By Craig R. Smith Posted: October 12, 2009 ~ 1:00 am Eastern © 2009 I, for one, am delighted to hear that our 44th president received the coveted Nobel Peace Prize last week. It now places him in a unique fraternity of past recipients. This prize may prove very valuable to his legacy. Upon receiving the news, Mr. Obama stepped to his trusty microphone and teleprompter and said, "I was surprised and deeply humbled." The honor has caused something I see as a modern-day miracle – a feat as big as the parting of the Red Sea or bringing Lazarus out of the grave: It humbled our president. Now that he is "humbled," hopefully he can get over himself and get doing the business of the American people and not just those on the Democratic Left. Humility in leadership is a good thing. Now that millions of Americans have voted him in and the Nobel committee has awarded him, all he has left is to focus on unemployment, the economy, real health-care reform and defending the United States of America against all enemies foreign and domestic. "Let me be clear. I do not view it as recognition of my own accomplishments but rather as an affirmation of American leadership on behalf of aspirations held by people in all nations," he said. Sounds surprised to me, don't you think? As Lech Walesa said "So soon? Too early. He has no contribution so far." The prize, if awarded for his accomplishments, obviously was for ridding the world of Bill and Hillary Clinton, marginalizing candidate John McCain and preying on the anger of a nation toward George Bush. Those are all worthy accomplishments, don't you think? He used the race issue to neutralize the most powerful political dynasty in modern American politics. That is not worthy of a prize? It sure is! [CLICK HERE TO READ MORE]
Monday, October 12, 2009
Exclusive: Craig R. Smith highlights modern-day feat as big as resurrecting Lazarus
From WorldNetDaily
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