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Oh Albert, Where Art Thou?
The Weekly Standard ^ | September 10, 2004 | Noemie Emery

Posted on 09/10/2004 1:35:51 PM PDT by RWR8189

The tragedy of Al Gore isn't that he lost the presidency in a fluke--but that he was never really suited for the job in the first place.

EVERY DAY, it becomes more and more obvious that a dreadful wrong has been done to Al Gore. No, not the outcome of the 2000 election, though that would have been gruesome for anyone. The election was a tie, each side had grounds to complain about one court or another, and each had reason to believe that some fluke had cost it an unknowable number of votes. In the end, the bad luck on both sides probably worked out to the same kind of tie that prevailed in everything else having to do with that election, but it was inevitable that the loser would be sentenced to a lifetime of gut-churning anguish. There is a story that after his 49 state wipeout in 1984 Walter Mondale asked George McGovern how long it took him to recover from his 49-state wipeout 12 years earlier; McGovern told him he would let him know when he did.

But the real wrong done Gore was less that he lost than that he had had such a dreadful time doing it, and may have had a bad time for much of his life. David Remnick at the New Yorker has developed an intriguing small sideline profiling politicians who could have been president but slipped up and lost everything, his previous takes being Gary Hart, who could have been president if not for the Monkey Business; and Mario Cuomo, who might have been president if he had run in 1992, but who, when Remnick got to him, was reduced to hosting an unlistened-to talk show.

Remnick's >latest riff, in this week's New Yorker, is about Gore, who might have been president if several Florida ballots had been printed differently, or he hadn't backed gun control (goodbye Tennessee and West Virginia), or Bill Clinton hadn't fooled around with an intern, or he hadn't screwed up the debates. Gore is now back in Tennessee (a state that rejected him), where he seems to be making a new career out of grievance, feeding off of contacts with people who assure him he won and was cheated, and venting his rage against Bush. But behind the story of a man who may have lost by a fluke is the story of a man who spent his whole life in the wrong occupation, and lost in large measure because he never fit into the one he was in. What comes through in this piece is what has come through in others--such as Nicholas Lemann's four years ago in the New Yorker, and Liza Mundy's two years ago in the Washington Post: Gore possesses a high degree of the kind of intelligence that is no use whatever in politics, and none of the talents that are, either. He seems born for the world of think tanks and schoolrooms, of dissertations and seminars, of endless digressions about this and that.

In one soliloquy, as Remnick tells us, Gore mentioned in sequence, "the brain-imaging center at New York University, The Alphabet Versus the Goddess by Leonard Sclain; Broca's Brain by Carl Sagan . . . the lack of research on the relation between the brain and television . . . Gutenberg and the rise of print . . . David Sarnoff; the agricultural origin of the term 'broadcast' . . . an article on 'flow' in Scientific American; the 'orienting reflex' in vertebrates; the poignancy and 'ultimate failure' of political demonstrations as a means of engaging the aforementioned public sphere."

This is not how presidents are given to spending their time. "One tries, and fails, to imagine the current president alluding to the author of Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action," Remnick says, snottily. But one tries and fails to imagine FDR or JFK doing this either, much less Colin Powell, and/or John McCain. As for the real things that engage real politicians--the dynamics of power among states and people, how to move people, how to frame and sustain a large message--Gore has no sense whatsoever. But his parents, who did, were determined he ought to be president, and raised him from infancy with this goal in mind. If his dynamic sister had been born a boy, she might have fulfilled their ambitions. It was his extremely bad luck she was not.

As the world knows now, a reluctant John Kennedy was dragooned by his father into running for Congress, was elected, and spent the next few years doing little, and lamenting his fate. But then something odd seemed to happen: he came to love politics, and discovered he had a great gift. "Fascination began to grip me," he said in 1959, when he was running for president. "I saw how ideally politics filled the Greek definition of happiness: 'A full use of your powers, along lines of excellence, in a life affording scope.'" It seems fair to say that no such "fascination" ever came to grip Albert Gore.

"Politics was a horrible career choice for him," an aide said to Remnick. "He finds dealing with other people draining. . . . He should have been a college professor or a scientist or an engineer." He began his political career by making a terrible speech and throwing up later, and things did not get better: he would be stiff and robotic in campaign appearances, and his public smiles "seemed a form of pain." He won easily when he ran as his father's son for his father's old House seat, won easily when he ran as his father's son for his father's old seat in the Senate, and won of course in l992 and l996 when he ran with Bill Clinton. But the one time he ran on his own, in his l988 run for president, his campaign was a catastrophe, in which he never failed to make the wrong choice. In 2000, he ran without his father or Clinton, and made all the same errors. His parents had raised a boy with no feel for politics to believe the presidency was something he owed them and that was owed to him by the universe, and the stage was set for a human catastrophe. A perfectly good policy wonk, who could have had a rapturously happy life in the depths of a think tank, was turned instead into a failed politician, who will bear a great wound to his death.

Noemie Emery is a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: albertgorejr; algore; gore; goron; unhinged; weeklystandard
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1 posted on 09/10/2004 1:35:53 PM PDT by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189

Along with Al, where has Tom Daschle been? Haven't seen nor heard from him since the Pink Tie-rade.


2 posted on 09/10/2004 1:37:37 PM PDT by SGCOS
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To: SGCOS

Daschle is starring in a tv commercial with Pres Bush. He thinks Bush's good poll numbers will rub off on him....LOL.


3 posted on 09/10/2004 1:47:42 PM PDT by tioga
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To: RWR8189

The problem with the "get another career" idea is that Gore does not work well with others.

At some point, a person has to take responsibility for the life decisions he has made and has to decide what to fix and what to live with. He can't because he is addicted to mysery.


4 posted on 09/10/2004 1:48:01 PM PDT by saveliberty (Liberal= in need of therapy, but would rather ruin lives of those less fortunate to feel good)
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To: SGCOS
algore has grown a beard and drives aimlessly around the country looking for people to listen to him give speeches, sometimes getting caught speeding........and even then the cops don't even recognize him.
5 posted on 09/10/2004 1:48:57 PM PDT by tioga
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To: RWR8189
"he was never really suited for the job"
...and every time he opens his mouth he confirms it.

BUSH
REAGAN
LINCOLN
JEFFERSON
WASHINGTON

McGovern
Mondale
Dukakis
Gore
Kerry

6 posted on 09/10/2004 1:51:35 PM PDT by Savage Beast (9/11 was never repeated--thanks to President Bush.)
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To: RWR8189

> The tragedy of Al Gore isn't that he lost the presidency
> in a fluke--but that he was never really suited for the
> job in the first place.

Al Gore and John Kerry share this trait.

Both thought that being POTUS was their Destiny.

Gore, because daddy raised him with that goal.
Kerry, because it was revealed to him that he was JFK-2.


7 posted on 09/10/2004 1:52:50 PM PDT by Boundless
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To: RWR8189

Some other might-have-beens: Spiro Agnew would have been President if he hadn't taken bribes as governor of Maryland. Hiram Johnson would have been President if he had accepted the VP slot on the Republican ticket in 1920.


8 posted on 09/10/2004 1:55:31 PM PDT by Verginius Rufus
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To: RWR8189

> Mario Cuomo, who might have been president if he had run in 1992

Unlike Clinton, Cuomo was unpopular in his own state in 1992. He was too liberal and had no chance of winning the election.


9 posted on 09/10/2004 2:04:28 PM PDT by Revenge of Sith
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To: Verginius Rufus

> Spiro Agnew would have been President

Also, the Democrats were reluctant to impeach Nixon until Agnew resigned and was replaced by Ford.


10 posted on 09/10/2004 2:05:53 PM PDT by Revenge of Sith
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To: RWR8189
He seems born for the world of think tanks and schoolrooms, of dissertations and seminars, of endless digressions about this and that.
I disagree. Yes, Gore can cite authors and string together references. Only he does so with no discipline or sense of direction; he does so associatively, almost randomnly. In other words, he seems to like to read and listen, but he has no idea how to apply or process what knowledge he consumes: he thinks-acts-writes-speaks like an undergraduate trying to impress a professor with how much he knows.
11 posted on 09/10/2004 2:06:47 PM PDT by Asclepius (protectionists would outsource our dignity and prosperity in return for illusory job security)
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To: RWR8189
She's right, Gore is scatterbrained, but is Jack Kennedy really the best counterexample? Surely, there's a happy medium between being completely distracted and completely obsessed by politics and personal advancement. One wouldn't want a leader who didn't want to be one and couldn't concentrate on the job, but knowing that the person in charge has "found his bliss" in political performances and maneuvering isn't necessarily a comfort.
12 posted on 09/10/2004 2:08:27 PM PDT by x
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To: Verginius Rufus
General Benjamin Butler was offered the VP slot for Abraham Lincoln's second term. He turned it down , joking that he'd accept only if Lincoln promised to die during that term-so he'd be president.

We all know what happened in April 1865...

(That would have been an odd-looking pair. Had BB accepted, he and Lincoln would have had a 13" difference in height between them. Lincoln was 6' 4", and Butler claimed to be 5' 3" , so if he was like most men , he was probably even shorter. Even in those less looks-conscious years, they would have looked a bit strange stumping together.)

BB never quite recovered from that one, either. He ran unsuccessfully for the presidency as a third party candidate IIRC, and I believe he did get elected as a senator, but I'm not 100% sure of that.

13 posted on 09/10/2004 2:08:40 PM PDT by kaylar
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To: RWR8189

Oh, nonsense. Gore would have been equally bad as an intellectual or a teacher. "Earth in the Balance" is a severe embarrassment. He is full of flaky ideas, but his thinking goes about 2" deep.


14 posted on 09/10/2004 2:33:54 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: kaylar

President "Spoons" Butler?


15 posted on 09/10/2004 3:47:52 PM PDT by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: Revenge of Sith

CUOMO was too liberal for NY?Then how in God's name did The Witch win in 2000?
Riverman


16 posted on 09/10/2004 5:24:09 PM PDT by Riverman94610
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To: RWR8189
"He finds dealing with other people draining. . . . He should have been a college professor or a scientist or an engineer."

Don't professors have to deal with people quite a lot? What Gore and Kerry both lack are a moral compass, leadership skills, and a vision for America.

17 posted on 09/10/2004 5:36:21 PM PDT by ride the whirlwind (Where I come from, deeds mean more than words. - Zell Miller)
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To: Cicero

The New Yorker article points out that Gore drives a 2004 Cadillac and Tipper drives (if you can believe it) a 1965 Mustang. In his book "Earth in the Balance" he decries the evil of the internal combustion engine. The guy is a joke.


18 posted on 09/10/2004 5:50:04 PM PDT by CobraJet
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To: Asclepius
I disagree. Yes, Gore can cite authors and string together references. Only he does so with no discipline or sense of direction; he does so associatively, almost randomnly. In other words, he seems to like to read and listen, but he has no idea how to apply or process what knowledge he consumes: he thinks-acts-writes-speaks like an undergraduate trying to impress a professor with how much he knows.

Actually, you are describing in perfect detail all of my humanities professors in college. They would just ramble on from one idea to another, and apparently we were supposed to see the grand connection between them, but to this day I suspect that it's just the way Ph.D.s love to convince themselves of how smart they are. And that's most of the reason why I so despised my humanities courses.

I think Gore would have been very happy as a college professor. He could ramble on all day about how brilliant he is, never having to make any sense, and he'd have hordes of liberal college kid groupies.

19 posted on 09/10/2004 7:17:26 PM PDT by AQGeiger (Have you hugged your soldier today?)
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To: AQGeiger
I think Gore would have been very happy as a college professor.

Only in the humanities, as you said. In the hard sciences, math, or engineering he'd be expected to produce objectively verifiable results.

20 posted on 09/10/2004 8:51:38 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (Am Yisrael Chai!)
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