Obama-Bashing

Rob Natelson has lined up with others to take a shot at Obama supporters who are investing messianic qualities in the new president. There’s something to be said for that. Cult of leadership is not a new phenomenon. Many of us noticed that Americans also invested superhuman qualities in George W. Bush after 9/11. That was fear speaking, however. The new followers are preaching hope. They are probably just as naive.

Nonetheless, Natelson’s criticisms of Obama are off the mark.

Obama had one of the thinnest resumes of any major Presidential candidate ever, but supporters have convinced themselves that he would not only govern brilliantly, but ”transform America.”

I think Obama brings impressive credentials to the table. For one, his educational achievements are stellar – Juris Doctor (J.D.) magna cum laude from Harvard. People are pooh-poohing that now, but those Latin words on parchment separate him from 99.99% of us. Few could have achieved what he did while in school. He then went on to community organizing, staying in touch with common folk, as opposed to most Harvard grads who head for Washington or Wall Street. In addition, he taught constitutional law, served in the state legislature, and the United States Senate. That’s a good start for a relatively young man. He’s a far cry from what we’ve had in office – a bright man with huge potential – one who has shown that he can organize, lead, and inspire. I find his resumé to be quite impressive.

People who claim to be against hate-mongers have blinded themselves to a record of associations that would have induced them to indignantly repudiate anyone else.

This is beneath Mr. Natelson. Over the years Obama has met thousands of people, had conservations with them, agreed and disagreed as a man of independent thought would do. I’m glad he’s been exposed to the thoughts of people on the left, including the thoughtful bomber Bill Ayers. Most people don’t take the time. To say that he’s been sullied by association is McCarthyism. That’s a word we bandy about, but it’s a tried and true technique for smearing people. It’s propaganda. I wonder if we went through Mr. Natelson’s background, dredged up every association, if we could find one or two that could be thrown in his face. Probably – if not, I’d say he’d led a sheltered existence.

We’ve had eight years now of a man who insulates himself from every outlook but his own. Now let’s see where we can go with a man who knows that there are more than two sides to every issue.

Supporters have convinced themselves that a politician with a record of cooperating with the Chicago machine is going to clean up Washington.

A man comes home from work, opens the closet to hang his jacket and finds a naked man standing there. “What are you doing here?” he asks. The man says “Everybody has to be somewhere”.

Merely coming from Chicago, living and working there and having success, should have no more bearing on his performance in office than if he came from Wasilla. Mr. Natelson’s point is no point at all. He’s reaching.

Now the gush of ga-ga really floweth over with breathless comments about how Obama’s IQ is the highest of anyone to occupy the White House, etc. etc.

I don’t know what Obama’s IQ is – but I know this: I am tired of being governed by ordinary people with ordinary smarts. People like Bush had to rely on the brains around him for policy, and he didn’t even have the good sense to being in people who disagreed with him. Smart people are not the answer – smart people with humility can lead effectively however. So stand back, Mr. Natelson, and let us do an experiment here. We’ve done it the other way. Now we’re going to try a smart guy at the helm.

Mr. Natelson offers some words of support at the end of his post. He’s not so much down on Obama as his followers. He thinks they are cultish, and that Obama has encouraged this behavior. I’ve seen some of that too. It’ll wear off. I’m already put off by all of the Clinton people and Rahm Emmanuel – the fact that he felt the need to appoint a “progressive liaison” for his transition team, meaning progressives need not apply for other positions. My antennae are already up – I’m already suspecting a Clinton-like triangulator. But I’ll give him a few more days.

I see Obama as a pragmatic intellectual. The closest I can come in comparing him to other presidents is Woodrow Wilson. I hope he does better.

Interview with a Terrorist

Salon has run an interview with Bill Ayers, the poster child of the McCain/Palin campaign – read it here. It was very much worth my time.

Ayers notes that he has become the symbol of the anti-war movement of the 1960’s, and Jeremiah Wright has become the civil rights movement. The right has reduced everything down to manageable size – something they are good at.

Here’s a passage on his violent activities:

I imagine two groups of Americans. One slightly off the tracks and despairing of how to end this war and penetrating the Pentagon and putting a small charge in a bathroom that disables an Air Force computer. An act of extreme vandalism, but hard to call, in my view, terrorism.

Meanwhile, another group of Americans — also despairing, also off the tracks — walks into a Vietnamese village and kills everyone there. Children, women, old men. They kill every living thing, even livestock, and burn the place to the ground.

And the question is, What is terrorism? And what is violence?

Indeed it was hard during the campaign to listen to McCain, knowing of the violence he had inflicted on Vietnamese people, and Palin, with her head full of silly putty, and not think that the American public had internalized one of the most violent and criminal chapters in our history, Vietnam, and trivialized it.

This Too Shall Pass

The funny thing about Sarah Palin is that she thinks she is helping herself by doing all of these interviews. The more she talks, the more we know about her, the less her appeal. She will never overcome those initial negative impressions of her – she will only reinforce them. She will always have a small cadre of supporters – those on the religious right who do not value clarity of thought or academic achievement. But the simple truth is that she is not qualified for a high leadership position – she could spend her next four years at Harvard Law, and she still wouldn’t muster up. She doesn’t have the chops. You can put lipstick on a pig …

Another Subsidy For Business On the Way?

More so than Jay, I am troubled by Democratic Party proposals to fix our health care system that are built around the private insurance model. It is contradictory – it says that we fix the problem by spreading the problem around. The private insurance model is the reason why we have 47 million uninsured, millions more underinsured, and seniors, the poor, and children dumped onto government as the insurer of last resort.

Private insurance is a profit-driven model, and as such, has to confine itself to the lowest risk clients they can find. That’s the nature of the beast – it cannot be changed. Health insurance salespeople sift through the rubble looking for profitable clients, screening out the others. My wife and I, with our pre-existing conditions, have been told by agents not even to bother applying, and are sent packing instead to the ultra-expensive Montana health care pool for unprofitable health care clients. (It exists by government mandate – that alone is informative.)

So I am intrigued by Obama’s statements during the campaign, and by the Baucus proposal, that would make it illegal to reject people for insurance based on pre-existing conditions. I’m encouraged by this because it would undermine the private insurance model, and perhaps act as a driving force towards government-sponsored health care. No private insurer can survive if it has to provide insurance to all comers. Their business model is built around rejection of high risks.

Of course, the private insurance people are probalby miles ahead of me here. They might be willing to take on higher risk clients if we help them out – subsidy. That might well be our future – government-subsidized private insurance. That is the most expensive model we could possibly design, complete with all of the waste and extravagance of subsidy coupled with the greed and inefficiency and golden parachutes of the private insurers. It is no solution – it has all of the earmarks of a boondoggle.

The cleanest way to health care is to eliminate insurance pools, and simply provide care to everyone, high and low risk alike. Insurers can find other ways to make a living – an honest living. In other industrialized countries, it works just fine. People in Canada, Great Britain, France and Germany are mostly happy with their systems, far more satisfied than we are with ours. Maybe I’m being overly pessimistic here, but I see big brother private insurer in my future, want him or not. He’s bought his way in, and it will take major surgery to remove him.

Obama is a nice change, but he does not represent major change. That much is readily apparent as we watch him assemble his team with retreads, excluding progressives.

Palin Being Jettisoned

The rumors being floated now that Sarah Palin didn’t know the participants in NAFTA, that she didn’t know that Africa was a continent, that she didn’t know that South Africa was a country – it all sounds like utter nonsense, but it is interesting. She’s not terribly bright, but she’s surely not that dumb.

The rumors sound like the results of a meeting in a bar over many beers – people who were angry at Palin decided to do her in. It’s interesting to watch – the Republicans seem to be cleaning their machinery post-McCain. Palin is not the future of the party. That’s been decided.

The problem they have is the extreme loyalty of the Christian base to Palin. Without them, the Republicans are a permanent minority centered in the south.

It’ll be interesting to watch – party leadership is not stupid. In fact, since 1980 or so, they have brilliantly managed their various factions. This could be self-destruction, or it could be just the messy early stages of a much-needed house cleaning.