By Patrick O'Hannigan on 11.30.09 @ 6:08AM
Our president has as much of a problem with the experience he has
as with the experience he lacks.
Mark Steyn and Hugh Hewitt were talking on Hewitt's radio
show when Hewitt suggested that Barack Obama does not know how to
be president. Steyn shoehorned that comment into a
column about Obama's "crassly parochial narcissism,"
supporting the dig with familiar examples, most recently
presidential
failure to return from a trip to Asia with anything more than
fodder for a
Saturday Night Live
sketch.
Steyn and Hewitt
are not alone in thinking the president ill-equipped for his
job, and so it makes sense to ask "why" rather than "whether" he
makes so many mistakes. Obama's defenders treat those mistakes as
the occupational hazards of anyone in his position, but the White
House itself undercuts their argument by treating almost
everything Obama does as
unprecedented. Anyone who claims unique success must also
concede the possibility of unique failure.
Critics often write about President Obama's lack of
executive experience as though it were the one shortcoming that
explains everything from diplomatic gaffes to vetting problems
and
typos on state dinner menus. Three years from now, the same
people will be writing stories about how Obama has grown in
office. Unfortunately, treating experience like the object of a
quest bestows more nobility on President Obama than a sober
reading of his work would allow. Our president has as much of a
problem with the experience he has as with the experience he
lacks.
When Barack Obama humbled Hillary Clinton, the campaign
orchestrated for him by Democratic fixers was widely misread as a
thing of genius. Because Hillary has fans who delude themselves
into thinking of her as the smartest woman in America, an
influential few figured that anyone who beat her had to be even
smarter. But smooth is
not the same as smart, and neither smooth nor smart should be
confused with effective. In fact, there is more evidence for
saying that Obama is vindictive than for saying he is smart, and
that matters when smarts are supposed to compensate for
inexperience.
Remember how Obama's college transcripts, his curious
failure to write anything for the Harvard Law
Review while editing that publication, and his
habitual
votes of "present" in the Illinois State Senate were
frog-marched down the memory hole? Only later did we learn that
those questions from his past keep company with Jeremiah Wright,
Van Jones, Bill Ayers, Samantha Power, Greg Craig, and anyone
else (sincere or cynical) who breaks a potluck promise by
arriving at Chez Obama with nachos and bean dip rather than a
platter of
Wagyu Steaks.
Obama's legislative career was too short to be
distinguished, and he got little campaign leverage from his stint
as a lecturer in constitutional law once his enthusiasm for
Roe v. Wade and his
nuanced-to-the-point-of-neutering relationship with the Second
Amendment became common knowledge. As a result, the most
interesting part of his pre-presidential experience is his time
as a community organizer.
Supporters were quick to defend that part of his background
when Sarah Palin quipped that "being a small-town mayor is sort
of like [being] a community organizer, except you have actual
responsibilities."
Her barb stampeded Democrats into swelling the ranks of
community organizers with as many cherry-picked names as they
could find. They
drafted everyone from Clara Barton and Crazy Horse to Lech
Walesa while trying to give Obama a better pedigree. Some
Democrats even elbowed carpenters and rabbis aside to call Jesus
a community organizer.
These partisans ignored anyone scripturally literate enough
to observe that Jesus deputized "community organizing" chores to
Peter and the other apostles. Worse, no one trying to draft Jesus
for Obama asked why a rabbi allegedly organizing other Jews spent
so much of His public ministry flouting their expectations, and
no one in that little movement noticed that Jesus told his
apostles to preach the gospel past community
boundaries to the ends of the Earth.
That Obama seems to think he has the same reach (and nearly
the same significance) helps explain why his more fervent
supporters don't see anything weird about looking at Jesus
through Obama instead of the other way around.
As one of the people trying to draft Jesus for Obama,
Joe Klein of Time magazine rubbed Sarah
Palin out of his disbelieving eyes to complain that community
organizers are "doing the Lord's work." At some level removed
from President Obama he might have a point, but it is absurd to
think that off-the-rails mentors like Frank Marshall Davis, Bill
Ayers, and Jeremiah Wright offered Barry O a blueprint for such
work.
ACORN itself hints at the limits of using that brand of
activism as a steppingstone to executive responsibility. While
neither the ACORN website nor the Wikipedia entry on community
organizing is definitive, both are instructive. According to its
website, ACORN exists to "bring neighbors together to work
for stronger, safer, and more just communities." These goals are
met through "issue campaigns, service delivery, ballot
initiatives, and voter participation."
The
Wikipedia entry on community organizers traces that label
back to Saul Alinsky, and describes their work as "a process by
which people living in proximity to each other are brought
together in an organization to act in their shared
self-interest." The entry also says that unlike community
development, which "generally assumes that groups and individuals
can work together collaboratively without significant conflict or
struggles over power to solve community challenges,"
community organizing takes conflict and
power struggles for granted.
Reading the ACORN and Wikipedia descriptions leaves the
impression that community organizers strive to equip other people
for political combat, usually by facilitating meetings.
Unfortunately for a president who leans heavily on such
experience, neither of those skills animates a nonpartisan
outlook or sharpens decision-making ability.
Anyone weaned on ideologies whose sole purpose is to "Stick
it to the Man" is keenly aware of office perks, and so Mr. Hope
and Change stiffed allies like
Great Britain and Poland. He set a first-year foreign travel
record, but has little to show for it, as can be seen when even a
sympathetic columnist quotes Henry Kissinger reaching for a chess
metaphor to wonder whether Obama has a middle game, while a
Latvian official worries about Obama making
democracy unfashionable.
At home, Obama found time to play a
lot of golf.
Reflexive disdain for authority other than his own also
explains why President Obama pontificates about everything from
the Cambridge Police Department to "smarter
diplomacy" that isn't. According to rules learned early in
his life and reinforced by experience fresh out of college,
whatever vexes the powers that be must be called successful. To
be fair, some other politicians think the same way. They have
that in common with many of the people serving prison
terms.
topics:
Barack Obama, ACORN, Community Organizing