Posted on 08/31/2011 4:48:08 AM PDT by Servant of the Cross
People who rail against fat cats shouldnt vacation with them.
By Sunday afternoon, the Gallup tracking poll showed a 17-point spread in the presidents approval rating 38 percent approval to 55 percent disapproval. Such polls are fickle and can go up and down quickly, often depending on unwarranted and unfair perceptions and media hype, hinging on everything from hurricanes to killing bin Laden. That said, these recent abysmal numbers might suggest that for the first time, a considerable number of Americans are starting to be turned off not just by Barack Obamas economic policies, but by Barack Obama himself. But why now?
The presidents latest Marthas Vineyard vacation was a public-relations disaster, wholly unnecessary, and in part responsible for Obamas most recent slide in the polls. Part of the problem was purely coincidental and no ones fault: Who could have expected that while the president of the United States was resting on an exclusive private beach on a tony island on a calm August day, millions of Eastern Seaboarders around him would be engaged in a media-driven frenzy of emergency preparation and evacuation?
Yet most of the negative perception was the presidents own doing. For nearly three years, there has been something strange about the First Familys ritzy getaway tastes. The annual Marthas Vineyard rentals were bookended by First Family junkets to Vail, Costa del Sol, and Hawaii. The choice of venues spawned at least three problems for the president that have nothing to do with the First Familys right, and indeed duty, to enjoy a little well-earned vacation time or with the fact that other presidents have vacationed in nice places.
First, Obamas fiery rhetoric (fat-cat bankers, corporate jets, millionaires and billionaires, redistributive change, at a certain point youve made enough money, etc.) has demonized the better off. Many successful liberal presidents do that, but they finesse the necessary fundraising and schmoozing with Wall Street zillionaires with tact and discretion. Bill Clinton was a past master at gluing a populist veneer atop his deep fascination with old money and hip celebrity. The Obamas are far clumsier in both their class-warfare boilerplate and their overt elite tastes, whose contradictions they apparently either miss or dont much care about.
No doubt this August the presidential advisers, without a clue about life in Tulare or Des Moines, gave sycophantic pep talks to the Obamas not to listen to right-wing talk radio and just enjoy what they like to enjoy. Obama himself apparently is still confident that the media will always exempt his golfing in a way they never did Bushs far less frequent putting. Michael Moore, after all, is not going to cut and paste a video clip of Obama on the fairway.
Yet some photos inevitably leaked out of the redistributive change statist at his $50,000-a-week rented estate, surrounded by millionaires and billionaires who could alone afford such rental prices, many of whom flew in on corporate jets. That disconnect appears to the American public as abjectly hypocritical. We all know that for the president to keep pushing his agenda of higher taxes, he will soon inevitably get back to bashing the rich. But we also assume that this time the public has seen the flip side of a one-eyed Jack and wonders, when the president hits up his Vineyard neighbors for campaign cash at his $20 million rented estate, whether he will first make sure that they are not fat cats and owners of corporate jets.
Even right-wing presidents, even in good times, know enough not to rub in too much the perks of being president. George W. Bush was pilloried for chain-sawing at the ranch, as if he were a counterfeit outdoorsman; but he still knew that his media critics suffered far more in his beloved nowheresville of Crawford than did he. The Reagan Ranch in the Santa Barbara Mountains was not really a ranch at all, but a rustic hovel, and the videos of Reagan in his early seventies, chopping wood amid burrs and stickers, with sweat spots under his arms, were not faked. In contrast, the elder Bush liked boating off his family estate in Maine and was flayed for being a bit too happy with his seaside, preppie-sounding Kennebunkport mansion.
Timing poses a second problem, hurricanes apart. The United States is in the doldrums. The economic news high unemployment, credit-downgrading, a ruined housing market, almost no growth, record debt, trillion-dollar-plus deficits, soaring fuel and food prices is not just bad, but seems to be getting worse. Could not the president have gone home to Chicago for a week, followed by a weekend at Camp David demonstrating in symbolic fashion to hurting Americans that their chief executive is cutting back on exclusive travel and amenities? Even Jimmy Carter knew enough to turn down the White House thermostat and put on a cardigan sweater when gas was hard to find. The misdemeanors of phony man-of-the-people photo-ops (the awkward, camouflaged John Kerry coming back from goose hunting) are usually far outweighed by the felonies of I do what I want to do overt elitism (the smug windsurfing John Kerry in spandex).
Finally, this summers golfing at Marthas Vineyard has torn the curtain away from an image that Barack Obama has taken a lifetime to cultivate, to considerable advantage. He was decidedly a middle-class prep-schooler in Hawaii. He was not born into Clinton-like poverty. Occidental and Columbia are not Eureka College or Texas A&M. When Obama finally got some real money, he almost immediately bought a wannabe Chicago mansion and tried to enhance his grounds with help from Mrs. Tony Rezko. Nothing in Obamas résumé suggests poverty or disdain for elite enjoyment.
To square his apparently embarrassing middle-class circle, Obama has brilliantly manipulated some weird facets of American culture: Being not quite so-called white, and vocally left-wing, can mean that even a multi-millionaire has innate street credibility and can qualify for minority victimhood. The fact that Barack Obama is part Kenyan meant for many and apparently for Barack Obama himself that a record number of presidential golf outings, and Michelles Costa del Sol jetting, were still excused by the fossilized 1960s nexus between poverty, prejudice, and race.
Likewise, Obama (thanks to the two-decade tutelage of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright) does not talk like someone from Hawaii at least not all the time. With some flair, he is able to turn on and off the slightly southern soaring cadences of the inner city (better than Hillary Clintons awkward attempts at clingers populism), both to reassure skeptical blacks of his racial solidarity and authenticity, and (as Harry Reid bluntly noted of the adroitly opportunistic diction) to remind his white liberal supporters that their efforts at penance really were genuinely well grounded. Again, in our upside-down world of race, a Clarence Thomas or a Condoleezza Rice, who grew up amid the authentic African-American struggle against Jim Crow, could never quite be as legitimately black as was Barack Obama (preppie, half-white/half-Kenyan), simply because liberal identity politics offers instant superficial authentication in a way real life cannot.
But this last in-your-face Marthas Vineyard vacation was one too many even for our most adroit gymnast of identity and class politics: The public at last really does believe that Barack Obama, whatever his heritage or nomenclature, is an out-of-touch elitist who simply likes hanging out with wealthy people and shares their refined tastes, even as millions are out of work or broke. This summer all the old SEIU talk about fat cats and corporate jets has been reduced to a parlor game.
In short, this years vacation was a vineyard too far.
Would some journalist do some digging and get takeoff and landing records from MVY and find out who flew in and out of the Vineyard during Barrys’s stay at Blue Heron Farm.?
Good point.
Ohaha is the “therapy” candidate.......makes the disturbed people who voted for him “feel good about themselves.
Great column - I especially love how he points out Bambi’s accent can vary depending on the occasion and the audience. What a d!ck. If he’s talking to the riff raff, he’s a Southern preacher encouraging class warfare. If he’s at a high-end fundraiser, he’s all (affirmative action) Ivy League elitist with no slang or drawl.
VINEYARD HAVEN - When President Obama took his first trip to Marthas Vineyard after taking office, the excitement among locals here was palpable, from the signs of support strung across shop windows and front porches to a full-page newspaper ad taken out by 125 Vineyard grandmothers in support of his health care plan. This week, with the jobless rate stuck above 9 percent and the presidents nationwide approval rating at its lowest level, the Vineyards broad allegiance shows cracks, leaving some islanders with a more textured, even tormented feeling about the president.
I just have to say I feel really uncomfortable, because I love loving him, said Leslie Pearlson, a real estate broker on the island. At the core of islanders misgivings is the shaky local economy. Although the Vineyard is sometimes depicted as a playground for the rich and famous, the numbers tell another side of the story.
Empty storefronts dot main streets in Vineyard Haven, Edgartown, and elsewhere. According to the islands Chamber of Commerce, at least one member of nearly every Vineyard household is dependent on summer business, which softened during the recession and still has not recovered. Discretionary spending dipped so far down that it devastated retail and dining in particular, said Nancy Gardella, executive director of the Marthas Vineyard chamber.
Lifelong resident John Alley, a county commissioner and postmaster at legendary Alleys General Store in West Tisbury, knows many island residents out of work. Theyll take anything that they can get their hands on, he said the other day as he sorted mail. Thats tempered a lot of the enthusiasm.
Even in the high tourist season, nearly 700 of the roughly 16,500 year-round Vineyard residents are unemployed, state labor statistics show. In January, the jobless rate was 13.2 percent. The median household income, $57,000, is among the lowest of any county in the state, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Islanders have lost homes to foreclosure at a rate of two per month since 2008, a rate not showing any signs of abating, according to The Warren Group, a company that tracks real estate transactions.
In addition to the stuttering economy, bitter finger-pointing in Washington between Republicans and Democrats, including the president, has fueled disenchantment. I think a lot of people in 08 felt, Hey, here comes a breath of fresh air, and maybe this guy can put an end to a lot - not all of it, but a lot - of the foolishness that goes on, Alley said. But he hasnt been very good at that. The brinkmanship that brought the country within hours of defaulting on some of its bills earlier this month disgusted 31-year Vineyard Haven resident Lorraine Parish.
Why cant they listen to each other? Why are they just throwing out these things, throwing out blame? said Parish, a clothing designer and boutique owner. Theyre not listening. Like many Americans, she dug deep when the economy went sour, first starting a fashion school in her boutique and then renting out part of her home to tourists. She said that as a business owner she does not have time to worry a lot about what goes on in Washington. I want to live my life and I want all that to be in order, and theyre doing their jobs - and now theyre not, she said. She thinks another standoff, with Obama and Republicans blaming it on each other, would so disgust her and others that they would skip voting in 2012 altogether. Americas not going to stand for it, she said.
For other longtime residents, the Republican mantra during the past year about government debt and waste has struck a chord. Lifelong Edgartown resident Paul Jackson, 76, reuses everything on his 2-acre farm. He takes scallop shells from local fishermen and puts them around plants so that rain washes leftover nutrients into the soil. When the nutrients are gone, Jackson puts the shells on his driveway, where they are crushed into a fine white powder.
Thats the trouble about all of these politicians - they dont know anything about what it is to do things. They never got their hands dirty, Jackson said, sitting on a patch of grass overlooking long rows of carrot and squash plants. Theres too much waste and too much wrong direction theyre going in.
Jackson said he feels for Obama but believes he may be hamstrung by the system in Washington. You put somebody in there that could do something, but they cant because the other people, the people with money, control everything, he said.
For other islanders, who had backed Obama by a ratio of 3-1 over Republican John McCain in 2008, reservations came after Obama compromised on beliefs they hold dear. The grandmothers newspaper ad applauded his dedication to a publicly provided health insurance option, something the president gave up to secure passage last year of the historic overhaul of the health care system.
Lifelong resident Josh Goldstein said he and his family, which owns the Mansion House Inn in Vineyard Haven, believe Obama is doing the best he can under the circumstances. We feel like hes working hard against some serious adversity, said the 32-year-old, a onetime aide to the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy. We really support his politics and his position. Goldstein acknowledged that the recession hit business hard at his familys hotel and that it has not fully recovered, but he said that has not caused his faith in the president to waver. The White House has booked every available room at the hotel during the presidents vacation last year and this summer. We hope that he gets Congress to act, Goldstein said. We want him to come to the Vineyard for as long as hes in office, which we hope is five more years.
There are some, though, who say the doubts have caused them to look at other candidates. Mary Jo Goodrich, a 21-year resident and real estate broker who voted for Obama in 2008, said he will not get her support next year. We all wanted a happy ending to this fairy tale, said Goodrich, owner of Mary Jo Goodrich Island Properties in Vineyard Haven. But I dont think theres going to be one. I just dont see a turnaround in the near future.
-——But this last in-your-face Marthas Vineyard vacation———
That is a bit presumptuous. There is still the summer of 2012
Ohaha is the therapy candidate.......makes the disturbed people who voted for him feel good about themselves.Or.... Ohaha is the Thorazine candidate.
I still love Pink Floyd, 'The Wall' was pure genius.
This was the one:
Again, in our upside-down world of race, a Clarence Thomas or a Condoleezza Rice, who grew up amid the authentic African-American struggle against Jim Crow, could never quite be as legitimately black as was Barack Obama (preppie, half-white/half-Kenyan), simply because liberal identity politics offers instant superficial authentication in a way real life cannot.
this proves the people of martha’s Vinyard are idiots, fools, or commie’s.... take your pick
Well.....Obama IS a little girl.
When Obama finally got some real money, he almost immediately bought a wannabe Chicago mansion ...Finally. Someone besides me has said it. Barry O'DUmmy's house is not a "Mansion". His larger than average house and the surrounding neighborhood of like size houses were built by Jewish Merchants who made a little bit of money 'way back when' with their various types of retail stores. They sold everything from furniture, to clothing, appliances, and sports equipment.
So thank you Victor Davis Hanson. A house is a 'house', and a mansion is a 'Mansion'. And Barry's is the former - a house.
NOTE: the term 'Jewish Merchants' is NOT meant as a pejorative. My family dealt with a 'Jewish Merchant' starting when my Grandparents got married to when I was well into my late 40's. The salesman, Mr. Lee, was like part of the family. He helped us out so many times when things 'were tough' I couldn't count them all!
(I'm ashamed that I have to clarify use of that term on FR.)
B U M P
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