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What Happened To Obama?

Formaldehyde

Both Fair And Balanced
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Jan 29, 2003
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This op-ed appeared in the NY Times last weekend, and it just appeared in the local paper this morning. It is causing quite a stir:

What Happened to Obama?

Spoiler :
Drew Westen is a professor of psychology at Emory University and the author of “The Political Brain: The Role of Emotion in Deciding the Fate of the Nation.”

IT was a blustery day in Washington on Jan. 20, 2009, as it often seems to be on the day of a presidential inauguration. As I stood with my 8-year-old daughter, watching the president deliver his inaugural address, I had a feeling of unease. It wasn’t just that the man who could be so eloquent had seemingly chosen not to be on this auspicious occasion, although that turned out to be a troubling harbinger of things to come. It was that there was a story the American people were waiting to hear — and needed to hear — but he didn’t tell it. And in the ensuing months he continued not to tell it, no matter how outrageous the slings and arrows his opponents threw at him.

The stories our leaders tell us matter, probably almost as much as the stories our parents tell us as children, because they orient us to what is, what could be, and what should be; to the worldviews they hold and to the values they hold sacred. Our brains evolved to “expect” stories with a particular structure, with protagonists and villains, a hill to be climbed or a battle to be fought. Our species existed for more than 100,000 years before the earliest signs of literacy, and another 5,000 years would pass before the majority of humans would know how to read and write.

Stories were the primary way our ancestors transmitted knowledge and values. Today we seek movies, novels and “news stories” that put the events of the day in a form that our brains evolved to find compelling and memorable. Children crave bedtime stories; the holy books of the three great monotheistic religions are written in parables; and as research in cognitive science has shown, lawyers whose closing arguments tell a story win jury trials against their legal adversaries who just lay out “the facts of the case.”

When Barack Obama rose to the lectern on Inauguration Day, the nation was in tatters. Americans were scared and angry. The economy was spinning in reverse. Three-quarters of a million people lost their jobs that month. Many had lost their homes, and with them the only nest eggs they had. Even the usually impervious upper middle class had seen a decade of stagnant or declining investment, with the stock market dropping in value with no end in sight. Hope was as scarce as credit.

In that context, Americans needed their president to tell them a story that made sense of what they had just been through, what caused it, and how it was going to end. They needed to hear that he understood what they were feeling, that he would track down those responsible for their pain and suffering, and that he would restore order and safety. What they were waiting for, in broad strokes, was a story something like this:

“I know you’re scared and angry. Many of you have lost your jobs, your homes, your hope. This was a disaster, but it was not a natural disaster. It was made by Wall Street gamblers who speculated with your lives and futures. It was made by conservative extremists who told us that if we just eliminated regulations and rewarded greed and recklessness, it would all work out. But it didn’t work out. And it didn’t work out 80 years ago, when the same people sold our grandparents the same bill of goods, with the same results. But we learned something from our grandparents about how to fix it, and we will draw on their wisdom. We will restore business confidence the old-fashioned way: by putting money back in the pockets of working Americans by putting them back to work, and by restoring integrity to our financial markets and demanding it of those who want to run them. I can’t promise that we won’t make mistakes along the way. But I can promise you that they will be honest mistakes, and that your government has your back again.” A story isn’t a policy. But that simple narrative — and the policies that would naturally have flowed from it — would have inoculated against much of what was to come in the intervening two and a half years of failed government, idled factories and idled hands. That story would have made clear that the president understood that the American people had given Democrats the presidency and majorities in both houses of Congress to fix the mess the Republicans and Wall Street had made of the country, and that this would not be a power-sharing arrangement. It would have made clear that the problem wasn’t tax-and-spend liberalism or the deficit — a deficit that didn’t exist until George W. Bush gave nearly $2 trillion in tax breaks largely to the wealthiest Americans and squandered $1 trillion in two wars.

And perhaps most important, it would have offered a clear, compelling alternative to the dominant narrative of the right, that our problem is not due to spending on things like the pensions of firefighters, but to the fact that those who can afford to buy influence are rewriting the rules so they can cut themselves progressively larger slices of the American pie while paying less of their fair share for it.

But there was no story — and there has been none since.

When Dr. King spoke of the great arc bending toward justice, he did not mean that we should wait for it to bend. He exhorted others to put their full weight behind it, and he gave his life speaking with a voice that cut through the blistering force of water cannons and the gnashing teeth of police dogs. He preached the gospel of nonviolence, but he knew that whether a bully hid behind a club or a poll tax, the only effective response was to face the bully down, and to make the bully show his true and repugnant face in public.

IN contrast, when faced with the greatest economic crisis, the greatest levels of economic inequality, and the greatest levels of corporate influence on politics since the Depression, Barack Obama stared into the eyes of history and chose to avert his gaze. Instead of indicting the people whose recklessness wrecked the economy, he put them in charge of it. He never explained that decision to the public — a failure in storytelling as extraordinary as the failure in judgment behind it. Had the president chosen to bend the arc of history, he would have told the public the story of the destruction wrought by the dismantling of the New Deal regulations that had protected them for more than half a century. He would have offered them a counternarrative of how to fix the problem other than the politics of appeasement, one that emphasized creating economic demand and consumer confidence by putting consumers back to work. He would have had to stare down those who had wrecked the economy, and he would have had to tolerate their hatred if not welcome it. But the arc of his temperament just didn’t bend that far.

To the average American, who was still staring into the abyss, the half-stimulus did nothing but prove that Ronald Reagan was right, that government is the problem. In fact, the average American had no idea what Democrats were trying to accomplish by deficit spending because no one bothered to explain it to them with the repetition and evocative imagery that our brains require to make an idea, particularly a paradoxical one, “stick.” Nor did anyone explain what health care reform was supposed to accomplish (other than the unbelievable and even more uninspiring claim that it would “bend the cost curve”), or why “credit card reform” had led to an increase in the interest rates they were already struggling to pay. Nor did anyone explain why saving the banks was such a priority, when saving the homes the banks were foreclosing didn’t seem to be. All Americans knew, and all they know today, is that they’re still unemployed, they’re still worried about how they’re going to pay their bills at the end of the month and their kids still can’t get a job. And now the Republicans are chipping away at unemployment insurance, and the president is making his usual impotent verbal exhortations after bargaining it away.

What makes the “deficit debate” we just experienced seem so surreal is how divorced the conversation in Washington has been from conversations around the kitchen table everywhere else in America. Although I am a scientist by training, over the last several years, as a messaging consultant to nonprofit groups and Democratic leaders, I have studied the way voters think and feel, talking to them in plain language. At this point, I have interacted in person or virtually with more than 50,000 Americans on a range of issues, from taxes and deficits to abortion and immigration.

The average voter is far more worried about jobs than about the deficit, which few were talking about while Bush and the Republican Congress were running it up. The conventional wisdom is that Americans hate government, and if you ask the question in the abstract, people will certainly give you an earful about what government does wrong. But if you give them the choice between cutting the deficit and putting Americans back to work, it isn’t even close. But it’s not just jobs. Americans don’t share the priorities of either party on taxes, budgets or any of the things Congress and the president have just agreed to slash — or failed to slash, like subsidies to oil companies. When it comes to tax cuts for the wealthy, Americans are united across the political spectrum, supporting a message that says, “In times like these, millionaires ought to be giving to charity, not getting it.”

Like most Americans, at this point, I have no idea what Barack Obama — and by extension the party he leads — believes on virtually any issue. The president tells us he prefers a “balanced” approach to deficit reduction, one that weds “revenue enhancements” (a weak way of describing popular taxes on the rich and big corporations that are evading them) with “entitlement cuts” (an equally poor choice of words that implies that people who’ve worked their whole lives are looking for handouts). But the law he just signed includes only the cuts. This pattern of presenting inconsistent positions with no apparent recognition of their incoherence is another hallmark of this president’s storytelling. He announces in a speech on energy and climate change that we need to expand offshore oil drilling and coal production — two methods of obtaining fuels that contribute to the extreme weather Americans are now seeing. He supports a health care law that will use Medicaid to insure about 15 million more Americans and then endorses a budget plan that, through cuts to state budgets, will most likely decimate Medicaid and other essential programs for children, senior citizens and people who are vulnerable by virtue of disabilities or an economy that is getting weaker by the day. He gives a major speech on immigration reform after deporting more than 700,000 immigrants in two years, a pace faster than nearly any other period in American history.

THE real conundrum is why the president seems so compelled to take both sides of every issue, encouraging voters to project whatever they want on him, and hoping they won’t realize which hand is holding the rabbit. That a large section of the country views him as a socialist while many in his own party are concluding that he does not share their values speaks volumes — but not the volumes his advisers are selling: that if you make both the right and left mad, you must be doing something right.

A somewhat less charitable explanation is that we are a nation that is being held hostage not just by an extremist Republican Party but also by a president who either does not know what he believes or is willing to take whatever position he thinks will lead to his re-election. Perhaps those of us who were so enthralled with the magnificent story he told in “Dreams From My Father” appended a chapter at the end that wasn’t there — the chapter in which he resolves his identity and comes to know who he is and what he believes in.

Or perhaps, like so many politicians who come to Washington, he has already been consciously or unconsciously corrupted by a system that tests the souls even of people of tremendous integrity, by forcing them to dial for dollars — in the case of the modern presidency, for hundreds of millions of dollars. When he wants to be, the president is a brilliant and moving speaker, but his stories virtually always lack one element: the villain who caused the problem, who is always left out, described in impersonal terms, or described in passive voice, as if the cause of others’ misery has no agency and hence no culpability. Whether that reflects his aversion to conflict, an aversion to conflict with potential campaign donors that today cripples both parties’ ability to govern and threatens our democracy, or both, is unclear.

A final explanation is that he ran for president on two contradictory platforms: as a reformer who would clean up the system, and as a unity candidate who would transcend the lines of red and blue. He has pursued the one with which he is most comfortable given the constraints of his character, consistently choosing the message of bipartisanship over the message of confrontation.

But the arc of history does not bend toward justice through capitulation cast as compromise. It does not bend when 400 people control more of the wealth than 150 million of their fellow Americans. It does not bend when the average middle-class family has seen its income stagnate over the last 30 years while the richest 1 percent has seen its income rise astronomically. It does not bend when we cut the fixed incomes of our parents and grandparents so hedge fund managers can keep their 15 percent tax rates. It does not bend when only one side in negotiations between workers and their bosses is allowed representation. And it does not bend when, as political scientists have shown, it is not public opinion but the opinions of the wealthy that predict the votes of the Senate. The arc of history can bend only so far before it breaks.

Rebecca Sive's take on the editorial:

Huff Post: Drew Westen Makes His Case. But There's More to It.

Spoiler :
Drew Westen's brilliant piece in Sunday's New York Times, about character traits of President Obama, and how they may explain his disappointing actions, took me back to some notes I made, earlier this year.

My notes recorded the notion that Barack Obama's seeming shortcomings as a President may be a consequence of an aspect of the President's, (and the First Lady's), personalities that Professor Westen didn't mention Sunday.

Actually, for those of us who've known the President and the First Lady since they returned to Chicago from Harvard Square, that aspect of their personalities has been plain as day.

As I watched the Obama's rise to power, I kept hoping for some ongoing public commitment to social justice and equality from two whose childhoods were spent in modest circumstances, scarred by the consequences of race discrimination, yet who had so much to offer the world. It rarely showed-up.

Instead, the President chose the safety of a cubbyhole at the University of Chicago Law School and the anonymity of a State Senator who never said anything that really challenged "the power elite," (keep reading), and the First Lady chose the security of Richard Daley's City Hall and the University of Chicago, albeit interrupted by an interlude at Public Allies.

As I thought about this, after reading Professor Westen's piece, I remembered a speech by another President. In his farewell address, President Eisenhower said:

In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

By contrast, Professor Westen points out that FDR had the courage to do the right thing when faced with the same problems President Obama faces today:

In a 1936 speech at Madison Square Garden, he (FDR) thundered, 'Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me...and I welcome their hatred.'

Time to forget the hugs, and do what FDR did: Ignore "the power elite" and fight for those "ordinary Americans" leaving the White House, with nothing but hugs.

A few years ago, when I used to see (only) an occasional homeless person on Michigan Avenue, I asked some friends how many homeless people they would tolerate on this street in the heart of Chicago's "Gold Coast," before they would try to change the situation. No-one could or would say.

Fast forward to today's Michigan Avenue: Every day, in every block, one sees several homeless people, often mothers with their children: Ordinary Americans down on their luck ,needing an American revolution, not a hug.

Contrast that with Norman Podhoretz:

The Wall Street Journal: What Happened to Obama? Absolutely Nothing.

He is still the same anti-American leftist he was before becoming our president.

Spoiler :
It's open season on President Obama. Which is to say that the usual suspects on the right (among whom I include myself) are increasingly being joined in attacking him by erstwhile worshipers on the left. Even before the S&P downgrade, there were reports of Democrats lamenting that Hillary Clinton had lost to him in 2008. Some were comparing him not, as most of them originally had, to Lincoln and Roosevelt but to the hapless Jimmy Carter. There was even talk of finding a candidate to stage a primary run against him. But since the downgrade, more and more liberal pundits have been deserting what they clearly fear is a sinking ship.

Here, for example, from the Washington Post, is Richard Cohen: "He is the very personification of cognitive dissonance—the gap between what we (especially liberals) expected of the first serious African American presidential candidate and the man he in fact is." More amazingly yet Mr. Cohen goes on to say of Mr. Obama, who not long ago was almost universally hailed as the greatest orator since Pericles, that he lacks even "the rhetorical qualities of the old-time black politicians." And to compound the amazement, Mr. Cohen tells us that he cannot even "recall a soaring passage from a speech."

Overseas it is the same refrain. Everywhere in the world, we read in Germany's Der Spiegel, not only are the hopes ignited by Mr. Obama being dashed, but his "weakness is a problem for the entire global economy."

In short, the spell that Mr. Obama once cast—a spell so powerful that instead of ridiculing him when he boasted that he would cause "the oceans to stop rising and the planet to heal," all of liberaldom fell into a delirious swoon—has now been broken by its traumatic realization that he is neither the "god" Newsweek in all seriousness declared him to be nor even a messianic deliverer.

Hence the question on every lip is—as the title of a much quoted article in the New York Times by Drew Westen of Emory University puts it— "What Happened to Obama?" Attacking from the left, Mr. Westin charges that President Obama has been conciliatory when he should have been aggressively pounding away at all the evildoers on the right.

Of course, unlike Mr. Westen, we villainous conservatives do not see Mr. Obama as conciliatory or as "a president who either does not know what he believes or is willing to take whatever position he thinks will lead to his re-election." On the contrary, we see him as a president who knows all too well what he believes. Furthermore, what Mr. Westen regards as an opportunistic appeal to the center we interpret as a tactic calculated to obfuscate his unshakable strategic objective, which is to turn this country into a European-style social democracy while diminishing the leading role it has played in the world since the end of World War II. The Democrats have persistently denied that these are Mr. Obama's goals, but they have only been able to do so by ignoring or dismissing what Mr. Obama himself, in a rare moment of candor, promised at the tail end of his run for the presidency: "We are five days away from fundamentally transforming the United States of America."

This statement, coming on top of his association with radicals like Bill Ayers, Jeremiah Wright and Rashid Khalidi, definitively revealed to all who were not wilfully blinding themselves that Mr. Obama was a genuine product of the political culture that had its birth among a marginal group of leftists in the early 1960s and that by the end of the decade had spread metastatically to the universities, the mainstream media, the mainline churches, and the entertainment industry. Like their communist ancestors of the 1930s, the leftist radicals of the '60s were convinced that the United States was so rotten that only a revolution could save it.

But whereas the communists had in their delusional vision of the Soviet Union a model of the kind of society that would replace the one they were bent on destroying, the new leftists only knew what they were against: America, or Amerika as they spelled it to suggest its kinship to Nazi Germany. Thanks, however, to the unmasking of the Soviet Union as a totalitarian nightmare, they did not know what they were for. Yet once they had pulled off the incredible feat of taking over the Democratic Party behind the presidential candidacy of George McGovern in 1972, they dropped the vain hope of a revolution, and in the social-democratic system most fully developed in Sweden they found an alternative to American capitalism that had a realistic possibility of being achieved through gradual political reform.

To be sure, no white candidate who had close associations with an outspoken hater of America like Jeremiah Wright and an unrepentant terrorist like Bill Ayers would have lasted a single day. But because Mr. Obama was black, and therefore entitled in the eyes of liberaldom to have hung out with protesters against various American injustices, even if they were a bit extreme, he was given a pass. And in any case, what did such ancient history matter when he was also articulate and elegant and (as he himself had said) "non-threatening," all of which gave him a fighting chance to become the first black president and thereby to lay the curse of racism to rest?

But I emphatically agree with Messrs. Limbaugh and Sowell about this president's attitude toward America as it exists and as the Founding Fathers intended it. That is why my own answer to the question, "What Happened to Obama?" is that nothing happened to him. He is still the same anti-American leftist he was before becoming our president, and it is this rather than inexperience or incompetence or weakness or stupidity that accounts for the richly deserved failure both at home and abroad of the policies stemming from that reprehensible cast of mind.

Has Obama failed in not providing a proper narrative why the Democrats won an overwhelming victory at the 2008 elections to only squander it away, as America and the world became more and more disenchanted with his leadership?

Or was he yet another vile anti-American socialist in a long succession of same, who has failed because socialism can never succeed? That he is actually responsible for this worldwide recession which existed long before he took office?

Or was it just partisan politics as usual? That people expected far too much from Obama, while the Republicans were again far too effective in Swift-boating him and everything he tried to accomplish?

Or was it something else?
 
This reminds me of something from the Onion that I can't find at the moment, the headline was something like "Obama imposter arrested". It mentioned that the real obama was tied up somewhere in secret after his inauguration while this imposter pretended to be the charismatic and hopeful president or whatever.
 
To be honest? I just think he's not capable enough in the position. He seems frazzled -- even befuddled -- by all the recent problems, and he can't tell a story simply because he can't make himself as the hero in it.

I was at the Inauguration as well, and he could have used all his momentum he possessed after the election; unfortunately, like said, he squandered it away.
 
He failed not because of which way he swings, but because he literally sat there and did nothing for 2.35 years.

The only reason I like him to any extent is because he supposedly planned and killed Osama all by his lonesome. BEAST
 
I think Obama is just a right-wing Trojan horse. With Dubya's catastrophic approval ratings at the end of his term, the right wing knew that a liberal backlash was on its way. So then Obama was presented to us as a liberal champion. "Change you can believe in." Once in office, Obama mostly continued Dubya's policies and disappointed the mayority of people who voted for him.
 
The Democrats do have a lack of a narrative. Not just Obama, but all of them. They do not have a socioeconomic philosophy, an economic philosophy, or really any ideology at all.

The Democrat's move to the "center" on economic issues was one of the worst things that ever happened to the US politics and economy. Because it allowed the "center" to move ever further rightward. And now we have a default national economic policy that is far too far right wing to support a prosperous and stable national economy. Obama has bought into too much of the radical right's world view. Perhaps he just never really developed one of his own, and so accepts the common narrative.

America needs a new FDR, or suffer decline and failure until we get one.
 
Well looking back at (what impression i formed from here) the 2008 election in the USA it looks like a different world all-together. Now things are miserable in most of the west, and it seems it will get worse, the economic crisis is deepening. At the time i think the american public were busy with issues which now mean less to them, such as Bush's idiotic manners and possible low IQ. Obama was supposed to be intelligent and able, but in reality he seems quite unable to lead the USA.
 
This reminds me of something from the Onion that I can't find at the moment, the headline was something like "Obama imposter arrested". It mentioned that the real obama was tied up somewhere in secret after his inauguration while this imposter pretended to be the charismatic and hopeful president or whatever.

You mean this clip?


Link to video.
 
He failed not because of which way he swings, but because he literally sat there and did nothing for 2.35 years.

The only reason I like him to any extent is because he supposedly planned and killed Osama all by his lonesome. BEAST

With a small bit of help from Seal Team Six.
 
All the momentum he once had has been wiped away by Iraq, Afghanistan, Obamacare, the ailing economy and the debt ceiling. He had a lot on his plate and couldn't produce enough results, so the conservatives saw an opening and took it.
 
He was hit by the reality, as I thought he would.

It's very easy to make promises while you're campaigning, it's an entirely different matter to deliver on them once you enter the office. HOWEVER, I think he was also critically undermined by the insane, hateful campaign the Republicans have launch against him. In such a political environment, even a better President would probably come out defeated.

Obama was supposed to be intelligent and able, but in reality he seems quite unable to lead the USA.

The way its society seems to be evolving, I doubt anybody can lead it. Now, if they elect some nutjob this time - someone like Bachmann, they'll be totally ruined, and they'll do the best to take the rest of us down with them.
 
I'm surprised how high expectations there seems to have been on Obama. Did you believe that he single-handedly could turn the disaster around? He has been forced to compromise a lot and politicians in the US still seem too proud to sacrifice any political points for a greater good.

I think you will crash and burn no matter who you vote for. At least Obama gave it an honest shot.
 
I do not like this Uncle Sam, I do not like his health care scam. I do not like these dirty crooks, or how they lie and cook the books. I do not like when Congress steals, I do not like their secret deals. I do not like ex-speaker Nan, I do not like this 'YES WE CAN'. I do not like this spending spree, I'm smart, I know that nothing's free. I do not like their smug replies, when I complain about their lies. I do not like this kind of hope. I do not like it. nope, nope, nope
 
Brilliant. You should change your avatar.

cat-in-the-hat2.jpg


I agree with those who think too much was expected from him. The president is largely a figurehead position, despite being blamed for anything that goes wrong and being credited for events that are almost completely out of his control. And he has been very effectively sabotaged by the Republicans.

But I also think that he has failed to be the inspirational leader who kept driving the proper narrative, which I think we were all expecting him to be. That is, except for those who think he is an anti-American socialist. He has tried to be a unifying force when he should have held those responsible for egregious misdeeds to be held accountable for their acts, and the resultant disgrace which they brought to our reputation. I think most of the world was quite disappointed he did not do so.
 
The president is largely a figurehead, despite being blamed for anything that goes wrong and being credited for events that are almost completely out of his control..
So then all that blame that gets piled on Bush for everything during his term is actually the fault of Congress?
 
But I also agree that he has failed to be the inspirational leader who kept driving a narrative, which I think we were all expecting him to be.

I agree with this - even here in Europe he somehow disappeared from TV screens, and when he appears, it's usually not in a very good light.

As Reagan proved, you can be a popular leader even if your presidency sucks. Obama failed to capitalize on his post-election popularity and now he looks weak and tired. If he manages to win a second term, it will be just because the Republican opponent is too obviously insane.
 
I do not like this Uncle Sam, I do not like his health care scam. I do not like these dirty crooks, or how they lie and cook the books. I do not like when Congress steals, I do not like their secret deals. I do not like ex-speaker Nan, I do not like this 'YES WE CAN'. I do not like this spending spree, I'm smart, I know that nothing's free. I do not like their smug replies, when I complain about their lies. I do not like this kind of hope. I do not like it. nope, nope, nope

Well said.
 
So then all that blame that gets piled on Bush for everything during his term is actually the fault of Congress?
Substitute the word "Republicans" for "Congress", then yes. He was really nothing but a spineless lackey of those who were controlling his every move.
 
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