Click Here to Read
Today's U.S. News
Los Angeles Times
The Washington Post
Click Here to Read
Today's News
The Daily Tribune
You need Java to see this applet.
MENU # 1 -- Pinoy Global Online News
MENU # 2 -- The Outstanding Filipinos
MENU # 3 -- Articles by Joe Mari Mercader
MENU # 4 -- Featured Writers
MENU # 5 -- The Outstanding Filipinos Abroad
MENU # 6 -- Filipino Achievers
MENU # 7 -- The Philippine Provinces
Inquirer
Philippines News Agency
Member Since 1993
Business World Online
The Manila Bulletin Online
ABS-CBN News
The New York Times
The Malaya
Manila Standard Today Online
The Manila Times
Philippine Star
Sun Star Network Online
Philippine
Government News
Click & Read
the latest reports
ADVERTISING RATES - ADVERTISING CONTRACT
Click here for:
ADVERTISING RATES -
ADVERTISING CONTRACT
Click to know about the
PGON AD Program
Click to know about the PGON AD Program
Click to read the
2009 FILIM
Magazine
Copyright© 2007 Filipino Image. All rights Reserved.      Request for Write-up  |  Contract  |  Subscribe  |  Publisher  |  Contact Us
Saint Martin de Porres Healing Ministry
Bukas-Loob sa Diyos Washington Covenant Community
Filipino Image Magazine Unsurpassed Credentials:
  • Member since 1993 of the world renown National Press Club of Washington, D.C.
  • Member of the Philippine News Agency, the largest news organization in the Philippines
  • Originator & Creator of the popular (TOFA) Twenty Outstanding Filipino-Americans
  • Originator & Creator of the populat (TOFA) Twenty Outstanding Filipinos Abroad
2008 Filipino Image Magazine
Pinoy Herald
Click Here To Read Office of the Philippine President
Click Here To Read Department of Tourism
Click Here To Read Department of Foreign Affairs
SEARCH THE SITE
Tea Party - White House Out Of Touch?
 
ALERT: Our friends at the Washington Examiner wrote: Is Obama in the "Cone of Silence" when it comes to
national priorities? While critics from both parties called his State of the Union address a missed
opportunity, President Obama was back in campaign mode, declaring job creation his new top priority.

On a swing through Tampa, Fla., with Vice President Biden, Obama reiterated economic themes of his
address, including a call to create jobs through infrastructure spending and similar proposals from his first
year in office. "We're not going to rest until we rebuild an economy in which hard work and responsibility are
rewarded, and businesses are hiring again, and wages are growing again, and the middle class can get its
legs underneath it again," Obama said.

Still, to some who listened to Obama's first State of the Union, a sense of disconnection persisted. The
lengthy speech, which contained a few modest new initiatives, fell short even for those who embrace his
larger political philosophies.

"We are pleased that the president understands the urgency in passing health care reform this year," said
Alan Charney, program director at USAction, an anti-war and social justice organization. "But we are
disappointed that he did not propose a jobs program that is as massive and robust as the problem he
inherited."

Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, ranking House Republican on the Joint Economic Committee, said Obama's
White House feels out of step with national priorities and moods. "I do think there is a disconnect," Brady
said. "It's almost like the White House has the Cone of Silence from 'Get Smart,' where nothing is getting
through."

Brady, who like Obama is also back in campaign mode, said federal spending, job creation and opposing
health care "is all anybody wants to talk about." He called Obama's economic agenda, "small ball."

In Tampa, Obama mocked journalists for their interest in whether he would adopt a more forceful, populist
tone in his address and subsequent political outings.

But the day after the speech, administration officials were still rebuffing questions about the larger message
of last week's Massachusetts Senate election. Widely regarded as a populist rebuttal to Obama's
leadership, the election of a Republican to fill the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's seat dashed the
president's hopes for passing health care. "What was interesting about the Massachusetts election was that
so much of it was reminiscent of what we saw in our own election," White House senior adviser David
Axelrod told ABC News. "That same sense of disillusionment among particularly middle class people."

John Fortier, a political scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, called Obama's speech "a little
disjointed" and also potential trouble for moderate Democrats who won't want to vote on immigration reform,
gays in the military or other hot-button issues in an election year.

"On the big issues, I think Obama either doesn't know what he wants to do or wants to send a message to
stay the course," Fortier said. "Their plan is essentially more or less the same plan."
 
 
 
News Archive