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The odd choices in Barack Obama's career
American Thinker ^ | August 20, 2008 | J.R. Dunn

Posted on 08/20/2008 5:27:07 AM PDT by vietvet67

It's time to throw my hat in the ring as regards predicting the election results. So here it is: Barack Obama will be defeated. Seriously and convincingly defeated. Not due to racism, not due to the forces of reaction, not even due to Karl Rove sending out mind rays over the national cable system. He will lose for one reason above all, one that has been overlooked in any analysis that I've yet seen. Barack Obama will lose because he is a flake.

I'm using the term in its generally accepted sense. A flake is not only a screwup, but someone who truly excels in making bizarre errors and creating incredibly convoluted disasters. A flake is a "fool with energy", as the Russian proverb puts it. ("A fool is a terrible thing to have around, but a fool with energy is a nightmare".)

Barack Obama is a flake, and the American people have begun to see it. The chief characteristic of a flake is that he makes choices that are impossible to either understand or explain. These are not the errors of the poor dope who can't grasp the essentials of a situation, or the neurotic who ruins things out of compulsion, or the man suffering chronic bad luck.

The flake has a genius for discovering solutions at perfect right angles to the ordinary world. It's as if he's the product of a totally different evolutionary chain, in a universe where the laws are slightly but distinctly at variance to ours. When given a choice between left and right, the flake goes up -- if not through the 8th dimension. And although there's plenty of rationalization, there's never a logical reason for any of it. After awhile, people stop asking.

Obama's rise has been widely portrayed as a kind of millennial Horatio Alger story -- young lad from a new state on the outskirts of the American polity, a member of once-despised minority, works his way by slow degrees to within arm's length of the presidency itself. That's all well and good -- we need national myths of exactly that type.

But what has been overlooked is the string of faux pas marking each step of Obama's journey, a series of strange, inexplicable actions, actions bizarre enough to require some effort at explanation, through such efforts have rarely been offered. It's as if the new Horatio made it to the top by stepping into every last manhole and open trapdoor in his path. And we, the onlookers, the voters who are being asked to put this man in the White House, are supposed to take this as the normal career path for a successful chief executive.

What are these incidents? I'm sure many of you are way ahead of me, but let's go to the videotape.

Here's a young man who graduated from Columbia with high marks, with a choice of positions anywhere in the country. He comes from a state generally held to be a close match to Paradise. One, furthermore, that can be characterized as the most successful multiracial society in the world, with harmonious relations not only between whites and blacks, but also Japanese-Americans and native Hawaiians as well. To top it off, a state controlled in large part by a smoothly-functioning Democratic machine. So where does he choose to go?

To Chicago. One of the windiest, coldest, most brutal cities in the country. One that is also infinitely corrupt in a sense that Hawaii is not. One that remains one of the most racist large cities in the U.S. (Cicero, Al Capone's old stomping grounds, a suburb that is effectively part of the city, is completely segregated to this day.) It would be nice to learn which of these aspects most attracted young Obama to the city. But if you'd asked at the beginning of the campaign, you'd still be waiting.

And what does he do when he reaches the city? Why, he joins a cult. Jeremiah Wright's Trinity United Church has been turned inside out since the videotaped sermons appeared early this year, without anyone ever quite explaining exactly what Obama was thinking of when he joined up in the first place. Street cred, so it's claimed. But there are a plethora of black churches that would have provided him that without the taint of demented racism that Wright's church offered.

Obama apparently had to swear an oath of belief in "black liberation theology" when he joined the church. (It is the little touches of that sort that make it a "cult", and not simply a "church".) Did the thought of his career ever cross his mind? Didn't he realize that church would inevitably cause him trouble somewhere down the line? That he'd be required to repudiate it and its ideas eventually? We can ask -- but we won't get an answer.

Back at school, Obama got himself named editor of the Harvard Law Review. This is a signal achievement, no question about it. The kind of thing that would be mentioned about a person for the rest of his life, as has been the case with Obama. But then... he writes nothing for the journal.

Now, let's get this straight: here we have one of the leading university law journals in the country, one widely cited and read. Entire careers in legal analysis and scholarship have been founded on appearances in the Review, including some that have led to the highest courts in the country. Yet here's an individual who, as editor, could easily place his own work in the journal -- standard practice, nothing at all wrong with it. But he fails to do so. And the explanation? There's none that I've heard. We can go even farther than that, to say that there is no explanation that makes the least rational sense.

We follow Obama down to Springfield, where as a state legislator, he voted "present" over 120 times. What this means, as far as I've been able to discover, is that he voted "present" nearly as much as he voted "yes" or "no".

Now, statehouses work very simply: a member approaches his colleagues and asks them them to vote for his bill. Some comply, some do not. Some ask, "Is it a good bill?" and some don't. Either way, they customarily, except in unusual circumstances, vote "yes' or "no". All except for Barack Obama. And how did get away with it? How did mollify his colleagues? How did he square himself with the party bosses? Echo answereth not.

(A good slogan could be made of this: "You can't vote present in the Oval Office." I hereby commend it to the McCain campaign.)

We turn eagerly to learn what his term in the U.S. Senate will reveal, only to be disappointed. But it's not surprising, really. After all, he was only there for 143 days.

And there lies one of the keys to Obama's rise. David Brooks pointed out in a recent New York Times column that Obama spent too little time in any of his positions to make an impact one way or another. This is what saved him from the normal fate of the flake: he was never around long enough for his errors and strange behavior to catch up with him.

But a presidential campaign is a different matter. A man running for president is under the microscope, and can't duck anything, as many a candidate has had reason to learn. If Obama is a flake in the classic mode, now is when it would come out. And has it?

The case could be made. Here we have a campaign with everything going for it -- the opposition party in a shambles, a seriously undervalued president, the media in the candidate's pocket, the candidate himself being worshiped as nothing less than the new messiah. And yet the results have comprised little more than one fumble after another.

First came the Wright affair. Obama apparently thought he was above it all -- a not-uncommon phenomenon with flakes -- and allowed the revelations to take on a life of their own before bothering to respond. Even then, his thoughtful and convincing explanation (that he hadn't been listening for twenty years) did little to settle the crisis, which instead guttered out on its own after nearly crippling his campaign. Even months afterward it threatens to pop back up at any time. The latest word is that Wright -- now a deadly enemy of his onetime protégé -- has written a book. I can't wait.

Obama learned his lesson, and confronted the next threat immediately, tackling The New Yorker cover with the avidity of a man having discovered zombies in the basement. A development that could have been defused with a chuckle and a quip (the customary method is for the politician to ask the cartoonist for the original) was allowed to explode into a major issue. The campaign's relentless attacks on one of the oldest liberal magazines extant merely perplexed the country at large. After all, any Republican has had to endure far worse.

Almost simultaneously, the birth certificate saga was unfolding. On no reasonable grounds, the campaign blew off requests for a copy of the document, at last releasing it through one of the least reputable sites on the Internet, and so badly copied that literally anything could be read into it -- and was. I'm not one of those who believes that Obama was actually born in Indonesia/Kenya/Moscow/the moon, but I still have plenty in the way of questions, almost all of them arising from how the matter was handled. Well played.

The latest pothole (or one of them, anyway) involves Jerome Corsi's The Obama Nation. Corsi has been given the full New Yorker treatment, with the campaign hoping to avoid John Kerry's "error" in not challenging Corsi's 2004 book, Unfit for Command. What Obama missed was the fact that Kerry's major problem was not with Corsi but with the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, who were disgusted with Kerry's hypocrisy in running as an experienced military veteran, and set out to take him down. Corsi's effort dovetailed with the veteran's campaign and to a large extent was swept up with it. No such campaign is in operation against Obama. The smart method of answering Corsi would have been to allow the media to handle it, instead of drawing attention to the book and raising it to level of an issue. This appears to be a real talent for the Obama campaign.

We could go on. The victory tour of Europe, and the speech in which Obama declared himself "citizen of the world", a trope guaranteed to focus the attention of Middle America. His inept handling of Hillary, in which he wound up appearing frightened of the opponent he'd just beaten. Allowing Hillary (and her husband there, what's-his-name) a starring role in the Democratic convention is not a solution any sane individual would be comfortable with -- much less a roll-call vote. This threatens the near-certainty of turning the entire affair into BillandHillarycon, with the nominee winding up as a footnote. But it's all of a piece with the campaign Obama has waged up until now.

We've never had a flake as president. We've had drunks, neurotics, cripples, louts, and fools, but never a career screwup. (I except Jimmy Carter, whose errors arose from sincere, misguided goodwill.) And I don't think we're going to get one now. Another three months of flailing, incompetence, and a collapsing image will do little to assure voters concerned with terrorism, the oil crunch, a gyrating economy, and a bellicose Russia. (Anyone doubting that Obama will go exactly this route can consider the Saddleback church fiasco, which unfolded as this piece was being wrapped up. Evidently, the campaign goaded NBC news personality Andrea Mitchell into all but accusing John McCain of "cheating" by failing to take his place within the "cone of silence" during Obama's part of the program. The grotesque element here is that Obama's people and much of the liberal commentariat -- including Mitchell -- apparently believe that the "cone of silence", a gag prop for the old Get Smart! comedy series, actually exists and was in use at Saddleback.)

Many of us have dealt with flakes at one time or another, often in settings involving jobs and careers, and not uncommonly in positions of some authority. We all know of the nephew, the fiancé, the boyfriend, whose whims must be catered to, whose reputation must be protected, who must be constantly worked around if anything at all is to be accomplished, always at the cost of time, money, efficiency, and personal stress.

In the fullness of time, we will inevitably see such a figure in the White House. But not this year, and not this candidate. Such acts of national flakery occur only when there’s no real alternative. In this election, an alternative exists. Whatever his shortcomings, nobody ever called John McCain a flake.

J.R. Dunn is consulting editor of American Thinker.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 2008; democrats; elections; nobama08; obama; obamatruthfile; radicalleft
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1 posted on 08/20/2008 5:27:07 AM PDT by vietvet67
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To: vietvet67
“ ...a fool with energy is a nightmare".

Jimmy Carter's 16 hour workdays come to mind...

2 posted on 08/20/2008 5:31:36 AM PDT by johnny7 ("Duck I says... ")
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To: vietvet67

He is a flake, but he’s a flake who wants power. He may not do much with it when he gets it, but if you look at his “decisions” and the peculiar course of his life, you can see that they all were calculated to do one thing only: Get Barry to the top of the heap.

He has no ideas of his own and the radical leftist positions he has imbibed from his mentors are so extreme that he would have to work hard to convince anyone in the real world to accept them. Barry doesn’t want to work hard at anything; he just wants to be king of the hill.


3 posted on 08/20/2008 5:37:50 AM PDT by livius
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To: vietvet67

I have often wondered what is a Harvard law school grad doing working as a community organizer? Why didn’t he work as a lawyer and who pays one to be a community organizer and what does it pay? When I was in college we had a wide range of fields to study but community organizer wasn’t one of them.


4 posted on 08/20/2008 5:39:32 AM PDT by engrpat
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To: vietvet67

Insightful


5 posted on 08/20/2008 5:44:18 AM PDT by vrwc54
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To: engrpat

He’s my age, and so I figure he was inspired by Billy Dee Williams in ‘Mahogany’—while plotting his lifelong quest to rise to the presidency.


6 posted on 08/20/2008 5:45:20 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: vietvet67
Have said these same sentiments for quite a while now.
7 posted on 08/20/2008 5:47:25 AM PDT by OKIEDOC (OBAMA aka Post Turtle the Forest Gump of American Politics ABORTION -Liberal Child Abuse.)
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To: livius

“”He is a flake”” Great article but I would call him a “fake” first and foremost.


8 posted on 08/20/2008 5:51:09 AM PDT by Thank You Rush
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To: vietvet67
I'm not sure that ‘flake” is a term I would use to describe the Obamessiah. To me, flakes are, among other things, unreliable. One thing about Obama is he is NOT unreliable. Above all else, we can rely on his naked obsession with power and the need to gain power for the sake of his handlers and ‘shadow puppet masters’ who want to destroy America.

I'm not sure that the Obamessiah would have even selected the path he is currently following. To me, he lacks the innate drive to have made these choices for himself but, rather, appears to be someone whose choices have been made for him for a VERY long time. IOW, he is beginning more and more to appear to be the quintessential “Manchurian Candidate”.

There are too many nagging questions about his origins and his publicly acknowledged history is cloudy at best. His failure (or outright refusal) to address these issues and put them to rest is troubling, to say the least.

In the late 70s, the Dems gave us one of the most indisputably inept presidents in recent memory and, perhaps, ever. In 2008, they are giving us a candidate that could easily wrest that title away from Jimmuh without breaking a sweat.

9 posted on 08/20/2008 5:54:13 AM PDT by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: vietvet67

mark


10 posted on 08/20/2008 5:54:16 AM PDT by Christian4Bush (About Obama: "Overinflated balloons pop suddenly and catastrophically." - Bill Dupray)
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To: vietvet67
“Barack Obama will lose because he is a flake.”

The author misspelled FAKE!

11 posted on 08/20/2008 5:58:54 AM PDT by Beagle8U (FreeRepublic -- One stop shopping ....... Its the Conservative Super WalMart for news .)
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To: vietvet67

A flake, I get it. I also happen to think he is the closest thing to evil I have seen in my lifetime running for POTUS....


12 posted on 08/20/2008 5:59:08 AM PDT by Born In America (America was a better country when it offered free boat rides to the New World from the Old World....)
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To: vietvet67
The trick is understanding that this is not a perfect world. There is no such thing as a perfect decision or course of action; just better and worse ones. All will have some downside even if only marginally perceptible, and even less effective decisions can generally be understood if the person making them can explain and justify their reason(s) for the choice(s) that they made.

The problem with Obummer is that he has absolutely NO real world experience on which he can base his decisions, and I'm sure his campaign staff has spent many long nights coming up with explanations for some of his choices so they sound reasoned and principled.

God help us if this man is elected.

13 posted on 08/20/2008 6:03:03 AM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: vietvet67
Barack Obama will lose because he is a flake

Yes but he is nuanced!

whateverthehell that means ...

14 posted on 08/20/2008 6:10:15 AM PDT by catpuppy
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To: livius
Get Barry to the top of the heapBecoming the editor or the Harvard Law Review and writing NOTHING tells me that Obama was too lazy to put in the effort.
15 posted on 08/20/2008 6:16:38 AM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (G-d is not a Republican. But Satan is definitely a Democrat.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants

It also tells me he really had nothing to say - that is, no ideas of his own.

As Dusty Moment said in post #9, however, there’s got to be someone behind him. One of the problems in identifying that person or power (well, other than Satan) is that there are so many candidates: George Soros, the radical left, rich Muslims, foreign powers - in fact, any America-hater you can name.


16 posted on 08/20/2008 6:22:48 AM PDT by livius
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To: vietvet67

Obama is a flake!
Not quite the word Jackie Mason would use, but still a bull’s eye! So very few people nowadays will come forward to shoot a single arrow at a proper target.
But it isn’t just Obama’s positions in this race, or what he said on this issue or that, or even his scanty resume or his malodorous associations.
It’s himself. He’s a flake.


17 posted on 08/20/2008 6:42:07 AM PDT by 668 - Neighbor of the Beast (My spiritual advisor is a lawyer.)
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To: vietvet67
"Barack Obama will lose because he is a flake. I'm using the term in its generally accepted sense. A flake is not only a screwup, but someone who truly excels in making bizarre errors and creating incredibly convoluted disasters. A flake is a "fool with energy", as the Russian proverb puts it. ("A fool is a terrible thing to have around, but a fool with energy is a nightmare".) Barack Obama is a flake, and the American people have begun to see it. The chief characteristic of a flake is that he makes choices that are impossible to either understand or explain. "

The positive side of this is the opportunity for a teaching moment, defining the liberal flake as a psychological type along with the social disasters which ensure when he is given power.

But there seems to be a combination of the New Age flake with the traditional jinx. Sort of like Cousin Oliver in The Brady Bunch. You just never know what he is going to try to do or say next. Carter was a bit like this.

18 posted on 08/20/2008 6:43:39 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: vietvet67

This is waaaaaaaaaay funny. After reading it, the thought came to me that Obambi even makes Hucksterbee, biggest buffoon in the Republican slate, look presidential by comparison.


19 posted on 08/20/2008 6:44:11 AM PDT by Vigilanteman (Are there any men left in Washington? Or, are there only cowards? Ahmad Shah Massoud)
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To: vietvet67
Barry Soetoro-Obama is imploding. Little by little, he is melting into a heap of self-centered media hype. He's wanted to be "president" since he was in Primary School in Indonesia. It was in Indonesia where he was adopted by Lolo Soetoro (1965-66), became an Indonesian Citizen, and, as an adult, used that birth certificate to obtain a Passport to go visit his mother in Indonesia and someone in Pakistan. All without any comprehension that his actions would be called into account if he did indeed run for President of the USofA.

Most stable rational people who have a long term goal set up a plan of action which will bring them to that goal with all the necessary education, experiences, contacts, etc. Barry Soetoro-Obama somehow missed that part of his education. All he knew was he wanted to be President. But he failed to count the cost. He has tried to achieve his goal without first building character traits worthy of that goal.

Who are Barry Soetoro-Obama's non-political friends? I daresay, he has none. Maybe a handful. But I doubt that anyone Soetoro-Obama would list is someone who could not help him politically. On the other hand, John McCain has people who are just "sit around the table and talk a while" friends who can do nothing for him politically."

Let me pose this question: Who would you prefer to come over to your house to sit around your kitchen table, drink your iced tea, and just chew the fat?

Barry O' smug mug . . . or . . . Photobucket
20 posted on 08/20/2008 6:49:01 AM PDT by HighlyOpinionated (The World is a Tragedy for Those Who Feel (Democrats) but a Comedy to Those Who Think (Republicans).)
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