Obama Calls Scott Walker An Empty 

Suit on Foreign Policy, Walker 

Responds in EPIC Fashion


April 8, 2015 3:17 am
Barack Hussein Obama II sought the office; the office did not seek the man.
Since his first term commenced in January, 2009 we’ve come to accept that our president has 
the thinnest skin of possibly any elected official to ever hold the nation’s highest office.
Our Head of State simply cannot tolerate any sort of constructive criticism. He shows 
weakness at every opportunity in a concerted effort to not come across as overtly manly – 
an area in which he excels.
Here he is responding to WI Gov. Scott Walker’s reaction to the “deal” with Iran; one that 
Walker said if elected president he would strike down:
From HotAir:
“And, you know, I am confident that any president who gets elected will be

knowledgeable enough about foreign policy and knowledgeable enough about t

he traditions and precedents of presidential power that they won’t start calling

to question the capacity of the executive branch of the United States to enter into

agreements with other countries,” Obama told the hosts of NPR News. “It would

be a foolish approach to take, and, you know, perhaps Mr. Walker, after he’s

taken some time to bone up on foreign policy, will feel the same way.”
Those words were spoken by an Ivy League graduate responsible for running t
he country. He is not-so-subtly implying that the governor is an empty suit on
 foreign policy; insulting Walker by telling him he’s impotent as a leader.
These next words were spoken by a Marquette University dropout:
“President Obama’s failed leadership has put him at odds with many across

the country, including members of his own party, and key allies around the

world. Americans would be better served by a president who spent more time

working with governors and members of Congress rather than attacking them.

Whether it is cutting a bad deal with Iran, calling ISIS the JV squad, or touting

Yemen as a success story, Obama’s lack of leadership has hurt America’s

safety and standing in the world.”
The difference is that the president’s statement is completely weak in its attempt to 
shame Gov. Walker in not having exposure to foreign policy, while Walker’s is spot on.
Walker doesn’t attempt to pussyfoot. He hammers the point home!
Was foreign policy experience your forte, Mr. community organizer President?
“We have seen the consequences of a foreign policy based on flawed ideology,

and a belief that tough talk can replace real strength and vision,” Obama said 

nearly eight years ago. For a politician who prided himself on his audacity, this

comment is perfectly in kind with that unattractive personality trait. Obama was

ever only a man of words. His actions have diminished his stature greatly.

If Scott Walker lacks foreign affairs experience — and he does, as does the rest

of the field of prospective 2016 candidates with the debatable exception of


Marco Rubio – he has time to correct for that knowledge deficit. But the best

teacher is, of course, failure. Fortunately for Republicans, Obama has led

a master class in how not to manage American international affairs as commander-in-chief.
A master class? Obama is going for a doctorate!
What 44 repeatedly and will continually fail to grasp is that he is the President of the
 United States of America. He isnot the President of the Liberal Progressive Dominion. 
Why does that seem to be all he cares about? Why doesn’t he believe he was put in 
office to lead 100% of Americans and not simply the 53% that voted for him in 2008, 
and 51% in 2012?
“Well, we voted for him and expect him to govern by our ideology which is that America 
needs to change fundamentally from the inside out. We need to end racism, withdraw 
from unnecessary wars in the Middle East, increase entitlement spending, place 
restrictions on teabaggers applying for tax-exempt status, and …”
Pfft. How’s that going?
Scott Walker – Chief Executive of the state of Wisconsin – knows what it truly means
 to lead; to keep a promise; to fight for the rights of constituents who are constrained 
by unreasonable workers unions.
There’s little doubt Obama feels threatened that a Republican will take back the Oval 
Office come January 20, 2017. He knows that Walker has a great shot at becoming
 his successor. If he didn’t think so, he wouldn’t feel the need to respond to Walker’s
 assertion that he’s mortgaging the future of our nation – and Israel’s – by “agreeing to 
an agreement” with Iran.
If Obama is worried about his legacy it makes sense.
Never should there be a dedicatory bust commemorating America’s first black president – 
other than at his presidential library – to celebrate the “accomplishments” of what he’s 
“achieved.” Even if there is, it would be in effigy and have been constructed by 
a low-information voter who truly believed that 44 was the Second Coming.
Is that the kind of remembrance he desires?
Wouldn’t he prefer to be known as the man who vehemently worked with both sides 
of the aisle to ensure true“hope” and “change?”
No. He wouldn’t.
He would prefer to be canonized as St. Barack I – the man that set a nation back decades in a disastrous attempt to fix America’s prejudicial past.
Here are Obama’s greatest foreign policy accomplishments, and they couldn’t be
 worded any better by Noah Rothman:
Today, on the back end of Obama’s second term in office, the world is an

objectively more dangerous place than it was in 2009. War has again

returned to the European continent, and Russia has embarked on the

distinctly 20th Century course of gobbling up its neighbor’s territory.

China has set the stage for its own crusade of territorial acquisition, a

threat for which the world is so unprepared that it simply pretends this

looming catastrophe doesn’t exist. The Middle East has not been this

volatile since the immediate post-War era. The region’s Sunni nations

have intervened militarily in places like Libya and Yemen; two states that

failed as a direct result of directionless Western action and careless inaction

respectively. Iran’s creeping influence has now expanded to four Arab capitals.

The threat of a regional civil war between Sunni and Shiite Muslims 

looms larger now than at any point since 1979. And all the while, the unimaginably

horrific Islamic State insurgents, who have captured major portions of Iraq and

Syria, have led the American public to again warm to the prospect of sending

young men and women in arms back to the region.
“But he gave us Obamacare and lowered the unemployment rate; he’s allowing
 millions of undocumented Americans to stay in the nation without any recourse; 
he’s made it possible for the LGBT community to feel accepted when they walk 
in to a restaurant; he’s …
Delusional.