Posted on 01/20/2009 12:56:30 PM PST by lewisglad
Obama's Disappointing Speech Posted at: 2009-01-20 14:57:00.0 Author: Michael Sean Winters
President Barack Obamas inaugural address was surprisingly leaden. It did not soar like his "Yes, We Can" speech after losing the New Hampshire primary, nor did it chart his plans for governance as did his convention speech in Denver. Most strangely, it did not seem to capture the history of the moment the way his election night speech did.
Part of the problem is with the nature of such an address. This was the speech of a head of state, not a head of government, even though the President serves both functions. But, presidential oratory only succeeds in head of state mode at times of national tragedy. After the space shuttle Challenger disaster, Ronald Reagan gave his best speech as Bill Clinton did in the wake of the Oklahoma City bombing. Inaugurals are festive occasions, and as we saw today, the impulse to speak for the nation often leads to the kinds of abstractions that do not make for great oratory. Still, one need not be so opaque about historical illusions: If you want to refer to Washington crossing the Delaware, speak of Washington crossing the Delaware not of "the coldest of months" and "the icy river."
One of the chief virtues of Obamas campaign speeches was that they did not need flights of poetry. They were often quite prosaic. "Yes We Can" is not the most lyric of lines. But, he matched policy and purpose in those speeches, and he inspired not only in his presence but in his sensibility that government must be a force for good in our national life again, that governance was a moral act, that we were not at the mercy of economic laws made by the gods but could yet again be masters of our nations future through systematic, thoughtful analysis of our problems.
Obamas speech contained a lot of spinach. Alan Wolfe thinks this was the primary problem with the speech too much duty and not enough hope and I think he is largely correct. Obamas campaign was about hope, about our ability as Americans to reach for the stars. Obamas tone today was gloomy and foreboding, sounding more like a stern, unpleasant uncle than the smiling man who captivated the nation last year. He needed to inspire, not merely to lower expectations, to make his talk about values less vague and more precise, more concrete. The speech too often seemed like spinach pretending to be poetry.
Obama said that our problems, and our solutions, would require common effort, and the sight of crowds stretching the entire length of the Mall emphasized the small "d" democratic quality of the speech better than the words he chose. But, inaugurals do not merely commemorate the voters who choose: They commemorate the choice. Maybe Obama is a more humble man, but I yearned for some reiteration of Franklin Roosevelts line: "The people of the United States have not failed. In their need they have registered a mandate that they want direct, vigorous action. They have asked for discipline and direction under leadership. They have made me the present instrument of their wishes. In the spirit of the gift I take it." We may need to focus on our common responsibility, as President Obama suggested, but we want leadership too.
Sitting here not three hours since the speech was given, it is sad to think that I cant recall a single line from memory. I suppose almost any collection of words was likely to be dwarfed by the historical enormity of the moment. And such a moment it was.
We were tipped off when the oaf of office was botched.
yitbos
Empty suit delivers empty speech.
The beginning of the speech was soooo depressing. Anything after that was lost.
We’ve lost a POTUS and gained a POSER.
Unfortunately it was Chief Justice Roberts that botched the oaf. Hussein was just thrown off by the goof.
So does this mean that the words are not going to be chiseled into marble? That would be bad news for all of those out of work stone masons.
Yes, we can.
There's a bigger question.
Will it pass Peggy Noonan's Estrogen Test?
I was thinking the same thing...
Unfortunately it was Chief Justice Roberts that botched the oaf. Hussein was just thrown off by the goof.
If true just think how Putin,Hassan,Akmandinajad,Chavez and other advesaries will have their way with him. Roberts may have been nervous too. But he isn’t the leader of then semi-free world. Ya think they would have practiced this once or twice.
I have been doing important thijgs today like cleaning up the attic. I can understand Justice Roberts botching the oath if he did, it was his subconscious punishing him for swearing in this usurper.
The words should have stuck in his throat, he just sold the Constitution down the river.
It was a theft of Cesar Chavez's lines.
I guess he couldnt find a better speech to plagiarize?
“Unfortunately it was Chief Justice Roberts that botched the oaf. Hussein was just thrown off by the goof. “
I like Chief Justice Roberts. Good man. Heck of a job! ;-)
While reading this I was listening to the radio and some commentator stated “parts of this speech will be carved into granite” (or “may well be carved, etc.”). The sickening veneration of this guy just continues. It was an outtake on the Sean Hannity show.
Oh, barf.
No he didn't, the dimwits and libtards that voted for the messiah are the ones that did the selling. Obama automatically became president at 12:00 whether Roberts said a word or not.
Please place the blame squarely where it belongs.
No, listen again. Obama started to repeat the first part of a section of the oath before Roberts had finished giving it to him.
That threw the whole thing off, and they both started to stumble. It’s linked on Drudge.
Fox says that they both stumbled. But I think it was Obama jumping in before Roberts had finished speaking.
http://www.breitbart.tv/html/262133.html
the death of a nation was just born
Couldn’t watch this BS. Played my DVD of Celtic Women and relaxed with an occasional switch to Fox Business to watch the DJ tank.
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