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Obama in His Own Words: ‘Everybody Says How Cool I Am’
Jewish Press ^ | 2-15-17 | Andrew Ferguson

Posted on 02/16/2017 6:20:21 PM PST by SJackson

{Written by Andrew Ferguson and originally posted to the Commentary Magazine website}

As Barack Obama passes into the next phase of his stellar evolution, as the protostar of the 2004 Democratic convention fades into the planetary nebula of 2017 and a very long retirement, phrases from his presidency that once rang in my ears grow dimmer by the day. To tell the truth, there’s not a lot of them. For a man with such a reputation for eloquence, he leaves behind little quotable material from his presidential years. Yes, generations from now schoolchildren will still be reciting “If you like your doctor . . .  ” And there’s “I’ve got a pen and I’ve got a phone.” And: “The election’s over. I won.” And also: “If you’ve got a business—you didn’t build that.” The rest is silence. Well, not silence. It’s plainly difficult for Obama to stop talking. He is a verbal man if not an eloquent one. The Obama utterance that sticks stubbornly in my mind at the moment is of very recent vintage. I made a point of listening to all the “exit interviews” Obama granted over the last several months. There was a lot of overlap, of course; one of the keys to a successful politician is the ability to say the same thing thousands of times without hanging yourself in the next Comfort Inn. But the interviews did serve as a quarry from which the president pieced together his farewell address. Together they present a notable self-portrait of the man and the people who love him. As the day of his departure neared he added a new riff to his repetitions, in an interview to two friendly reporters from the pro-Obama website Vox. (All the exit interviews were given to interviewers who, in their approach to the president, ranged from “sympathetic” to “bootlicking.”) One Vox reporter asked Obama a question about the Affordable Care Act. It was 12 minutes of monologue before the other reporter, like a man jumping onto a passing train, could ask another question. After 20 minutes the reporters had asked him a total of two questions. He was still talking.

And then, from this dog pile of verbiage, he drew a proposal that summarized much of what’s maddening about Obama’s performance as president.

“I’m saying to every Republican right now”—a steely gaze, a thrusting index finger—“‘if you can in fact put a plan together that is demonstrably better than what Obamacare is doing, I will publicly support repealing Obamacare and replacing it with your plan.’”

The Republicans could even call it TrumpCare if they wanted, the president said. It wasn’t about him! “I’d sign on to a Republican plan that would say, ‘We’re going to give more subsidies to people to make it even cheaper, and we’re going to have a public option.”

Here was the essence of Obama’s rhetorical style as chief executive: a feint toward common ground while pushing his opponents still further away. It was dramatic, delivered in an exasperated, put-up-or-shut-up tone. It was utterly insincere. It gave an impression of boldness where there was none. It limned a meaningless proposal to make him appear flexible and bipartisan while scoring a partisan point. And it displayed his sly understanding of how public policy should work. A “public option” in a national health-insurance program would bring us closer to the socialized medicine that Obamacare supposedly made unnecessary. And the way to make national health insurance “cheaper,” in the president’s view, is to make it cost more, by giving more people more subsidies.

The Vox audience, of course, lapped it up like hungry pups. One could just imagine the arguments spinning through the twittersphere and echoing down the halls of the Center for American Progress: Look, it’s very simple—Obama said he’s happy to repeal his own law if the Republicans find something that’s cheaper with more options . . .

By now Obama has refined his demagoguery so that it perfectly suits the modern partisan of the left—that is, a partisan who refuses to see himself as partisan. This isn’t the traditional populist demagoguery of William Jennings Bryan or even Lyndon Johnson, aimed at the unschooled, the unlucky, the desperate. This is demagoguery aimed at the well-to-do audience of Trevor Noah and Samantha Bee: the overschooled and undereducated, the self-certain and self-satisfied, who see ideological deviation as a moral lapse rather than a difference of opinion. It’s demagoguery with a graduate degree. It’s boob bait for pseuds.

Among whom are the readers of Vanity Fair, the celebrity slick that brought in Doris Kearns Goodwin to do an exit interview. To the editors, the choice of Goodwin must have been obvious: She, like most American writers, has written a book about Abraham Lincoln, and the parallels between the two presidents from Illinois have been a common theme for Obama’s partisans. When Goodwin asked him to comment on a Lincoln quote about personal ambition, the president feigned reluctance—“It’s always dangerous to amend the words of Abraham Lincoln”—before taking a header into what he evidently thought were deep waters.

“When you’re young,” he said, “ambitions are somewhat common—you want to prove yourself. It may grow out of different life experiences.” Some people—I’m greatly condensing the president’s word salad here, and you’re welcome—have an ambition to do one thing, some people to do another. But they all want to get ahead. “I do think that there is a youthful ambition that very much has to do with making your mark in the world,” Obama continued. “And I think that cuts across the experiences of a lot of people who end up achieving something significant in their field.”

At this point Goodwin could no longer contain herself. “Oh, well said, sir,” she cried through the clouds of vapor. “We can amend Lincoln.”

Most public men strive to please an audience. It has been Obama’s good fortune to surround himself with an audience that wants to please him. “Everybody likes to talk about how cool I was,” he said at the beginning of his chat with George Stephanopoulos, who tilted toward the “bootlicker” end of the spectrum. Later he drove the point home, without fear of contradiction: “People always talk about how cool I am.” To Doris Goodwin, however, he expressed a demurral: “I don’t buy the hype when everybody is saying how great I am.”

Just between us, I think he buys the hype. How could he not? He has been described, by the writer Michael Beschloss among others, as the “most intelligent man ever elected president.” Throughout his long exit, one jejune sentiment after another was greeted with solemn nods or giddiness from his interlocutors. As president, he visited the pyramids, he told one interviewer, and the thought occurred to him: Fame is fleeting. “Sometimes I carry with me that perspective,” he reflected. Our economy, he tells us, is more digitized than it was, and our news now lacks the traditional filters we once relied on, and the old ways of manufacturing are no longer relevant, and we can’t respond to technological change by sticking our head in the sand, and our country is undergoing big changes in terms of demography . . . and . . . and none dared point out that the smartest president in history has yet to make an observation that couldn’t be found in any back issue of the Economist.

“There is a big part of me that has a writer’s sensibility,” Obama said in one exit interview. “And so that’s how I think. That’s how I pursue truth. That’s how I hope to communicate truth to people.” Indeed, with his memoir, Dreams from My Father, 21 years ago, Obama proved he had a native gift for what words can do, how to use them intimately, to reveal layers of thought and feeling. This lends an almost tragic note to the self-debasement of these last years—the intellectual and verbal sloppiness that his adorers have let him get away with.

Then again, perhaps it was inevitable. He talked with Axelrod about his upbringing by a loving mother. “For all the ups and downs of our lives,” he said, “there wasn’t a moment that I didn’t feel as if I was special—that I was just this special gift to the world.”


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: dbag; delusional; goldenchild; narcissism; narcissist; nobelpeaceprize; obamalegacy; worstpresidentever
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To: SJackson

**Everybody**

I don’t think so.


21 posted on 02/16/2017 6:42:34 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: SJackson

What an absolute turd.


22 posted on 02/16/2017 6:43:24 PM PST by SunTzuWu
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To: Terry L Smith

Devo is certainly appropriate! Here is my response to mr choom cool:

Barack the Magic Negro: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N08ZIsSPKuo


23 posted on 02/16/2017 6:45:50 PM PST by John S Mosby (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
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To: SJackson
Reminds of me the always humble and connected to reality Oprah Winfrey, who once said - and I'm pretty close to quoting exactly - "From a very early age, I always knew that I was destined for greatness."

It's interesting that they define accomplishment, success, contribution ... as how many people they convinced to do something for them - watch them, vote for them. I won't take away from Oprah that she has built a great empire - I'm not calling her stupid. But in each case, they have built nothing. Oprah's empire is a media empire - meaning - an empire of hypnosis, of entranced eyeballs.

So here are two people who have built nothing of actual value, and see that as greatness.

To them, greatness is merely to be thought of as great, so that one can agree with oneself that one is great.

I can't think of a better summary of what makes a liberal a liberal, a progressive a progressive, a socialist a socialist, a communist a communist, and a tyrant dictator a tyrant dictator - that they think greatness is to be thought of as great -> even if it means destroying or merely making miserable millions of lives.

I guarantee that whatever arrogant act Trump puts on to piss off his enemies and reach his goals, he will judge himself at the end by what he built and what he contributed to life - not just his, as well as the personal integrity with which he did it. (Liberals would not be able to believe the last few words of that sentence because they don't understand integrity.)

Obama will say at the end 'People though I was cool.' But I suspect even he experiences the emptiness in that. I think it was in one of his books that he expressed a certain discomfort when in college he gave a rambling BS impromptu speech outside to a group of students and they all seemed to love what he said. I do think that there are moments, the one's that matter, though he'd never let you see it, where he is perplexed and a bit anxious at the emptiness of his life given how 'great' it was.

24 posted on 02/16/2017 6:48:21 PM PST by tinyowl (A is A)
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To: jazminerose
Obama: If You've Got A Business, You Didn't Build That
25 posted on 02/16/2017 6:48:34 PM PST by hole_n_one
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To: SJackson

Just because he has a block of ice for a brain doesn’t mean he’s cool.


26 posted on 02/16/2017 6:49:13 PM PST by Cololeo
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To: SJackson

FUBO


27 posted on 02/16/2017 6:50:16 PM PST by King Moonracer (Bad lighting and cheap fabric, that's how you sell clothing.....)
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To: SJackson
That's because you be rockin' those guns you got from your weekly 2 or 3 reps of 5 lb. curls.
28 posted on 02/16/2017 6:53:35 PM PST by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: heterosupremacist

I remember thinking when he was elected, “What a nothing this guy is”.

It still applies.


29 posted on 02/16/2017 6:54:03 PM PST by glorgau
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To: SJackson

0bama? May his name and memory be erased!


30 posted on 02/16/2017 6:55:30 PM PST by sheik yerbouty ( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
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To: SJackson

Maybe it’s just me, but I’m guessing this guy is in major scramble mode when he comes face-to-face with God Almighty.


31 posted on 02/16/2017 6:55:51 PM PST by Rockitz (This is NOT rocket science - Follow the money and you'll find the truth.)
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To: Slyfox

Bath House Barry, dtill peddling his ass..


32 posted on 02/16/2017 6:56:43 PM PST by sheik yerbouty ( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
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To: SJackson
"and they all tell me what a wicked fastball I got."


33 posted on 02/16/2017 6:57:00 PM PST by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: SJackson

. . .encouragement of Obama was unequivocal. He (Harry Reid) was wowed by Obama’s oratorical gifts and believed that the country was ready to embrace a black presidential candidate, especially one such as Obama — a “light-skinned” African American “with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one,” as he said privately. Reid was convinced, in fact, that Obama’s race would help him more than hurt him in a bid for the Democratic nomination.

—From the book “Game Change” by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann


34 posted on 02/16/2017 6:57:35 PM PST by Brad from Tennessee (A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.)
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To: Texas Eagle
Alright you took my idea. Here's another.
35 posted on 02/16/2017 7:20:04 PM PST by Proyecto Anonimo
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To: SJackson
How does Dreams from my father demonstrate Obama's talent for using words? Did he help Bill Ayers?
36 posted on 02/16/2017 7:29:33 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: SJackson

37 posted on 02/16/2017 7:29:38 PM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: SJackson

Commie faggot Mooselimb fool says what?


38 posted on 02/16/2017 7:39:26 PM PST by VRWC For Truth (FU Shmuckie Shoomer (Rat-NY) and Prick Durbin(Rat-IL) Commie)
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To: SJackson

“For all the ups and downs of our lives,” he said, “there wasn’t a moment that I didn’t feel as if I was special—that I was just this special gift to the world.”

If it were not 0bama saying this he’d be thought an arrogant fool.


39 posted on 02/16/2017 7:43:52 PM PST by Excellence (Marine mom since April 11, 2014)
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To: SJackson

He’s so cool I call him Cool-o.


40 posted on 02/16/2017 7:44:18 PM PST by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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