Veritas
When the history of this administration is written, a key theme will be the abyss between the hope-and-change, across-the-aisle rhetoric and the almost gratuitous way Obama has caricatured his supposed opponents. The current “don’t make me look bad”/“like a dog” psychodrama follows attacks of various sorts on Arizonans, Wall Street, opponents of the Ground Zero mosque, insurers, police, doctors, and anyone above the hated $250,000 income level.
After the media’s embarrassment over the hagiographic coverage of Obama in 2007–9, they still cannot quite fathom that we have the most lashing-out and paranoid president since Richard Nixon — a nebulous and nefarious “they” always behind every administration stumble.
Remember, don't make him look bad...'Cuz he doesn't seem to need any help doing that these days...
Obama: We are not amused!
All you hicktard rube-racists better watch out for lightning bolts lest you be struck down; for the mighty O! is pissed about wingnut criticism and ridicule following his NYC date night in May. I mean, c'mon h8ters! Can't a man just haz him some Broadway? On all our nickels?
"If I weren't president, I would be happy to catch the shuttle with my wife to take her to a Broadway show, as I had promised her during the campaign, and there would be no fuss and no muss and no photographers,"
If you weren't President...If you weren't President...Just let me savor that thought for but a fleeting moment...But you are mister President, unfortunately, and you have acquired a reputation for willingly spouting whoppers, no matter how inane, in order to make whatever point you wish at a particular moment. Sure Mr. Obama, we all believe that if you were just a regular schnook, instead of a Presidential one, that you and Chewie would be jetsetting all over the country for date night, complete with personal limos and such, to all sorts of highbrow events. That the FWOTUS would be taking vacations to Europe on a lark. Because there are just so many accounts on record of you all doing just that, that it is...Oh, wait...There is just about nothing on the record of your past, that you'll allow in the light of day, so no one can be really sure of what you did or didn't do.
All we know is that it wasn't enough for you to see a movie in the opulent White House media room, or to take in a show at Ford's theater or the Kennedy Center-like past Presidents have. As a matter of fact, that's one thing we do know, that you needn't adhere to any previous tradition or protocol; that only the bling-iest, bestest, over the top is good for you and the Wooky. And you needn't produce any of your records or verify your personal history, like any of your predecessors did, nor bother with that old fashioned notions of, you know, telling the truth, carrying yourself with dignity, or acting like the President of all America instead of just the progressive Democrats. No, you don't have to do any of that; you're the better of all your predecessors. Hey, you're Cicero and Caesar all rolled up in one...
All you have to do is lecture and scold the American people when they don't buy the snake oil you're selling. To vilify and try to diminish and marginalize all who publicly disagree with you, whether they be individual, association, or legitimate media outlet. And stamp your feet and shake your fists in the privacy of your quarters when people use the same tactics you and yours have used for the last 25 years, the ones you used to smooth your way into that White mansion at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue; the ones that you and the liberal Democrats transformed from being scurrilous and petty into mainstream criticism. To you, turnabout is not fair play, but some dastardly racist wingnut plot; a meme that is starting to wear thin with the public.
You made the bed sir, so enjoy laying in it.
Herbert & Cohen; off message, or off the reservation?
As mentioned in prior posts, some of the liberal intelligentsia of the fourth estate have lately been experiencing epiphanies, and in those moments of clarity are seeing Obama as he really is. Instead of the demi-god ushering in a whole new era of hope-n-change, some are beginning to see him more as an inexperienced demagogue who is perhaps in over his head in regards to foreign relations and policy, and who’s lack of leadership has led to a derailing of his promised, ambitious, domestic social agenda.
Today the disgruntled liberals in the spotlight are Bob Herbert of the NY Times, and in his second appearance, Richard Cohen of the Washington Post. Bob Herbert, who up until now has never penned a story about the President that cast him in an unfavorable light, is concerned that Obama doesn’t feel the pain of the unemployed nor an urgency to create government funded programs to employ them:
The big question on the domestic front right now is whether President Obama understands the gravity of the employment crisis facing the country. Does he get it? The signals coming out of the White House have not been encouraging.
[snip]
We seem to be waiting for some mythical rebound to come rolling in, magically equipped with robust job creation, a long-term bull market and paradise regained for consumers.It ain’t happening.
I get that Bob Herbert is feeling people’s pain, but my intuition makes me suspect that he’s concerned as much, if not more, about the electoral prospects of the Democrats in 2010 should unemployment remain high, as he is about the unemployed themselves.
Richard Cohen is also having doubts about Obama, this time around it's about his inexperience and how that affects foreign policy. And, in not so many words, he wonders aloud whether the President is perceived as weak:
This is the president we now have: He inspires lots of affection but not a lot of awe. It is the latter, though, that matters most in international affairs, where the greatest and most gut-wrenching tests await Obama. If he remains consistent to his rhetoric of just seven weeks ago, he will send more troops to Afghanistan and more of them will die. "This is not a war of choice," he said. "This is a war of necessity. Those who attacked America on 9/11 are plotting to do so again. If left unchecked, the Taliban insurgency will mean an even larger safe haven from which al-Qaeda would plot to kill more Americans."
[emphasis-ed.]
George Will, while hardly a liberal, also weighs in on the first couple’s self-centeredness as well as Obama’s certainty that the very power of the wisdom flowing forth from his lips is enough to sway any audience, solve any dispute, and correct any problems; and more realistically, the folly of that belief:
Both Obamas gave heartfelt speeches about . . . themselves. Although the working of the committee's mind is murky, it could reasonably have rejected Chicago's bid for the 2016 Games on aesthetic grounds -- unless narcissism has suddenly become an Olympic sport.
In the 41 sentences of her remarks, Michelle Obama used some form of the personal pronouns "I" or "me" 44 times. Her husband was, comparatively, a shrinking violet, using those pronouns only 26 times in 48 sentences. Still, 70 times in 89 sentences conveyed the message that somehow their fascinating selves were what made, or should have made, Chicago's case compelling.
[snip]
It was gallant of the president to say to the Olympic committee that Michelle is "a pretty big selling point for the city." Gallant, but obviously untrue. And -- this is where we pass from the merely silly to the ominous -- suppose the president was being not gallant but sincere. Perhaps the premise of the otherwise inexplicable trip to Denmark was that there is no difficulty, foreign or domestic, that cannot be melted by the sunshine of the Obama persona. But in the contest between the world and any president's charm, bet on the world.
Notwithstanding Will’s snarkiness, he is most likely correct. But there will be some folks who read these words that feel he’s just another right-wing hater; I direct them to these postings by Ace in which he not only refutes the assertions nicely, but also flames a few of those wringing their hands in concern over such a pronounced and unpatriotic lack of civility. So in keeping with one of the President’s favorite memes, let's consider such crying and gnashing of teeth to be mere distractions; more of the corrosive “old kind of politics†that have gone the way of the dinosaur in the age of Obama.
Still, there are many in the legacy media who remain ardent supporters of the President, such as those leveling the accusations of Republican sedition vis-à -vis the 2016 Olympic bid. One of the higher visibility examples, in exposure only and certainly not gravitas, is part-time economist and full-time shill Paul Krugman, also of the NY Times. His latest column, “The Politics of Spiteâ€, an exposition on the Copenhagen catastrophe, is such an archetype of partisan high dudgeon that it should be included in a poli-sci style manual. I’ll spare you direct quotations from the smarmy diatribe, but instead will point you to Bookworm’s post where she employs a plethora of evidence from Krugman’s own past columns  which exhibit the same behavior that he decries today; and in doing so proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that his picture should accompany the dictionary entry for “hypocriteâ€.
Fineman to Obama; less talk, and more action your O!neness.
In a sure sign that the bloom is really off the Obama rose, permanent "Hardball" propagandist and now former Obama shill Howard Fineman wonders when the President is going to stop talking about all the things he's planning to do and, you know, start doing them. And, in a mind-boggling moment of clarity, gently cautions the President to quit using Boooooosh! as a bogeyman, suggests that there might just be limits to the persuasiveness of charisma alone, and wonders aloud why all of Obama's speeches contain so many personal pronouns...
The president's problem isn't that he is too visible; it's the lack of content in what he says when he keeps showing up on the tube. Obama can seem a mite too impressed with his own aura, as if his presence on the stage is the Answer. There is, at times, a self-referential (even self-reverential) tone in his big speeches. They are heavily salted with the words "I" and "my." (He used the former 11 times in the first few paragraphs of his address to the U.N. last week.) Obama is a historic figure, but that is the beginning, not the end, of the story.
There is only so much political mileage that can still be had by his reminding the world that he is not George W. Bush. It was the winning theme of the 2008 campaign, but that race ended nearly a year ago. The ex-president is now more ex than ever, yet the current president, who vowed to look forward, is still reaching back to Bush as bogeyman.
[emphasis-ed.]
There is many more tasty morsels contained within, and they are especially delicious considering that they flow from an unlikely source indeed. I encourage you to read the whole thing.




