Obama Trapped by Tidal Forces of History and Doesn't Know How to Swim

Posted By Rick Moran On August 10, 2011 @ 12:02 am In
Culture,economy,History,Politics,US News | 11 Comments
<http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/obama-trapped-by-tidal-forces-of-history-and-d
oesnt-know-how-to-swim/?print=1#comments_controls> 

I am not an historian. But I know enough about history to realize that there
is more to the study of the past than memorizing names, dates, and places.
There are gigantic forces that are pushing history forward and are only
revealed in hindsight, or when cataclysms blow away the fog and allow a
brief glimpse of where we are going. Barack Obama is caught up in these
forces - well and truly trapped by them - and appears unable to respond to
them, much less identify the fact that he is a prisoner of events, many of
which are beyond his control, but others on which he might make an impact if
he had the first hint of what it took to be a leader during a crisis.

Social historians like Page Smith believe it is the march of ordinary people
that drives history forward. Over time, the hopes, dreams, and aspirations
of billions of people work on the decisions of national and international
leaders, shaping them in ways that are unfathomable to us in the present but
can be seen when history is receding in the rear view mirror.

It's a seductive argument, but leave me my belief that the "Great Man"
theory of history plays a role too. I have learned that the narrative
histories I so enjoyed in my youth are perhaps not the best way to look at
how history unfolds. Too many events occur virtually simultaneously for
narrative history to be much of anything but a good read, because by
definition, a narrative artificially provides order to disorder.

The towering personalities of those narratives were largely trapped by
forces of history that, try as they might, they couldn't bend to their will
in order to alter destiny. Lincoln put it best when he said, "I claim not to
have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me."

Lincoln could only ride the tsunami, not direct it. The ageless desire for
freedom, the growing agitation for equality, the westward expansion of
peoples and ideas, the rising shame over the sin of slavery, the greed of
industrialists, the incomprehensible hypocrisy of a nation that boasted of
its freedoms while keeping millions in chains, the emergence of free labor
and a nascent labor movement - this and more was in the wave that Lincoln
was trying to ride. He was successful only insofar as he was able to
identify those things he could control, and those he could not. It was his
particular genius, and you certainly can't expect every president to be
gifted with such insight.

But in Barack Obama's case, events have gotten far the better of him. And
most tellingly, he seems unable to see anything that he can control,
settling for blaming his predecessor and promising to do better.

In these times, with the challenges he is facing, that simply isn't good
enough.

Obama is riding the wave without realizing he's even on the water. And to
make matters worse, he apparently can't swim. The analogy of a "deer in
headlights" seems harsh but that is a judgment of some of the Washington
press corps.

Dana Milbank
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-most-powerful-man-on-earth/2011/
08/08/gIQA49w72I_story.html>  [1]:

Yet Obama plods along, raising gobs of cash for his reelection bid - he was
scheduled to speak at two DNC fundraisers Monday night - and varying little
the words he reads from the teleprompter. He seemed detached even from those
words Monday as he pivoted his head from side to side, proclaiming that "our
problems is not confidence in our credit" and turning his bipartisan fiscal
commission into a "biparticle."

He reminded all that the situation isn't his fault (the need for deficit
reduction "was true the day I took office"), he blamed the other side ("we
knew .?.?. a debate where the threat of default was used as a bargaining
chip could do enormous damage to our economy") and he revisited the same
proposals he had previously offered to little effect: extending unemployment
benefits and the payroll tax cut, and spending more on infrastructure
projects.

This, he said, is "something we can do as soon as Congress gets back," along
with further deficit reduction. "I intend to present my own recommendations
over the coming weeks," he said.

Over the coming weeks? As soon as Congress gets back?

Milbank is complaining about there being no sense of urgency in Obama's
remarks. The world is on the edge of a full-blown panic and the president
seems detached, uninvolved, perhaps even unaware of the perception that
there is a lack of leadership coming from Washington.

His allies and apologists claim that this demonstrates the president's
"coolness." Nice try, but that just doesn't cut it. Coolness is telling your
wife when you're on a stretcher with a bullet an inch from your heart that
you hope all the doctors are Republicans. Obama's "coolness" appears to be
an aloofness - perhaps even an arrogance - that manifests itself in the
curious way in which he views "leadership." Giving inspiring speeches is
very nice (although it's been a while since we got one of those), and
feeling people's pain is very politically correct these days.

But political leadership is more than delivering pretty words and
demonstrating political empathy. It is projecting the ability - whether it
is present or not - to identify a problem and make the rest of us partners
in addressing it. Leadership engages those being led, makes them part of the
enterprise, inspires confidence that collective action will make a
difference. In short, leadership is a two-way street. You can't lead if no
one is willing to follow.

When the president speaks, it is usually to lecture, or to have his rhetoric
take flight, mouthing meaningless platitudes that fail to inspire but
allowing us to feel good about ourselves. "No matter what some agency may
say, we've always been and always will be a AAA country," sniffed the
president during his speech Monday. Does that inspire you? It seems
despairingly banal to me.

There is much that is beyond the ability of the president to do anything
about. The European debt crisis is not his fault, and he can't get in a time
machine and go back to fix George Bush's mistakes, nor the errors of his
predecessors. We are paying for a refusal by every president for the past 30
years to cut spending as much as we are now paying for Obama's myopia on the
subject.

But Bush is no longer the president of the United States. Obama supposedly
is. Proclaiming that he is failing to do anything about our fiscal crisis
because it's not his fault is more than just politically passing the buck.
It is demonstrating to any and all that the man in charge not only can't
control events, but that he has no desire to do so; that the wave he is
riding - a wave built on 50 years of belief both here and in Europe that
gargantuan schemes to redistribute wealth can go on indefinitely - will
crash against the rocks with the president oblivious to the reasons why.

Does this make Obama stupid?
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904140604576495932704234052.h
tml> [2]

He makes predictions that prove false. He makes promises he cannot honor. He
raises expectations he cannot meet. He reneges on commitments made in
private. He surrenders positions staked in public. He is absent from issues
in which he has a duty to be involved. He is overbearing when he ought to be
absent.

[...]

But it takes actual smarts to understand that glibness and self-belief are
not sufficient proof of genuine intelligence. Stupid is as stupid does, said
the great philosopher Forrest Gump. The presidency of Barack Obama is a case
study in stupid does.

Neither does it reveal someone with leadership skills. The nation and the
world cry out for an American president who can demonstrate that whatever is
placed within his grasp can be addressed if we all face the challenges
together.

Instead, Obama is telling us we have to make our way forward all by
ourselves while he's right there - leading from behind.

  _____  

Article printed from Pajamas Media: http://pajamasmedia.com

URL to article:
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/obama-trapped-by-tidal-forces-of-history-and-do
esnt-know-how-to-swim/

URLs in this post: 

[1] Dana Milbank:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-most-powerful-man-on-earth/2011/0
8/08/gIQA49w72I_story.html

[2] Obama stupid? :
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904140604576495932704234052.ht
ml

 



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