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Unstoppable Obama




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When did you begin to think that Obama might be unstoppable? Was it when your grown feminist daughter started weeping inconsolably over his defeat in New Hampshire? Or was it when he triumphed in Virginia, a state still littered with Confederate monuments and memorabilia? For me, it was on Tuesday night when two Republican Virginians in a row called C-SPAN radio to report that they'd just voted for Ron Paul, but, in the general election, would vote for... Obama.

 

In the dominant campaign narrative, his appeal is mysterious and irrational: He's a "rock star," all flash and no substance, tending dangerously, according to the New York Times' Paul Krugman, to a "cult of personality." At best, he's seen as another vague Reagan-esque avatar of Hallmarkian sentiments like optimism and hope. While Clinton, the designated valedictorian, reaches out for the ego and super-ego, he supposedly goes for the id. She might as well be promoting choral singing in the face of Beatlemania.

 

The Clinton coterie is wringing its hands. Should she transform herself into an economic populist, as Paul Begala pleaded on Tuesday night? This would be a stretch, given her technocratic and elitist approach to health reform in 1993, her embarrassing vote for a credit card company-supported bankruptcy bill in 2001, among numerous other lapses. Besides, Obama already just leaped out in front of her with a resoundingly populist economic program on Wednesday.

 

Or should she reconfigure herself, untangle her triangulations, and attempt to appeal to the American people in some deep human way, with or without a tear or two? This, too, would take heavy lifting. Someone needs to tell her that there are better ways to signal conviction than by raising one's voice and drawing out the vowels, as in "I KNOW ..." and "I BELIEVE ..." The frozen smile has to go too, along with the metronymic nodding, which sometimes goes on long enough to suggest a placement within the autism spectrum.

 

But I don't think any tweakings of the candidate or her message will work, and not because Obama-mania is an occult force or a kind of mass hysteria. Let's take seriously what he offers, which is "change." The promise of "change" is what drives the Obama juggernaut, and "change" means wanting out of wherever you are now. It can even mean wanting out so badly that you don't much care, as in the case of the Ron Paul voters cited above, exactly what that change will be. In reality, there's no mystery about the direction in which Obama might take us: He's written a breathtakingly honest autobiography; he has a long legislative history, and now, a meaty economic program. But no one checks the weather before leaping out of a burning building.

 

Consider our present situation. Thanks to Iraq and water-boarding, Abu Ghraib and the "rendering" of terror suspects, we've achieved the moral status of a pariah nation. The seas are rising. The dollar is sinking. A growing proportion of Americans have no access to health care; an estimated 18,000 die every year for lack of health insurance. Now, as the economy staggers into recession, the financial analysts are wondering only whether the rest of the world is sufficiently "de-coupled" from the US economy to survive our demise. 

 

Clinton can put forth all the policy proposals she likes - and many of them are admirable ones - but anyone can see that she's of the same generation and even one of the same families that got us into this checkmate situation in the first place. True, some people miss Bill, although the nostalgia was severely undercut by his anti-Obama rhetoric in South Carolina, or maybe they just miss the internet bubble he happened to preside over. But even more people find dynastic successions distasteful, especially when it's a dynasty that produced so little by way of concrete improvements in our lives. Whatever she does, the semiotics of her campaign boils down to two words - "same old."

 

Obama is different, really different, and that in itself represents "change." A   Kenyan-Kansan with roots in Indonesia and multiracial Hawaii, he seems to be the perfect answer to the bumper sticker that says, "I love you America, but isn't it time to start seeing other people?" As conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan has written, Obama's election could mean the re-branding of America. An anti-war black president with an Arab-sounding name: See, we're not so bad after all, world!

 

So yes, there's a powerful emotional component to Obama-mania, and not just because he's a far more inspiring speaker than his rival. We, perhaps white people especially, look to him for atonement and redemption. All of us, of whatever race, want a fresh start. That's what "change" means right now: Get us out of here!

Person

Re: Unstoppable Obama

By B, Alex at Feb 17, 2008 09:08 AM

Obama is NOT "anti-war," contrary to Ehrenreich\'s statement in the second-to-last paragraph. This is a strange article- she seems to recognize that the Obama phenomenon is based on image rather than substance, but she still advocates buying into it rather than calling him out on his cynical exploitation of people\'s genuine desires for change. On some substantive issues, such as healthcare, Clinton is actually better than Obama. But, as Ehrenreich correctly points out, Clinton doesn\'t represent any move toward substantive change. But neither does Obama. As Stu pointed out, if he\'s elected, people are going to in for a great disappointment. It\'s better to start building an indpendent movement for real change now, rather than after the disillusionment sets in after the election.

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Person

It\'s a pedagogical-existential transformation

By Neely, Sol at Feb 16, 2008 13:27 PM

This kind of inspiration is remarkable in our age of cynicism and despair. Any radical political transformation in this country will first require a radical existential transformation, and Obama without doubt inspires people at this level. We should never trivialize this level of our humanity for cynical political pragmatism, lest we become inhuman ourselves. More importantly, Obama encourages community commitment as no other candidate dares. In his speech this week--in which he spoke more like a philosopher than a politician (and what\'s wrong with that? Think about Vaclav Havel)--he called on young people to \"fight for freedom\" through an activist lifestyle, not just through army recruitment. Obama clearly acknowledges that \"fighting for freedom\" means civil rights struggles; while warmongers are keen to insist, \"If you like your freedom, thank a vet,\" Obama\'s call to action reminds us that the marines did not bring women the right to vote, nor did the army did bring an end to Jim Crow laws. When McCain spoke last week, he noted how wonderful it is to live in a free country; when Obama spoke last week, one got a sense that he implicitly suggests that we are not yet free in this country. This is why Obama is so important right now: Even if he appears to be less immediately progressive than some desire, if our country can shift its understanding of freedom and commitment, if we can work from mere faith past hope and toward love, the progressive agenda will fall into place. Any political transformation requires first an existential transformation. This is why, compared to the Obama campaign, all other campaigns seem fraudulent.

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667474

By Shadwell, Stu at Feb 16, 2008 08:43 AM

But if you serious look into him; his voting record, fund-raising, not mention that the media swarm all over him should be a warning sign, and vacuousness of what he says he is still just another breath from the crypt just one wrapped in seemingly proggressive Christmas paper. I think you probably know this based on your references to Paul Krugman. While perhaps people voting for Obama and even Clinton may want have good intentions, want all the the same things we want, they\'re in for dissappointment. We need something else, perhaps a brand new mass populist movement some of which already exists in this country and a lot of which is happening south of us.

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