Exhausted Obama

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Bush did frequently. Have you read the link, I posted about the record of Bush´s absence?
don't make assumption without facts. do you know what he did during his vacation?

Interesting, I thought it´s inappropriate accord your posts - due our debate over gift situation at other threads. Look at your post here, you should agree with me in other thread...

Actually, like what I said an earlier that it´s embarrassment that the gift, Obama gave PM Brown and his kids is not appropriate which it should be traditional and historic. All of that, it´s still nice thoughtful of Obama. It´s better than NO gifts.
better than no gifts? that's very ignorant thing to say. It's called DISRESPECT.

None of Americans complaint Obama´s visit plan to England but UK over gifts. :dunno:
why would we?
 
Isn't it time to have a young president with enough energy to do the job?
no. I prefer EXPERIENCED person to do the job especially the President of United States.

What about John F. Kennedy?
what about him? it was a short-lived career. and beside - just because JFK was young doesn't mean any young person can. he was far more experienced than Obama.
 
and just like at Camp David, he often, quite often had meetings and dignitaries at the Ranch or Camp David which turned his vacation into a working vacation.

A vacation is still a vacation. :)
 
Commentary: Slow down, Mr. President

# Story Highlights
# Ed Rollins: Obama ran a disclipined marathon-style campaign to win election
# He says that, in office, Obama is acting like a sprinter, moving very fast
# Rollins: Is he moving fast due to crisis or to desire to greatly expand government?
# He says if Obama wants much bigger government, taxpayers should worry
Editor's note: Ed Rollins, who was political director for President Reagan, is a Republican strategist who was national chairman of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee's 2008 presidential campaign.

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Every great athlete has a pace. A pace is a certain speed at which they can run for very long periods of time without damaging their bodies and wearing themselves out before the race is over.

President Obama showed a marathoner's pace when he took on the Democratic establishment and defeated Hillary Clinton in the long primary season campaign and still had enough left to finish off a tired John McCain in the general election. He was disciplined and executed the long-distance runner's strategy perfectly.

However, the new president has now become a sprinter, racing out of the blocks full speed ahead! A sprinter doesn't have to pace himself. He just uses every ounce of energy, power and speed to get himself to the finish line in the fastest time.

We know the president is running fast. He and the Congress have spent more money in a shorter period of time than ever in our history. And Congress seldom moves fast

The problem we have is, we don't know after 50-plus days in office what the distance of the race is and what's the level of the president's pace or his endurance.

This is still a man we don't know. He gives the appearance of being cool under fire. We know he is smart, and we know he can give a good speech. Pollsters tell us the public likes him. Every president since Eisenhower has been liked at this stage of the game. But liking the man doesn't mean you like his policies.

We also don't know if he is a decision-maker. Can he prioritize? To date, he has been a man of motion. He has by the stroke of a pen -- through executive orders -- undone a lot of the Bush agenda, the same tactic Bush used to undo the Clinton agenda. That's his prerogative.

But the critical question is whether the president is in a fight or flight mode. Is he running fast because he is scared and thinks today's crisis necessitates immediate action, including reckless spending? Or, as I suspect, he is in a fight mode, and the fight is to change the course of this country toward bigger government and solving all problems at the federal level. If it's the latter, then I am very concerned, and every taxpayer should be, too.


The president should be scared. We are all scared, and he has more inside knowledge (or at least should have) than any of us. As a nation, we certainly have many problems. First and foremost, of course, is the financial crisis. The smartest people in and out of government don't have a clue when this thing is going to end or how much larger the nation's debt will get

The president and the Congress must do what they can to get the economy stabilized and growing again and to get people back to work. We should all support that.

We have a public education system and health care system that need major overhauls. Our roads and infrastructure need a lot of rebuilding. All of which costs trillions of taxpayer dollars, which we don't have. But these are problems that must be prioritized. There is not enough money to do them all, and it is dishonest to say there is.

We are in the mess we are in because, as individuals and corporations, we acted irresponsibly. We spent money we didn't have; neighbors bought houses they couldn't afford; corporations took risks they shouldn't have, and we are all paying the price now.

Doing the same thing at the federal level with tax dollars we don't have only guarantees that our children and their children will have to pay for it and have the quality of their lives diminished. President Obama needs to quit sprinting and get back in a marathon mindset. Fixing this country's problems is a long-term goal. Get the economy fixed, and then you can work on other things. Trying to do them all at once will result in many failures.

Being the fastest out of the blocks may not work if the race is long. I think this is a very long race. As I was taught many decades ago as a young athlete; "Victory comes to those with staying power!" We know the president has speed; we need to see if he has stamina.

And just a word of warning. The term "stay the course" seems to be the new administration slogan. President Reagan and the Republicans in Congress used the same term in the 1982 midterm elections. Republican lost 26 seats in the House.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Ed Rollins.

hhhmmmmm OPINION? :hmm:
 
A vacation is still a vacation. :)

not really. Vacation is when you're NOT doing any work at home. Apparently - he brought work at home. White House was a stressful environment for him especially when Clinton left a gigantic security mess for him. Like I said.... 7 years of no terrorist attacks..... :)
 
As far as Obama is concerned, I give him credit for trying to do everything he can in such a short amount of time. Kudos to him because it's a nice change after what we've had to deal with over the past 8 years.
 
I wonder how long it will take Obama to become gray headed. Some of our past presidents got them pretty quick. Will he dye his hair to cover the gray? :dunno:



;)
 
It isn't unusual for people to start getting gray hair in their 30s. I'm 38 and I have some gray hair myself. :giggle:
 
It isn't unusual for people to start getting gray hair in their 30s. I'm 38 and I have some gray hair myself. :giggle:

And I'm 65, going on 45 and have just a few of those hairs. Might it be because of the personality types we are, along with other factors?
 
And I'm 65, going on 45 and have just a few of those hairs. Might it be because of the personality types we are, along with other factors?

simple - stress factor. Look at each President. They look like they aged 20 years ahead in just 4/8 years!
 
This isn't surprising coming from Fox. :)

is this better now? it's from NY Times... there are several same articles from all new sources.

For Young President, Flecks of Gray

05gray_600.JPG


**pix of Obama's hair of before and after

WASHINGTON — Well, that didn’t take long. Just 44 days into the job, and President Obama is going gray.

It happens to all of them, of course — Bill Clinton still had about half a head of brown hair when he took office but was a silver fox two years later, and George W. Bush went from salt and pepper to just salt in what seemed like a blink of an eye.

But so soon? “I started noticing it toward the end of the campaign and leading up to inauguration,” says Deborah Willis, who, as co-author of “Obama: The Historic Campaign in Photographs,” pored through 5,000 photographs of the first head over the last year.

Mr. Obama’s graying is still of the flecked variety, and appears to wax and wane depending on when he gets his hair cut, which he does about every two weeks. His barber, who goes by only one name, Zariff, takes umbrage with bloggers who alternately claim Mr. Obama, 47, is dyeing his hair gray (to appear more distinguished) or dyeing it black (to appear younger). “I can tell you that his hair is 100 percent natural,” Zariff said. “He wouldn’t get it colored.”

And for all of his 16 years giving Mr. Obama his “quo vadis” haircut — black parlance from the 1960s for close-cut locks — Zariff said he is not about to start ribbing Mr. Obama. “We do not tease about the gray at all,” he said.

For a guy who prides himself on projecting a stress-free demeanor, the changes above his temples are speckled evidence that perhaps the psychological and physical strains of the job — never mind the long process of winning it — are in fact taking something of a toll. (Experts say stress can contribute to whitening locks.)

Mr. Obama seems to have noticed it at least as far back as last summer. “I’ve been running for president for about 19 months now,” he told supporters at a campaign event in Virginia in August. “Folks are noticing that I’ve got a lot more gray hair now than when I started.”

But with the economy struggling, two wars raging and countless other pressures facing him, the president is very likely to see additional signs of wear and tear in the mirror each morning.

“Presidents age two years for every year that they’re in office,” said Dr. Michael F. Roizen, co-founder of RealAge, a Web site that tells you how much older your body really is because of all that smoking and drinking you have been doing.

Rapidly lightening locks are just one sign that the job is getting to America’s presidents. Many of them (Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Delano Roosevelt) also developed hypertension. Mr. Clinton had to have heart surgery after leaving office.

Mr. Obama’s aides have not been giving him any grief. But since he has what is probably the most photographed hair in the world right now, noted authorities in coping with his condition are freely offering their advice.

The onetime basketball star Walt Frazier said in a telephone interview on Wednesday that Mr. Obama should start dyeing his hair, as Mr. Frazier does (and as Ronald Reagan was widely assumed to do). Reprising a Just For Men television commercial that featured Mr. Frazier and the former New York Mets star Keith Hernandez doing commentary on a poor graying schlub who gets “Rejected!” when he approaches a woman at a bar, Mr. Frazier had these words for Mr. Obama: “No play for Mr. Gray.”
 
So? Obama is 47 years old. People get gray hair. Your point? :)

There are more important things to be concerned about. :giggle:
 
Even my mom is turning 56 this year and already has some gray hairs, but she kind of dye them to cover it up lol.

so yea most men in the mid 40s to 50s would already have some gray hairs.
 
So? Obama is 47 years old. People get gray hair. Your point? :)

There are more important things to be concerned about. :giggle:

I'm 42 and my hair is mostly gray in the front. I'm sure by the time I'm 50, I'll have completely gray hair. Time to dye my hair. :giggle:
 
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