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Obama is resorting to a common, but risking tactic of under-qualified job-seekers: fudge the resume.

Barack Obama has a solution to his lack of accomplishment and
experience: pad his resume. If resume fraud were a crime, Obama would
be looking at fifteen to life. And it is not just an isolated incident
or two. He is a repeat offender.
Obama started early. Even the New York Times acknowledges that in his book Dreams From My Father Obama accomplished little as a "community organizer." ("It is clear
that the benefit of those years to Mr. Obama dwarfs what he
accomplished.") But he did manage to steal credit for asbestos testing
and removal in the Altgeld Gardens, a public housing project in
Chicago. But he didn't quite tell the whole story. The Times writes:
What Mr. Obama does not mention in his book is that
residents of the nearby Ida B. Wells housing project, and some at
Altgeld itself, had already been challenging the housing authority on
asbestos. A local newspaper had also taken up the issue.
Now Obama is running for the presidency on the slimmest record of
accomplishment of any major party candidate in recent memory. In June
Obama was interviewed by ABC's Jake Tapper. There was this exchange:
TAPPER: But have you ever worked across the aisle in such a way that entailed a political risk for yourself?
OBAMA: Well, look, when I was doing ethics reform legislation, for
example, that wasn't popular with Democrats or Republicans. So any time
that you actually try to get something done in Washington, it entails
some political risks.
But I think the basic principle which you pointed out is that I have
consistently said, when it comes to solving problems, like nuclear
proliferation or reducing the influence of lobbyists in Washington,
that I don't approach this from a partisan or ideological perspective.
And the same is true when it comes to the economy. The same is true
when it comes to national security. You know, this administration, the
Bush administration, has made, for example, the war on terror into a
sharply partisan issue. But the truth is, is that I admire some of the
foreign policy of George Bush's father. And I've said so before. I
think that there's a tradition of us working together to make sure that
we are dealing with the threats that are out there and that we are
building a consensus here in the United States. That's the kind of
approach I intend to take when I'm president of the United States.
If you missed the answer to Tapper's question - name a bipartisan
accomplishment putting you at political risk - don't worry. There
wasn't one. Because unlike John McCain who has taken his lumps from his
own party but who has actually accomplished something in Congress,
Obama's record is relatively barren.
Even friendly bloggers remarked that he might have to improve on this non-answer.
Perhaps sensing that Obama needed to demonstrate some record of
accomplishment his campaign put up an ad in early July touting his
record on welfare reform, claiming he "passed a law to move people from welfare to work - slashed the
rolls by 80 percent." But this wasn't true. He actually opposed the
1996 welfare reform bill passed by his former rival Hillary Clinton's
husband. As Factcheck.org pointed out:
That's going too far. First, the law in question wasn't
dreamed up out of thin air by its sponsors. It was the follow-up to the
welfare reform act,
the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act, that President
Clinton signed on Aug. 26, 1996. That law gave states the ability to
design their own welfare programs as long as they met certain federal
requirements, including limits on how long recipients could get
benefits. The bill that Obama cosponsored was Illinois' version. And
far from having "passed" the bill single-handedly, Obama was among five
Senate sponsors of the measure, as we said previously. It was passed by both chambers of the Illinois Legislature and signed into law by the governor.
. . .
But we don't think Obama alone, or even Obama and the four other
sponsors of the Illinois law, can take credit for all of this. It was
the federal law, hammered out by Clinton and the Republican Congress,
that set the wheels in motion and forced states to act.
That same ad also contained an exaggeration about his personal life.
Although he claimed to have worked his way through school, his campaign
could identify only two summer jobs during his college years.
This propensity to pad his own resume has continued unabated. John
McCain nearly committed political suicide by championing comprehensive
immigration reform. Obama? His role was slight. Indeed he helped sink the bill at a critical time by joining other pro-Big Labor Democrats in
voting on poison pill amendments. But now he boasts of his own role.
Chicago Sun-Times' Washington bureau chief and longtime Obama watcher Lynn Sweet calls foul. She writes:
Obama on the campaign trail inflates his leadership role
- casting himself as someone who could figure out how to get something
done. Obama "did not absolutely stand out in any way," said Margaret
Sands Orchowski, the author of "Immigration and the American Dream:
Battling the Political Hype and Hysteria," and a close follower of the
legislation. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a McCain ally and a key
player on immigration, said Obama was around for only a "handful" of
meetings and helped destroy a 2007 compromise when he voted for making
guest worker visa programs temporary. A permanent guest worker program
was to be a trade for a legalization program to cover many illegal
immigrants. "When it came time to putting that bill together, he was
more of a problem than he was a help. And when it came time to try to
get the bill passed, he, in my opinion, broke the agreement we had. He
was in the photo op, but he could not execute the hard part of the
deal," Graham said.
So what to make of all this? Obama claims that experience is not as important as "judgment" or "change." By manufacturing or
existing accomplishments, however, he suggests that he does not buy his
own pitch.
Rather, his repeated attempts to bolster his resume indicate that he
may be nervous about his non-existent record of achievement. Not
trusting that voters will buy his disparagement of experience, Obama is
now resorting to a common, but risking tactic of under-qualified
job-seekers: fudge the resume.
Resume fraud carries grave risks. If the employer finds out you are
lying, you are unlikely to get the job, even if the competition is
weak. And for Obama, who is already belaboring under an avalanche of tough press about his many policy flip-flops, he hardly needs another storyline which sheds doubt on his credibility and character.
It is not yet clear whether more than a few savvy reporters and fact
checkers will pick up on Obama's exaggeration and outright lies about
his accomplishments.
But the McCain camp's new communications team would be smart to ask: would your hire someone who lied on his resume?
Source: pajamasmedia.com
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