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Week of July 6, 2008 - July 12, 2008

Obama decontents a dream


Obama is running against Obama, not McCain.

He is running against his own personality, his private ghosts and demons.

Of course if Obama loses, McCain will win. But it will be Obama that beats Obama, not McCain.

This is Obama's election to lose.

I think his changing positions in a way that appears at first pragmatic, is in fact a major mistake.

A mistake  if for no other reason than that if focuses interest on Obama as a subject in action that does or doesn't do things  instead of focusing on the idea of Obama or on Obama the "dream". Objectively Obama has little or no CV at all, many of his supporters consider that a prime virtue.
Barack Obama  never has aroused any real interest in his supporters with his policy positions or his voting record.

Americans are in a panic and Obama is a Rorschach ink blot that people project their hopes and fears on. If he  doesn't embody his story he literally ceases to exist. He mustn't lose sight of how and why he has been suddenly elevated.

Fortuitously he has tapped into some sort of vein of mass hysteria and craziness of the kind that periodically sweeps America throughout its history and it all began to get out of control.  How many candidates in the history of the republic have ever elicited this sort of reaction?
"Many spiritually advanced people I know (not coweringly religious, mind you, but deeply spiritual) identify Obama as a Lightworker, that rare kind of attuned being who has the ability to lead us not merely to new foreign policies or health care plans or whatnot, but who can actually help usher in a new way of being on the planet, of relating and connecting and engaging with this bizarre earthly experiment. These kinds of people actually help us evolve. They are philosophers and peacemakers of a very high order, and they speak not just to reason or emotion, but to the soul." Mark Morford, San Francisco Chronicle
When I read Morford's piece I wondered whether it was possible to laugh and vomit at the same time without strangling. Certainly neither Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln nor FDR were ever talked about that way. The language is totally outside America's republican traditions and is reminiscent of the things that enthusiastic flunkies said and wrote about Franco, Mussolini and Hitler in the 1930s.

How is a Hawaiian from the South Side of Chicago supposed to handle horse shit like that?

However moving away from it into some imagined center could be a fatal mistake. Barack Obama is his own space or no space at all

His secret has been the charm of his difference.

If he loses that special quality, and by now there is little left, it will be like Cinderella's Coach turning back into a pumpkin and all the pretty horses into scurrying, little mice.

I have to agree with Arianna Huffington
Running to the middle in an attempt to attract undecided swing voters didn't work for Al Gore in 2000. It didn't work for John Kerry in 2004. And it didn't work when Mark Penn (obsessed with his "microtrends" and missing the megatrend) convinced Hillary Clinton to do it in 2008. Fixating on -- and pandering to -- this fickle crowd is all about messaging tailored to avoid offending rather than to inspire and galvanize. And isn't galvanizing the electorate to demand fundamental change the raison d'etre of the Obama campaign in the first place?
As Buchanan Pat asks "The question of 2008 remains: When all is said and done, who is this guy?"

That is the question that Obama cannot afford to have people asking.

For Obama to be is to do and to do is to cease to be.

Choking in the clutch


A great many people on the left, on the right and on the center are increasingly puzzled by Barack Obama's "turn toward the center" and are unable to explain it.

I have a theory, of course.

I'm afraid that I'm going to have to tell a golfing story.

I don't like golf, I don't play golf, I don't even watch it on TV.

However, my late father was a businessman and he had had to spend a great deal of time and money to become reasonably competent at the game; as such proficiency was indispensable to him in his wheelings and dealings and he once told me the following story.

My father knew a man that made a lot of money betting on golf.

Let's call him "the oldest member".

He was a little old fellow, not very strong, not very tall, not very heavy... he couldn't hit the ball very far, but he could hit it very straight and with total control, his little chip shots were jewel perfect and his putting deadly.

But the most important thing about him is that he didn't have a nerve in his body, he was as cold as ice or perhaps it would have been more correct to say that he had the sort of disattachment that Zen archers and yogis are supposed to possess.

Despite the ice in his veins, he was a friendly, unassuming, insignificant, little fellow with a successful, if modest business, known to have money, who never had any problem finding someone to play a round of golf with him.

The compleat hustler, he chose his victims with care.

Those that he preyed on were the brilliant natural golfers. The sort of fellows who captained their school golf teams in high school and college, who might have had fantasies of "turning pro" before the responsibilities of wife and children or a seat on the board of the family firm took them on to more prosaic paths: men who drove the ball far, who sometimes came in under par. Hearty, aggressive and self-confident... until the man my father knew crossed their paths.

The first few holes were played for peanuts and the "oldest member" lost them cheerfully, all full of admiration for the solid drives and brilliant birdies of his mark.

After about three of four holes the "oldest member" offered to double the bet at each succeeding hole. Soon the "natural" was winning big bucks. Everybody knew the little old fellow could pay... it was like taking candy from a baby.

By about the twelfth hole the "oldest member's" victim was winning a fortune, a fortune which doubled at each succeeding hole.

But then, way at the back of the winner's mind a dark, spark of a little genie began to pull at his coat... "But what if I lost? Impossible! Lose to this pitiful duffer! ... Yeah, but what if?" the little genie would murmur, "Christ, I'd have to take another mortgage on my house if I lost this, my wife would divorce me if she found out I lost this much playing golf with an old man. I won't be able to pay my daughter's orthodontist."

And so thought succeeded thought and the natural's hands began to sweat and his game slowly became erratic... The powerful drives began to slice into the rough, while the little old man was onto the green with three or four of his plumb line dribbles and into the cup in two or three unadventurous, but perfect, puttlings: meanwhile the natural was blasting furiously out of the sand and beginning to bogey.

Finally, broke and broken the natural trudged away, so humiliated that he never told another soul at the club what had been done to him. In this way "the oldest member" was able to continue his devil's game.

End of story

What does this have to do with Obama?

Simply, that Obama is a "natural" and the "old man" in my story is "reality", certainly not McCain.

I imagine when Obama announced he was running for President, Hillary was considered "inevitable" and he thought that running in the primaries would at least make him into a national figure and position him for veep or whatever and then he discovered that he had tapped into some sort of vein of mass hysteria and craziness of the kind that periodically sweeps America throughout its history and it all began to get out of control.

Things like this began to appear.
 "Many spiritually advanced people I know (not coweringly religious, mind you, but deeply spiritual) identify Obama as a Lightworker, that rare kind of attuned being who has the ability to lead us not merely to new foreign policies or health care plans or whatnot, but who can actually help usher in a new way of being on the planet, of relating and connecting and engaging with this bizarre earthly experiment. These kinds of people actually help us evolve. They are philosophers and peacemakers of a very high order, and they speak not just to reason or emotion, but to the soul." Mark Morford, San Francisco Chronicle
How is a Hawaiian from the South Side of Chicago supposed to handle horse shit like that?

When I read Morford's piece I wondered whether it was possible to laugh and vomit at the same time without strangling.

After winning the primaries Obama suddenly saw that, from being a junior Senator and a former community organizer, he was now the favorite to become, literally, the most powerful man on earth.

All that is really standing now between him and unimaginable power and responsibility: the chance to fail like Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush, are his own ghosts and inner demons... and his game is beginning to fall apart.

Probably the best time line of this process comes from paleo-conservative Pat Buchanan:
* Samantha Power was tossed off Barack's sledge after calling Hillary a "monster" and suggesting Barack's Iraq timetable was not set in concrete. Robert Malley was canned for having talked to Hamas, though that was his portfolio at a think tank for conflict resolution.
* Barack pole-axed pastor Wright and, though he said he could no more repudiate his church than his family, shortly after the second time Wright went off, Barack severed all ties to Trinity United.
*Barack has spoken of how he cringed at the racist reaction of his white grandmother after she was accosted by a black man on a bus. Grandma has now been rehabilitated in a new ad as the loving woman who inculcated good old Kansas values into little Barack.
*When his own surrogate, Gen. Wesley Clark, suggested John McCain's war service did not automatically qualify him as presidential timber, a storm erupted. Barack proceeded to cut the general's legs off.
*His had been one of a few Senate voices to speak of Palestinian suffering. But Barack's address to the Israeli lobby read like it was plagiarized from the collected works of Ze'ev Jabotinsky.
*When the Supreme Court declared every citizen has a Second Amendment right to a handgun, Barack stood with Justice Scalia. When Scalia said the court ought not to have taken away Louisiana's right to execute child rapists, Barack was with him again.
*When Congress voted the telecoms immunity from prosecution for colluding with the Bush administration in wiretapping citizens, Barack stood with Bush and the telecoms. Fearing it might cost him his huge money-raising advantage over McCain, Barack tossed campaign finance reform over the side.
*In Ohio, Barack was a populist opponent of NAFTA. He is now a free-trader. Yet when economic adviser Austan Goolsbee told the Canadians pretty much the same thing, Barack disinherited him.
*As July 4 approached, Barack gratuitously dissed his friends at MoveOn.org for their "General Betray Us" ad mocking Gen. David Petraeus. And that flag pin Barack got rid of after 9-11, calling it a "substitute ... for real patriotism"? It's back on the lapel.
*Last week, Barack said that, after he meets with Petraeus and his field commanders in Iraq, he might "refine" his commitment to withdraw all U.S. combat brigades within 16 months.
* And finally, Obama has co-opted President Bush's faith-based initiative and claimed it as his own.
In the center-center, The Financial Times grumbled.
All this is a mixture the left finds toxic – and it allows Republicans to attack Mr Obama for cynicism and inconsistency. So much for his new kind of politics, they say.(...) Mr Obama needs policies that retain the left’s loyalty, underline the Democrats’ case for change, impress independents and move the country with conviction in a new direction. It so happens he has one: comprehensive healthcare reform, an issue of historic importance for the country’s fiscal prospects, economic vitality and moral self-confidence. Lately it has been relegated to secondary status, behind taxes and national security. Mr Obama needs to put that right.
Progressives are the most worried. Bob Herbert of The New York Times sounds positively heartbroken.
Back in January when Barack Obama pulled off his stunning win in the Iowa caucuses, and people were lining up in the cold and snow for hours just to get a glimpse of him, there was a wide and growing belief — encouraged to the max by the candidate — that something new in American politics had arrived.(...) Only an idiot would think or hope that a politician going through the crucible of a presidential campaign could hold fast to every position, steer clear of the stumbling blocks of nuance and never make a mistake. But Barack Obama went out of his way to create the impression that he was a new kind of political leader — more honest, less cynical and less relentlessly calculating than most. You would be able to listen to him without worrying about what the meaning of “is” is. This is why so many of Senator Obama’s strongest supporters are uneasy, upset, dismayed and even angry at the candidate who is now emerging in the bright light of summer.(...) But Senator Obama is not just tacking gently toward the center. He’s lurching right when it suits him, and he’s zigging with the kind of reckless abandon that’s guaranteed to cause disillusion, if not whiplash. So there he was in Zanesville, Ohio, pandering to evangelicals by promising not just to maintain the Bush program of investing taxpayer dollars in religious-based initiatives, but to expand it. Separation of church and state? Forget about it. And there he was, in the midst of an election campaign in which the makeup of the Supreme Court is as important as it has ever been, agreeing with Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas that the death penalty could be imposed for crimes other than murder. What was the man thinking? Thankfully, a majority on the court left the barbaric Scalia-Thomas-Obama (and John McCain) reasoning behind and held that capital punishment would apply only to homicides. “What’s he doing?” is the most common question heard recently from Obama supporters.(...) There has been a reluctance among blacks to openly criticize Senator Obama, the first black candidate with a real shot at the presidency. But behind the scenes, there is discontent among African-Americans, as well, over Mr. Obama’s move away from progressive issues, including his support of the Supreme Court’s decision affirming the constitutional right of individuals to bear arms. There’s even concern that he’s doing the Obama two-step on the issue that has been the cornerstone of his campaign: his opposition to the war in Iraq. But the senator denied that any significant change should be inferred from his comment that he would “continue to refine” his policy on the war.(...) that’s a very dangerous game for a man who first turned voters on by presenting himself as someone who was different, who wouldn’t engage in the terminal emptiness of politics as usual. Time flies and the Iowa caucuses seem a very long time ago.
The gray lady herself recoiled, sniffing in shocked dismay.
Senator Barack Obama stirred his legions of supporters, and raised our hopes, promising to change the old order of things. He spoke with passion about breaking out of the partisan mold of bickering and catering to special pleaders, promised to end President Bush’s abuses of power and subverting of the Constitution and disowned the big-money power brokers who have corrupted Washington politics. Now there seems to be a new Barack Obama on the hustings. First, he broke his promise to try to keep both major parties within public-financing limits for the general election. His team explained that, saying he had a grass-roots-based model and that while he was forgoing public money, he also was eschewing gold-plated fund-raisers. These days he’s on a high-roller hunt.(...) The new Barack Obama has abandoned his vow to filibuster an electronic wiretapping bill if it includes an immunity clause for telecommunications companies that amounts to a sanctioned cover-up of Mr. Bush’s unlawful eavesdropping after 9/11. In January, when he was battling for Super Tuesday votes, Mr. Obama said that the 1978 law requiring warrants for wiretapping, and the special court it created, worked. “We can trace, track down and take out terrorists while ensuring that our actions are subject to vigorous oversight and do not undermine the very laws and freedom that we are fighting to defend,” he declared. Now, he supports the immunity clause as part of what he calls a compromise but actually is a classic, cynical Washington deal that erodes the power of the special court, virtually eliminates “vigorous oversight” and allows more warrantless eavesdropping than ever.(...) Mr. Obama endorsed the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the District of Columbia’s gun-control law. We knew he ascribed to the anti-gun-control groups’ misreading of the Constitution as implying an individual right to bear arms. But it was distressing to see him declare that the court provided a guide to “reasonable regulations enacted by local communities to keep their streets safe.”(...) There are still vital differences between Mr. Obama and Senator John McCain on issues like the war in Iraq, taxes, health care and Supreme Court nominations. We don’t want any “redefining” on these big questions. This country needs change it can believe in.
Arianna Huffington is more in the strict governess line.
Running to the middle in an attempt to attract undecided swing voters didn't work for Al Gore in 2000. It didn't work for John Kerry in 2004. And it didn't work when Mark Penn (obsessed with his "microtrends" and missing the megatrend) convinced Hillary Clinton to do it in 2008. Fixating on -- and pandering to -- this fickle crowd is all about messaging tailored to avoid offending rather than to inspire and galvanize. And isn't galvanizing the electorate to demand fundamental change the raison d'etre of the Obama campaign in the first place?(...) Watering down that brand is the political equivalent of New Coke. Call it Obama Zero. In 2004, the Kerry campaign's obsession with undecided voters -- voters so easily swayed that 46 percent of them found credible the Swift Boaters' charges that Kerry might have faked his war wounds to earn a Purple Heart -- allowed the race to devolve from a referendum on the future of the country into a petty squabble over whether Kerry had bled enough to warrant his medals. Throughout the primary, Obama referred to himself as an "unlikely candidate." Which he certainly was -- and still is. And one of the things that turned him from "unlikely" upstart to presidential frontrunner is his ability to expand the electorate by convincing unlikely voters -- some of the 83 million eligible voters who didn't turn out in 2004 -- to engage in the system. So why start playing to the political fence sitters -- staking out newly nuanced positions on FISA, gun control laws, expansion of the death penalty, and NAFTA? In an interview with Nina Easton in Fortune Magazine, Obama was asked about having called NAFTA "a big mistake" and "devastating." Obama's reply: "Sometimes during campaigns the rhetoric gets overheated and amplified." Overheated? So when he was campaigning in the Midwest, many parts of which have been, yes, devastated by economic changes since the passage of NAFTA, and he pledged to make use of a six-month opt-out clause in the trade agreement, that was "overheated?" Or was that one "amplified?" Because if that's the case, it would be helpful going forward if Obama would let us know which of his powerful rhetoric is "overheated" and/or "amplified," so voters will know not to get their hopes too high.(...) The Obama brand has always been about inspiration, a new kind of politics, the audacity of hope, and "change we can believe in." I like that brand. More importantly, voters -- especially unlikely voters -- like that brand. Pulling it off the shelf and replacing it with a political product geared to pleasing America's vacillating swing voters -- the ones who will be most susceptible to the fear-mongering avalanche that has already begun -- would be a fatal blunder. Realpolitik is one thing. Realstupidpolitik is quite another.
And Pat Buchanan sums it all up well too.
We may be misunderestimating Barack. But the question of 2008 remains: When all is said and done, who is this guy?
I think it is all more simple than that.

Obama the natural has been playing double or nothing with the oldest member, who is reality, not repeat not, John McCain: and seeing laid out before him, like the Promised Land before Moses, the greatest of successes or the most humiliating of failures... he is choking and his game is falling apart.
http://seaton-newslinks.blogspot.com/
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David Seaton

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