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Scottbrown2012
06-08-2010, 12:31 PM
I posted this yesterday in franks d-day thread but it seems to have been buried by the other posts of insults and arguing. I think it is important enough to repost in its own thread.

By: Glenn W. Smith Sunday June 6, 2010 9:30 am


George W. Bush lost the popular vote in 2000 and was appointed president by the conservative U.S. Supreme Court. A sanctimonious pundit class tells us it is crabby, unpatriotic and uncivil to dwell upon that bit of history. But questions of legitimacy (“does he really belong here?”) have dogged Barack Obama since he won the Iowa caucuses. Where have the “get over it” arguments gone? Long time passing.

There is an ugly pattern in coverage and conversation about Obama. The media’s immediate recourse to dubious language like “the Gulf oil spill is Obama’s Katrina” is just the most recent example.

Juxtaposed against the overt “get over it” arguments about Bush’s appointment, this presents us with some unpleasant suspicions about the national character. About Bush the media asked, “When will he succeed?” About Obama they ask, “When will he fail?” Obama’s the show that doesn’t belong on Broadway, and the critics clamor: when will the curtain come down?

Obama’s reflections at a San Francisco 2008 fundraiser about the source and symptoms of white, working class frustration would prove his undoing, we were told. Okay, then, surely the Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s “God damn America” preaching would take Obama out. A poor debate performance against Hilary Clinton? Disqualifying, said many.

Obama’s handling of the health care debate? The economy? Jobs? Too often the questions turned not on healthy, objective, rational critique, but on when this guy’s Broadway show would close. It’s not a quite a birther rant, but it’s of the same family.

Part of this is just the media’s attempted fulfillment of the clichéd American celebrity narrative: the star that rises from nowhere must crash and burn. I think unrestrained and unthinking Obama worship fed the “star” part of this storyline. I’m anti-authoritarian by nature, and I read too much history and covered politicians far too long to imagine superhero exploits from any of them, ever.

I’m for radical democracy because I believe in the wisdom of the public, not distant proclamations from an unapproachable elite or single political celebrity. In my view, the president is a hired hand. I don’t even like it that there is a song called “Hail to the Chief.”

When the depressive Maureen Dowd asks that Obama show some melodramatic anger, it says more about our addiction to melodrama and our celebrity obsessed culture than it does Obama.

There’s a big difference between critique or heartfelt, courageous advocacy – pressuring Obama on health care or financial reform, for instance – and leaping to conclusions about his character or fitness for office.

The latter, I’m afraid, is connected to his undeniably historic achievement as the first African-American president of the United States. This wasn’t supposed to happen so soon, we’re told. It sent America’s unquiet racists into fits. It has led the media intelligentsia to frequent, hysterical predictions of presidential doom.

And it’s not just the media or the right wing that fall into this questionable pattern. Many Democrats do, too. Once again, I’m not talking about legitimate criticism or advocacy. That’s necessary in a democracy. It’s healthy. Unconditional loyalty and hero worship are not. Neither is hyper-sensitivity based in old prejudices we pretend to have outgrown.

Democracy requires honest introspection from its citizens. We shouldn’t let our hopes for the post-racial era confuse our thinking about the national psyche, race, and the cultural impact of Obama’s presidency.

Why, we should ask ourselves, is America so willing so often to predict the end for Obama?

A couple of quick points. No one should misread these thoughts as a reduction of Obama criticism to issues of race. Our circumstance is, of course, more complex than that. But race matters, as Cornel West says. We can’t throw out a question involving race and the Obama presidency under the false premise that such a question reduces all questions about the Obama presidency to race. That’s a transparently phony dodge.

Also, this piece isn’t a review of Obama, a defense of Obama, or a critique of Obama. My only intention is to raise a question about a pattern in the Obama media story. I think that pattern is worth examining, because I think the examination will tell us something about ourselves.
http://firedoglake.com/2010/06/06/a-...s-obama-story/
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Trinnity
06-08-2010, 12:53 PM
Of course race matters. But issues matter more. I am so busy worrying about policy, I don't have time to think about race, except for one thing I saw on TV just today. A poll (don't remember which one) said 91% of Blacks support Obama. That's understandable. Blacks are proud and should be. BUT what about policy? Does pride override the quality of policy? Ethnically, yes.

And the media is the ultimate drama queen. It drives the race issue to the front burner every day. That in itself fuels racism.

Let's focus on policy. THAT'S what really matters. All policy comes down to 3 things at this point:

Jobs
Debt
Oil spill

Isn't that important enough to keep us all busy?

Focus
Focus
Focus

Scottbrown2012
06-08-2010, 12:57 PM
Of course race matters. But issues matter more. I am so busy worrying about policy, I don't have time to think about race, except for one thing I saw on tv just today. A poll (don't remember which one) said 91% of Blacks support Obama. That's understandible. Blacks are proud and should be. BUT what about policy. Does pride override the quality of policy? Ethnicly, yes.

And the media is the ultimate drama queen. It drives the race issue to the front burner every day. That in itself fuels racism.

Let's focus on policy. THAT'S what really matters. All policy comes down to 3 things at this point:

Jobs
Debt
Oil spill

Isn't that important enough to keep us all busy?

Focus
Focus
Focus
But did you read the WHOLE thing and get the point the author was trying to make?

The last two paragraphs say it all I believe

A couple of quick points. No one should misread these thoughts as a reduction of Obama criticism to issues of race. Our circumstance is, of course, more complex than that. But race matters, as Cornel West says. We can’t throw out a question involving race and the Obama presidency under the false premise that such a question reduces all questions about the Obama presidency to race. That’s a transparently phony dodge.

Also, this piece isn’t a review of Obama, a defense of Obama, or a critique of Obama. My only intention is to raise a question about a pattern in the Obama media story. I think that pattern is worth examining, because I think the examination will tell us something about ourselves.

Trinnity
06-08-2010, 01:03 PM
Yes, Scott, I read it all. What point in particular would you like to address?

I think the media is the ultimate purveyor of the "race card".
It's good for ratings in general.

GetAClue
06-08-2010, 04:28 PM
Until the media ends it love affair with Obama and gets back to honest journalism, they are as culpable in the demise of this country as Obama, Pelosi, Reid, etc.

I believe that there are a number of reasons why the media has a crush on Obama and race is one of them. It’s the ultimate storyline. They need to portray this country as being controlled by a bunch of inbred, racist’s intent upon keeping minorities depressed in an effort to maintain power and control of wealth. Obama is portrayed as a hero that has garnered enough grass roots support to rise above all of this and take control. The fact that he has no idea how to lead is just now dawning on these idol worshipers in the media.

The fact is Obama has been getting a pass from the media for a number of reasons the least of which is his race. And as long as they have a willing and gullible public buying the narrative, they will continue to espouse it.

Scottbrown2012
06-08-2010, 09:36 PM
wow..I am surprised number 1 that more havent bitten on this one, number two that no libs have responded, only conservatives...thought they would be the ones ignoring this and finally I like the ideas talked about so far BUT I think the real point has been missed..it is about race yes but i think he is trying to get us to look deeper at ourselves and how we act and how the media precipitates our emotions on both sides.

Trinnity
06-08-2010, 09:46 PM
The media is influential, but it rarely changes ones' core values.

Pat
06-08-2010, 09:48 PM
The media is influential, but it rarely changes ones' core values.
Some people don't have values.

doctordog
06-08-2010, 10:27 PM
Some people don't have values.

Now wait a minute, he has values similar to Al Capone.