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The New York Times
Surrender Already,
Dorothy
By MAUREEN DOWD,
OP-ED COLUMNIST, nytimes.com March 30, 2008
WASHINGTON -- It’s all about
the magic, really.
And whether we can take a flier on this skinny guy with the strange name and
braided ancestry to help us get it back.
Bernard Kouchner, the foreign minister of France and a strong supporter of the
United States, recently observed that President Bush has done such a number on
our image in the world that no one will be able to restore the luster.
“I think the magic is over,” he said.
Pas si vite, mon vieux. In terms of style, the Obamas could give
Carla Bruni-Sarkozy a run for her euros. And at least Obama is not in a
fantasy world on Iraq, as W. and John McCain are, insisting it’s improving while
we see it exploding.
Many voters decided last week to stick with Obama despite his
less-than-convincing explanations about the Rev. Wright — even as many soured on
Hillary, casting her as Lady Voldemort.
Democrats are coming around to the point Jay Rockefeller made 10 days ago after
introducing Obama in West Virginia: “Democrats always make a mistake by
nominating people who know everything on earth there is to know about public
policy. I introduced both Al Gore and John Kerry at their rallies.
They knew all the policies, but people didn’t connect with them. You don’t
get elected president if people don’t like you.”
Despite Bill Clinton’s saying it was “a bunch of bull” that his wife should drop
out, Democrats are trying to sneak up on Hillary, throw a burlap sack over her
head, carry her off the field and stick her in a Saddam spider hole until after
the Denver convention.
One Obama adviser moaned that the race was “beginning to feel like a hostage
crisis” and would probably go on for another month to six weeks. And Obama
said that the “God, when will this be over?” primary season was like “a good
movie that lasted about a half an hour too long.”
Hillary sunnily riposted that she likes long movies. Her favorite as a
girl was “The Wizard of Oz,” so surely she spots the “Surrender Dorothy” sign in
the sky and the bad portent of the ladies of “The View” burbling to Obama about
how sexy he is.
But who knows? Obama and Bob Casey talking March Madness to the patrons of
Sharky’s sports cafe in Latrobe, Pa., on Friday night seemed demographically
clever. But it is always when Hillary is pushed back by the boys that
women help hoist her up.
Obama, like the preternaturally gifted young heroes in mythical tales, is still
learning to channel his force. He can ensorcell when he has to, and he has
viral appeal. Who else could alchemize a nuanced 40-minute speech on race
into must-see YouTube viewing for 20-year-olds?
But at several crucial points in the last year, he held back when he should have
poured on, leaving his nemesis around to damage him further.
Obama has social engineering plans as ambitious, in their own way, as the Bush
administration’s failed social engineering plans to change the psyche of America
and the Middle East.
“I think the president needs to use the bully pulpit to change our culture,” he
said Thursday, talking energy at a $1,000-a-plate fund-raiser in Manhattan.
“We are a wasteful culture. It’s always been that way because of our
history. We do everything big.”
He wants to make government “cool” again. He wants to banish the red-blue
culture of conflict on TV and in Washington. And he wants to make the
country healthier, thinner and smarter. “I want our students learning art
and music and science and poetry,” he says, in a crowd-pleasing line.
Using his preacher voice, he urged a black audience in Beaumont, Tex., to be
better parents, to put away chips and cold Popeyes for breakfast, and to turn
off the TV and video games. “Buy a little desk or put that child at the
kitchen table,” he instructed. “Watch them do their homework.”
It’s not certain that Obama could bring about an American renaissance. As
the L.A. entertainment lawyer Nancy McCullough, who was on the Harvard Law
Review with Obama, told Vanity Fair’s Todd Purdum, he tended to wallow in words.
She said he was so intent on letting everyone have a say that “I actually would
have been happier for him to say sometimes, ‘This is how we’re doing this, and
shut up!’ ”
The pollster Peter Hart says the central questions are: “Is Hillary
honest?” and “Is Obama safe?”
Her foreign affairs plumping-up has hurt her, while his exotic and unorthodox
narrative stirs doubt.
“If I were to produce a spot for Obama,” Hart said, “I would take 100
photographs of everything that he does with his children and wife — that could
range from Halloween to a picnic to everything we identify with as part of
American life — so people could say, ‘I relate to that, I understand it.’ ”
But, for now, Obama might want to leave the Trinity church photos out of the
montage.
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