In the 2012 election, “a fair shot” is the new “hope and change.”
President
Barack Obama regularly promises in campaign speeches that his policies
will give every American a “fair shot.” As with his previous campaign
promises, the president knows people interpret “fair” to match their own
meaning.
The choice Americans face in this important election,
however, does not rest on what they think “fair” means. They must know
what the President means when he uses the term.
For more than three and a half years, the president has governed by
his politically motivated idea of fairness. His record demonstrates that
“fair” for him doesn’t mean equal opportunity for all Americans – it
means equal outcome regardless of efforts.
We now know that the president thinks it’s fair to redefine the work
requirements for the welfare program to include bed rest and helping
neighbors run errands.
He thinks it’s fair to tell defense contractors they cannot warn
employees about future layoffs before the election — because he doesn’t
want workers to know that he supports looming defense cuts.
He thinks it’s fair to take more than $700 billion from seniors on
Medicare to spend on a whole new program for someone else, “Obamacare.”
He thinks it’s fair to tell American seniors that he has strengthened
Medicare, though he has no workable plan to prevent it from going
bankrupt.
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