Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Barack Obama: The Invisible Man

Note: Today on another site (http://newjerseyforjohnmccain.blogspot.com), I'll have an important piece called "Can McCain Win New Jersey?" NJ is the ninth-largest state. If McCain can win NJ and PA (the sixth largest state), he will the presidency.

Photo: Obama, Not Totally Happy to See Jesse Jackson


"Words crack and break . . . will not stay in place." (T. S. Eliot)
Here's what I wrote prior to Obama's Tuesday remarks on race: I expect the usual "deep baritone filibuster," loaded with self-serving rhetoric. Rev. Wright's anti-American statements are similar to many Obama heard -- and probably internalized -- in his years at Harvard (where Michelle also attended). He will talk about his "love" for America, but I fear the country he loves is one most of us wouldn't recognize.
He will discuss how he "profoundly disagrees" with some of Wright's comments, but he won't discuss exactly which ones or why precisely he dissents.
Also, I wrote the following yesterday to an important Black conservative, Lloyd Marcus, whom you'll hear a lot more about on this site:
I believe in his speech Obama is going to do what he called recently the "okie dokie," an exercise in deception. In his first book, he talks basically about being ashamed of his (white) mother, whom he should be portraying as the heroine of his life story. Brought up by a white mother and white grandparents, he will somehow proclaim his expertise about the "Black experience in America." In short, he'll talk out of both sides of his mouth.
The notion that Obama "had no idea" what America-hating Rev. Wright was up to is the candidate's version of "the dog ate my homework." He's a little bit like novelist Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man." We don't know him -- or know what he believes. We fear he may share many more beliefs with Wright than he lets on.
His wife Michelle, who apparently has spent her entire adult life being ashamed of her country, is a typical Princeton/Harvard graduate, convinced of her superiority to her countrymen and countrywomen. Her point seems to be: How can she be proud of a country which isn't run by people (Ivy-League graduates) like them? The general view is: "America is a terrible place, but if I ran it, the country would be a much better one."
Here's how Shelby Steele, of Stanford's Hoover Institution describes the "Obama phenomenon":
". . . Now, the floodlight of a presidential campaign has trained on this usually hidden corner of contemporary black life: a mindless indulgence in a rhetorical anti-Americanism as a way of bonding and of asserting one's blackness. Yet Jeremiah Wright, splashed across America's television screens, has shown us that there is no real difference between rhetorical hatred and real hatred.
"No matter his ultimate political fate, there is already enough pathos in Barack Obama to make him a cautionary tale. His public persona thrives on a manipulation of whites (bargaining), and his private sense of racial identity demands both self-betrayal and duplicity. His [Obama's] is the story of a man who flew so high, yet neglected to become himself."
Steele is suggesting that one reason we don't know Obama is that he doesn't know himself. Coming from faith and community traditions of Black separatism, he claims to be the man who can transcend racial polarities. He wants to become President of a country that his pastor and his fellow congregants abhor. It makes no sense.
What Shelby Steele means by "bargaining" is that Obama is making a trade with white people: in exchange for their votes and money, he'll enable them to feel good about themselves. Basically, he'll allow them to assuage their guilt over past racial sins by a single act: supporting his candidacy.
Obama is now engaged in a desperate balancing act: his long-time minister and his wife both despise their native land, America. Whether Obama disagrees with them remains uncertain.
Again, he's the Invisible Man, someone we'll never be able to pin down on his beliefs.
He will "disagree" with Rev. Wright, the man who claims the U.S. government "invented HIV" to kill Blacks, but he will not disown him, as he should. The most liberal member of the Senate, Obama claims to have a special ability -- one never demonstrated -- to reach across the aisle and bridge political divides. On every issue, Obama is a programmatic liberal.
Is he just lying to us? Or is he truly uncertain of the contrast between what he says and what he does?
Again, we don't know Barack Obama -- and we probably never will. That's the real message of Tuesday's speech.
STATEMENT BY JOHN MCCAIN ON TIBET

For Immediate Release
Contact: Press Office
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
703-650-5550
ARLINGTON, VA -- U.S. Senator John McCain today issued the following statement on the situation in Tibet:
"The unfolding tragedy in Tibet should draw the attention of the entire world. I deplore the violent crackdown by Chinese authorities and the continuing oppression in Tibet of those merely wishing to practice their faith and preserve their culture and heritage. I have listened carefully to the Dalai Lama and am convinced he is a man of peace who reflects the hopes and aspirations of Tibetans. I urge the government of the People's Republic of China to address the root causes of unrest in Tibet by opening a genuine dialogue with His Holiness, the Dalai Lama. Reports of shutting down YouTube and confiscation of SIM cards are disturbing and reports of multiple deaths are far more so, especially in a year when China is preparing to host the Olympic Games. I urge the Chinese authorities to ensure peaceful protest is not met with violence, to release monks and others detained for peacefully expressing their views and to allow full outside access to Tibet."
Note: If you'd like to get up-to-the-minute releases and news from the McCain Campaign, you can do so by e-mailing Patrick Hynes at: phynes@calypsocom.com.

4 comments:

Average American said...

Nice blog Steve, and I believe you have correctly taken the pulse of Barack Hussein Obama, and a mighty weak pulse it is!! I'm short on time right now, but I shall return!!

Stop by if you have a chance.

Joe

Stephen R. Maloney said...

Hey, average American, since I'm an Average American, shouldn't we join up? :-)

Thanks for visiting, and I'll return the favor. Come back often!

steve maloney
ambridge, pa

Average American said...

Looks like we have quite a bit in common. I am proud to tell you and anyone who'll listen, I'm from New Hampshire, the state that got John McCain started on the right foot!!

First time in at least 20 years that I don't feel like I'm voting for the "lessor of 2 evils!"

Joe

Stephen R. Maloney said...

Joe, My father was born in Berlin, NH, and his father worked for Brown Paper Company (later James River). I lived in N. Springfield, VT for several years and spent a good deal of time in NH. That state played a vital role in John McCain's becoming the Republican nominee. It's essential that McCain win NH. He's doing very well with Republicans AND Indepedents (as well as some moderate Democrats) in New England and nationally. Keep up the good work!

steve maloney
ambridge, pa

(P.S. McCain is leading in PA right now, ahead of both Clinton and Obama. We need to keep up the momentum.)