Heritage Foundation
Tomorrow at 6:10 AM EST, President Barack Obama will deliver a keynote address at Cairo University. If past experience is any guide, he will continue apologizing for America’s “mistakes” and bend over backward trying to explain that the United States is not a threat to Islam.
The President has already apologized for his country to nearly 3 billion people across Europe, the Muslim world and the Americas. His top ten apologies include:
10. Apology for Guantanamo in Washington: “There is also no question that Guantanamo set back the moral authority that is America’s strongest currency in the world. … Rather than keeping us safer, the prison at Guantanamo has weakened American national security. It is a rallying cry for our enemies.”
9. Apology for the Mistakes of the CIA: “So don’t be discouraged by what’s happened in the last few weeks. Don’t be discouraged that we have to acknowledge potentially we’ve made some mistakes.”
8. Apology for U.S. Policy toward the Americas: “Too often, the United States has not pursued and sustained engagement with our neighbors. We have been too easily distracted by other priorities, and have failed to see that our own progress is tied directly to progress throughout the Americas.”
7. Apology before the Turkish Parliament: “The United States is still working through some of our own darker periods in our history. … Our country still struggles with the legacies of slavery and segregation, the past treatment of Native Americans.”
6. Apology for Guantanamo in France: “I don’t believe that there is a contradiction between our security and our values. And when you start sacrificing your values, when you lose yourself, then over the long term that will make you less secure.”
5. Apology for the War on Terror: “Unfortunately, faced with an uncertain threat, our government made a series of hasty decisions. … In other words, we went off course.”
4. Apology at the G-20 Summit of World Leaders: “I would like to think that with my election and the early decisions that we’ve made, that you’re starting to see some restoration of America’s standing in the world.”
3. Apology to the Summit of the Americas: “While the United States has done much to promote peace and prosperity in the hemisphere, we have at times been disengaged, and at times we sought to dictate our terms. … So I’m here to launch a new chapter of engagement that will be sustained throughout my administration. The United States will be willing to acknowledge past errors where those errors have been made.”
2. Apology to the Muslim World: “We sometimes make mistakes. We have not been perfect.”
1. Apology to France and Europe: “Instead of celebrating your dynamic union and seeking to partner with you to meet common challenges, there have been times where America has shown arrogance and been dismissive, even derisive.”
As President Obama embarks this week on his second major overseas tour, which will take him to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Germany, and France, the world does not need yet another apology from the President. Mr. Obama’s mea culpa campaign has produced no outpouring of Muslim support for his policies. Instead of wallowing in guilt, President Obama should find a way to connect America’s tolerance of Islam with honest criticism of extremists who abuse others - Muslim as well as non-Muslim - in Islam’s name. After all, Muslims have suffered the most at the hands of Islamist extremists.
QUICK HITS
President Barack Obama told a French television station yesterday that the United States was “one of the largest Muslim countries in the world.”
The Obama administration accidentally made public a report that gives detailed information about the nation’s civilian nuclear sites and programs.
Flip flopping on “some of his harshest campaign rhetoric,” President Obama told Democratic senators yesterday that he is willing to consider taxing employer-sponsored health benefits to help pay for a broad expansion of coverage.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger warned yesterday, that just like the last time California ran out of money (January 2009), the state may soon begin delaying payments to private contractors, local governments, and welfare recipients.
Thanks to drops in tax revenue, growing health-care costs, and pension obligations, state budget deficits are only expected to get worse.
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