the ceremonies in the dance of life, impels us through all its mazes and meanderings, but leads none of us by the same route.

Charles Caleb Colton quotes (English sportsman and writer, 1780-1832)



Maze of Barak Obama, profile view - 2009
barak obama maze by maze of mazes artist yonatan frimer InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Side Portrait Maze of Barak Obama, President


When I was in New York it was like a maze, a rat maze, going from one little box to another little box and passing through passageways to get from one safe haven to another.
Bruce Conner


Maze - Kong 2006
maze of kong InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Maze Kong - By Yonatan Frimer


Life is a maze in which we take the wrong turn before we have learnt to walk

Cyril Connolly quotes (English critic and editor, 1903-1974)



Maze King, of Rock N Roll, Elvis
Elvis Maze InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist

Elvis Maze - By Yonatan Frimer

"They that mistake life's accessories for life itself are like them that go too fast in a maze: their very haste confuses them."

~ Seneca quotes






Matrix Maze - Keanu Reeves, Neo
Maze of the matrix Neo InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Matrix Maze By Yonatan Frimer


The maze ... was such a mind-altering and life-changing experience. ... My gosh, I mean for something that's pretend it changes your viewpoint on life,

~ John Travolta quotes



French Maid Maze - 2007

French Made Maze InkBlotMazes Ink Blot Mazes, By Yonatan Frimer, your humble maze artist
Maze Maid in France By Yonatan Frimer




Poem I found on the web about mazes...

Maze Poem
Maze I entered the maze not knowing what I’d find
A world so different within my own
The path was set
But never clear
As I walked along my eyes grew wide
I found so many things I thought I knew
But how different they now appeared
I continued looking for the end
Hopeful that I was getting near
Eventually I reached the end
But by then I realised it was only the beginning.
Magentia

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Obama's budget is the end of an era

Reporting from Washington -- Not since Lyndon B. Johnson and Franklin D. Roosevelt has a president moved to expand the role of government so much on so many fronts -- and with such a demanding sense of urgency.

The scope of President Obama's ambition was laid bare in the budget blueprint issued Thursday.

The budget would account for 24.1% of next year's estimated gross domestic product, one of the highest percentages since World War II, and would raise taxes, redistribute income, spend more on social programs than on defense, and implement policies that touch almost every aspect of Americans' lives -- their banks, healthcare, schools, even the air they breathe.

Even more stark than the breadth and scale of Obama's proposals was his determination to break with the conservative principles that have dominated national politics and policymaking since Ronald Reagan's election as president in 1980.

"It changes the whole paradigm," said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.). "We're going to have a government that helps people."

House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) took another view. "The era of big government is back, and Democrats are asking you to pay for it," he said.

Obama's budget plan asserts that in some areas, government can do a better job than private enterprise and do it for less. For instance, he argues, Washington can provide loans to college students just as efficiently and at lower cost than the private lenders who dominate the field.

And after years of steady growth in the share of the nation's wealth owned by its most affluent citizens, Obama is calling for tax changes that would require high-income taxpayers to shoulder more of the load.

The question now is whether Congress will go along.

The question applies, in particular, to Blue Dog Democrats, members of the House and Senate who in recent years have won election from traditionally conservative and Republican areas by positioning themselves as moderate to conservative, especially on spending and the deficit.

Although Obama's supporters enjoy a comfortable margin in the House, his $787-billion economic stimulus package passed the Senate only after a deal was struck with conservative Democrats and three moderate Republicans.

As a candidate, Obama often staked out positions so general or nuanced that voters often inferred that he agreed with them even though he had not quite said so. That approach broadened his appeal. And in his first five weeks as president, Obama largely continued that approach, signaling that he was willing to listen to all sides and using his choice of Cabinet members to strike balances among different interest groups.

That stage of his presidency appears to be ending. The budget outline suggests that Obama is ready to start spending his political capital -- a recent Gallup poll found that 67% of Americans approved of the way he was handling the stimulus bill -- and risk making enemies in the pursuit of ambitious policy goals.

The breadth of the budget has an advantage: Even if Obama achieves only part of his goals, that could leave a long record of accomplishment. But by proposing action on such a wide range of fronts, Obama also risks overloading the often cumbersome legislative machinery of Capitol Hill.

"I cannot remember a time when Congress had an agenda of this scope, size and difficulty," said former Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, an Indiana Democrat who spent 34 years in the House.

He compared the magnitude of Obama's agenda to that of Johnson's Great Society, which launched a costly war on poverty and pushed through the most far-reaching civil rights laws since President Lincoln.

Obama has already demonstrated an ability to get Congress to break its institutional inertia. The economic stimulus was one of the biggest bills in history, and it made it through the congressional maze in record time.

Part of his approach to achieving that was to set the broad parameters of the initiative and leave it to congressional Democrats to fill in the details. On the stimulus, no detail seemed more important to Obama than two demands: The package had to be big, and it had to be approved quickly.

In the new budget blueprint -- a basic outline of the budget to be submitted to Congress in April -- Obama has similarly left it to Congress to write the details of his healthcare initiative. But he wants it at the top of Capitol Hill's agenda.

"The urgency on healthcare is now," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.). "After 60 years of yakking about healthcare, he's saying, 'I don't want to wait for year 61.' "

All this has left Republicans largely on the sidelines, despite earlier talk about a new era of bipartisanship. Indeed, the budget's sharp U-turn away from conservative principles shows how willing Obama is to confront Republicans directly.

Even a relatively moderate Republican like Rep. Steven C. LaTourette (R-Ohio) bridles.

"We seem to be going back to class warfare," he said.

Obama's leadership style is a far cry from other recent presidents, like Bill Clinton, who declared "The era of big government is over" and made an art form of proposing modest initiatives, such as requiring school uniforms as a step toward improving education.

Some in Washington were surprised by the budget because Obama's approach often blurs distinctions rather than highlights them.

But in writing this budget, he had to drop the shades of gray because a budget is all numbers in black and white. Either spending for defense goes up or down; taxes are raised or they are cut.

Although Obama has tried to cut a nonideological profile and has staffed his administration with many moderates, much of his budget reflects liberal ideals.

He says government can do some things better and cheaper than the private sector. He embraces income redistribution of sorts by proposing to pay for his healthcare initiative with increasing taxes on the wealthy.

And without apology, the budget document essentially declared the end of an era: "The past eight years have discredited once and for all the philosophy of trickle-down economics -- that tax breaks, income gains and wealth creation among the wealthy eventually will work their way down to the middle class."

janet.hook@latimes.com

Christi Parsons and Ben Meyerson contributed to this report.

Obama's budget is the end of an era

By Janet Hook
February 27, 2009
Reporting from Washington -- Not since Lyndon B. Johnson and Franklin D. Roosevelt has a president moved to expand the role of government so much on so many fronts -- and with such a demanding sense of urgency.

The scope of President Obama's ambition was laid bare in the
budget blueprint issued Thursday.


The budget would account for 24.1% of next year's estimated gross domestic product, one of the highest percentages since World War II, and would raise taxes, redistribute income, spend more on social programs than on defense, and implement policies that touch almost every aspect of Americans' lives -- their banks, healthcare, schools, even the air they breathe.

Even more stark than the breadth and scale of Obama's proposals was his determination to break with the conservative principles that have dominated national politics and policymaking since Ronald Reagan's election as president in 1980.

"It changes the whole paradigm," said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.). "We're going to have a government that helps people."

House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) took another view. "The era of big government is back, and Democrats are asking you to pay for it," he said.

Obama's budget plan asserts that in some areas, government can do a better job than private enterprise and do it for less. For instance, he argues, Washington can provide loans to college students just as efficiently and at lower cost than the private lenders who dominate the field.

And after years of steady growth in the share of the nation's wealth owned by its most affluent citizens, Obama is calling for tax changes that would require high-income taxpayers to shoulder more of the load.

The question now is whether Congress will go along.

The question applies, in particular, to Blue Dog Democrats, members of the House and Senate who in recent years have won election from traditionally conservative and Republican areas by positioning themselves as moderate to conservative, especially on spending and the deficit.

Although Obama's supporters enjoy a comfortable margin in the House, his $787-billion economic stimulus package passed the Senate only after a deal was struck with conservative Democrats and three moderate Republicans.

As a candidate, Obama often staked out positions so general or nuanced that voters often inferred that he agreed with them even though he had not quite said so. That approach broadened his appeal. And in his first five weeks as president, Obama largely continued that approach, signaling that he was willing to listen to all sides and using his choice of Cabinet members to strike balances among different interest groups.

That stage of his presidency appears to be ending. The budget outline suggests that Obama is ready to start spending his political capital -- a recent Gallup poll found that 67% of Americans approved of the way he was handling the stimulus bill -- and risk making enemies in the pursuit of ambitious policy goals.

The breadth of the budget has an advantage: Even if Obama achieves only part of his goals, that could leave a long record of accomplishment. But by proposing action on such a wide range of fronts, Obama also risks overloading the often cumbersome legislative machinery of Capitol Hill.

"I cannot remember a time when Congress had an agenda of this scope, size and difficulty," said former Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, an Indiana Democrat who spent 34 years in the House.

He compared the magnitude of Obama's agenda to that of Johnson's Great Society, which launched a costly war on poverty and pushed through the most far-reaching civil rights laws since President Lincoln.

Obama has already demonstrated an ability to get Congress to break its institutional inertia. The economic stimulus was one of the biggest bills in history, and it made it through the congressional maze in record time.

Part of his approach to achieving that was to set the broad parameters of the initiative and leave it to congressional Democrats to fill in the details. On the stimulus, no detail seemed more important to Obama than two demands: The package had to be big, and it had to be approved quickly.

In the new budget blueprint -- a basic outline of the budget to be submitted to Congress in April -- Obama has similarly left it to Congress to write the details of his healthcare initiative. But he wants it at the top of Capitol Hill's agenda.

"The urgency on healthcare is now," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.). "After 60 years of yakking about healthcare, he's saying, 'I don't want to wait for year 61.' "

All this has left Republicans largely on the sidelines, despite earlier talk about a new era of bipartisanship. Indeed, the budget's sharp U-turn away from conservative principles shows how willing Obama is to confront Republicans directly.

Even a relatively moderate Republican like Rep. Steven C. LaTourette (R-Ohio) bridles.

"We seem to be going back to class warfare," he said.

Obama's leadership style is a far cry from other recent presidents, like Bill Clinton, who declared "The era of big government is over" and made an art form of proposing modest initiatives, such as requiring school uniforms as a step toward improving education.

Some in Washington were surprised by the budget because Obama's approach often blurs distinctions rather than highlights them.

But in writing this budget, he had to drop the shades of gray because a budget is all numbers in black and white. Either spending for defense goes up or down; taxes are raised or they are cut.

Although Obama has tried to cut a nonideological profile and has staffed his administration with many moderates, much of his budget reflects liberal ideals.

He says government can do some things better and cheaper than the private sector. He embraces income redistribution of sorts by proposing to pay for his healthcare initiative with increasing taxes on the wealthy.

And without apology, the budget document essentially declared the end of an era: "The past eight years have discredited once and for all the philosophy of trickle-down economics -- that tax breaks, income gains and wealth creation among the wealthy eventually will work their way down to the middle class."

janet.hook@latimes.com

Christi Parsons and Ben Meyerson contributed to this report.