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Do You Smell Something In The Air? Hugo Chavez Does In Copenhagen

Oh, what a turn of events, and so quickly, too. Remember when Hugo Chavez called Bush “the devil” at another UN meeting? Many of us thought that was hilarious. Here’s the clip as a reminder:

Yes, yes, that was mighty funny. Finally, someone was saying what so many of us lefties thought.

Then, at the end of this past September, Chavez turned his, um, aromatic rhetoric on Obama, who came out smelling like a rose:

Oh, blech. Anyone smell any hope up in here? Yeah, me neither.

Well, that was then. Now, Chavez’s olfactory senses are being assaulted again, this time by Obama:

See, I told you Obama was like Bush (and not just because of Chavez)! Oh, this is just too, too rich. I bet Obama didn’t see THAT one coming!

Now I have no particular love lost for Chavez, though I do appreciate that his country sent a whole bunch of heating oil up to New England during Bush’s presidency. Regardless how you feel about him, this is funny.

But it isn’t just Chavez who is turning on Obama. It seems many in the World Community are seing the “Citizen of the World” for who he is. The more Obama traipses around talking, taling, talking, the more they get it. Yes, this headline from the Guardian (UK) pretty much says it all, Barack Obama’s Speech Disappoints And Fuels Frustration At Copenhagen,US president offers no further commitment on reducing emissions or on finance to poor countries.

Oh dear. That doesn’t bode well for Obama from the get-go:

Barack Obama stepped into the chaotic final hours of the Copenhagen summit today saying he was convinced the world could act “boldly and decisively” on climate change.

But his speech offered no indication America was ready to embrace bold measures, after world leaders had been working desperately against the clock to try to paper over an agreement to prevent two years of wasted effort — and a 10-day meeting — from ending in total collapse.

Obama, who had been skittish about coming to Copenhagen at all unless it could be cast as a foreign policy success, looked visibly frustrated as he appeared before world leaders.

He offered no further commitments on reducing emissions or on finance to poor countries beyond Hillary Clinton’s announcement yesterday that America would support a $100bn global fund to help developing nations adapt to climate change.

He did not even press the Senate to move ahead on climate change legislation, which environmental organisations have been urging for months.

Nope. Of course he didn’t. He’s too busy pushing this “Health Care” policy that the majority of Americans do not want, apparently to feed his own ego. He sure isn’t going to push them on something for which he cannot claim sole credit. C’mon already!

As for what Obama said in Copenhagen:

The president’s speech followed the publication of draft text, obtained by the Guardian this morning, that reveals the enormous progress needed from world leaders in the final hours of the Copenhagen climate change summit to achieve a strong deal. The draft says countries “ought” to limit global warming to 2C, but crucially does not bind them to do so. The text, drafted by a select group of 28 leaders – including UK prime minister, Gordon Brown – in the early hours of this morning, also proposes extending negotiations for another year until the next scheduled UN meeting on climate change in Mexico City in December 2010.

In his address, Obama did say America would follow through on his administration’s clean energy agenda, and that it would live up to its pledges to the international community.

“We have charted our course, we have made our commitments, and we will do what we say,” Obama said.

But in the absence of any evidence of that commitment the words rang hollow and there was a palpable sense of disappointment in the audience.

Instead, he warned African states and low island nations who have been resisting what they see as a weak agreement that the later alternative — no agreement — was far worse.

“We know the fault lines because we’ve been imprisoned by them for years. But here is the bottom line: we can embrace this accord, take a substantial step forward, and continue to refine it and build upon its foundation,” he said.

“Or we can again choose delay, falling back into the same divisions that have stood in the way of action for years. And we will be back having the same stale arguments month after month, year after year – all while the danger of climate change grows until it is irreversible.”

Well, I guess he chose delay, because there is nothing concrete about the “deal” that came out of all of this. But Obama wasn’t done:

He also took a dig at China, drawing attention to its status as the world’s biggest emitter and reinforcing America’s hardline on the issue of accountability for greenhouse gas emissions.

The lacklustre speech proved a huge frustration to a summit that had been looking to Obama to use his stature on the world stage – and his special following among African leaders – to try to come to an ambitious deal.

The president was drawn into the chaos within minutes of his arrival at Copenhagen, ditching his schedule to take part in a meeting of major industrialised and rapidly emerging economies.

Responding to Obama’s speech, a British official said: “Gordon Brown is committed to doing all he can and will stay until the very last minute to secure a deal… but others also need to show the same level of commitment. The prospects of a deal are not great.”

I believe he was talking to Obama, don’t you? I love Obama lecturing China, too. That is rich. He might want to be a tad careful before they call in all of their chits. We’d be bumming if that happened.

People abroad are opening their eyes on this “Citizen of the World”:

Many reactions were strongly critical of Obama. Hugo Chávez, the president of Venezuela, described Obama’s speech as “ridiculous” and the US’s initial offer of a $10bn fund for poor countries in the draft text as “a joke”.

Tim Jones, a spokesman for the World Development Movement, said: “The president said he came to act, but showed little evidence of doing so. He showed no awareness of the inequality and injustice of climate change. If America has really made its choice, it is a choice that condemns hundreds of millions of people to climate change disaster.”

Friends of the Earth said in a statement, “Obama has deeply disappointed not only those listening to his speech at the UN talks, he has disappointed the whole world.”

The World Wildlife Fund said Obama had let down the international community by failing to commit to pushing for action in Congress: “The only way the world can be sure the US is standing behind its commitments is for the president to clearly state that climate change will be his next top legislative priority.”

The extent of crisis in the talks has taken leaders by surprise. The Brazilian leader, Lula da Silva, told the conference that the all-night negotiating sessions took him back to his days as a trade union leader negotiating with his bosses.

There’s that Chavez again exposing Obama’s lack of real action. Not to mention an organization we have supported for many, many years now, the World Wildlife Fund. I think the “Friends of the Earth” sum it up nicely: “…he has disappointed the whole world.” Surely now the “whole world” realizes he hoodwinked them, too, with his “lofty” (empty) rhetoric. All talk, no action, just like we have been saying.

Ah, well – I guess they have learned their lesson, too, like some in the States are now. Maybe next time, they, along with those in this country, won’t be taken in by a charlatan. That doesn’t help for the moment, but maybe we will all be wiser next time around (that’s a collective “we,” not us specifically, as I posted recently). Our country depends upon it. And the world just might, too.

  • aleph

    Sorry this is off topic. Does anyone know what happened to Hillary is 44? When you clink on links to it you only get to a google search box?

  • aleph

    Sorry, click.

  • aleph

    BTW I’m sure everyone knows not to use that fake goggle search box.

  • bart

    Chavez is such a creep. It is amusing to see him turn on The One.

    Somehow I don’t think Chavez is an environmentalist. I think he is looking for money he thinks will leave the US and be given to him so he can buy more power. It’s beginning to look like there is merit in the argument that some of the environmental plans put forth by the UN are wealth transfers.

    For Chavez, I think it’s all about the money.

    • Docelder

      The wealth transfers to developing countries are just Chicago style graft. It is just buying their participation in an attempt to legitimize the process. Environmental issues aside, I don’t believe that the warming conference has anything to do with the environment. It is more about world government. Chavez calling Obama the devil is just theatrics. It is like the old WWF skits where the bad guy jumped in the ring and hit the good guy over the head with the chair with fake blood and all. But the people in the audience ate it up, phony as it was. Same thing really.

      • Peggy Sue

        I agree, Doc. There is a measure of theatrics involved. But Chavez is a hyena. When he takes a bite out of the President of the United States, he wants to draw blood from us all.

        The standing ovation he got was against the West. Even though I dislike Obama, I take exception to that.

        He gets no kudos from me.

      • http://www.rabblerouserruminations.blogspot.com/ Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy

        You make a great point, Docelder – it is so much theatrics, as is the whole “Agreement” Obama touted. Nothing really changed from his staying there, and barging into a meeting to which he had not been invited. It’s all just smoke and mirrors.

        I don’t particularly cotton to other leaders disparaging our country, either, but there was no shortage of glee when Chavez said the same abt Bush. I’m just sayin’ – not that it was right, but many of the same people who now discount Chavez thought he was spot on when he said the same abt Bush. (And again, I have no love lost for Bush, just making a point.)

    • nan

      Chavez is a smart guy, like it or not, and he is honest, whether you agree with his politics or not.
      To each his own.

      • http://! stodgie

        chavez isn’t honest. please so he doesn’t like obama? who does. that doesn’t take guts.

      • mary2

        nan,

        I don’t know how “smart” Chavez is, but he is liked by the poor and the very poor in his own country and they love him more than anything seen in Latin America.
        On the other hand, I have read how the secret Intelligence Forces since the 50s have invaded the corrupt political classes and installed dozens of corrupt, pillaging and self-serving and U.S.-backed Dictatorships. REmember l973 and the installing of that monster Pinochet whose gangs raped thousands of women students in Chile, aided by secret American officers?
        That was not something to endear Latin Americans to us! We’ve done some pretty nasty stuff for power in South America. so many books have been written and so many Church Organizations have aided these poor people who were victimized by American shortsighted Foreign policy and their own eager corrupt politicos who hang into power….too many examples…no one’s got the monopoly on Political Sainthood!!! Chavez sometimes calls it as he sees it. So far, his country hasn’t been evaded successfully, altho I saw docuentary recently online on what happened before he came into power. Amazing history…..let’s open our eyes wider and understand other people’s sorrows.

  • Peggy Sue

    As much as I did not like George Bush, I was offended as an American when the likes of Hugo Chavez stood up at the UN and called the President out. I’m equally appalled that he took his show to Copenhagen and decided to do a repeat on President Obama. And I am no Obama fan. Chavez not only called President Obama out; he called us all out. And then, got a standing ovation in his sneering spew against the West.

    Maybe I’m having one of those moments when a member of family, the one you can’t stand, is called out or insulted by a neighbor that you like even less. Hugo Chavez is a dispicable creature, who likes to fawn and pose as a “hero of the common man.” He isn’t.

    I agree, however, that there is a bitter irony that Bush and Obama, men who presumably are on the opposite ends of the political spectrum, are called out by a sneering dictator. But I take no pleasure in that. Chavez insulted President Obama but he’s trying to demean us all.

    I absolutely agree with you, Amy–we need to be more careful in our voting choices because these hyenas like Chavez can smell weakness, spot fraudulant leadership. And they love using that to our disadvantage.

  • Seymour

    Personally I think Chavez needs to pull the match sticks out of his nose but what do I know as employer to 2300 folks.

    As to Obama? Use those match sticks Hugo but don’t go overboard. Just a mere hot foot will jog Obama’s memory to assume that bow (I think) position for America’s apologies to the international community.

    Hell, Obama just may give you the eastern seaboard for this which at this point wouldn’t surprise me in the least.

  • Seymour

    In all seriousness bart and Docelder just nailed this. This is exactly what’s going on. IMO of course…

    Seymour

  • Peggy Sue

    Amy, I had another post gobbled. Please rescue if you can.

    Thanx.

  • I’m a Linda too

    I just have one question, what will Sean Penn do next?

    First he didn’t support Obama because he was prowar…he supported Kucinich-a better choice by all means.

    Then, he jumped on the Hopey wagon after his many trips to Venezuela and all of the sudden he was sucking the koolaid by the gallons giving speeches of grandeur of the empty hObama. He then divorces and starts living a new and exciting different life.

    Now…what will he do? I don’t think there’s enough koolaide to help him through, but it looks like he’s reverting back to his younger years and Robin Wright won’t be able to fix him again.

    • oowawa

      Robin Wright won’t be able to fix him again.

      Not the princess, nor all the king’s horses nor all the king’s men. So much for trusting in “that elegant man.”

      • I’m a Linda too

        I know, how could he do that to the Princess Bride? “Boooo Boooo”

    • http://www.rabblerouserruminations.blogspot.com/ Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy

      Good question there, IALT, except they’re divorced now, fortunate for Robin. Penn has a bad temper, as I understand it. We know he abused Madonna when they were married – but hey, who cares if he batters someone as long as he can act, right? Sigh.

      Anyway – I just saw a funny comment at an article abt the two getting divorced. Someone said Penn was leaving Wright for his new Significant Other, Chavez! :-)

      • I’m a Linda too

        lol great minds and all that.

  • TeakWoodKite

    “We know the fault lines because we’ve been imprisoned by them for years.

    .

    WTF?? HUh? and he’s not talking about social justice regarding energy use?

    GAG!

  • PainkillerJayne

    Funny Chavez smells sulphur…I just smell crap wafting after Obama.

    • http://www.rabblerouserruminations.blogspot.com/ Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy

      :-D

    • I’m a Linda too

      yep. I said that on CNN’s site the other day, “flush the toilet, it’s starting to stink”. lol

  • Diana L. C.

    RRRA,

    Thanks for the vids and the summaries and quotations.

    As with many on this thread, to me this whole conference has never really been about the climate at all, but about money. Chavez, a communist/socialist is, of course, ruled by the thought that the only thing driving people is the material and, by that, I mean their own material wealth. He doesn’t care if the people of his country couldn’t breathe, as long as he could.

    I just wish Chavez would do more for the people of his own country and that Obama and the rest of the heads of state there would also just go home and try to figure out how to make their citizens’ lives more pleasurable rather than more materially wealthy. That would mean they need to find ways to ease the stresses in their lives–like having jobs and food and medical care.

    As I said, I do my meager part in recycling and trying not to overconsume, though as an American, that is pretty hard. I’ve been doing it since the first Earth Day in 1970. I have since then seen minor improvements coming from government. For instance, the one I’m most grateful for has to do the brown cloud over Denver that would keep me inside for days on end so I didn’t get headaches and nausea and have to gasp for breath. It has been pretty much eliminated since the late 80′s because of laws about car emissions. We can help as a country, but it doesn’t have to be through a joint effort of all the world’s countries. I don’t do things personally only if others agree to do them. If it’s right, I try to do it as best I can. Countries should do the same.

    Ultimately that is what Obama’s speech amounted to in the end, but it does not excuse him for his stupid previous rhetoric and promises and attempts to be the Prince of Peace and most popular man on campus for the rest of the world because of his own narcissism. HE deserves Chavez’s speech.

    But, as Peggy Sue pointed out, Chavez was being a rude, nasty bully toward all of us. Obama deserved it–if for no other reason than his fingers and brush offs directed to Hillary during the primary–but also for what I said above. Most Americans, except those on Wall Street, don’t deserve it. I for one, did not laugh when Chavez said it about Bush either, though I definitely did not like Bush. It’s not the kind of talk I expect from a country’s leader.

    I would give more credit to Chavez if I felt his people were his greatest concern, not his own power. I say the same for Obama.

    They both make me sick and sad. And, RRRA, also as I said in an earlier post, I don’t expect our mass of voters to learn any lessons. Many get most of their practice in voting on American Idol and actually think it’s important to vote in that contest. Most couldn’t pass the citizenship test immigrants have to pass. A majority don’t even vote in their local, county, and state elections–they just bitch a lot when they discover some government rule they don’t like.

    Sorry–a very downer comment.

    • http://www.rabblerouserruminations.blogspot.com/ Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy

      I totally understand – and not a downer comment, just telling it like you see it! That’s important, and I appreciate it.

      I, too, wish these leaders would actually work for the very best possible for the greatest number of their citizenry instead of doing all this political posturing and one-up-person-ship. s it possible to have a leader who really leads, who cares more abt the people than their own ego?

      And I am right there with you – I do what I can for the environment, and have for years, too. On some levels, I am not sure it really matters if the global warming is 100% due to human activity – we should be doing what’s right for the planet, thus ourselves, ANYWAY because it is the smart, right thing to do. If we preserve the planet, if we utilize renewable energy sources, if we curtail pollution, how is that a bad thing? It just seems to make sense to take care of our home, protect our wildlife, and keep our water sources clean. Know wheat I mean?

  • ziggy

    Hugo always seems to be smelling something whenever he turns up in public. Maybe he should consider taking a shower.

    • Ferd Berfle

      Even Chavez can be right once in a blue moon–Obama does stink. Of course, bots being inured to the smell don’t notice anything until it asphyxiates them.

      • oowawa

        Der Furz hat keine Nase.

        (The fart has no nose.)

        • Ferd Berfle

          LMAO.

  • wbboei

    Reverend Amy: excellent analysis.

    Ziggy, Hugo knows Obama is a paper tiger. He is taking full advantage of the situation. Machiavelli said it best–it is better for a prince to be feared than loved.

    With Obama the fear factor once wielded by the United States is gone. In fact, I am told by sources in the know that both Israel and the Palestinian authority have concluded that Obama’s word cannot be trusted and that he will be a one term president. Therefore, they are not inclined to wait him out rather than doing anything.

    Just as an aside, wasn’t it funny how AP, CNN and the New York Times immediately reported that this meeting was a great success for Obama, and how he snatched victory from the jaws of defeat? I mean the world knows the truth–he fucked it all up. And headlines of the foreign press made no bones about that. Hugo was the star, and Obama was an extra.

    The only thing that bothered me about Copenhagen was those peace loving protesters in ninja suits being brutally and sadistically assaulted by authoritarian danish police monsters. Not to be critical of the Messiah, but I wish he had saved one his miracles for them and made those nightsicks levitate out of their hands, messiahs can do that you know.

    I guess he was too busy insulting China and barging into private meetings and getting verbally bitch slapped by Hugo to see what was going on outside those halls.

    • Ferd Berfle

      Spot on, wbboei. That One is a pretender to the office and everyone but his lock-step ditto-heads know it. One has to be incredibly s t u p i d, intellectually lazy, and/or comatose from the Kool-Aide to believe any of the off-gassing done by That One.

  • wbboei

    correction: Israel and the Palestinian Authority have decided to wait him out. It is more than an inclination, according to my sources.

  • http://! stodgie

    i am pretty sure even the poorly informed have figured out that the “copenhagen win” was in truth an embarassment and huge smack in o’s face. the old adage about you can’t fool all the people all the time holds true. even the koolaid drinkers are starting to sniff the poison in the brew as it were.