Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Barack Obama Will Lose Because He Is A Flake




Who? The Messiah?

Nah!

From the American Thinker:


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.

9 comments:

WATCHER71 said...

The joke is that, I have stayed out of the whole Obama thing on IB, princeply because as far as I was concerned my opinion here was formed a long time ago. Whilst I'm ecstatic to see a brown man having a shot at the White House, and once again Kudos to America for this, (The UK is many many years away from that kind of state equality, I'll clarify that statement of any body requires me too) the inescapable fact, the Elephant in the room is that in one word.....he is too flakey. I think I said that at the start of his run. His policies are a mixture of BS, empty platitudes and flat out deception. Then again I'm cynical, we had Blair....He is America's Blair. There is no substance here, and believe me I would probably support some candidates who would probably have most of you foaming at the mouth...and no I'm not saying who....those who know me here have an idea where I come from politically... But I just can't support a candidate that is all style and no substance. Even Jesse knows it...Last I heard his figures were slipping so it seems that America isn't buying it.

Anonymous said...

It's not just you who thinks the big "0" is flakey.

I was listening to the radio this am and heard Imus say he was voting for McCain.

Who'd a thunk?

Pastorius said...

Watcher,
Who would you support? Hilary?

I really, almost, don't care who wins, because I think they all suck.

WATCHER71 said...

If you had asked me at the start of the run I would have said yes....but I saw an awful lot of cynical presumptuousness on her part during the campaign that was a turn off. No, my support currently, pending a review of their commitment to racial, gender and religious equality is with some one quite unexpected for me. What I will say is that McCain is my #2. The current climate in the world makes me lean more towards a candidate who has been to war so has a concept about the realities of what is actually involved, aswell as a personal understanding of just how mean humans can be to each other ...as opposed to some cosseted preppy who has never had a day of hunger or misery in their lives....A suggestion for all candidates. You know the show survivor...? How about if ALL presidential candidates got dumped on an island on their own and had to survive for say 3 months with just a survival knife. Then I think we would really see the character of the individual...! To my way of thinking, the character of 'my' leader should, in theory' be better than mine.....

WATCHER71 said...

I remember way back when I first started blogging, I started on Rednecks Revenge where I had a few run ins with Turn. Interestingly his attitude towards me changed when I revealed my complexion, suddenly a WHOLE load of assumptions were made about comments I made and my character. I look forward to meeting him again....But I had a good conversation with one woman from Texas (I think AOW was around for it) and she concisely, gently and articulately broke certain things down for me....I love Texas after that conversation. If I ever get back in to the US, Texas is on my list...but she spoke more about personal self determination and making your voice heard....instead of relying on big government to fix society....because lets face it...they won't rather than can't. Years of mismanagement of the British state and (sorry guys) dissatisfaction with the current US administration (my father worked with an ex member of this administration for a while at the world bank so I can tell you some shit....) has shown her words to be prophetic, of course in the UK I look back at the legacy of Thatcher and I know you guys LOVED Reagan (although I am still to get to the bottom of this...) and to my mind, like you say...they all suck.

Pastorius said...

Anonymous,
Imus doesn't much like black people. So, he probably has his own reasons.

Me? I have more black people in my family than Obama does. My reason for not liking Obama is simple. I think he's a socialist and an Islamist-sympathizer. Not to mention, he doesn't seem to have much grasp of history, and that worries me when someone wants to be Pres.

Pastorius said...

Watcher,
You don't like Reagan, huh? That's kind of like saying you don't like Churchill.

I hated Reagan the first six years he was President, but then, everything he ever said he'd do, he did. He surprised my ass off. And, I was a hardcore Liberal then.

I couldn't believe his negotiations with Gorbachev. I thought he'd never do it, but he did.

And, what was the outcome?

The fall of Communism and the Berlin Wall.

Read the book Reagan's War. You will find that Reagan formulated his plan in the early-50's and spent the next 35 years of his life making it happen.

There have been few like him in history. Lincoln, Churchill, and the men who founded America. I don't know of many others to mention.

Also, Reagan was brilliant on the subject of the unlimited potential of the human mind.

Reagan was a rare combination of mystic and pragmatist.

WATCHER71 said...

......Reagan was a rare combination of mystic and pragmatist.

Thats the part I want to understand.

I'll take your advice and read the book. It is important to me to understand why somebody feels the way the do even if I disagree with them...Also understand that at this point in my life I am open to the idea of Reagan rather than closed minded...and that is a continental shift in my position. I remeber the Bronx and the people in the Bronx and their attitudes towards Reagan, I remember derelicts for as far as the eye could see under Reagan, yet I am keenly aware of the reverence with which he is held in by Americans. Churchill is of course a national hero for me, yet I don't view Churchill as the second coming. He was the right man at the right time who led the right way...Yet still he gass bombed imperial subjects for not paying their taxes earlier in his career....

Thanks for the recommendation, if you think it will answer my questions I'll read it.

Pastorius said...

Reagan quotes:

"There are no constraints on the human mind, no walls around the human spirit, no barriers to our progress except those we ourselves erect."

"There are no great limits to growth because there are no limits of human intelligence, imagination, and wonder."