A PBS person hits Big O. on the head

Thanks as often to WSJ.com’s Political Diary for this:

“The cracks are growing in the Democratic unity dam. And McCain may be on the verge of getting his act together. Sen. Barack Obama needs to step off his ‘holier than thou’ platform and get his designer shoes dirty. He needs to let voters catch a glimpse of the regular guy who may actually lurk under his veneer of superiority.

From using a logo resembling a presidential seal at one speech earlier this year (an obvious error and never seen again) to addressing a crowd of 200,000 in Berlin and meeting with heads of state before he has reason to, Obama’s puerile self-absorption may backfire on him and turn off the very voters he needs to turn on: the white working class.

Obama needs to humanize himself. His campaign has done too good a job of apotheosizing him”

— liberal columnist Bonnie Erbe, writing in U.S. News & World Report.

“Puerile self-absorption” says a lot. 

Among Erbe’s accomplishments, etc. is that she  hosts PBS’s weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe.

Add this to the mix:

A new CNN/Opinion Research poll out Wednesday shows that despite nine solid days of blanket media coverage from overseas with Barack Obama cheered by adoring throngs of Germans and parlez-vousing with the French, making a three-point shot in the Middle East and standing outside No. 10 Downing Street, the freshman Illinois Democratic presidential nominee to be Senator Barack Obama of Illinois stayed static in the polls despite his well-covered long foreign tripsenator is stuck right where he was in the polls before he left.

No bounce. Not even a roll.

Woe is he?

Obama’s world — at your doorstep

. . . . Opened my “Obama’s World” yesterday and found his pic big and clear and colorful. Some call it the Sun-Times, but they are woefully misinformed or wrongheaded. He “faces tough questions,” I read, wondering who will have the effrontery. “Honeymoon over,” says harsh critic Mary Mitchell — unconvincingly.  But how she gets away with her irreverence beats me.

. . . . For honest-to-God irreverence, on the other hand, consider this from a London newspaper, namely that O. stiffed the folks (favorite word — he uses it for Mideast heads of state) back home (where his father grew up and had his first dreams):

[A] bucolic scene in his father’s village of Kogelo near the Equator in western Kenya conceals a troubling reality that, until now, has never been spoken about. Barack Obama, the Evening Standard can reveal, after we went to the village earlier this month, has failed to honour [British spelling] the pledges of assistance that he made to a school named in his honour [again] when he visited here amid great fanfare two years ago.

At that historic homecoming in August 2006 Obama was greeted as a hero with thousands lining the dirt streets of Kogelo. He visited the Senator Obama Kogelo Secondary School built on land donated by his paternal grandfather. After addressing the pupils, a third of whom are orphans, and dancing with them as they sang songs in his honour, he was shown a school with four dilapidated classrooms that lacked even basic resources such as water, sanitation and electricity.

He told the assembled press, local politicians (who included current Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga), and students: “Hopefully [gives him his out?] I can provide some assistance in the future to this school and all that it can be.” [Noble words, well spoken!]  He then turned to the school’s principal, Yuanita Obiero, and assured her and her teachers: “I know you are working very hard and struggling to bring up this school, but I have said I will assist the school and I will do so.” [Italics added]

. . . . In an even more irreverent vein, is this the campaign weapon we’ve been waiting for?

Case v. B.O. 

. . . . Cutting to today Obama’s World, we find a 2/3-page headshot of Michelle in trademark tight grin. Had lunch with dutiful chronicler Lynn Sweet and others at the Palmer House, pulling in $1 million, said food is an “issue” — “one . . . we have to address.” She and O.? His cabinet? The nation? Below it,same page: O’s “to-do list” — Select running mate, take vacation.

. . . . Also in O’s World, back to being just Sun-Times: “Pop, juice risky for black women” on p. 9 — raising diabetes risk. Maybe, but not as risky as black fetuses, more than half of whom are aborted, per Jonah Goldberg’s Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning, citing Sheryl Blunt, “Saving Black Babies,” in Christianity Today.

. . . . Meanwhile, black life goes on, per “Fatal shooting closes [black] club” in Chicago Heights on p. 10. Are these events more common in black clubs than, say, Asian clubs?

. . . . And on p. 25, an editorial mocks Todd Stroger, which is what I call grabbing low-hanging fruit, and another takes Rev. and Sen. Meeks to task — gently: “Good cause, bad idea” — for his plans to bring black kids to Winnetka to register on first day of school. Meeks seeks statist solution to black learning problems — jiggle taxation to shift money around — but also takes a page from Alinsky, who bused black women to M. Field’s in the ’40s to try on dresses, back when the issue was blacks’ being waited on.  In this case, it’s pure show biz.

. . . . On p. 27 we have everyone’s favorite columnist, Rev. Jesse Jackson, telling us about O. unleashing hope for the world, not just for us hopeless in U.S. Jesse, feverishly trying to make up for wanting O.’s nuts in a scissors, is identifying him as the world’s Savior, a la Farrakhan’s Savior Day motif.  In fact, F. called him “the hope of the world” last February. 

But if O. loses, we will need a savior badly, when we get multiple dirty looks from 200,000 once-cheering Germans — or was it 20,000, as has been alleged? And were they there for him or for beer, brats, and rock & roll music?  People being what they are, it’s a fair question.

. . . . Finally, in another vein entirely, another Larry Finley obit got me reading about someone I neither knew nor had heard about. As has happened several times, I read, then looked to see who did it. Him again. He’s an old Daily News hand, long time on real estate beat for S-T but now making a very good thing about praising famous or not famous men and women.  Clean copy there.abor

From the other side . . .

In the admirable tradition of “We report, you decide,” in this case “I (moi) report,” etc., here is a pro-O. site that some may call toxic. 

It’s called The Smirking Chimp | News And Commentary from the Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy, raises money for the Big O. — “Summer fund-raiser, Day 20: We’re $430 short of our goal” —  and has a head shot of GW Bush with this truly engaging subhead: “Ask not for whom the Chimp smirks — he smirks at you,” which we have to admit is darn clever.

Among its features is “SmirkingChimpWire,” with links to:

# Are you ready to live in McCain’s world? — Jul 27 2008 – 11:35am (3 comments)
# Troubles fail to drive down Hummer owners’ passion — Jul 26 2008 – 9:23pm (7 comments)
# Regulators Close Two More National Banks — Jul 26 2008 – 3:04am (6 comments)
# Reward offered for citizen’s arrest of Rice — Jul 25 2008 – 5:20pm (3 comments)

and other stories, including a staple of current talkable points,

# Traders manipulated oil prices – U.S. — Jul 24 2008 – 9:40pm (11 comments)

At page bottom are links to:

All Recent Posting Activity | Topics & Issues | Events | Polls | Chimp 1.0

About | Contact | Advertise | Shop | Donate

All one can say is, no wonder O. raises so much from the ‘Net.  He knows his constituency and solicits accordingly.

What helps

THIS HELPS . . . . A line from the Gospel that rang true for me was “I believe, Lord. Help thou my unbelief.” Another, from St. Paul, says we will see things clear in heaven but now only “through a glass darkly.” Not to worry, you who think you are of little faith.

ASSESSMENT . . . . Here’s an aptly stated judgment, rendered at the end of a Power Line dissection of Obama’s claim for Banking Committee membership as part of his newly discovered toughness toward Iran:

Barack Obama has proved himself an extraordinarily cynical politician. He doesn’t believe in much, but he certainly believes in his own power to make voters believe whatever he says, even when what he says today contradicts what he said yesterday, and even when it constitutes a bald fiction, such as his claim that the Senate Banking Committee is “[his] committee.”

Some day it may begin to dawn on attentive observers that Obama represents a type that flourishes on many college campuses. The technical term that applies to Obama is b.s. artist. Obama is an overaged example of the phenomenon, but his skills in the art have brought him great success and he’s not giving it up now.

Some day.

REACTION . . . . I told an Oak Parker about recent armed robberies in the village, including one in the block next to hers, and she said, “People are really getting desperate,” identifying instantly with the guy holding people up. She also wants to fight terrorism by going after the root causes?

ANTIDOTE . . . . Here’s a possible antidote to this people-getting-desperate approach: Shooting Back: The Right and Duty of Self Defense, by Charl van Wyk. He was a missionary in S. Africa in 1993 when terrorists attacked his church during worship. He shot back and saved lives, though not all, and it’s called a massacre. In his book he makes

a biblical, Christian case for individuals arming themselves with guns, and does so more persuasively than perhaps any other author because he found himself in a church attacked by terrorists.

“Grenades were exploding in flashes of light. Pews shattered under the blasts, sending splinters flying through the air,” he recalls of the July 25, 1993, St. James Church Massacre. “An automatic assault rifle was being fired and was fast ripping the pews — and whoever, whatever was in its trajectory — to pieces. We were being attacked!”

But van Wyk was not defenseless that day. Had he been unarmed like the other congregants, the slaughter would have been much worse.

“Instinctively, I knelt down behind the bench in front of me and pulled out my .38 special snub-nosed revolver, which I always carried with me,” he writes in “Shooting Back,” a book being published for the first time in America next month by WND Books. “I would have felt undressed without it. Many people could not understand why I would carry a firearm into a church service, but I argued that this was a particularly dangerous time in South Africa.”

During that Sunday evening service, the terrorists, wielding AK-47s and grenades, killed 11 and wounded 58. But the fact that one man – van Wyk – fired back, wounding one of the attackers and driving the others away.

SITTING, KNEELING . . . . Reading in May ’08 New Oxford Review of Donna L. Kruger’s complaint about half sitting, half kneeling worshipers — “Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament must surely be offended” — instead of sitting straight up if you have to if elderly and/or with “sore or weak knees,” I was offended mightily, being one of the last mentioned, though also elderly, I guess.

Then imagine my delight in reading the July-August issue with two excellent letters, one from a 71-year-old arthritic male from West Palm Beach, Florida, “with a knee wrecked in a skiing accident fifty years ago,” who does the half and half, partly out of concern for the worshiper kneeling behind him, presumably with strong, healthy knees, for whom it would be “awkward” otherwise. As for offending the Lord, “Who knew?” he asks.

The other letter, from a Very Reverend in Vladivostok, notes perceptively that Americans are getting “bigger year by year” and “half and half may be the only way some of us will be able to kneel” in the churches he visits in Eastern Poland, where kneelers are squeezed in for space considerations.

THOUSAND-WORD SPECIAL . . . .

Kc CHIX

These animal activists can get active whenever they want, as far as I’m concerned.

This guy has my vote too:

BATMAN COMIC

GOOD BOOK . . . . Only at page 548 of Prince of Darkness, Robert Novak’s memoir, did I encounter the second name that I did not recognize. The individual had been identified a few pages earlier, but it hadn’t stuck. That’s how good a book this is: it keeps you attentive and it makes identities clear along the way — two signs of clean copy.

QUOTE . . . . And our wise(guy) quote of the day about newspapers:

If one morning I walked on top of the water across the Potomac River, the headline that afternoon would read:  “President Can’t Swim.”  ~Lyndon B. Johnson

Light has come to the world

The U.S. editor of Times of London has blessed us with a marvelous rendition of a recent non-political trip by a U.S. senator:

And it came to pass, in the eighth year of the reign of the evil Bush the Younger (The Ignorant), when the whole land from the Arabian desert to the shores of the Great Lakes had been laid barren, that a Child appeared in the wilderness.

Etc.  Read it here.

Inconvenient reporter

We know Big O. has thrown various people under the bus, but this time he threw one off:

The campaign received 200 requests for press seats on the plane.

Among those for whom there was no room [on the way to Mideast] was Ryan Lizza, Washington correspondent of The New Yorker. The campaign, which was furious about the magazine’s satirical cover this week, cited space constraints in turning him away.

That’s how messiahs do it?

Later: See here for extended not-so-sure from the Huff Post man who gave us the above.  Or did he?  These gabby libs are something else.

Cocky Locky unmasked

In an excellent summary of Obama as insufferably sold on himself, more than most, Krauthammer starts with the hubris manifested in his Germany ploy, asking

what exactly has he done in his lifetime to merit appropriating the Brandenburg Gate as a campaign prop? What was his role in the fight against communism, the liberation of Eastern Europe, the creation of what George Bush 41—who presided over the fall of the Berlin Wall but modestly declined to go there for a victory lap—called “a Europe whole and free”?

Does Obama not see the incongruity? It’s as if a German pol took a campaign trip to America and demanded the Statue of Liberty as a venue for a campaign speech. (The Germans have now gently nudged Obama into looking at other venues.)

He further asks:

has there ever been a presidential nominee with a wider gap between his estimation of himself and the sum total of his lifetime achievements?

He continues:

Obama is a three-year senator without a single important legislative achievement to his name, a former Illinois state senator who voted “present” nearly 130 times. As president of the Harvard Law Review, as law professor and as legislator, has he ever produced a single notable piece of scholarship? Written a single memorable article? His most memorable work is a biography of his favorite subject: himself.

And there’s more more more here.

Hey buddy, can you spare a law?

Daily Herald discusses loan-capping from hard-luck-story perspective:

“It’s mainly desperate people and desperate people don’t always do the smart thing,” Alop says. “There are some folks who it works for, but in my experience … 90 percent regret ever doing it.”

How about hard-hitting reportage about the dangers of borrowing over one’s head?  How about asking schools what they do to warn students from their most tender ages?  Or do we say there oughta be a law in true statist knee jerk?

Arlington Heights business owner Bob Griffith [drinker of statist Kool-Aid] balked as soon as he read the letter from a payday loan company demanding that he garnish the wages of one of his employees.

“Is this even legal?” Griffith wondered. “If it is legal, then shame on our legislators.”

is the lede for this story, which quotes a retail lender in its middle:

Sitting in his Cash Now Loans office in a Palatine strip mall, Henry Magiera counters that charge with testimonials from recovering alcoholics, gamblers, cancer patients and others who say they used his service in the last eight years to keep from falling into further financial problems while they got their lives in order.

“My customers are very happy I’m here,” Magiera says. “We’re the last ones on the block who are going to give them money.” [Italics added]

When a bank charges $35 for bouncing a $7 check, “I’m the lesser of two evils,” Magiera says.

As if on a cue, a former customer comes in, thanking him for lending her some cash when she was down.

“This place has always been great to me,” she says.

but devotes the rest of the story to this lending as bad idea, even puffing Dick (Turban) Durbin’s proposed federal legislation “that would cap interest rates nationwide at 36 percent” — as a suggestion by the deputy director of the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago.

This after noting the failure of state legislation — “The law only affects loans of 60 days or under, so [lenders] all went to 61-day products,”

Reminds me of anti-gun legislation that fails to eliminate guns in hands of bad guys.  So what?  Let’s have more of it, say libs.