By Enemy Central on 7.9.09 @ 6:08AM
A president away, and a society in disarray.
At last, some intelligent commentary on Sarah Palin in the
New York Times. "I fear that we are only deepening the
divide by mocking her...all the while failing to address the
issues faced by the people who actually find meaning in Sarah
Palin.…Sarah Palin was in large part a phenomenon that arose
because of the split nature of this country -- we whom they call
'elites'…and the people who feel shunned by said elites.…" "You
know, many think of Sarah Palin as a dumb broad. But think Judy
Holliday in Born Yesterday. Not so dumb really, huh?"
"…it is Palin's political views, not her personality, which now
need to be discussed.…easy satire…contributes nothing to our
understanding of Palin as a political force, and it doesn't help
us understand why she still might emerge in the future as even
more of a threat to liberal policy in America."
Okay, so the above wasn't taken from Maureen Dowd's latest
snark, just from a single strand of comments from lowly
readers of her column, including an 80-year-old Texas gal who
knows better than to say "Palin will never be president." Instead
she says, "So while we are busy rearranging the deck chairs on
the Titanic, let's not rule out Ms. Caribou Barbie's popularity
with the masses. It may take more than an iceberg to sink the
Unsinkable Sarah."
And all this is from people who don't like Palin, but trying hard
to remain "intellectually curious," as Sarah Jessica Kathleen
Parker would
put it, citing one of her main objections to Palin's mental
makeup. Why our funny name for Ms. Parker? We were just
intellectually curious to see how it might look, that's why.
Frankly, intellectual curiosity can be overrated, if it means
having to knock heads with Dr. Parker. To be sure, it took
courage for her to weigh in, given that she was only the 359th
pundit to join the anti-Palin gauntlet. And to think each and
every one of its members had once been a staunch opponent of
clubbing baby seals to death -- oddly, the one crime Palin has
yet to be charged with. Not to worry, we're still in the early
stages. But before we forget, a Spirit of St. Louis prize should
go to the ageless Richard Cohen, who
compared a Palin presidency to a fictitious -- and
anti-Semitic --presidency of Charles Lindbergh, as depicted by
the novelist Philip Roth. Does Cohen know something no one else
does?
Much as we miss him -- the Obama recovery can't resume until he
gets back -- don't you nonetheless wish our President could stay
away longer? So much of the world has yet to give him his due,
starting with Russia itself. The alarm was sounded in a New
York Times
headline yesterday, "In Russia, Obama’s Star Power Does
Not Translate." Perhaps Obama should not have limited himself to
Moscow, or spent so much quality time with Dmitri Medvedev, whom
Premier Putin treats almost as dismissively as Obama does Joe
Biden. We'd have recommended a long whistlestop ride along the
Trans-Siberian Railway, original home of fur cap and trade.
Sad to say, we forgot to attend the spectacular send-off given to
Michael Jackson the other day. We were struck, however, by what
former Laker Star Magic Johnson
had to say, speaking for himself and for current Laker Star Kobe
Bryant. "He allowed Kobe and I [sic] to have our jerseys in
people's homes across the world -- because he was already there
and he opened all those doors for us." The lesson? Maybe Barack
Obama should have hung around less with Jeremiah Wright and more
with Michael Jackson. You never know when celebrity power will
come in handy, in Russia or anywhere else appeasement is on the
menu.
Apparently also not in attendance at the Jackson event, besides
President Obama and representatives of Enemy Central, was Mr.
Tiger Woods. NFL legend Mr. Jim Brown was no doubt disappointed,
having recently
chastised Woods on HBO for being
"terrible, terrible" as an "individual for social change." The
Washington Post's
Michael Wilbon rose to Woods' defense, though not too
high, prefacing his remarks with what might politely be called
kowtowing toward Brown and his alleged social work with gangs --
all the while neglecting to inform readers that Brown has
been arrested
several times and even done jail time for brutalizing women. The
more social change we have, the more things stay the same. Mr.
Obama, you really want to come back to this?