Eric Cantor says that Obama is in over his head

From the leftist Politico web site, an assessment of Obama’s negotiating ability.

Excerpt:

President Barack Obama is “in over his head” when it comes to tackling the country’s economic troubles, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said Wednesday.

The president has not run a business or created jobs and has proven himself ill-suited to put the economy back on track, the Virginia Republican said in a midday interview on The Wall Street Journal’s website with opinion columnist Peggy Noonan and editor James Freeman.

President Barack Obama is “in over his head” when it comes to tackling the country’s economic troubles, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said Wednesday.

The president has not run a business or created jobs and has proven himself ill-suited to put the economy back on track, the Virginia Republican said in a midday interview on The Wall Street Journal’s website with opinion columnist Peggy Noonan and editor James Freeman.

When picking someone to run an economy, don’t pick the person who has scored high marks for agreeing with professors in university classrooms. Agreeing with professors does not give a person experience of how the world really works. Instead,  choose someone who has practical experience at running a business and creating jobs. Academic parroting is no substitute for running a successful private sector business. Herman Cain would be a better choice for President than Barack Obama, if the main criterion was job creation.

One thought on “Eric Cantor says that Obama is in over his head”

  1. Holy contradiction wintery…at least you did add the caveat “if the main criterion was job creation” which we know it’s not. Add on top of that you’re an elitist when it comes to credentialism, especially on topics of the scientific or philosophical nature, just not if it’s one of the most important jobs in America? I have serious doubts that agreeing with professors is enough to gain the marks and entrances he (Obama) achieved nor that most tests in college are subjective rather than objective (being especially true in the sciences) with the notable exceptions of philosophy, psychology, and economics – the popular three that are not hard sciences.

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