By now you’ve probably heard that Obama’s top choices for his administration are more than likely going to come from Clinton’s administration. Well, according to a PDF document on CSPN.org (http://www.c-span.org/pdf/transition.pdf) Obama and Biden have named numerous people to head the transition into their administration.
- Carol Browner: Served as Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency during the Clinton Administration
- William Daley: Served as Secretary of Commerce in the second administration of President Bill Clinton
- Christopher Edley: He served as an advisor to President Clinton’s One America Initiative, was a member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, and chaired President Clinton’s 1998 Affirmative Action Review.
- Michael Froman: From January 1977 to July 1999, Froman served as Chief of Staff of the Department of the Treasury…again, the Clinton Administration.
Those are just the top 4 names on the list, I’m sure the other 21 names are also connected to the Clinton Administration somehow. But that still leads to the question “Where is the change?”
Although it’s probably too late to ask this question now, but just how is Obama going to accomplish the “change” he is promising everybody by bringing back the Clinton Adminstration? It was the Clinton Administration that got us into this whole economical mess in the first place. It was the Clinton Administration that opened up the banks and credit unions which allowed them to loan all their money to people they KNEW would not be able to pay it back, and it was the Clinton Administration that gave the US a “false hope” by doing so.
So is this big “change” Obama has been bragging about been nothing more than another farce to provide the United States with MORE false hope? Where is he taking us in the next 4 (or maybe even
years? He certainly doesn’t have the experience to lead us into a real “economic change” without the help of people who screwed us up to begin with.
Posted under Election 2008
written by PoliticalSpite on November 6, 2008