Obama’s calculus
The stage we’re in now with Barack Obama’s pastor Wright problem is sort of post-spin and pre-confrontation. People are still analyzing it. Like, Christopher Hitchens, for one. About a year ago, Hitchens reports, Obama knew this day was coming, so there’s some grandstanding going on now in how it’s being played.
“If Barack gets past the primary,” said the Rev. Jeremiah Wright to the New York Times in April of last year, “he might have to publicly distance himself from me. I said it to Barack personally, and he said yeah, that might have to happen.” Pause just for a moment, if only to admire the sheer calculating self-confidence of this. Sen. Obama has long known perfectly well, in other words, that he’d one day have to put some daylight between himself and a bigmouth Farrakhan fan. But he felt he needed his South Side Chicago “base” in the meantime. So he coldly decided to double-cross that bridge when he came to it. And now we are all supposed to marvel at the silky success of the maneuver.
Thomas Sowell breaks it down further.
Obama didn’t just happen to encounter Jeremiah Wright, who just happened to say some way out things. Jeremiah Wright is in the same mold as the kinds of people Barack Obama began seeking out in college — members of the left, anti-American counter-culture.
In Shelby Steele’s brilliantly insightful book about Barack Obama — “A Bound Man” — it is painfully clear that Obama was one of those people seeking a racial identity that he had never really experienced in growing up in a white world. He was trying to become a convert to blackness, as it were — and, like many converts, he went overboard.
Nor has Obama changed in recent years. His voting record in the U.S. Senate is the furthest left of any Senator. There is a remarkable consistency in what Barack Obama has done over the years, despite inconsistencies in what he says.
The irony is that Obama’s sudden rise politically to the level of being the leading contender for his party’s presidential nomination has required him to project an entirely different persona, that of a post-racial leader who can heal divisiveness and bring us all together.
The calculus has worked for him probably more perfectly than he ever imagined.
One sign of Obama’s verbal virtuosity was his equating a passing comment by his grandmother — “a typical white person,” he says — with an organized campaign of public vilification of America in general and white America in particular, by Jeremiah Wright.
Since all things are the same, except for the differences, and different except for the similarities, it is always possible to make things look similar verbally, however different they are in the real world.
In other words, the press and some people are being bamboozled. Successfully.
Except for writers who ask questions like these.
Among the many desperate gambits by defenders of Senator Obama and Jeremiah Wright is to say that Wright’s words have a “resonance” in the black community.
There was a time when the Ku Klux Klan’s words had a resonance among whites, not only in the South but in other states. Some people joined the KKK in order to advance their political careers. Did that make it OK? Is it all just a matter of whose ox is gored?
That kind of moral equivalence doesn’t fit with Obama’s equation. Victor Davis Hanson, like so many other analysts, zeroes in on that.
The more the pundits gushed about the speech, the more the average Americans thought, “Wait a minute — did he just say what I thought he said?†It’s not lost on Joe Q. Public that Obama justified Wright’s racism by offering us a “landmark†speech on race that:
(1) Compared Wright’s felony to the misdemeanors of his grandmother, Geraldine Ferraro, the Reagan Coalition, corporate culture, and the kitchen sink.
(2) Established the precedent that context excuses everything, in the sense that what good a Wright did (or an Imus did) in the past outweighs any racist outburst of the present.
(3) Claimed that the voice of the oppressed is not to be judged by the same rules of censure as the dominant majority that has no similar claim on victim status.
What is happening, ever so slowly, is that the public is beginning to realize that it knows even less after the speech than it did before about what exactly Obama knew (and when) about Wright’s racism and hatred.
Even elites will wake up to the fact that they’ve been had, in a sense, once they deconstruct the speech carefully and fathom that their utopian candidate just may have managed to destroy what was once a near-certain Democratic sweep in the fall.
The speech continues to be deconstructed, and some elites are finding it unconvincing.
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As a Chicagoan, Barack Obama cut his political teeth in a single party system. The firmly entrenched Democratic machine for all intents and purposes ensures that Chicago Democrats are never really challenged if they stick with the party line. This has worked against Obama because he never developed a sixth sense on how to react when the political tide turned against him. His attempt to reach out has a distinctively hollow and duplicitous feel to it because he doesn’t know how be a leader that crosses divides with an authentically unifying message. Thanks to the Rev. Wright controversy the rest of the nation can now begin to see Obama as many here in Illinois know him to be–a young man with lots of appeal and talent, but nevertheless very liberal, very inexperienced, and not at all prepared to be President.