If Barack Obama wants to know something related to a government agency, he simply has one of his many assistants call and ask the question. There would be an immediate answer, because it’s the president who’s asking. For a real taxpayer asking, well, not so much.
In the best piece of simple, basic reporting I’ve seen this year, Politico covered the aftermath of Obama’s answer to a farmer’s question in Illinois Wednesday. The farmer had heard rumors about some new regulations related to dust, noise and water runoff, and he was afraid the rumored regulations were going to hurt his business, so he asked Obama about them.
Obama advised the farmer to contact the U.S. Department of Agriculture directly and ask about the rumored regulations. He was quite insistent on this point — that the farmer should be able to get an answer to his question. During part of the answer, there was some soft laughter in the room at Obama’s naiveté. So the Politico reporter got the question from the farmer and called the USDA.
Don’t personalize: The system is the issue, not Obama or any individual
Love drives us mad, but madness rescues us from ‘horrible sanity’
Most of nature follows instinct, but humans often ignore voice
Understanding often matters more than solving someone’s problems
As humans live in slums, why do I complain about my privileged life?
I need to communicate meaning, but my words vanish into a void
The love I crave seems beyond horizon, always out of my reach
Listening to our own inner voice can be the toughest thing we do
Will better marketing make you love state-controlled medical industry?