Big word left out of hyped Obama video
Big word left out of hyped Obama  video, No ‘Afghanistan’ in new Obama campaign video, A slick new film  narrated by Tom Hanks touts the president's most pivotal moves — except  for one. President Barack Obama's re-election campaign late Thursday  released a Hollywood-caliber campaign film, 16 minutes and 56 seconds of  Tom Hanks-narrated footage that trumpets Obama's achievements since  taking office three years ago, highlights the challenges still ahead—and  never once mentions America's longest war, the conflict in Afghanistan,  by name.
The movie, directed by  Oscar-winner Davis Guggenheim, defends Obama's handling of the economic  collapse of 2007-2008, highlights the auto industry bailout, puts the  May 2011 raid in Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden at the center of his  argument for another four years in the White House, lays out the  immediate benefits of his landmark health care overhaul, and notes he  fulfilled his promise to withdraw from Iraq.
But Obama's controversial  decision to "surge" troops into Afghanistan, and his plan to withdraw  American forces by the end of 2014, never appear in the film, which was  released in full just days after an American soldier allegedly  slaughtered 16 Afghan civilians and plunged already frayed relations  into a new crisis.
The only Republican critic cited  by name is Mitt Romney, whose November 2008 op-ed entitled "Let Detroit  Go Bankrupt" appears at 5 minutes and 13 seconds into the film.
Former president Bill  Clinton—who appears several times—defends the bailout, while former  White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel sticks the shiv a little further  into Romney, describing his approach as a callous "let it (the auto  industry) go … can't be saved …"
Republicans quickly assailed the  film, with Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus  saying: "We don't need a Hollywood movie to know what the president  accomplished over the past three years."
"Unfortunately Americans live  Obama's accomplishments every day from higher gas prices, food prices,  health care costs, unemployment and record debt. Hollywood may not be  able to find anything wrong with Obama's first term but Americans  literally can't afford to find out what another four years looks like  under Obama," Priebus said.
Obama himself does not speak  directly to the camera until 8 minutes and 49 seconds into the film, and  does so to defend in poignant, personal terms the Affordable Care Act  that Republicans scornfully dubbed "Obamacare."
"When my mom got cancer, she wasn't a wealthy woman, and it pretty much drained all her resources," the president says.
He later gives voice to uniquely  presidential worries about the May 2011 raid to kill Osama bin Laden at  his fortified compound in the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad.
"A lot of people have asked,  'How did you feel when you first heard that it was bin Laden and he had  been killed?' And the truth is I didn't have time for a lot of feelings  at that point, because our guys were still in that compound, and it  wasn't until I knew that they were across the border, they were safe,  everybody was accounted for—including the dog—that I allowed some  satisfaction," he says.
Vice  President Joe Biden casts the go-ahead decision as far from the obvious  choice. He relates the tense atmosphere in the White House's Situation  Room as Obama asks his top advisers what he should do.
"And they say 'well, 49 percent  chance he's there, 51. It's a close call, Mister President,'" says  Biden. "If he was wrong, his presidency was done. Over."
"It was the ultimate test of leadership," says Hanks, who calls the raid "a victory for our nation."
The  video also highlights Obama's kept promise to pull U.S. forces out of  Iraq, showing him meeting with General David Petraeus in the Oval  Office, before cutting to soldiers on patrol, and then the president  telling returning troops, "Welcome home."
With the fragile U.S.  economy—and stubbornly high unemployment still over 8 percent—weighing  heavily on Obama's re-election efforts, the film casts the situation he  inherited as a "horror movie" scenario that shocked the new president  and his top aides at a meeting shortly after the 2008 election.
"All I was thinking at that moment was 'could we get a recount?'" quips senior campaign strategist David Axelrod.
The film revives the famous  "bikini graph" that the president's supporters use to illustrate the  turnaround in job creation since Obama took office.
At 13 minutes in, the film turns  into something of a laundry list: It describes the benefits of Obama's  health care law in some detail; highlights his commitment to improved  fuel efficiency and renewable energy; cites achievements in education  standards, student loan reform, and the Dodd-Frank rewrite of Wall  Street rules; and trumpets his recess appointment of Richard  Cordray—over stiff Republican objections—to head the consumer protection  bureau created by the health care law.
It shows Obama meeting with the  Dalai Lama, celebrating the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," and  signing the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act aimed at erasing some  gender-based disparities in pay. It lingers over the swearing-in  ceremonies for Supreme Court Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.
And it notes that the U.S. auto industry has recovered.
The final words are from Hanks, who urges voters to "look forward to the work still to be done."
via: yahoo
via: yahoo